Immediate Family Diagram

Here’s a long-term project I’ve put off for sometime, a quick diagram illustrating the people in my life I know (or have known) over the years. I’ve made references to them in e-mails, articles, etc. Sometimes I refer to them by their nicknames which confuses those who’ve never met them so this series of pages should clarify everything and they’ll always be part of the FAQ section. I hope to add links with pictures and other data about them which I did do in the past but I ran out of steam on it in 2003.

First up, the people I would classify as my immediate family. The extended side of my family really only pertains to my dad’s siblings by today’s definition. Mom is an only child which means her side would have to include cousins and other “distant” relatives I may have met briefly, mainly funerals. I couldn’t fit the cats in so I guess they’ll have to be a separate page and I can add past pets in my life.

Next up, people who are my friends that get referenced too and are the main audience of the site.

September 2, 4pm Update: I was on a roll and completed page covering friends I made at Marquette. Enjoy and all your former Warriors (I refuse to accept Golden Eagles), chime in to me if there are any errors.

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Adventures in Housesitting

jackandme

Here’s a rare photo with Jack and me. I’m cropped out from the neck up because I think I just completed watering the side and front yards, so I looked terrible, don’t want to make my site NSFW (Not Safe For Work in case you didn’t know like I did last year). As you can see by the expression on Jack’s face, he’s rather skittish and right now, pretty terrified. Jack has much in common with our cat Wicca; both are black cats, both are the heaviest, both are the largest and both are the biggest wimps when standing up for themselves with the cats they live with. However, Wicca is only afraid of children and Jack is afraid of everyone but the Lowrys.

With a little help from Somara setting up barricades to slow Jack’s ability to sprint away, I caught up and comforted him a tad. I wanted some photographic proof to show the Lowrys.

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What’s with these ugly colors?

It does seem to match that Elric cover two stories earlier.

Alas, no.

Since September is the fifth anniversary of buying my house and the longest physical address I’ve ever lived at, including the 18 years I spent growing up with my parents, Picayune has a color scheme based upon my house. Actually, it isn’t that ugly.

The reddish-brown would be the bricks. The light gray is the painted wood sections. Finally, the green is the front door. Photoshop using its matching/blending for the graphics this weblog uses causes it to have somewhat of a pinkish or brownish tint. The web-based colors may not be super accurate becuase I also used the eyedropper (sampler) tool in Photoshop on the pictures to get the hexadecimal code for these colors. It’s not an accurate science but I’m not going to go bananas with a Pantone swatchbook.

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Somara’s surprise return last year

This time last year, I was home ill but on the up side Somara was coming home after her four months in Phoenix working at a resort called The Boulders. Her externship needed to complete culinary school was well over (she officially graduated earlier in the Summer) and it meant me attaining a new job with Apple over there was a bust. I could pound the pavement yet Somara’s position paid too little to support the both of us and we would deplete all our savings quickly with Phoenix costing much more than Austin. She had left the evening before and was driving overnight with Wicca (our oldest cat). I received updates by phone as she arrived at each major geographical stop along her route; Tuscon, state borders, El Paso, so on. Somara called me one last time in the early evening stating she was either in El Paso or Fort Stockton which meant I would probably see her in the morning or at the crack of dawn. Thus I went back to my night of recuperating with over-the-counter drugs and watching The Simpsons Season Six on DVD.

Then the doorbell rang around 9 pm. I was rather irked since I had already been annoyed by solicitors that day. But to my delight it was Somara! She fudged on every landmark she was at when she called so she was really at the next one. Very clever. There wasn’t too much to catch up on due to our recently acquired cell phones we used every day and we unpacked (maybe just her) the truck the next day. Then would come the process of her hunting down a new job. It could all wait that evening since it was great to have human company in the house again. Oh the three cats (Molly, Miette and Nemo) were great too, they just couldn’t speak English, heck they don’t even try to meet me half way.

