The Last remnant of My Google Presence is Finally Swept Away

As of 9-September 2019 I have deleted my last Google account. I have not actively used Google services other than ocasuonally an android phone here or there in years. Up until now I kept my original Gmail account in case I need it. That was mainly for nostalgia reasons. I barely ever log into it. I haven’t used it actively in over a decade. After my abrupt stopping use of my Motorola G7 (see my post on that) I finally decided to take the final step in purge my entire Google presence.

Since I have deleted other accounts before the entire process was pretty easy to back up and delete everything. I have absolutely no regrets. More importantly its not even a nuisance (so far) that i don’t have an account. Every so often i want to save a YouTube video for referencing later. Pocket or Trello is great for capturing that stuff so my designer to have functionality google offers is fleeting.

Now all I need to do is nudge M a little bit to finish moving off of her Gmail account. I’m proud that on her own she asked me to set up a new domain name and email address for her somewhere else. We’ve been down this road before so we’ll see if she finishes migrating.

Jacket Firmware Upgrade

I never thought I would talk about the fact that today I updated the firmware on my jacket. Yes you read that correctly I said my jacket had a firmware upgrade. That statement and the specific jacket in particular provides my wife endless amusement in making fun of me for having it.

Years ago I found Ministry of Supply as a kickstarter for some socks. After supporting them I started looking into the company. I noticed they had dress shirts and trowsers as well as socks. The history behind the company sounded interesting and what they offered seemed perfect for me. I bought a shirt and have been buying their stuff ever since.

In 2018 when they announced a kickstarter for a smart jacket I was intrigued. The discount on backing the project was pretty good as well. I ended up supporting the project. I got the jacket last winter. I really like it. I haven’t needed it this season yet until today. Since the girls were at a birthday party I had some time so I finally followed their instructions to update the firmware on the jacket.

What makes this jacket “smart” is it has a heating element throughout the jacket. It pairs with your phone and adjusts the temperature of the jacket depending on your temperature and activity. Initially the smart part of the jacket did not really work. It would simply heat you based on manual adjusting the app. That in and of itself is pretty cool and worked on cold commute days. This firmware upgrade should fix some connectivity problems and allow for true automatic “smart” heating.

An auto adjusting heated jacket is not really a necessity. It is pretty cool. The jacket itself is actually pretty nice. I would like to even get one without the heating stuff in it so I can travel with it. Overall a great buy for me. The firmware upgrade even went off without a hitch. Even if it was probably more complex than most people would have wanted to deal with.

The W Sisters And The Story of The Coaster Hostages

There has been a constant hostage situation unfolding in our house since we moved in. It has involving one or more of our bar coasters. The girls would steal them and hoard them. Then one would get free or be found. Only for us to have another go missing. I am not really sure where they would go all the time. We had limited evidence to conflict any single child. We know they would take them, and then they would turn up. Problem was all of them would never turn up at the same time.

About a week or so ago i thought like they were all finally turning up and then one would be missing. Today I was cleaning out under the couch and found one. When putting them all together I realised that we finally had the complete aet.

The band was finally back together. Just in time. We have house guests coming next week. I think I need to put police protection on these to make sure they stay together for the next week.

The Great No Wallet Experiment

One of the minor advantages to living in England versus the US is the ubiquity of tap to pay. Pretty much anywhere that takes a credit card allows you to use the NFC chip on your credit card or Google/apple pay. The catch has been you can only use it up to £30. After that you need to use the chip and pin. That meant for most day-to-day transactions I was able to use Apple pay on my watch. I kept my belroy slim wallet (pictured) with three credit cards and ID in it along with 20 pounds just in case I needed to spend more than £30.

