Any cross-overs from Jon's Access forum will know me, but for the others:
I'm a retired grandpa from south Louisiana. Though I live in suburban New Orleans, both my parents and my wife's parents were definitely steeped in rural roots. My dad's family was from rural Georgia; mom's folks from rural Alabama. My wife's folks were from Cajun country in the vicinity of (but not from inside the city limits of) Thibadeaux, Louisiana. (Pronounce that one Te'-ba-do.) If any of you have ever seen the TV series Swamp People then you have heard the accents. My wife's grandfather was an alligator hunter.
My career? A bit strange by some standards, but it seemed logical at the time. I got my degrees from New Orleans - a B.S. in Chemistry from L.S.U.N.O. and a Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry from U.N.O., and went to work with a company that automated oil and gas pipelines so one person could monitor and control an entire pipeline. Since my research was in automated experiment control and data gathering, it was a good fit. When the oil industry went bust in 1984, I had to change careers because my dad had passed and mom was in a nursing home, dying the slow and ugly death of Alzheimer's Disease. To stay with mom, I switched to a "pure" computing venue, the U.S. Navy Reserve's Headquarters, which was in New Orleans at the time. I retired 28 1/2 years later from the Navy Enterprise Data Center New Orleans (NEDC NO) as a systems administrator (certified for HP OpenVMS) and with a Security+ certificate.
Now I just do computer games and help my wife with housework. And I play with my grandsons, technically "step-grands" because they are from Linda's first marriage. I also visit a limited number of forums.
Hobbies? Fewer now that I'm older. My knees don't work so well for tennis and that limits me to neighborhood walks where there is no rapid side-to-side movement. I play a lot of first-person and isometric shooters. I still play music for self-entertainment these days. If anyone is curious, my instrument is a Technics F5 console organ. I worked my way through college playing organ with a rock group, mostly on a Bourbon Street barroom stage, but some dance gigs now and then for variety. As a result, though I remained as poor as a church mouse, I had no student loans to pay off.
Not sure what I can contribute here because I haven't seen the flavor of the forum yet, but I'll skim a few articles and see the lay of the land.
As old Justin Wilson, a Cajun philosopher and humorist used to say, "Take care and don't swear; be humble and don't stumble."
I'm a retired grandpa from south Louisiana. Though I live in suburban New Orleans, both my parents and my wife's parents were definitely steeped in rural roots. My dad's family was from rural Georgia; mom's folks from rural Alabama. My wife's folks were from Cajun country in the vicinity of (but not from inside the city limits of) Thibadeaux, Louisiana. (Pronounce that one Te'-ba-do.) If any of you have ever seen the TV series Swamp People then you have heard the accents. My wife's grandfather was an alligator hunter.
My career? A bit strange by some standards, but it seemed logical at the time. I got my degrees from New Orleans - a B.S. in Chemistry from L.S.U.N.O. and a Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry from U.N.O., and went to work with a company that automated oil and gas pipelines so one person could monitor and control an entire pipeline. Since my research was in automated experiment control and data gathering, it was a good fit. When the oil industry went bust in 1984, I had to change careers because my dad had passed and mom was in a nursing home, dying the slow and ugly death of Alzheimer's Disease. To stay with mom, I switched to a "pure" computing venue, the U.S. Navy Reserve's Headquarters, which was in New Orleans at the time. I retired 28 1/2 years later from the Navy Enterprise Data Center New Orleans (NEDC NO) as a systems administrator (certified for HP OpenVMS) and with a Security+ certificate.
Now I just do computer games and help my wife with housework. And I play with my grandsons, technically "step-grands" because they are from Linda's first marriage. I also visit a limited number of forums.
Hobbies? Fewer now that I'm older. My knees don't work so well for tennis and that limits me to neighborhood walks where there is no rapid side-to-side movement. I play a lot of first-person and isometric shooters. I still play music for self-entertainment these days. If anyone is curious, my instrument is a Technics F5 console organ. I worked my way through college playing organ with a rock group, mostly on a Bourbon Street barroom stage, but some dance gigs now and then for variety. As a result, though I remained as poor as a church mouse, I had no student loans to pay off.
Not sure what I can contribute here because I haven't seen the flavor of the forum yet, but I'll skim a few articles and see the lay of the land.
As old Justin Wilson, a Cajun philosopher and humorist used to say, "Take care and don't swear; be humble and don't stumble."