A post a day keeps the mundane away...
A post a day keeps the mundane away...
Today was brutal! Excruciating exhaustion when it started out. But interestingly, I ended up feeling a lot better towards the end of my shift. Which is weird, since I usually, gradually, get more tired the longer I work. But I made it!
Now, for the title of the post: I tried some fried chicken liver! Hated it, not for me, haha!
But I also got to try some banana pudding and pineapple icebox pudding, both were phenomenal!
I’ve also written down a lot of Notes & Thoughts for this weekend. The ideas started coming and didn’t stop coming, so I’m excited for this weekend.
Speaking of this weekend, some exciting things are planned as well. So the next couple of days of work will be rough, but it’ll be a good weekend! (Hopefully.)
For now though, I’ve got to get some rest!
And I posted about it!
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I've also gotten Taco Bell for the first time in months. And I'd like to do a brief review. (Something I'd like to keep consistent moving forward!)
Rating system:Another post from the Chromebook! I love this thing, even though it's just... objectively not good. It was a struggle trying to open .HEIC image files.
Protip: send the files from your iPhone via LocalSend, it'll convert them to .JPGs.
I needed to do this to make a couple of posts. (All socials: Bluesky / Threads / X / Mastodon / Tumblr / Instagram / Pixelfed)
On that note: Happy Mother's Day! Sunday, May 10th. Hope you didn't forget; call your mom.
But the topic of the title is quite an interesting one. A few weeks back, I heard some rumblings that our QA Specialist was switching positions. I was curious, but didn't want to seem invasive by asking. Besides, I'm still the "new guy", so why bother? And not only that, I was sure loads of people were interested in the position anyway, and I didn't want to step on any toes! But as it turns out, internally my supervisors and the QA guy had been talking about getting me to apply. They figured I'd be a good fit! I'm already part of the company, have a good work ethic, mesh well with all (or most, at least) of my coworkers, and love working with computers and data. So I applied! It's being fast-tracked and I'll likely have a meeting with the soon-to-not-be-QA Specialist to see if I'd be as good of a fit as they assumed. Fingers crossed! The bump in pay would be nice, but that's not why I was interested. In this position, I'd be working with a bunch of data every day! Measurements, verifications, calculations... The same thing every day! And boy, I sure love doing the same thing every day! While I'm hopeful, I also shouldn't expect too much since it's a pretty sweet role, and I might not get picked. But that won't stop me from dreaming! Looking forward to the next few days, and seeing where things go. Wish me luck!
Oh, and I'll need to get a notebook ready in case I get the position! There'll be so much for me to learn, and I reckon I'll be writing a lot of SOPs for personal use.
Even though I spent a lot of time listening to podcasts today, there are very few Notes & Thoughts. In fact, just a singular thought!
- On the latest episode of the WAN Show titled "AMD Proving to be Linux Chads AGAIN - WAN Show May 8, 2026", Linus is doubling down on his stance on the Billet Labs situation (which I literally complained about yesterday!) That's the final straw to me, so I unsubscribed after eight years. Perhaps I should revisit LTT as a whole, if Linus' stance changes, but it's been about three years, so I doubt it...
Written at 1778421296.
Fueled by leftover stuffed crust pizza, I'll write another sizable blog post!
It's been an interesting week, so without further ado:
(Or some slight ado: I'm thinking of separating the Notes & Thoughts, and applying labels for either section, or both sections, when applicable. But that's irrelevant for this post, it's more of a future-forward change.)
- WhatPulse 6.2 has been released. I was particularly excited about the new pause toggle, but it doesn't seem to be available on Linux yet unfortunately.
- Ubuntu 26.04 is out now, too! Here is the list of all changes from 25.10. GNOME 50 is the big one!
- Super ZSNES was released, after nearly two decades! Being nostalgic for an emulator is a funny thing, but I'll have to give this one a try!
- The Android Show | I/O Edition will be happening May 12th, and I've already created a calendar event! Curious to see what the "big changes" will be. The main Google I/O event will be happening a week later, May 19th - 20th.
- Google COSMO was briefly released, then pulled. Seems like it was supposed to be an "anticipating" AI assistant.
- Gizmodo's article on the leaked iPhone 4 is an evergreen article worth a read for a nice hit of nostalgia.
- Spotify has released a "Save To Spotify" CLI tool, mainly intended to push your own (AI-generated) audio for personal use. Interesting enough for me to mention it, but I likely won't use it.
- The long-rumored Google FitBit Air was finally released! $99.99, so I'll have to pass, but this has been an "open secret" for a little while now.
