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Fri Oct 22 06:00:01 EDT 2021
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Slept from eleven to six without waking.
Can't believe it's Friday already; this week flew by.
Cooler.
Mostly cloudy.
Highs around 50.
Northwest winds 5 to 10 mph becoming up to 10 mph in the late morning and afternoon.
Work
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- ✓ work on Chateau post-sale stuff
- ✓ pick a post-sale VoIP provider
Probably RingCentral.
- ✓ review Newegg invoices
Played with Office 365 administration a little.
Pretty nice.
Hour-long walk at lunch.
Mostly cloudy and cool.
Put on a sweatshirt.
Saw a pair of mourning doves, several blue jays, and a turkey vulture.
Whelp, to my mild surprise, Lightstone/Beacon offered me employment today.
Same title and salary.
Sounds like work from home will not be an option.
They expect my response by Tuesday.
Kathy Hudgins (Regional Manager) was let go.
Randy says he got an offer too.
Glad for him and his family.
Home
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- reactivate LinkedIn account [shudder]
- ✓ create indeed.com account
https://justremote.co/
https://weworkremotely.com/
Started reading Foxglove Summer.
Washed dishes.
Found the box with my coasters.
The excitement of unpacking!
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/21/science/russian-satellite-break-up.html
> Something streaked across the night skies over Ohio, Michigan and Indiana during predawn hours on Wednesday. The fireball burned in hues of green, gold and pink, leaving a bright trail in its wake. It spent about two minutes breaking apart into smaller pieces during its descent from orbit before crossing over the border of the United States and Canada, somewhere over the Great Lakes.
>
> “I saw it coming across the sky,” said Stephanie Neal, a Williamsburg, Ohio, resident who saw the object. “It first had no tail, then a tail, then no tail again.”
>
> Holly Wood was taking her dog for a late walk in the suburbs of Cincinnati when she saw the blazing object.
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> “For a split second I was like, am I watching an airplane crash? Then I was like, there’s no way — none of it made sense,” said Ms. Wood, who like Ms. Neal reported the sighting to the American Meteor Society, which maintains a hotline for those who spot fireballs in the sky.
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> “This thing was so bright, and so big, and it was so much slower than a meteor,” she added.
Servings: grains 5/6, fruit 1/4, vegetables 3/4, dairy 1/2, meat 3/3, nuts 1/0.5
Breakfast: egg and avocado sandwich
Brunch: coffee
Lunch: banana
Dinner: Japanese curry
-37
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