D'oril. Beginning the Journey

D'oril.  Beginning the Journey

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Back from the dead

Okay, time to resurrect this blog...

Expect content soon

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Sorry, nothing about the FAA today...

So I want to be a writer... 

All I have to do is rekindle the fire...

For that, I need some matches.  Or a couple of rocks.  That'd be more my style, bang some rocks together until something creative comes out.  Of course, the neighbors will probably look askance if I sit under the willow tree, bashing fist sized quartz cobbles together.  Might be fun, but I'm going to need a scotch or two.  On the rocks (pun intended...)

As long as I'm banging rocks together, let's see what ideas do come out.  Way back when, I outlined a few storylines to work on, eventually I chose Imperfect Hope to work on first.  I did indeed finish the first draft, printed it out, and promised myself a break before getting back into the grind.  I suppose a year and a half is a long enough break.  I've started rereading IH, taking notes on the storyline, and trying to see how much rewrite, as opposed to revision, it's going to need.

I know I touched on it a bit ago, but right off the bat, I can see my opening is weak.  Not so much the writing, but the concept.  What I'd decided way back when I finished the first draft was that I was starting the story as if the readers were already familiar with the protagonists.  In essence, it was as if I was writing the third installment of a three book series, assuming the reader already had "an investment" in the characters.  So...  I did start writing the new origin of the story, untitled and, as yet, without a firm plotline other than a hope to introduce the main characters (and all the background) to the readers in a more involving manner. 

However...  The storyline needs to be developed before I go any further.  So time to get a brainstorm on...

I need a real gully-buster of a brainstorm.  Filled with thunder and lightning, blizzard conditions, maybe a tornado or two...

Hmmm...

More to come...

Clear skies, (except, perhaps, in the new project...)
Jim

Sunday, September 2, 2012

7 months to go...

Here we are in september already.  Guess I'll start a countdown, 7 months to retirement.  Barring any surprises, my last day as an air traffic controller will be march 31st, next year.  Guess what...  I'll be ready...

It's silly season again, political ads are spewing filth all over the place.  Despite the fact that almost nothing you see or hear from either side tells you anything useful except what a despicable character the opponent is or makes vague, unattainable promises, there are those who believe what they see and hear as "TRUTH".  Bad enough we get it from paid advertisements on television, worse that our "unlisted" phone gets bombarded with "unknown" recorded messages that bark inanities to our answering machine.  (note to any political's reading this, if the number shows up as unknown or blocked, we don't answer, and chances are the message will be deleted seconds into the recording.  (Oh wait, a political reading...  not gonna happen...))

The latest recorded message to hit our phone, played by both sides, is a fake town hall meeting, where you supposedly get to hear a broadcast of a live town meeting, and perhaps if you're lucky and answer the phone, you can ask the candidate a real question.  Except it's baldly plain it's merely another recording.  What's really annoying about this, however, is that it ties up my phone line for several minutes of some nim-null blathering on about bull****.  It's not easy to get them off your line, either, if you pick up the phone and hang it back up, somehow it remains connected, and minutes later, if you try and use your phone, ta-daa, they're still blathering...

Another exceedingly annoying part of this years campaign are the non-stop "status updates" on facebook.  Okay, it's your right to like either candidate.  I'd really rather not have you re-post political propaganda that I have to then go in and block from showing up on my page.  The problem is, in most cases, it's pure party propaganda, the same unsubstantiated rumor/half-truth/lie that is getting broadcast on TV or spewed into the answering machine of my home phone.  If the info being shared were anything other than leftist or rightist propaganda, I might read it.  I won't read/listen to propaganda from either side.  I don't care if you heard that first lady Michelle Obama has a staff of 22, the most of any first lady (and check out snopes.com to debunk that myth), or that Romney didn't pay taxes for more than 10 years, an unnamed source told me so...(really, an unnamed source?  What about the rumor I heard...  Bleah!)   Junior High School students make up better gossip than that...

Oh the joys of being an independent voter in a battleground state....

Clear skies,
Jim

Monday, July 30, 2012

July and still ERAM'min...

Well, we've gotten through 8 weeks of ERAM, the new air traffic control radar display system.  Is it workable?  Yes.  Is it good?  Bits and pieces of it.  Some of the features are an improvement over what we used to use, some are a step backwards in useability.  Overall, it's a wash.  Nice to know the gov't has spent multi-billion dollars on something that works almost as well as the system it's replacing...

Yes, eventually, when they get all the annoyances, glitches, and bugs out, it will be a good system.  However, my work load is increased, right smack in the middle of thunderstorm season, and in an effort to handle the extra workload the new system introduces, we're working more overtime than ever. 

(Insert grumpy old man noises here...)

And that's enough about ERAM...

Back to the original reason for this blog, writing.  As most of you have probably realized, my writing output this last year and a half has been pretty non-existent.  All the usual excuses pop up.  However, that doesn't mean I've forgotten about my ultimate goal, writing.  Waking up the creative process is underway, despite the challenges of extra time at work.  Little writing exercises with a cup of coffee in the morning, perhaps in conjunction with tossing the occasional bran muffin at those blasted squirrels who are starting to take interest in my apples and pears (which should be ripe soon...)  Find the right bran muffin, and I'll give a concussion to one of those tree rats...  ;-)

At any rate, where to start with writing exercises.  Oly the weatherman comes to mind, as does some pre-story for Imperfect Hope.  I'll let you know where I start, soon as I figure it out...