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Elric, the Making of a Sorcerer

elric1

This four-issue miniseries, written by Elric creator Michael Moorcock and illustrated by Walt Simonson, is a prequel to Elric of Melniboné explaining how the infamous anti-hero gained his ability to speak to dragons and summon the elemental lords. Unlike the Star Wars prequels, the dialog, character development and plots are much more sophisticated and satisfying. When I read the books 22 years ago, I never really questioned Elric’s capability to ask Grome or Straasha for aid but years later I felt like it was a lame deus ex machina move whenever Moorcock was painted into a corner. I still enjoyed the books though, I just think my expectations for plausibility with Elric’s sorcery evolved to a higher standard and was probably tainted by roleplaying games’ magic rules.

In Moorcock’s defense, the original Elric stories were written at an earlier point of his career. His series involving Elric, Hawkmoon, Corum, von Bek, etc., have matured and there’s a definitely been shift in mindset about the roles of Chaos and Law which he even admitted at a book signing were originally substitutes for Evil and Good. To support this change in his writing, the more recent stories have Law as the transgressor against the Balance. At the same event, he did assure me and the audience that Arioch will always be a villain despite the positive aspects of Chaos he’s written.

Back to the miniseries now that I’ve blathered on about the backstory of the author.

When the comic opens, Melniboné’s current ruler Sadric must choose between Elric (his weak albino son who prophecies say will destroy the kingdom) or Yyrkoon (his aggressive nephew who wants to restore the empire). It’s a close call so the decision will be determined by the outcome of four dreamquests Elric must complete. As he sleeps, Elric is “reincarnated”  in the dream and travels back in time to Melniboné’s past. There (or maybe then), he takes on the roles and memories of different ancestors while retaining his skills, personality and appearance (Elric wasn’t the only famous albino in Melnibonéan history). During the years which pass in his dreams (only days pass in the “present”), Elric forges the alliances and pacts he’ll use in the novels Moorcock wrote over 30 years ago.

Yyrkoon also participates in Elric’s dreamquests because if he kills Elric in the dream, he will have killed Elric indirectly in the “real world.” The same rules and conditions apply to Yyrkoon’s “reincarnated” self too; he still manages to know the objective of the dream unlike Elric.

Since this a Moorcock story, Elric’s actions will end in tragedy or set up the ones which happened in the six novels I read in high school. An obvious example are the bargains he strikes with Arioch, a fickle and volatile Lord of Chaos and keeper of the demon blade Stormbringer.

One complaint I have is Moorcock’s current characterization of the Melnibonéans. Back in the Sixties and Seventies, they were a cruel and decadent people. Nowadays they are portrayed as a somber, reflective people whose ambivalence was mistaken as cruelty by the Young Kingdoms. For example, when Elric dreams back to the past, we see the Melnibonéans were a fair and just people. They tended to shun Chaos (and Law) and built a commercial empire respected and liked by the Young Kingdoms. Their deeds, trustworthiness and nobility led them to earn the gratitude of the Elemental and Animal Lords. The fourth book is when events lead to the Melnibonéans allying with Chaos, namely Arioch, out of necessity and they begin to carve out an empire the world feared, despised and coveted. This sympathetic viewpoint even extends to Tanglebones as a “kinder, gentler” sagely mystic advising Elric on his dream journeys, not the cruel, sadistic chief torturer who enjoyed culling information from his victims in the first novel.

Now that the four issues of the comic have finally appeared, a trade paperback will probably arrive at your local bookstore’s graphic novel section. It’s a definite purchase for those who’ve read Moorcock’s past novels, fans of Simonson’s artwork or both (me). Otherwise, anyone who isn’t familiar with Elric’s tale involving him, Cymoril, Arioch and Yyrkoon will scratch his head in confusion; much like I do at a Harry Potter movie but with more boredom.

Correction, Aug. 31: My friend Mark “Narleyhotep” Brunner brought an error to my attention. I forgot that it was Dr. Jest who was the cruel and sadistic torturer from the first novel, not Tanglebones. It turns out Tanglebones was always wise, reserve and patient since I think he was also Elric’s personal combat trainer. He may not have been Melnibonéan, but a slave from one of the Young Kingdoms. Guess I will need to re-read the books as my memory of them from 22 years ago has obvious glitches.

