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  • Stupid Murv Tricks…

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    I’m not a huge fan of chocolate.

    I don’t hate it, but it’s not my first choice when it comes to candy and desserts. But then, I’m not much of a sweets guy anyway. Licorice, now that’s one thing… And I mean LICORICE… Well, what I’m able to get my hands on, anyway. I’ve never had any of the really good imported stuff.

    But we definitely aren’t talking about that red stuff that kids think is licorice.

    And there are certain pies I like.

    And certain cakes.

    But I really have to be in the right mood. At any rate, faced with a choice between chocolate whatever and a slice of Lemon Chess Pie, I’d go for the Lemon Chess Pie. Faced with a choice between a slice of Lemon Chess Pie and a piece of Fried Chicken, I’d go for the Fried Chicken…

    I know, how can a fat guy not be into sweets. Dunno. Just one of those things. But, that’s not really what this blog is about.

    When I worked as an electronics technician, I absolutely loved things with moving parts. Why? Because items with moving parts are wayyyyy more likely to break down. Friction, wear, deterioration of plastics and polymer gears, belts, etc. It was guaranteed money. After all, as a tech your job is to fix things. If they weren’t breaking then you were out of a job. It also didn’t hurt at all that I’m mechanically inclined. I can look at a mess of gears, sprockets, belts, motors, solenoids, and the like, and pretty much tell you what drives what, in which direction, how fast, and the reason.

    However, this blog isn’t about moving parts either…

    It’s actually about a USB device. Universal Serial Bus,  in case you aren’t familiar with the acronym. The device in question – that being a flash drive, also called a thumb drive, memory stick, and several other names – has no moving parts. It’s a lovely little piece of circuitry that contains something called NVRAM. Non-Volatile Random Access Memory. Basically, that means that even without power applied it remembers what you told it. And, you can tell it to forget that and remember something else. Or, remember the first thing AND something else… I all depends on how much capacity your flash drive has.

    So why all this fuss about USB flash drives?

    Well, as an author who happens to be a former electronics tech, I don’t trust computers. They break. I know this. It’s how I made a living… While I specialized in printers, computers have moving parts too. Hard Drives, fans, and the like. Plus, they think they are smarter than us, and on occasion decide to prove it. Mine threw one of these fits back when I was writing my third novel. I was nearing the end of a marathon writing session – back then they all were, because I still had the “day job” and could only write on weekends. During this particular session I had hammered out close to three chapters of Perfect Trust. I blinked. The screen flickered. Then it turned blue. Then silly words about exception errors and the like popped up.

    Apparently my computer had taken exception with something I had written, and in retaliation it crashed. But not only did it crash, it corrupted my saved files, as well as my autorecovery file. Yeah. I lost it all, except for the backup I had made the previous week.

    After that painful incident, I began backing up more often – like every few pages or so. Not just saving. Saving in multiple places.  And, a copy goes with me. For years the copy was either on a 3.5 inch diskette or a CD-ROM.

    Then I got my first USB Flash Drive.

    Small. Compact. Bunches of memory. A place to store all sorts of stuff. And, it fit right in my pocket. This was what I had been looking for. A simple way to carry all of my manuscripts and notes around with me, just in case of a catastrophic failure of my system at home, my notebook computer exploding, and my other backups being corrupt. Basically, it was another layer of redundancy that made me feel better about my redundancy. Know what I mean? Of course, it didn’t account for a CMF – that being a Catastrophic Murv Failure.

    Well… It was unseasonably warm that year at PUF.

    Yeah… I know… It looks like I just changed subjects again, but keep reading…

    I had a workshop to do prior to jumping in the van and heading into town for dinner with some friends who lived nearby. Normally I don’t leave events for that sort of thing, but this was a special case and The Big Kahuna was all good with it. Unfortunately, the person using the seminar venue ahead of me ran over with her workshop. Not a big deal, really, except that what ran over was not the workshop itself, but 30 minutes worth of cleanup. I’m not exactly sure what she had been teaching, but she had all manner of props, etc, that she had to pack up and move out before my class could sit down and listen to me ramble. Among the props were 4,897,236 Hershey’s Kisses.

    Don’t ask me. Like I said, I haven’t a clue what she was teaching…

    At any rate, as a gesture of apology, good will, don’t kill me, or something on that order, she walked over and thrust a handful of these chocolate bombs at me. I tried to politely decline, not being a big chocolate fan, but she insisted that perhaps the o-spring might want them. Conceding, I took the foil wrapped confections from her, and that was when the initial failure began. A failure that would soon cascade into a full blown CMF.

    What was the failure, you ask? Simple… I stuffed the Hershey’s Kisses into my pocket.

    Yes. I know. Stupid. Why do you think the title of this blog entry is Stupid Murv Tricks? Don’t worry. It gets “stupider”…

    So, anyone who has seen me present a workshop knows that I’m not a “calm” sort of speaker. I’m more along the lines of Morris Massey without the leisure suit (yes, my videos are OLD). If you’ve never seen one of his motivational  / training videos, then the simplest explanation I can give you is that I’m all over the stage. I run, jump, wave my arms, yell, talk, laugh, dance, and generally have a good time. Presenting should be fun. Attending a presentation should be fun. See the correlation?