In late August I read a newsgroup thread talking about how merchant terminals were no longer limiting Apple pay to £30 per transaction. That made sense to me since I bought stuff in the Apple Store for way more than £30 and they didn’t seem to have a limit. What I didn’t realize immediately was I was reading about a change to the banking laws that was coming into effect in mid-September so the terminals were changing their requirements

After September 17 or so there’s no longer a hard limit on how much you can spend with tap to pay. Apple and Google Pay offer 2nd factor authentication already. It’s my face or fingerprint on my phone so there in theory is no additional validation or limit on using my phone or watch to make purchases.

Using a physical card with a NFC chip need to reauthorize with the PIN every hundred pounds or so. This change in theory makes it possible for me to not have to carry a wallet. It also means in theory that using Apple pay is more convenient/better than using an actual physical card.

At the time of writing this it’s been at least two months since this came into effect. Since then i only once had to use a physical card at one merchant. Since this is still an experiment I leave my wallet with an emergency card or two in my bag hidden away. It still also has an emergency £20 note. You know for that rare time I need cash. So far the experiment has been fantastic. Even the one case that i did need my physical card i think the terminal was having issues. Even with the physical card the system had to try twice to make the transaction go through.

Here is to hoping I don’t need to carry a wallet ever again. Well at least in the UK.

The Full English vs Full Irish Breakfast

This post is topical since I have friends visiting for Thanksgiving and we had this discussion about breakfast. Their feedback was simply its all a lot of food.

Previously I have written about my picky eating habits. Specifically my lack of trying new foods until relatively recently.  I wrote “If The 12 Year Old Version of Me Could See Me Now” back in 2012. In that post I talked about how breakfast was transformed from me after I started eating eggs. Since then I have enjoyed going with M for diner breakfast.

When we moved to London we were no longer able to experience a good old-fashioned American diner. Thankfully there were lots of other options for us. I started ordering the full English breakfast. Mainly because it was an option available on most menus when we would go out for breakfast. I enjoyed it. My challenge was there were parts of it and I just didn’t like and would not eat. Mainly the baked beans, tomatoes, or mushrooms. If given the chance I would simply order eggs and some sides. The full English was typically enough if it was the only option.

We went to Ireland for a holiday in May. I was intrigued between the differences of the full English versus the full Irish breakfast. I was surprised to realize there were some distinct differences between them. Our first morning in Ireland I tried out my first full Irish. Instead of beans, tomatoes, mushrooms they added black pudding, white pudding and bacon. Since coming to England I have tried and liked the black pudding. I had never tried the white pudding,  however I give it a go. It turned out to be pretty good.

In the end the substitutions between the full English and the full Irish made it so I would eat the entire meal of a full Irish breakfast. I am going to say that is a good thing. Depending on how you look at it it could be a bad thing since probably not healthy for you. Every day of our trip I had one. Like the perfect lobster roll or piece of chocolate cake I am now on a mission to find the perfect full Irish breakfast. The catch is always even if I have the best one I’ve ever had a better one could still be out there so I have to keep trying…

I will still eat the full English. It just pales in comparison (for me) to its Irish cousin.

Too Many Choices, What Lounge to Choose?

Since our move to London we have been flying more. We are taking advantage of our location to see Europe on our holidays. With this travel we have been using one of the credit card perks we have, airport lounge access. With MC and my American Express cards we can each get into Priority Pass lounges and take 2 guests. That means the entire family can get in a lounge without any extra cost beyond what we paid for the annual fee on the card. This benefit alone this year justified the annual fee. The way i calculated that was since we need to get to the airport early for flights especially with the girls. We would get lunch. Lunch was costing us £40-60 pounds. Since we can get food at the lounges i calculated each visit to a lounge to be worth that amount to us. By adding up all the times we used the lounges it works out to be a worthwhile perk.

Before our trip to New York for our summer holiday we debated what airport lounge we should goto. We were flying Virgin out of Terminal 3 at Heathrow. We had flown Virgin in June for our quick trip to NY. That meant we had already gone to a lounge in Terminal 3. We did not know if we should return to the Aspire lounge or somewhere new. In this case the No1 Lounge was our other option.