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Somara concludes her cake decorating training

Yesterday, Somara officially completed her six weeks of cake decorating training with HEB (the dominant grocery store chain in Central Texas). There was a little pomp and circumstance to celebrate it down at their local HQ. It was a semi-big deal because HEB is trying to standardize the experience from store to store, at least in the Austin area, no idea about San Antonio or the neighboring Mexican states.

Best of all, she received a change in title with the Bakery Department and more importantly, a raise. I’m not going to disclose how much since I don’t know if her co-workers read my site and you know it always happens that people always discover the information you don’t want them to know. Let’s just say, if Somara continues to work 40 hours a week, the amount she received definitely helps.

Now let us see if this puts her another step closer to being on one of those cake-decorating competitions on the Food Network she keeps recording on the DVR.

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Getting re-acquainted with QuarkXpress

Back in July, two representatives from Quark came to the CapMac meeting to demonstrate the new Universal (compatible with PowerPC and Intel-based Macs) version of their product. I remember the last time how QuarkXpress was the biggest holdout on making the transition from Mac OS 9 to X, thus Apple still sold G4 towers that still booted in Mac OS 9 until a Carbonized version of it shipped. Now they’re well ahead of Adobe with a version of QuarkXpress capable of running natively on the Intel-based Macs without having to use the Rosetta piece.

Their demonstration was impressive and it showed how far behind the curve while Adobe’s product (InDesign) remains sluggish and has more in common with its clunkier predecessor PageMaker. I asked them if Quark’s leadership would ever release a stripped down version of QuarkXpress for those who really prefer it over InDesign but don’t need all the features (unless I planned on starting up my own service bureau). Apple did the same tactic with the introduction of Final Cut Express for those who didn’t need everything Final Cut Pro does. The answer was “no” because the powers that be at Quark gave it a few minutes of thought, then decided against it because the product is worth every penny. If I had my own Fortune 5000 company, sure, I could justify shelling out the $750 for one copy. I wasn’t too dejected, they gave everyone at CapMac some awesome swag.

Luck would have it, I scored an education copy for $200! It runs like a champ on my G4 1.25 GHz. I’m a bit rusty yet it converted two old print versions of Picayune I compiled through QuarkXpress 3 over a decade ago. The cliché about relearning a piece of software as if it were riding a bike has been pretty true. Due to my recent bout of illness, I haven’t been able to press on it much more. I will be going through a bunch of other old documents and converting them up to version 7.01 (the current). Then I can “print” out copies of the old documents as PDFs for future use since I doubt I could afford to upgrade this software for another decade, lottery winnings aside. Then I can start up the other projects I wanted to do with QuarkXpress I kept failing to complete due to InDesign’s (versions 1 through CS) constipated nature. This Universal 7.01 is just as smooth and quick as the version 3 I enjoyed using on my LC, 7100, Wave 120 and G3 back in the Nineties.

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Helen and I met 20 years ago today

The date is an educated guess of when I met Helen Marcotte (she wasn’t “officially” married to Paul Silder for another seven years) for the first time in COPA 001. COPA? COmmunications and Performing Arts. I know, rather redundant since Performing Arts, a more elaborate name for Theater (aka waiting on tables), is a form of communication. It was just English 001 anyway.

Helen sat in the back row while I was in the middle for this small class with only 12 (or was it 16?) people and the instructor. I didn’t really notice her on the first day. My first strong memory of Helen being a classmate was when she read her description assignment aloud. Something about the color of a sports car (Porsche) matching fingernail polish. Sounds shallow on paper, it wasn’t, I felt it was rather effective since fingernails have a glossiness which a waxed car has. It was still better than my wise-acre attempt of a made-up dictionary entry on the definition of “younger sibling” on the description assignment.

From the estimated date on, I have been friends with Helen for 20 years. Our relationship has had several rough patches with verbal sparring, including some periods of us not speaking to each other. Real mature, I know. I assume the bulk, if not all, of the blame, especially for the North Carolina era. On the upside, I am a major instigator to why she is married to Paul Silder. Thanks to us being in the same class, I wasn’t a complete stranger to her when I set her up with Paul on his floor’s Screw Your Roommate (a massive blind-date outing). They’re still happily married after 12 years so I am responsible for one positive thing in her life. I don’t know if that compensates for our overnight adventure at O’Hare Airport in 1988 though.