    Anywho, and hour or so later, after generating an enormous amount of fat guy body heat, in the unseasonably warm afternoon, presenting a workshop in an outdoor pavilion, there I was, riding along in the passenger seat of the Evil Mobile as we headed out for the dinner. Johnathan Mentos and Dorothy Morrison were in the back with the O-spring, and E K was behind the wheel, as usual. We were chit chatting, comparing notes and generally “debriefing” as we tend to do post seminar, when suddenly everything turned blue.

    Well… not really. But it sure seemed that way, for you see a random snippet of information shot through my forebrain. It took the form of a complex mathematical equation involving the integrity of foil wrapping, ambient temperatures, elevated body temperatures, proximity to such, and the melting point of Hershey’s Chocolate Kisses. All of that was divided by the variable, USB Drive In Pocket.

    Unfortunately, my math co-processor experienced a glitch, and instead of completing the equation, spawned a virulent sub-routine from my overall operating system.

    My mouth engaged, suddenly announcing, “OH SHIT!”

    At the same instant, the snippet of faulty op-system code triggered my motor reflexes and blocked all Logic Services from my brain. My arm flew up, then immediately down as I slapped my palm against my pocket. Apparently the subroutine wanted to know if the Hershey’s Kisses were still there.

    Unfortunately, they weren’t. In their place was Hershey’s Chocolate Syrup. Prior to the catastrophic failure it had been nestled precariously within the confines of the ultra-thin foil wrapping.

    Not anymore…

    In the end, the USB drive survived, although it seemed a little touch and go there for a bit. To this day it sort of smells like a toll house cookie…

    But the thing is, I’m not a huge fan of chocolate…

    More to come…

    Murv

    • Oh, noooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo. Being dependent on one of those little doolies myself to shlepp around my lectures, I can empathize with you at the thought of chocolatizing it. I would have a heart attack! Quite a thigh-slapper there, Murv. 😉

    • One good thing about putting chocolates in your pocket in unseasonably warm weather and having them melt – with or without being nestled nest to a flash drive – you are very unlikely to repeat the same action ever again.

      And, if you are in the proper company, someone you like might just offer to lick the chocolate off of you and your clothes. Of course, that probably wouldn’t help a chocolate-covered thumb drive…

    • There is an old joke about Satan and Jesus having a competition writing code with God refereeing, Satan is keeping up with Jesus totally, so God decides to throw a monkey wrench into things and kills the power, an anguished cry comes from Satan as the power comes back on and his data is gone, Jesus just keeps on coding, God knew his little trick would favor his Oldest Son, why? Because Jesus Saves. Thank you, I’m here all week.

    • I know a writer, who, going back from work to home, did not want to save her book on her work computer (she’s and English teacher, so writing at work is legit) – and she didnt have a redundancy plan. the ONLY PLACE she has stored her book was on her thumb drive. and got home and….nothing was on her thumb drive. When a thumb drive crashes, its lost. I save- on my home computer- both in the word processor and on my desktop-and I e-mail myself, so its stored in the great ether somewhere. I have an artist friend who has two external drives and he keeps one in a safety deposit box and switches them out every six months, becuase he has documented all of his work, and never wants to lose proof of any of this.

      • I can relate. Not only do I store to a flash, I store to 2 flashes. And those are my backups in the event that the original copy on the hard drive AND the redundant copy on the external drive both fail.

        All of my finished manuscripts (and other important data) are archived on CD ROMs and in a fireproof safe. Of course, once they are finished there are plenty of other copies in the hands of my editor, advance readers, etc as well…

    • Some of those thumb drives are crazy tough! I ran mine through the washing machine once and it worked great after some drying. I couldn’t believe it. A friend of mine lost his… It fell out of his pocket one winters day and he found it the next spring… Cleaned it up, popped it in his computer, it worked great!!
      I love thumb drives and they are only getting bigger.

    • Remember floppy discs, which we thought were so cool at the time? I really need to get ones with more storeage, as well. Apparently 2 gigs isn’t enough for me anymore.

    • OK I don’t go back that far. LOL!
      But it’s amazing to think my IPod holds more now than some computers did.

    • Hubby’s First computer for work had something like 250 k of memory used both 3.5 and 5 1/4 floppies, and was state of the art when the bought it. Ran on DOS, it was the goofiest thing he still had it up till about 5 years ago, I think he used it as a giant paper weight LOL . He finally had the hard drive thing destroyed (lawyer old legal files etc.) so that he could dump it.

      How times have changed.

      Chocolate and electronics rarely go good together, now Australian licorice (I here) is awesome.

    • Murv will tell you, and Celeste could too, I suppose, that the first computer I had, which came from her ex, and I think Murv had a hand in building, we thought was quite remarkable because it had a 10 MB HD. Two actually, but the HD controller could only handle one, so the other just sat there. This was in like 1985. The growth of memory is nothing short of mind blowing. One wonders where it will end (or if). Regarding chocolate covered flash drives: sounds like a robot snack. As for saving, I don’t keep too many redundant copies, but I am uploading my current project to my iDisk so that it will be available to me at home or on the road. Subsequently, my latest revision is online and on whatever computer I was last using, and the previous revision is on the other computer. Whenever I finish anything I copy it to my 1 TB external HD.

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