I hope everyone's having a happy new year!
New Year's last night ended up taking a decided although completely unintentional test equipment turn. It started off normally at first with one of my friends who's an electrician coming for our annual surf and turf new year's barbecue. We had scallops pan seared in cast iron for an appetizer. It was supposed to be part of the main course but ended up getting moved up because the charcoal took an eternity to light up in the barbecue. Once the barbecue was going, we followed up with steaks and lobster tails.
After we finished eating, a friend from college came by and the three of us retreated to the living room and the cozy warmth of the wood burning fire place which was getting its first use in two, maybe three years.
This was the perfect way to ring in the new year, hanging out shooting the breeze with friends in the living room by the fire with cups of hot chocolate. That's where it turned into test equipment. The college friend found some RF adapters and miscellaneous tools on the coffee table and it turned into playing around with those and some of the other stuff including trying to do some sample calculations on a slide rule. The electrician friend was asking me about Scopemeters to go with a Fluke EV charging station tester that was provided by the company he works for. We're now talking about doing a Scopmeter crash course downstairs on the bench.
The highlight of the night had to be the college friend accidentally setting off his car alarm a couple of times by sitting on his car keys. He'd parked in front of the awful neighbour's house so it was funny but I'm sure sometime in the next few days, I'm going to come home and find something's been vandalized in retaliation.
Midnight came and went and the two friends left about an hour later. In the cozy warmth of the living room by the fire, all three of us were completely unaware that a nasty half rain, half snow mix had started coming down outside until the fire had burned down and I went outside with the two guests to see them off.
That was the view from the kitchen window this morning when I got up and made my first cup of coffee. It's January 1 and it's definitely winter here now.