The girls are now old enough to start providing their opinion on subjects like this. Their opinion was they liked the lounge in Gatwick the best. That feedback was helpful however not in the context of where to go for this trip. That simply meant that anywhere we went in Heathrow would not meet their expectations! M was trying to remember if she liked the Aspire Lounge in Heathrow Terminal 3 or not. I liked it. They had the best breakfast buffet of a lounge we have gone to so far. What won me over, eggs and proper sausages in a buffet.

I had been to the No1 Lounge before. It was when i was by myself for work. I did not stay very long. The wait seemed long at the time so I had a drink and left. It looked nice though.

After more discussion than was likely necessary on the topic we settled for the No1 Lounge. We were curious.

The place was crowded. At first it looked like the lounge would be a total bust. M and I both were asking staff if there was anywhere to sit. Finally someone suggested we sit in the movie room. So we did. It was a nice sized room with chairs that had trays on them to eat off of. They were playing Despicable Me 3 or something. The girls loved it. M and I were happy since at first there was no one in the movie room. It was quiet. We ordered our food. The food came pretty quick. I liked my sandwich. The buffet was pretty good. Overall a huge win. Since they have since asked if they were going back there I think they have a new favorite lounge.

I am glad this is the biggest debate we are having:)

W Sisters Short on The Dance Party

The day of T’s birthday party the girls finished breakfast early. They were happily playing with lego on the floor of the kitchen. It was pretty picturesque setup for me. I was reading something on my iPad and drinking my coffee while sitting at the kitchen table. I had the garden doors open for a breeze. It was quite lovely.

I had a playlist from Spotify going on the Amazon TAP we have in the kitchen. The girls were generally just oblivious to the music and building away. Then the song “Thats What I Like” from Flow Rida came on. Back in NY the girls used to warm up to it in Gymnastics class. They always liked that song. I heard it come on and casually glanced over to them. As if reading my mind they looked at me for a second. Then they stood up without saying a word to each other and began to dance to the song.
I could not stop laughing at how spontaneous the whole thing was.

On Holiday

It is half term break. The girls are off school. I took off the week and my mom and youngest niece are visiting.

Hopefully this week’s visit will inspire me to have a story or two. It just wont be posted this week.

I will resume posting stuff I have in my backlog next week. My goal is to have one to two posts each week.  Until then…

W Sisters Short: A on Distracting Me

I was sitting on our big red easy chair in our living room. It is a comfy spot to relax. I think the whole family likes haning out there. I must have been reading on my iPad and A comes over to me. She puts my hand on her cheek like i am cupping her face. She does that sometimes. I really do not know why however i think its cute so i dont ask questions. She then has me squeeze her cheeks. Then A announces that she did that to distract me from tickling her belly.

Well played A. Well played indeed

The State of My Private Cloud in 2019

I have been maintaining my private cloud network powered by Resilio Sync for a few years now. I have talked about it before. See this search for all those posts. When I built the original version of my private cloud the intentions were for it to provide a 321 backup solution for my stuff. The effort involved in maintaining the system turned out to be more time involvement than I would like. Overall even with more work than i thought it still has been largely a success for me.

At the time when I built the network my intention was to use Raspberry PI’s as my remote nodes. As my use of the system evolved that stopped being a viable solution. One of my first Raspberry Pi remote nodes had to be replaced. The drive i deployed just wasn’t big enough. That wasn’t a Pi specific issue. The next thing that happened was I ran into significant challenges around the amount of memory available on the a Pi II. Resilio would crash the Raspberry Pi. The reason was the app would consume all of the available memory until the OS froze. I had the same challenge on my Synology disk station at one point. That was fixable with a $15 4 gig memory upgrade. I was not able to do anything like that with the raspberry pi II.

