An Ideal Set-Up

An Ideal Set-Up

It’s been four years, almost five, since I first looked at the ideal set-up for my work. Within the structure of the work itself, a couple of shifts, not to mention the big life-changing, world-shaking events with a common cold virus that is spreading out of control, yeah, not going to mention that influence.

This particular iPad is now five years old, one of the original 12.9-inch models. It’s been through a series of keyboards, but the latest is merely a re-purposed Apple “magic” keyboard from a desktop model, the keyboard itself wrapped in a canvas cover that unfolds to make a stand, and paired with that older iPad? Works, works well. Only has wifi, the iPad, and there was a series of events of that led me this way.

The original Apple Macintosh (only) astrology software I used was a complete suite of calculations. In the end, when the store shuttered, I had over 20K in astrology charts, and those were only the ones I kept on file. There were countless others, in a career that spanned almost the same amount of time.

The difference is I updated. Part of this is from a peak of “every weekend on, no weekends off” spent traveling, working, plying my craft across the state, sure some of it is from that. Started on a laptop but times being what they are? In the previous years, I shifted towards just using an iPad for work.

One of my old Austin buddies, “S’up dude,” watched as I scrolled through a phone full of music, looking for a some verifiable punk music. Had to prove my worth. He commented on the size of the type and, although I can cast a chart on my phone? Without cheaters, it’s too hard to really read the details.

An Ideal Set-Up

I like the iPhone/iWatch combination. I use it for health monitoring, as much as anything, and the watch’s timer has proven to be effective for meditation and steeping coffee. Some days, depends, I might answer a text on the watch, as well. On rare occasions, I’ve even answered a call on the watch.

But the purpose of this of this exercise is to start thinking about moving forward, what will work, and that’s based upon what has worked. I doubt I’ll be reading an astrology chart on my i-Watch.

Looks like, eventually, I’ll be working San Antonio and Austin again. My guess is September/October for the earliest date, and even then, I’m unsure. What has worked well this far? For work, I’ll carry two iPads. One is the early version of 12.9, originally, it was kitted out with AT&T cellular connection, but in a huff, and bad practice from the phone company, I dropped them. They still owe me a hundred bucks — off that last bill.

Still the hardware serves to work well, the old i-Tablet and keyboard, dependent on the home or venue wifi. In landscape mode, it fits the keyboard perfectly, and has adequate processing power to record an mp3 while calculating an astrology chart for me to read. I can also update various feeds.

I have a second, slightly newer but still out-of-date iPad Pro with a wireless plan, no longer AT&T, wrapped in its second cover, but I tend to carry it either as a primary or back-up, depending on the situation. For just an afternoon of reading charts and cards? I’ll have both, with the larger, older model working best as it provides a modicum of more screen real estate, making it easier for me.

But in a pinch, and on more than one occasion, I’ve started packing up and used just the slightly smaller iPad Pro 11, it’s just the screen is a little smaller, and I haven’t negotiated the right keyboard arrangement.

Works in progress.

I also have a “thing” about not going to bed with the device I use for work. The 11 inch is perfect for reading in bed, as well as scrolling news feeds, and so forth.

The iPads have replaced a myriad of laptops for most of what I do. The other, kind of expensive, but not really, but sort of piece in my computer arrangements? A small “mac-mini” at home, attached to remote drive back-up. I’m loathe to get too attached a single computer because computers fail. But I do like this one as it was older, almost end-of-life computer, but it works. Music, simplified bookkeeping, and some pieces of the original code for the websites, that’s what I have.

Digital ephemera. Photos (digital images).

An Ideal Set-Up

tl;dr

From a strictly hardware perspective, I’m roped into the Apple eco-system, but that’s not too troubling. From two phones back, I have a now-retired set Apple Air Pods, the wireless ear things. Lasted almost four years with the left one going out sooner, from repeated commutes Austin. Four years is a long time for supposedly disposable tech.

The current ‘work’ iPad, the 12.9 1st Gen.? Still entirely functional. Useful. Bit long in the tooth and its limited RAM means I exercise some degree of digital minimalism.

My daily driver is the 11-inch iPad Pro, now wrapped in a leather case. Functional, twice the capacity of the early 12-inch, even at more than two years old, it still holds up well. I use it for reading and it’s part of my grab-n-go gear.

I do have that Mac Mini paired with keyboards, mice, trackpads, and an extra-wide gaming screen. That Mac Mini sits atop a standing desk, itself more than 20 years old. With its gaming screen attached, there’s fast response, lots of visual real estate. I fear it’s getting close to its end, as that Mac Mini should be replaced soon. Not sure I’ll get around to that. The

Want v. Need

An Ideal Set-Up

Previously.

Business Concerns

Business Concerns

As a “small business,” or anyone who’s ever seen me in person, I was an early adopter of taking credit cards for payment, and I was an early adopter of Square —

SquareUp.com

I have used a fairly wide variety of credit card processing tech, always looking for the simplest, easiest, most transparent and cost efficient way to handle billing. Recently, I’ve wanted to add in touch-less, as a nod towards current conditions.

As a short run, in between, there was an app called Flint, no card reader, just a software version that took a picture of the card, then, supposedly, interpreted the numbers (nascent CC OCR tech.)