Hard to believe it all began with a simple, entry-level writing course at Marquette University 20 years ago.

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Best. Comic Book Store. Ever.

dragonslair

This weekend was the 20th anniversary of Dragon’s Lair’s grand opening. So some comic book/game store (aka nerd magnet) opened, big whoop. In Austin it is a rather big whoop because in my 12 years of living here, they’ve not only been the survivor but a well-deserved champion in the area. Actually, it’s pretty odd that this city doesn’t have as much competition for either of the niche markets Dragon’s Lair covers quite well since Austin is a college town at heart. This doesn’t mean there aren’t other comic book stores here, they just aren’t as well-known nor can I think of any who have lasted as long, other than Funny Papers at Dobie Mall (on the UT campus). The majority of the Austin residents who are into comics will recommend Dragon’s Lair first though. Their other big advantage is with the great selection of games, namely roleplaying games (D&D namely), miniatures (they’re the official Warhammer reseller in the area) and boardgames you won’t find at the usual retailers. I’ve been to a couple other comic book stores here and games tend to be rather secondary to their business so they lack much depth. When I first came to Austin, I did visit King’s Hobby to see what the game options were. Sadly, the selection was more focused on model railroads, historical miniatures and other dying wargames. It was a paradise for the clueless GDW founders. To be fair, King’s Hobby is a great place to buy scale models and the selection of Osprey military uniform books is impressive. 

Overall, the variety wouldn’t mean squat if it weren’t for the cheerful, enthusiastic, knowledgeable and never annoyed staff. From the owner David Wheeler down to the counter people, they are the antithesis of Comic Book Guy (aka Jeff Albertson). Trust me, I’ve been a customer at other stores over the years and the gag on The Simpsons is a rather factual stereotype. This doesn’t mean the staff lacks opinions. They post recommendations of various titles, they have gags taped on the walls near the registers (my favorite is the Emperor yelling “West Side!”) but in my years of shopping there, they’ve never really been a den of negativity. Dragon’s Lair is also a retailer I would encourage people who don’t know jack about comics to shop at if they need to purchase a gift for a superhero fan. The staff doesn’t ignore the uninitiated looking for assistance nor do they judge. 

This story is starting to turn into hyperbole yet I think not for two other reasons which illustrate Dragon’s Lair’s success over these 20 years. Over the last few years it has expanded from one store on Austin’s north side to three stores (Austin, Round Rock which is my store and the photo, and San Antonio). Multiple locations may not sound too impressive but the second reason is even better. Dragon’s Lair is a sponsor of the Saturday evening BritComs on KLRU (Austin’s PBS). Maybe I should switch that to “was” because I had no luck verifying despite combing through the sites of either parties. Next time I’m there, I’ll ask. If it’s not true anymore, then I’ll replace it with the radio commercials that ran on Bob-FM which is almost unattainable from an economic standpoint in the comic book/gaming store business. 

Congratulations Dragon’s Lair, Mr. Wheeler and his staff. May the next 20 years be as successful.

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Happy Birthday Steve!

What a great time to mention his birthday because we had our first phone conversation in three years. We weren’t mad at each other, just some apathy happened before I got married and he was pre-occupied for some time. It’s best that he explains it since it’s not my place to tell anyone else. I have his cell phone number programmed into my contacts, his new address to send him cool packages and a better e-mail (the one I used to have is a spam magnet).

It also dovetails with our first meeting over 15 years ago at GenCon 1991.

Back then I still lived in Milwaukee and I admit, going to GenCon was one incentive (the bigger one was my current girlfriend Carrie) for remaining there after graduation. My friend Phil and I were between events so we had time to kill. Phil wanted to go through the artists’ section. Reluctantly I went along but if I stopped moving around, I probably would’ve fallen asleep. The various booths were pretty interesting and then I saw this one for GDW’s Challenge magazine which did get my attention.

