This is the website of Abulsme Noibatno Itramne (also known as Sam Minter). Posts here are rare these days. For current stuff, follow me on Mastodon

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May 2025
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Another Step Away

As of Tuesday I no longer have a Florida driver’s license. Took me long enough I guess. I have been physically primarily in Washington for 17 months. My mailing address has been Washington for 10 months. And I sold my house in Florida 8 months ago. So it is about time. Of course, that is MUCH better than the 3 or so years it took me to get a New Jersey license when I moved from Virginia. Oops.

Of course, I still have Florida plates on my car. I think those are the last remnants of Florida. I guess I’ll aim at getting those switched over by the end of the year. :-)

All Hands 5

This time at the All Hands they had a rock concert.

Roscoe’s Adventure

A few hours ago Brandy and I went out to eat. Amy was going to stay home working on a school project and we were going to bring her back food. As we were leaving, Amy waved goodbye to us while hanging on the back fence.

When we got back with the food almost two hours later, and we came in, Brandy noticed that the dog did not come running. She quickly discovered that when Amy had been hanging on the back fence, she had accidentally unlatched the back gate. Roscoe often spends a few hours each afternoon and evening freely coming in and out of the house to the fully fenced back yard. This time he of course at some point noticed the open gate, and decided to take himself for a walk.

As soon as we realized what had happened, Brandy and I immediately split up, first walking the usual routes where we walk him, calling his name. Amy stayed home with the door open in case he came home. She was a wreck, crying and blaming herself for letting him out.

When there was no sign of him we gave up walking and instead we each drove slowly around practically every street within a one mile radius of the house, looking for any signs of him and fearing for the worst, as Roscoe is not necessarily aware of the dangers of streets and cars.

After about an hour, I had parked the car at home again and was walking various bike paths and looping around our usual routes again. Brandy was driving a few more loops on a few more streets before returning to do more by foot again. Around the 90 minute mark I got a call from Brandy. She had him.

About a third of a mile from our house, off our residential road, then onto the main road through the neighborhood, down a few streets, Roscoe had made a left at a fork in the road and was walking slowly down the sidewalk. Brandy stopped her car. She got out. They looked at each other for a moment, neither one moving. Then she called him and he ran to her as fast as he could and jumped into her arms. He then happily hopped straight into the car and curled up on the seat. He was done with his adventure.

A few minutes later he was home and eagerly drinking water from his dish. We were all very relieved. This could have ended very badly.

Of course this means Amy has not yet finished her school project which is due in the morning. But it is very late, and she has headed to bed, exhausted from both the hour and the emotional toll of the last few hours. Her clock is set for earlier than usual in the morning. Hopefully enough to get he project completed before school.

Or course, that is of lesser significance right now. Roscoe is home and Roscoe is safe. We are very very glad.

Amy at Sea

I just noticed that this picture made it into the May issue of the school newsletter. This is from Amy’s week long school sailing trip at the end of April. Amy is the one near the front with the kid with the hat in front of her. They seemed to have a great time on that trip.

Animal Globe

Last weekend we went to the zoo. This weekend is Music weekend. A performance by Amy’s bass teacher, a performance by the youth orchestra Amy is in, and finally a performance by Amy’s chorus. Right now we’re at two down, one to go.

But last week, we went to the zoo.

Reorg #4

Announced a few hours ago, a reorganization at work. Here is my history so far:

Jeff -> Kal -> Mark -> Llew -> Sam (36 days)
Jeff -> Kal -> Scott -> Llew -> Sam (74 days)
Jeff -> Kal -> Colin -> Llew -> Sam (145 days)
Jeff -> Brian -> Colin -> Llew -> Sam (237 days)
Jeff -> Brian -> Colin -> Llew -> Dan -> Sam -> {People}

My average is now a reorg every 123 days. But they have been getting further apart.

Now, this is actually the first change since I have been here that will have a direct effect on my day to day role.

My old boss (who reads this blog, hi!) just got a whole lot of new responsibilities and his organization just about doubled in size. He needed to no longer have direct reports. So I needed to move. (Well at least that was one of the options.)

For now, I drop down a level in terms of depth in the org chart, but at the same time my role shifts and for the first time in a few years I will have direct reports of my own and be an actual people manager again rather than a program or product manager. At the moment I have 4 people reporting to me. Plans are already in place so that by the end of June I should have 6 after one person returns from family leave and another transfers in from another group.

In terms of actual job titles and such it is considered a horizontal move, but I am hoping it is a move that will give me new opportunities to expand and grow in the future that will more than balance being one more level removed from the CEO. And I work with and get along with Dan (my new manager) very well. And I’ll still interact extensively with Llew. So all should be good.

I will have a lot to do to really step up into the new role though. So I’m sure over the next few months I’ll have my hands quite full and will be being challenged. But that is not a bad thing at all. Not at all.

Sam N Mom N Sara

The last picture from my Ohio trip. My mom, Sara and me right before I headed back to the West Coast.

Sara N Sam

Another big part of the trip besides the things already mentioned was that I got to see Serendipity for the first time since December 2003. In dog years that is a long time! Sara did seem glad to see me and wanted to spend as much time with me as she could, so I’ll choose to think that she remembered me. I have missed seeing her, as although my mother has managed to squeeze in a visit to me about once a year, me visiting in the other direction just hasn’t been in the cards, so it has been forever since I saw Sara!

For those who may not remember, in the summer of 2001, I rescued Sara when I found her running loose in the middle of Interstate 95 in Pennsylvania. I saw her almost hit by a couple cars as I approached. I pulled over to the side of the road and managed to get her out of traffic and into my car. I tried every way I knew to try to find her original owners but failed. The vet said that she was probably about 3 months old and judging by the ticks she had when I found her she had probably been “on her own” for around 3 weeks. She also had a broken and healed rib, indicating at least one unpleasant incident in her past.

I took her in, but because at the time I was in an apartment, and was not yet on medications that controlled my allergies well enough to live with a dog, I could not keep her. But I was not about to give her up to a stranger. So I introduced her to my mother, and a couple months after I had found her, she traveled to my mom’s house and they have been together ever since.

Anyway, I miss Sara. It was very good seeing her again.

Installation

A bit more on my trip to Ohio. This was the main point of the trip there.

My mother was being officially installed as the “Association Minister of the Southwest Ohio Northern Kentucky Association of the Ohio Conference of the United Church of Christ”. She has been at the job for almost a year now, but this was the time for the official service installing her in the position. It was a nice service with a lot of music that was definitely a match for who my mother is. And then there was the religious equivalent of a swearing in. I was glad I could be there.

Chad N Friends

On the second evening I was in Ohio, I got together for dinner with Chad and some of his friends from work. We spend a few hours talking and such. It was interesting to catch up a bit and to get a peek into the current life of Chad. Of course, I’m still not sure I understand exactly what they do, but that is OK. They were an interesting bunch.