Flint was, according to spurious web reports, running on too-thin a margin, got absorbed by Stripe, and that spun off Stripe Charge, but I’m totally unsure of lineage and accreditations. All I got is what’s left.

Stripe

Recently, I had a phone call, client was reciting the card number to me, and I jumped back into the Stripe app (now called “Charge”), just out of curiosity. Takes two or three days, but the deposits are automatic, and the company seems to take a half percent or so smaller fee. The percentage was pennies over the hundreds of dollars range.

Business Concerns

During the first part of volunteer shelter-in-place suggestion, I toyed with the buttons. There was a way to make a Stripe, or Stripe Charge button, and I liked the service because it was automatic — unlike my experience with either Square or PayPal.

I spent a portion of an afternoon wrestling code, buttons, and website testing, all for naught, at the end, I discerned what two pieces that mattered most, to me.

One, I wanted a seamless way to offer a single product, a streamlined way to charge for a service, without leaving the site. The giant is PayPal, and yes, I was an early adopter as that was the first gateway to offer a micro-payment, used for my original subscription set-up. As ubiquitous as it is, not everyone likes PayPal. Two: no need for me to trigger a deposit. Safe, secure, on-site, and no need for me to manually transfer monies.

Don’t leave the website, and automatic deposit. Plus simplicity. Is that really three?
Before the current troubles, and still under lock-down, I tried the Stripe option again. I had it set up for a spell with the subscription service, but oddly enough, it wasn’t the most popular — even though it was way simpler, and in my mind? Better from user/consumer point-of-view.

Business Concerns

As a consumer, in this example, as a web-based, media consumer, one site I subscribe to uses Stripe exclusively to handle the price of subscription, billing and so forth. Slick, clean, simple interface, i.e., intuitive user experience.

Since I started at the rock shop in Austin, I was looking for that happy middle ground. Cards or charts, I charge $20 for ten minutes. This is a Tuesday-only price, live at the rock shop. I can run long so I regularly charge twice that, billed in increments of ten minutes, rounded up. Plus tip.

Right before the pandemic and subsequent panic, I was in the process of raising my rates, and trying to simplify the whole process. What’s fun for me? What’s me at my best?

Most charted fishing trips are split into two categories, “half day,” up to four hours, and “whole day,” eight hours. My personal sweet spot for fishing is right at six hours on the water. I’m still energized, not too tired, enough time left over to clean the catch, and I enjoy the experience. More than a half, less than a whole.
Likewise, in a reading, I’m best between half hour and an hour. That is my sweet spot.

Took better part of weekend day, trying, cursing, reading the instructions over and over, and then, each server is a little different, getting the settings all adjusted out to the proper sequence? Was not easy, but eventually, on a second, more patient try, I managed to get the Stripe button to work the way I wanted it to work.

astrofish.net/shop

Unsure if it was the correct move, it started generating income almost immediately. Simple. Efficient. As one of my favorite sig files reads?

“A lot of work goes into making this look easy.”

astrofish.net/shop

Stripe

SquareUp.com

“Small business” being defined in terms of number of full-time employees, which, for most of this career? It’s been one. Just me. Part-time, freelance, and support? Comes and goes, and this works better if there is only one boss, nominally, me. “The buck stops here.”

  • “U.S. president Harry S. Truman had a sign on his desk with ‘The buck stops here’ inscribed on it.”

In the early days, and for the sake of both transparency and legal mumbo-jumbo, I would have to take an impression of the card, then have a piece of paper with a cardholders signature attached. I started accepting credit cards near 30 years back, and at the time, I paid a hefty percentage, plus having to log into a virtual terminal to process the payment, and for record keeping, maintain that paper trail for three years. Or five years, I forget. Seven or ten years? One of this is IRS, and I don’t recall which. The last of the “paper” paperwork was shredded years ago. Cost, like over $20 a month for the service, and a credit card terminal, then a near 5% for transaction fees. I don’t miss it. Think that was through a Discover clearinghouse, and I didn’t take AMEX at the time.

The “$20 for ten minutes” on Tuesday, in Austin, is a special price. It only applies at that rock shop, and only on Tuesdays when I’m there. In recent months, I’ve done that exactly twice for clients, and it was a miserable failure.

  • “So?”

So don’t even asknot happening.

astrofish.net/contact

Typography Meets Sci-Fi

Typography Meets Sci-Fi

Pull Quote
“…but the universe is an unfathomably huge place and we occupy a tiny backwater. ”
Seen here: Typography Meets Sci-Fi

Besides, we all know, when space aliens go cruising by Earth? They lock their doors. Roll up the windows, avoid eye contact.

Dear Webmaster

Dear Webmaster

Hi, My name is DOT DOT DOT, I represent DOT DOT DOT, and I noticed you had a link to XYZ, so would you like to exchange links, update your link, or let me post an article on your site.

Sometimes, in exchange for money, and sometimes, out of the goodness in my heart.

Look at the sites I run. I write all my own material, except when I quote from passages of either books, classic literature, or other sources, but quotes are duly noted — and totally compliant with extant copyright laws, dated that those laws may be.

So here’s the deal: you sent me a pitch. My fee starts at $1,000. Simple as that. Advertising, posting articles, enhancing links?

Send me a grand; we’ll talk.

Price too high? Please don’t contact me. Again.

It’s that simple.

Previously

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