- I need to set up a "Work" Focus Mode on iOS. I toggle on/off Sleep Mode when I (don't) want notifications, which is a bit of a hassle. A mode that automatically enables when I'm at work would be way more convenient!
- I can't wait for FEX (or similar translation layer) to get good enough to where we can run Borderlands 2 on Android phones. I'm sure we're almost there, given the rate of progress these past few months! I remember having to play the game on low settings at 630 x 480, just to get a playable 20 FPS. The future is now! (Or soon!)
- I'm excited for the new iPhone Luminance wallpapers, coming soon!
- I had to unsubscribe from the Mobile Tech Podcast, as it made me want phones I couldn't get. 😔
- And talking about emulation, I've been meaning to do some testing for the best cores in RetroArch. The idea of turning my Pi 5 into a retro machine sounds like a blast.
- Blast from the past: instead of using the Pi 5 as a retro emulation machine, what if I used it as a retro machine? A late 90s or early 2000s themed-PC. Linux, XFCE or MATE, using only The Old Net. Sounds fun, I think.
- Playing with the idea of adding a UNIX timestamp to each blog post, at the time of writing. Silly? Maybe. But fun!
- I want to read The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows.
- And I really need to look into PGP & GPG! I'm vaguely aware of them, but not using them (yet). Signing all my posts would be really cool, I think. In a nerdy, sysadmin-y way.
- For nostalgia's sake, I'd love a little desk mantle clock with swinging pendulum. However, they seem really expensive...
- The different designs of the flags of earth are definitely worth a look! My favorite is the One World Flag design by Thomas Mandl
Time for me to get some much-needed rest. Looking forward to trying the new cheeses tomorrow! 🧀
Oh, and I'll be posting some pictures tomorrow, too!
Written at 1778252636.
And goodness gracious, I could use some magic! I'm running on one hour of sleep, so bear with me.
It's been an errand-filled day more than anything. Although I put a sizable dent in the iCloud-Notes-To-Google-Keep migration. I managed to move over all the recipes!
I've also swapped the main PC over from openSUSE Tumbleweed to Fedora. I was having some odd bugs I couldn't recreate. The two main ones being:
- My power buttons would disappear and stop working. I couldn't lock, sleep, turn off, or restart* the machine! The sleep shortcut didn't work, the buttons were missing, and it would happen seemingly at random.
* A sudo systemctl reboot did work, but that led me to rebooting a whole bunch of times, unnecessarily.
- Krunner and the taskbar were slowly but surely becoming way slower. It's instant on Fedora, and I believe it was instant on Tumbleweed at first, too. But it started taking upwards of two seconds just to search for a program. Those seconds really do add up!
It's still being set up, so no screenshots yet, but it's largely the same system and setup.
Something I can show screenshots of, though: my Chromebook! I spent some time organizing my programs, and I like the simplified folder-only layout.
Taskbar on the left! It makes so much sense on ChromeOS. My apps are sorted in the following folders:Writing this blog post on a chilly Sunday while listening to Lunatic Harness. Quite fitting, don't you think?
Most noticeable change: Titles. Shrinking them way down. "But Riley, how will I know when this was posted?" Fear not! Full dates will be displayed below the title, on every post. I'm opting to remove the day, since I've found out that searching the web will tell you what day it was. (No matter the search engine!)I'll try to include the day in the opening sentences moving forward though. Because I do believe it adds useful context.
Today was interesting. I slept a lot, and felt pretty good after waking up! Then played Overcooked on the Nintendo Switch with some old friends of mine. It made me realize how much I've missed our game nights. In a lot of ways, I miss the small town we're from. But the grass is always greener on the other side, and undoubtedly I'd miss "all the nice places" from the city.
More changes ahead, however. I've decided to swap back from TickTick to Google Tasks. I love TickTick, but it's a bit too much for my needs. Sometimes, all you need is a simple hammer, not a whole toolbox. And on that note: Keep Notes. I've set up an extensive labeling system. It's still a work in progress, but I like the granularity it offers. Now I've got to move all my notes from iCloud into Keep. That'll be a chore!
Here's the list, feel free to use it as inspiration:
/ InboxQuick PSA: Mother's Day is next Sunday, May 10th! (In the U.S., at least.)
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I've been exhausted today, but this time it's simply because of a lack of sleep. That's an easy fix! And what's more promising: we found out what's wrong, and we've got solutions. So over the next week and beyond, I should be feeling a lot less tired all the time.
There won't be any Notes & Thoughts today, this is more of a diary-style entry. Spent all day running errands, and nothing too interesting came on my radar.
I'm listening to Selected Ambient Works 85-92 by Aphex Twin, I enjoy revisiting this album every once in a while! Xtal is probably my favorite track on the album, but I also highly enjoy Pulsewidth, Ageispolis, Heliosphan, and Delphium.