Now a quick diversion. Normally GDW’s games were pretty dull because they usually published boring wargames to compete with Avalon Hill, Milton Bradley and Games Workshop. The company’s RPG reputation wasn’t much better. Their roleplaying games tended to have a heavy military slant (Twilight: 2000, 2300 AD); disposable characters (Space 1889, Traveller); and terrible mechanics (all of them). There were two bright spots: GDW’s settings were pretty solid so people usually kept their settings but used different rules: GURPS, SpaceMaster or StarHero with Traveller’s backdrop was pretty common. The other plus was Challenge, an RPG magazine dedicated to the Sci-Fi roleplaying games. The (former) king of RPGs (TSR) stopped publishing adventures in Dragon with the appearance of Dungeon around 1986 and neither covered anything outside of TSR’s catalog since the mid-Eighties. Meanwhile, Challenge was at least half filled with material for GDW’s RPGs and the remainder was other companies’ games; FASA’s Shadowrun and BattleTech; WEG’s Star Wars and Paranoia; SJG’s GURPs Cyberpunk and Space, etc. GDW had also released Dark Conspiracy at this GenCon so Challenge would now be including horror RPGs: Call of Cthulhu, Chill and Vampire.

As the above paragraph explains, I had a positive bias for the magazine. I was also a typesetter at kinko’s then. One of the constant gripes and arguments I had to deal with at work was Macintoshes being a dying technology, kinko’s should wise up and replace them with PCs, blah blah blah, the same nonsense you still here today. A side project of mine for this GenCon was to survey the publishers on how they produced their books; Mac or PC, PageMaker or QuarkXpress, etc. So here’s this booth for Challenge magazine/GDW where one could meet its art director, Steve Bryant. Unfortunately, he was getting his ear yakked off by this geek rambling on about his Champions character (he can correct me if I’m wrong). I could tell he was rather bored and the geek was creating fodder for an SNL skit. When I got my chance to speak to him, I asked him my set of production questions: which type of equipment and software did he use to make the magazine. Steve definitely perked up. A question he could answer about something he gave a damn about! More importantly, an opportunity for him to actually speak and not be bombarded about another 18th-level anti-paladin armed with a soul-draining longsword! After his explanation, Steve asked why I wanted to know. I told him I was a typesetter at kinko’s looking for ammo against the PC naysayers. He was pretty enthused and told me GDW needed a new typesetter. Then he saw my name was Steve too and said (paraphrased) “Sorry, we can’t hire you because we already have two Steves working there. Nah, I’m just messing with you! Go by the GDW booth and ask for Julia Martin or Beth Bradford.”

The rest as they say, is history. GDW went on to be the most stressful, emotional roller coaster of a job in my life for the 15 months it lasted. Yet Steve and I went on to be friends well after what we branded Games by Disposable Workers, his move to Chicago for FASA and my departure for Austin. We’ve had ugly disagreements too, most of them fuelled by GDW’s deadlines so our friendship hasn’t be flawless. Yet I’m proud to say he is one of the key people who proved how wrong my parents were about friends. For years, they told my brother and me that friends couldn’t be counted upon in a crisis, only your family. This was mainly their rationalization to us when we were upset over moving to another location every other year. I think it also explained why they don’t have any close friends I could really name growing up. When GDW ended badly for me, Steve was one of my biggest supporters. He was a true friend unlike the alcoholic Dave Nilsen, the main architect of my firing. Steve (and Lazz) didn’t distance himself from me to keep his job. We continued to hit the movies, do lunch (he bought many while I was unemployed in exchange for my Mac expertise that GDW now sorely lacked) and socialize. The first 10 weeks of 1993 were rough. I don’t think I could’ve pulled through without him and he’s never asked for anything in return for it.

To my parents, I say “HA! I was right to trust my instincts!” which I have tended to follow more often since 1993.

As for Steve, let’s all wish him a great birthday and cheer him on as he continues to pursue his dream of drawing, inking and/or coloring a comic book for DC, Marvel or Dark Horse. He’s actually pretty close these days too. Meanwhile, I need to upgrade his Mac stuff and find a way to bring him to Austin for a visit with his son Chance.

