The second half of my NaNoDrawMo 2012 doodles. This includes my first attempt at doing a realistic drawing in almost 9 years. I probably should just stick to lettering.
The NaNoDrawMo[ref]NaNoDrawMo is inspired by NaNoWriMo (“National Novel Writing Month”), but “National Novel Drawing Month” doesn’t make sense. Many people have instead backronymed it to mean “National November Drawing Month”, but that’s redundant.[/ref] challenge asks for 50 drawings in 30 days. Fortunately for me, the only requirement is quantity, not quality.
My original plan was to do 50 tiny drawings using the Pilot Hi-Tec C pen on a single side of 8.5″×11″ paper, but I decided that I wasn’t up to that challenge. I instead chose to use two sheets of paper with 25 pencil drawings on each.
Here’s my progress at the midway point:
Earlier this year, I switched my mom from a Sprint plan to a Page Plus prepaid plan. She’s the type who uses an average of about 20 minutes per month on her cell phone, which was a waste of the $30/month that I was paying for her line. Switching her to a prepaid plan seemed like an obvious choice, but even then, most prepaid plans don’t fit well to such limited usage. Typical prepaid plans ask for tens of dollars per month for hundreds of minutes that expire after 30 days. Not a huge improvement.
(That’s not to say that my mom doesn’t spend a lot of time using a phone. However, we have unreliable cell phone reception in our house, so she normally uses a landline. The landline is cheap since we get service through Ooma.)
Page Plus is a prepaid MVNO, a virtual carrier that resells airtime from another one (in Page Plus’s case, Verizon). Unlike the prepaid plans from every other provider, Page Plus’s minutes last for 120 days, and the minimum purchase is $10 for 100 minutes. This means that I now can pay about $30 per year instead of per month.
It’s been about 8 months since I switched her, and so far she’s been on track.
I was satisfied enough with Page Plus that a couple of months ago, I decided to switch myself, and I bought a contractless, unused Verizon Palm Pre 2 for cheap. I too use very few voice minutes, and over the past year, I’ve used an average of about 100 MB of data per month, peaking at about 200 MB in a month. Page Plus doesn’t have good data plans, however: their standard pay-as-you-go plan charges a whopping $0.99/MB, and their cheapest monthly plan ($12) includes a meager 10 MB. However, overages on their monthly plans cost $0.20/MB, so my average usage should cost about $32/month, still significantly cheaper than the $60/month that I was paying Sprint (normally $70/month without the VMware discount).
I figure that I can cut back on the data usage and use WiFi most of the time to bring that down to $22/month. (Thank goodness for webOS patches that allow me to turn 3G data usage on and off easily.) Discouraging me from checking email constantly is probably a good thing anyway. The biggest thing that I’ll miss is Sprint Navigation; the webOS app was implemented pretty well, and it was handy to have GPS navigation readily available with up-to-date maps. Unfortunately there’s no good offline GPS navigation software (or even online, carrier-agnostic software). I’ll also miss the Sprint Airave femtocell (from Chelmsford!) that I got only a few months ago. Verizon’s coverage seems better, but it still seems unreliable where I live.
(And yes, this means that we’re back on the Verizon network without having to deal with Verizon.)
Other notes:
Some crappy watercolor paintings that I made in 1998 for an introductory watercolor class. Derived from photographs from magazines.
The instructor noticed that I seemed to have some fascination with painting mountains. Maybe that was due to all the Joy of Painting episodes I watched as a kid.
I started drawing again a few months ago, this time using ink and no pencil, which is mostly new and unusual for me. A significant motivating factor probably was my usual, futile desire to eventually become good enough to impress someone who likely would never care anyway.
Done with a Pilot G-2 0.5mm gel pen. (I hadn’t yet acquired the impressive Pilot Hi-Tec-C pen that I kept reading about from various Kickstarter projects.)
I’m releasing dropt 1.1.0 today.
dropt is a C library for parsing command-line options. Yes, there are a lot of existing ones already, but I wasn’t satisfied with those that I had come across:
A few weeks ago, one of my coworkers complained about doing maintenance on a project that he had moved away from. I told him that authoring code is like having a child: you can’t say you’re tired of it and abandon it. If you brought it into this world, you should take some responsibility for it. If you’re not prepared to do that, don’t have that baby.
I was joking, of course, but perhaps it’s not a completely ridiculous comparison (although I suspect that my friends who are actual parents might disagree).
Today marks my eight year anniversary at VMware. For those past 8 years, I’ve spent 40 hours per week (well, probably more) developing VMware Workstation, watching it grow and trying to imbue it with whatever knowledge I have. A number of people tell me that I’ve been at VMware for too long and should move on, but I’m not ready to let go yet.