While grocery shopping, I saw this beautiful and vibrant display of flowers. For Mother's Day, of course, since that's coming up!I also saw a really cute lemon-themed collection of kitchenware. If only that darned move wasn't coming up, I'd get those kitchen towels and that serving platter. Just imagine the charcuterie boards!It's officially May! I'm looking forward to this month.
Had to call out of work again, my arm's been killing me, and I can't shake this "sick" feeling. But there's hope! In about a week, we'll find out if the changes I've made will have helped.
- Fedora 44 has been released! Update your machines, and enjoy all the goodies.
- Talkie is a 1930s LLM. Or, as they'd call it, a vintage language model. Worth mentioning it's a 13B model. Spiffy!
- Logitech announced the G512 X Gaming Keyboard, notable for its TMR switches. TMR seems to be the trendy new technology! It offers improved precision, lower latency, and better durability compared to Hall Effect sensors. Plus 8K polling and dual-swap beds.
- Changelog News uploaded a new episode after a month of silence! I've missed Adam and Jerod.
- EFF & the Internet Archive have published a book on the vulnerability of digital data. It's called "Vanishing Culture: A Report on Our Fragile Cultural Record" and can be downloaded for free from the Internet Archive. You can also purchase a physical copy, if that's more your style.
- Turns out that inserting a Jump Break cuts off the posts on the homepage, and there's no quick XML fix for that. So the posts from this past week will be cut off. Oops! But it's all part of learning, right?
- I've always been skeptical of Amazon's Send-to-Kindle, but... I might be a convert! I don't have a Kindle yet, but you can use this to send files to the Kindle app on your phone. Previously I was using a comparatively complex setup in Calibre, where I'd run my library as a server, and then download the books from my phone into Apple Books. Which is not particularly useful as a multi-OS admin! Through the Kindle app I can easily read books on my phone and all my devices (Linux, Windows, ChromeOS). Plus, if I ever get an Android device or a Kindle, all my books are a simple download away! And there's cross-platform syncing, oh my.
- I've heard good things about The Empty Man, and I've added it to my Watchlist. I love a good (cosmic) horror!
- And I've been working on my iOS layout. Lock screen and home screen are set up, as are the icon designs. I'm currently working on icon layout and widgets. Pretty tedious, compared to a PC.
- And my attempt at moving over to Firefox has been slow. I want to make sure all my passwords have correct timestamps, which involves finding the "Account Created" email, taking the timestamp, converting it to Epoch Time, and then putting that into a spreadsheet to import into Firefox.
- Plus, I'll have to move my Reading List over to another read-it-later service. Pocket has been shuttered, which is a shame as I genuinely used and enjoyed the service. (And being able to sync with my Kobo was such a nice bonus!) I'm stuck between Instapaper and Raindrop.io. Instapaper is more of a drop-in replacement, while Raindrop.io seems more versatile and powerful. Since I'll have to get used to a new service, I might as well get used to a "more difficult" one at the same time, right?
- The Google Story by David A. Vise came onto my radar, and it's been added to my Reading List.
- I've managed to download all my files from iCloud Drive, and moved them into Google Drive. Another excruciatingly tedious task, as Apple doesn't make it easy to export your files. (In my opinion, anyway.) Dates on folders are incorrect (all timestamped as today), but the files seem fine. When I find the time, I need to comb through my years of accumulated digital cruft, and really sort everything properly.
- The Zen Browser did catch my eye, though. Not only is it available on Linux, there's even a Flatpak on Flathub! It's downloading now, but I may not have any time to test it this weekend, unfortunately.
- We all know Alan Turing, but I never realized how tragic his (short) life was. The Wikipedia page is worth a read. Without his work, I wouldn't be sitting here typing this, so I'm incredibly grateful for everything he's done.
- I'd never heard of IBM's "Quantum Chandelier", but it's a stunning piece of engineering work. You can read more about it on CNET.
- TechDweeb on YouTube has some very interesting videos about retro & handheld gaming. Not sure why he's not shown up in my recommendations yet; he deserves the shout-out!
- Steve Jobs' "Thoughts on Flash" is a lengthy read, but really interesting given how everything has developed since.
- I'd like to try out some different email clients on iOS. The default Mail app doesn't work for my needs, and I've had some issues with the Gmail app. Outlook seems like the obvious choice, but I've heard good things about Spark and Edison, so those might be worth checking out!
A rather lengthy post, with lots of thoughts! But all caught up, for now. I'd like to get my recipes written down and digitized, so that might be tomorrow's project! Goodnight for now. 😴