To work around the limitations of the Raspberry Pi 2 was that I bought more powerful and thus more expensive computers. The two remote machines that I had running were fanless zotac z-boxes. They were great. The only downside was the cost that was significantly more than a pi. I bought a low-end Celeron version of the Zotac for around $150 plus memory and drives. The costs were about 4 times as much as a similar Pi 2 setup. At the time I had no good alternatives.

Then someone at work put me onto buying a Hardkernel ODROID-HC1 that was designed as a personal cloud type machine. It came with a case to put an internal hard drive in. The beauty of these machines were they had two gigs of memory and were not that much more expensive than a Pi 2 at around $50. I think I maybe spent $70 including memory card etc, not counting the hard drive. The hard drive was an internal one so cost to get one was cheaper than using an external one for the PI.

I purchased two ODROID’s within a year. One was at a friends house. The other was replicating data at home. I had problems with what I think was corruption of the OS on the SD card on both machines. The remote host had to be rebuilt twice. By the 3rd time it had a problem I gave up. I just didn’t want to spend the time troubleshooting it. I’m not sure why they continued to get corrupted. I still have one of them at home that has been pretty stable this year. I gave the remote one to my friend who hosted it for me. He was going to see if he could use it for something. The ODROID was a good idea however it did not turn into a long-term solution for me.

When I first started this private cloud project the public or consumer file storage services did not really offer zero knowledge encryption. The only service at the time that was financially viable for me to use was MEGA. I tried that out and it wasn’t seamless for me so I abandon a public cloud solution. I went with my private cloud. Today there are a few service providers that cater to people looking for zero knowledge encryption for remote storage. There still aren’t a lot of them however I was glad to see the landscape had evolved since I started this project.

I’m not sure what triggered my research into public clouds again. I started looking at what the cost benefit would be to go with a zero knowledge encryption public cloud provider instead of continuing to build my own network over last summer. I found a provider I liked, Tresorit. They ticked all the boxes for me on what I was looking for. The challenge was for 2 TB monthly cost over £20 a month. There only cheaper solution was not enough space for my needs.

When calculating the lifecycle of the hardware I buy for my own private cloud network versus the service costs of the provider it’s probably cheaper to keep doing it myself. Originally that was not true. From when I started this investigation in moving to a service provider until today there was a change in what kit was availible. The Raspberry Pi 4 came out. Having a need to replace the ODROID and possibly one Zotac at a minimum in the next 3 years would have been several hundred pounds. The Pi 4 was clocks in for the 4gig model at around £60 for the computer and all the accessories I needed minus a hard drive. I am recycling a hard drive so there is no additional cost there. When they announced the latest pi4 I immediately put in order for one of the 4gb models. My hopes were that it would perform well enough to use in my private cloud network. On paper it solves the memory usage issue of the Pi 2 & 3.

At the time of writing this I have had my first Pi 4 running in “production” for almost 3 months. The software has been pretty stable. I am running it within a docker container on a Pi 4. So far the system is consuming way less than 50% of memory. Ussually somewhere between 1 to 1.5 gig. One of the other clean up things i did was consolidate the many shares I had into 5 total shares. The Pi replicates 4 of them.

With the extra space i have on a remote node can also take local copies of the replicated data on that remote machine. That should complete my 321 backup strategy. Since I want to add extra resiliency into my plan I will continue to take annual point in time offline copies of most of my data.

Since I am reusing hard drives right now (i over bought on size I needed on the last upgrade and the drives are great) that means i can get another Pi 4 for £60 pounds and have a refreshed pair of remote nodes. I continue to use my Synology, my laptop, and a Linux server for the other nodes at home.

My costs this year are on target to be £60-£120. That is half the price of one year of cloud storage service. The new machines should give me 2 to 3 years of service easily. Especially since I’m deploying them with 5 TB drives and I’m only using about 1.3 TB for what I’m backing up today.

I am pleased that the build my own system is cheaper and continuing to work out vs the public cloud option. As long as maintaining the system is not a lot of trouble I picked the right option.