Finding My Religion

A recent 88 Rewound on WMBR featured a playlist from May, 1971. I hadn’t heard this song in many years.

Honestly, I’d forgotten how much of an effect the song had on me. Life was changing fast, and I felt extremely unsettled. Six months later, entirely on my own, I started attending a Lutheran church I passed on the way home from my after-school job.

church

So began my religious period. It lasted until I was in my senior year of college.

Some years ago I attended my nephew’s wedding in the Midwest. My sister mentioned to her mother-in-law that she never knew how she and her husband were given permission to marry in the Lutheran church near our parents’ house. They lived out of state, and their church was in a different Synod. My sister’s mother-in-law smirked and said, “I know how.” My sister seemed surprised that, after so many years, this was the first she’d heard of it. “You do? How?” Her mother-in-law looked at me and said, “You were dating the minister’s daughter.” My mother must have told her. The minister’s daughter was Lori, and she got her dad to perform the ceremony.

Lori

First World Futzing

Putin continues his mad destruction of Ukraine, and I can only hope that Trump is collateral damage. Having reaffirmed that he is still Putin’s boy, I don’t know how any American can favor Trump’s return to elected office. But of course many do.

Meanwhile, extreme weather rages a path of destruction across Tornado Alley, and well beyond. People are being killed and, in an instant, families are losing every physical possession. With all of that going on, my trivial concern was… can a piece of home audio equipment be jealous?

The A/V receiver’s Music Server application for UPnP/DLNA is barely acceptable. I needed something better, and I found it with an Android application called Hi-Fi Cast. I think my purchase set a new personal record for the shortest time between trying and buying. The fact it’s only $9 helped.

Thanks to Hi-Fi Cast, I now understand why casting SiriusXM from the phone wasn’t working with the receiver. A feature called Eventing Mode, “for efficient monitoring of the renderer status,” needs to be disabled. None of other casting-capable apps on the phone offer control over Eventing Mode. Once it’s disabled in Hi-Fi Cast, it works with the receiver, without relying upon the Google Home app.

phone screenshot
Hi-Fi Cast screenshot

Hi-Fi Cast takes control of the Music Server renderer in the receiver, as dutifully reflected in Onkyo’s own controller app. Very nice.

screenshot
Onkyo Controller screenshot

Giddy with success, I went upstairs to try Hi-Fi Cast with Chromecast Audio and, uh oh, the screen on the Logitech Squeezebox Touch for LMS (rather than DLNA) looked very wrong. A quick check revealed that not only was it off the network, it thought it didn’t have a network interface. WiFi was completely dead, and cycling power didn’t bring it back. From happiness downstairs, to despair upstairs!

My immediate suspicion was the Touch was mad at me for adding Chromecast Audio to the stereo receiver. The timing was too coincidental. After ten years of loyal service, it was like a child being jealous of a new baby in the house. I sternly informed the Touch that if it didn’t start working again, then Chromecast Audio wouldn’t be supplementing it, but replacing, and the loss of gapless playback wouldn’t stop me!

I took the Touch downstairs, where I could put it on Ethernet. Before doing that I started it up again and confirmed it was still helpless. I warned the Touch it had better behave, or it would find itself back in its original packaging. I plugged in the Ethernet cable and WiFi came on! Everything was working! Ethernet hadn’t even been selected as the network interface, but it too worked when tested. Good boy!

Back it went upstairs. Properly chastened, the Touch further redeemed itself by continuing to work.

Logitech Touch
Logitech Squeezebox Touch and Chromecast Audio

Perhaps the Touch is just trying to tell me it’s sincerely feeling its age, and needs help rather than discipline. With that possibility in mind, I have ordered a WiFi-to-Ethernet adapter.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B018YPWORE

Management Lessons from 2011

Netflix has two movies I watched yesterday, almost back-to-back. What a fascinating contrast these selected scenes provide.

This one is about Major League Baseball.

This one is about Mortgage-Backed Securities.

Brad Pitt, playing the real life Billy Beane, sees the future and is scrambling to get ahead of it. Jeremy Irons, playing a fictional CEO, is doing likewise. In each scene, a whiz kid is called upon to share his insights.