Dear FutureMe,
Today would be a good day to do a quarterly inventory.
How is your personal life going?
How is your work life going?
How is your Volunteer Service life going?
Future Me
Personal Life
Financial Milestone
On Thursday, September 25, I paid off my mortgage. That is to say, I’d asked my mortgage holder, Rocket Mortgage, to send me a payoff letter for the 25th, and I took it to my banker, who wired the money over.
I’d been on an aggressive payoff schedule, so from now on, I won’t be out that $2,000 per month. Hallelujah!
Nextcloud feature add
By default, Nextcloud does not include file indexing, so there is no file content search. I was pretty sure that during a volunteer service planning meeting that I had written down notes of who was going to be doing certain tasks, but I could not find the file with those notes. I added Elasticsearch to my Nextcloud server and configured a Full Text Search – Files app to use Elasticsearch. Later I might add tesseract-ocr and scan images too.
This quarter was really shitty, politics-wise.
Second, on the morning of August 27, 2025, Robin (Robert) Westman murdered two children and injured twenty-one at the Church of the Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis, Minnesota. It disappeared from the news quickly.
First (but we wouldn’t hear about it until later), Iryna Zarutska was killed in a way that exposed just how broken the government is.
Iryna’s murder also exposed just how much the government has put the mass media on a leash. She was murdered on August 22, 2025, but for seventeen days, the mass media didn’t report anything, until the horrific video of her murder circulated on social media. Her murder didn’t fit the government narrative, so there was a news blackout. Then, when social media exposure forced their hand, several mass media organizations reported not on the murder or murderer, but rather that MAGA had its panties in a twist about a white girl being murdered.
Third, Charlie Kirk was assassinated. Again, the mass media response has been contemptible. As I said before, Wikipedia couldn’t remove Mr. Kirk’s assassination from their front page fast enough. They had Robert Redford’s death of natural causes on their “In The News” page for twelve days, while Charlie Kirk’s assassination was up for five days. Over on Reddit, the woke folk are demonstrating just how hypocritical they are and that they don’t mind telling lies to support their position.
Fourth, the news broke about 22-year-old Logan Federico who was executed by 30 year-old Alexander Dickey: he dragged her from bed, forced her to her knees, and executed her. He then went on a spending spree with her credit cards. Alexander Dickey had been arrested 39 times with 25 felonies. The murder was committed in May 2025, but the fact that the murder is only getting news attention now exposes how news media downplays stories that don’t fit their narrative.
Congressmen Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna have a bill waiting for one more signatory that will force every member of Congress to go on the record about whether they want to expose who the child rapist customers of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell are. The Republicans in Congress are fighting this as hard as they can, which is reprehensible. My congressman, Vince Fong, through inaction1 is showing that he also wishes to protect the child rapists.
Caffeinated Kool-Aid
I’m on the fence with this.
On the one hand, inflation is still terrible, and my caffeine fix became so overpriced that I quit. Coffee is fine, but during the summer months, I’d rather drink something cold. Iced coffee is fine, but I’m not getting much caffeine (but plenty of ice, which takes a while to melt). I got the thought of going to a “Dollar Store” and indeed they do have G-Fuel energy drinks at $1.25. That is still expensive, but it isn’t ridiculously expensive. I considered ordering the cans online. The G-Fuel website wants far too much money for the cans; but … what they really want to sell me is powder. This makes sense: water is costly to ship, and every household has running water.
And I do like the idea of multiple flavors. So I placed an order online. The flavors I got were lingonberry, raspberry lemonade, blackberry apple, strawberry citrus, watermelon mint, and blueberry lemonade.
In theory, one tub of powder can make 40 servings. There was a sale, so each tub was $18. That’s 45 cents per serving, which is great. Even if their shaker bottle is holding two servings, that’s still 90 cents, and 24 ounces of drink instead of 16.
Although I’m not really a fan of Sucralose, I do like “sweet” with no calories. The powders come with caffeine, vitamins C, E, B12, and B6, and some have niacinamide (vitamin B3).
On the other hand, as a brand-new, never-before-ordered, first-impressions-matter customer, at the end of the order, their website popped up an offer: would you like to add some hydration packets?
I foolishly said yes.
They ripped me off big time.
This is how you treat new customers?
Yeah, I no longer want to order products from you anymore.
I still have plenty of the caffeinated zero-calorie Kool-Aid type powder on hand. I do like the flavors and energy lift it gives me. But I’m sore that they chose to rip me off. Did they really think I’m such a chump that I wouldn’t notice?
Music Player Demon
I currently have a Raspberry Pi as my MPD server, and three clients. The script I wrote to populate the list isn’t nearly what I want it to be, but it runs without me having to deal with it. Two of the clients are full blown Fedora 42 KDE Plasma Edition workstations, so I have the Cantata program on them and can mess with the songs in the list all I want manually. I do enjoy having background music all the time, and once per hour a voice announcing, “The time is nn AM” (or PM).
Supercuts Subscription
The last haircut I got from a barber who rents a chair in a barbershop was $35. It was a low quality haircut, and the guy rushed the job. Then a friend of mine told me about Supercuts having a subscription service, which is a good deal. The Supercuts hair cutters / barbers don’t rent a chair; they get paid hourly whether there are customers or not. They get minimum wage, which is $16.50 per hour at the time of this writing.
In Walnut, California, Moxie Management Group “… is a franchise of Supercuts with 78 locations in California.” They offer a subscription service of $22 per month for as many haircuts as you want, plus $10 per month to include beards. So for $32 per month plus tip, I can get a haircut every week? Versus $35 per <whenever> including tip?
The math turns out to be about the same, except that on the all-I-want program, I’m going to the barber 52 times a year instead of 26. That’s a win for me.
Work Life
In previous Quarterly Inventories, I’d say something like, “If $18,000 fell out of the sky and into my lap, I would retire tomorrow.” Well, that dollar amount was based on how much of my mortgage I had left.
Today that is now zero. 🙂
I did drain my cash-on-hand pretty low to get the mortgage to zero. My financial advisor had told me that she wanted me to have $25,000 in the bank on the day I retire. I’m hoping to retire on 2026-07-19, but I don’t know if I’ll be there by then.
It does make my attitude toward work a little better, though. If Microsoft cannot figure out how to get Copilot to properly form a PowerShell to do text matching, that RSN2 will be Not My Problem.
Volunteer Service Life
Ringtones
Heh. At one of my meetings, I signed up to be the timer. We tell people they get to speak for three minutes, and here’s what the time expired warning sounds like: <I play the alarm ringtone>.3 Fun for me is to buy an MP3, take a snippet of it with Audacity, turn it into a ringtone file, and sync it to my phone. The more popular / recognizable the song, the more people laugh or smile. You could call it a variation on the game Name That Tune.
A friend said I should use Run DMC’s “You Talk Too Much,” but that seems a little too harsh to me.
But it is fun each week to come up with a new soundbite.
The Events Calendar
Sugar Calendar is no good. We bought The Events Calendar, and now I need to migrate everything to it.
- Isaac Asimov wrote the Three Laws of Robotics, and Number One is “A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.” Vince Fong is fine with inaction because he thinks doing nothing will let him off the hook. This is an incorrect assumption on his part. ↩︎
- Real Soon Now, popularized by BYTE magazine columnist Jerry Pournelle about when Microsoft would ship a product or update. It generally means any time period from two weeks to four years. ↩︎
- I set the timer for 3:30, because many a time, three minutes exact isn’t quite enough. ↩︎