Clear skies,
Jim

Saturday, May 12, 2012

She swallowed the cat...

... To catch the rat...

Eram's coming...  The new FAA en-route air traffic control center radar display is undergoing another 48 hour test, with a new patch to fix the problems they found last week...

Among the current problems, the patch they put in last week to try and fix some of the previously identified problems introduces us to a new bug, in which the altitude conflict probing (a tool used to predict a conflict when you "trial plan" an altitude change works in a way that nobody predicted.  Rather than predict a conflict based on the aircrafts real time position, ERAM backtracks the aircraft to it's previous fix (up to an hour in the past), then assigns the altitude and probes for conflicts from that point.  In otherwords, it's useless to us.  So today, when I get in for an overtime shift, I get a briefing on how to work around this "problem".  (Basically don't use conflict probe when trial planning an altitude). 

But this latest patch did fix the problem of aircraft creating a false conflict with itself in the middle of nowhere.  So, in an effort to fix this problem, they created a new one...

...She swallowed the rat to catch the mouse...

As a result, they're introducing a patch in the middle of next week that will un-fix the random conflict alert problem, but fix the conflict probe problem...

...She swallowed the mouse to catch the spider, that wiggled and jiggled and tickled inside her...

Who knows what the next patch will break.

...She swallowed the spider to catch the fly...

But we're still on track to launch this bottle rocket next weekend, bugs or no bugs...

... I don't know why she swallowed the fly.  Perhaps she'll die...

Next up?  Will the FAA try to keep london bridge from falling down... 

Clear skies,
Jim

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Here we are, thunderstorm season already...

 I'd ask what happened to winter, but I already know. It melted...

So what's happening in the wide world of ATC and writing? Same story, different day. No writing done of late, the FAA has finally succeeded in destroying my creative efforts thru massive fatigue. The FAA continues to grind away, we're testing (read periodic live tests) a new computer/radar display system. Someday, it will be an improvement. Right now, it's... Less than ideal...

Reasons for my initial dislike of the new system: It's buggy. It's awkward. It's a change.

It's buggy...
Two years overdue, and they still find problems that sometime cause aircraft data blocks (the tags we use to identify aircraft) to disappear. We've been briefed on more than a dozen "work arounds" to known problems, issues that range from inconvenient to downright dangerous. However, the political football has been tossed, some highly placed bureaucrats in the department of transportation face embarrassment if the new system isn't implemented NOW! Guess what wins when you put safety against a bureaucrats career...

It's awkward...
The new system was designed by a bunch of bureaucrats and engineers. None of whom had any real experience with air traffic control. Oh, they observed us working, saw how the old system ran, and from that, they designed something essentially from the ground up. As a result, a lot of effort went into features that the bureaucrats thought would be useful, for example, Automatic forwarding of holding delays to the national flow control center for data recording. Old system: Supervisor with a piece of paper writing down delay information and having a flow controller enter a delay report twice a day. New system sounds nice, no? Except, in order for the system to work, the controller working the traffic is now responsible for at least a half dozen data entries per aircraft put into holding that he didn't have to worry about before. I know, six data entries doesn't sound like much, except that in a holding environment, the controller generally is full-on focused on keeping the aircraft away from each other. I really don't want to take my eyes off the scope for even a moment, but soon I'll have to enter holding pattern data that was handled quite nicely by a bored supervisor with a pen and paper... Many other examples exist...

It's a change...
I've had 25 years of working on the current system, even though it's gone through several computer upgrades, the previous improvements left the way I work traffic pretty much unchanged. I know where a weather report is going to appear when I call one up, I know where to look to find the hot button to identify a radar sort box when a problem comes up... (Etc...) The design techs arranged things the way they think it should be, not based on how we think it should be. I really don't need 5 different ways to do one thing, each involving 5 or 6 steps, I want one way to do it in 2 steps. Sure, the techies think it's cool. Controllers don't do cool. We do safe. Over and over. Period.

As you can see, I'm on a bit of a rant. Someday, the new system will be a helpful improvement, when they get all the bugs out, when we streamline our procedures to get back to keeping our eyes on the radar screen. Probably after I retire... In the meantime, with thunderstorms building, it's going to be an ugly summer, because like it or not, we're probably going 24/7 on the new system in one week. See the light in the tunnel? It's not the exit.....

Clear skies, regardless...
Jim

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Somewhere, a snowy, wind-swept plain

Crow: "Is it dead?"
Squirrel: "I dunno, it ain't movin! Whaddya think?"
Crow: "Maybe... They're pretty tricky. Poke it, why doncha"
Squirrel: "I ain't touchin it, it smells terrible! You poke it!"
Crow: (Hops around to the other side of the body) "Uh-uh. They're pretty tricky, might just be playing dead. Why don't you throw your acorn at it?"
Squirrel: "And waste a perfectly good acorn? No way!"
(The hand twitches)
Squirrel: "Aieeeee! I'm out of here, it's alive!"
Crow: "Nah, that's just a reflex. Go ahead, poke it!"
Squirrel: (over his shoulder as he scampers off in search of a tree) "No chance. See ya!"
(The hand twitches again) Crow flies up to the fence post. "Guess I'll wait around and see what happens"

(To be continued...)