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The die is cast for Las Vegas 2006

Before I got ill through my misadventures in housesitting (that’s another story down the pipe), the wife and I made the decision to spend another aweseome week in Las Vegas. Last year she couldn’t go to the city’s centenniel celebration because she had returned from Phoenix too recently and was pre-occupied with job hunting around Austin. I know it wasn’t very fair. I’m making it up to her now. It looks like José won’t be making it in exchange for this excursion so I will have to do some proxy drinking and gambling for him. I have dropped a line to others we know that like to go and those who live nearby.

We scored a deal with the airfare and hotel (Treasure Island) for under $1400. Why TI? Location would be the strongest argument. Last time, I stayed at Luxor with José. Nice place, just too far to walk from if your goal is the central section of the Strip. I’ve stayed at Aladdin too but no longer with them as it’s transformed into Planet Hype and the Arabic-Turkish façade is being removed.

I’ve only been to Las Vegas when it’s hotter than blazes (July-September). I know it isn’t anything like Phoenix. Some website says the city averages between 40 to 65 degrees F. I guess we won’t be using the pool. It is going to be interesting to walk around the Strip with warmer clothing for a change. I think I will be packing a jacket as well as sweaters and hockey jerseys.

Somara hasn’t been on a vacation since a long weekend we had in Houston back in 2005. A real vacation would probably go back to Sonia’s wedding at the beginning of 2004 though. Culinary school occupied all of 2004 and most of 2005 which would be a major reason why. She deserves it and we’ve both started a countdown. As of this posting, we board the plane in 97 days. Any suggestions when we’re there, I’d love to see them.

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First car bought 10 years ago…

…and I’m still driving it.

With the job at PowerComputing secured, I had to buy a car because the bus was out of the question. This event had happened sooner than I had planned, just like everything else in life. Today was the tenth anniversary of when I handed over the check, showed my proof of insurance and then attempted to drive it off the lot. Attempted? I hadn’t driven a stick-based car since I left North Dakota in 1986. Foolishly, I rationalized to myself that I could get the hang of standard again. As the cliché went, it’s just like riding a bike, you never really forget. After I had killed the engine in the dealer’s lot, twice, the tidal wave of remorse swept over me. Couldn’t go back on this then, especially with it adding $1500 to the price of a VW. The drive to Apple (when it was along 183) wasn’t much better.

My new 1996 Golf GL sat in the parking lot at my apartment complex for the remainder of the week while I finished up my time with Apple, getting there by bus. Thankfully my friend Sonia had the generosity and patience to spend the following Saturday morning tutoring me on when to shift gears as we cruised around Hyde Park. I had an adequate mastery by the time I started my new job after Labor Day. There were still issues with not rolling backwards downhill or parking on slopes and they probably remain if you ask Somara. Now I can’t imagine driving a car without a manual transmission since it becomes a reflexive habit when driving.

Besides relearning how to drive stick, my car went on to be the biggest thing I ever successfully paid off in my life (until I closed on my house). My new job would pay adequately yet it would be a close call from time to time so I heavily considered asking for assistance from my grandparents. After a conversation or two with them, my ex-roommate Paul had the best advice; go ahead and pay for it yourself. It may be rough but if I received any guff from my family, I could tell them to go to hell in any argument the car came up in. Paul was quite wise there since I had to give my mother a ride during my time in North Carolina. She is just like her mother, a back-seat driver and a nuisance of a passenger. I got her to be quiet when I confronted her with “who owns the car?” Thus, the owner of the car will decide how to drive (no idea what her problem was that evening since I tend to follow the speed limit). I even managed to pay my car off two and a half months early to really impress my credit union.

These days it’s great not to have to deal with a car payment, America’s consumerism finds other ways to spend the money. The VW is holding up pretty decently as it turned 100,000 miles earlier. Volkswagen brought the Rabbit back (what the Golf used to be called) for a 2006/7 run. With its poor gas mileage, I probably won’t replace my Golf with a Rabbit. I might go with a diesel Beetle yet I’m really leaning toward a Toyota Yaris or Prius once Somara’s student loans are a more transparent expense in the near future.

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Texadelphia! Y’all know whut I’m sayin’?

texadelphia

This is the Hyde Park location. The original is on the Drag.

This place is a surrogate for a Philadelphian delicacy that doesn’t have too much of a Central Texas spin on it; namely drowning it with jalapenos. Thankfully their cheesesteaks don’t give you the other horrifying side effect several hours later. If you’ve never eaten an actual Philly cheesesteak, ask someone who has, I don’t want to go on in graphic detail.

Texadelphia was another restaurant Lee “Doc” Rhea took me to during my first few weeks in Austin. I hadn’t eaten a real cheesesteak since 1987 but I figured these people wouldn’t be much better than those ones you see in every mall. Well these guys may not be close but their modifications are very appetizing and terribly unhealthy. Who would’ve guessed how awesome a cheesesteak tastes when it’s topped with pepperoni and ranch dressing. Definitely a vegetarian’s nightmare. The default side is tortillia chips (or some would call nachos) because fries are more likely to compound the artery hardening. What puts them above the mallsteaks is they grill the meat in a similar fashion to what I remember from Jim’s on South Street. Yes, I know Philadelphians, the real thing is at Geno’s on 9th Street and I plan to go there when I visit.

Recently, Texadelphia has been expanding with new franchises around Austin and the suburbs. The one in the picture is in Hyde Park which is across the street from my first Austin apartment. I know there’s been one up in Cedar Park but hopefully they’ll put in one in Pflugerville or on Wells Branch. I think it would be a great treat for their 25th anniversary for me and them.

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PowerComputing began 10 years ago

Although the end and fate of PowerComputing was lousy, I will always remember it being the easiest (and one of the best) job interviews I ever had. By the Summer of 1996, Apple’s tumultuous period was going full speed ahead. There was always a chance Apple would be acquired because it was too large to go under. Meanwhile, PowerComputing was gaining momentum with its ugly, noisy yet cheaper licensed computers running Mac OS 7.5.

Despite his reputation for being a hardass, my current Apple manager Murray Wheeler was a fair man. He had a good working relationship with Mike Keig at PowerComputing so he put in the good word with them to land me an interview. I had to rent a car for the weekend because they were in Round Rock and the Austin buses didn’t go that far north then.

How easy was the interview? I had already been through a tech screening with Doug Reed in the Spring while he was a manager at Apple. He chose to skip it and get to the point. What did I want to come over? My requests were pretty reasonable. Pay me what I got as a temp with Apple but make me a PCC employee, thus I would receive health insurance. With a health plan in play, I would use the difference to buy a car. It was a done deal and I’d report to work after Labor Day.

I was so stoked. It didn’t matter how much the rental car was going to cost for the weekend by then. I don’t know when I went by the only VW dealer in town to get a rough idea on the car I own today. But I did take advantage of having a set of wheels to see a movie at Highland 10 (Bordello of Blood starring Dennis Miller as he slid into lameness and obscurity on Fox News) and driving all the way to Lakeline Mall near Cedar Park with Sonia. The only negative vibe I felt was during a conversation with Paul and Helen. Landing the job with PowerComputing was really what I had been trying to achieve at Apple yet phone support had definitely worn thin then (some days, it still does). Joining PCC was like quitting McDonald’s to work for Wendy’s in the computer business and this was the position I should’ve been in three to five years earlier in my life. At 28, I felt behind the curve. No matter, the Silders were still encouraging because the uncertainty was gone (little did we all know, in 1997 with the return of Steve Jobs at Apple). I would also be surprised at how my role would change after a mere several months with PCC.

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Pre-Occupied with Somara’s health right now, other things

Things have slowed a tad with the site due to Somara’s health. It’s nothing super serious or frightening. She had an allergic reaction to the medication the doctor gave her for the main problem. The allergy is more of a nuisance than deadly. To counter the medication’s side effects, Somara has to take Benadryl but then that makes her sleepy.

It should subside by the end of the week.

Meanwhile, our friends the Lowrys are going on vacation for at least a couple of weeks so that means housesitting. When it comes to their house, it’s always a treat because their home is like a resort due to its location, size and most importantly, having fun with their three cats; Tiki, Jack and Angel. At least my job is closer to their place so dropping by at least every other day will not be hard. With the ongoing drought, one of us will need to drop by every day to make sure their collection of plants are watered.

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