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Don White October 18th 07 05:42 PM

Back to work
 

"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 09:48:10 -0400, HK wrote:

Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 09:15:00 -0400, "Eisboch"
wrote:

I also remember Zeiders, but Gail was *way* too old for me. :-)

I was going to make a really smart ass comment, but I decided not to
out of respect for your relative youth.

Wouldn't do to corrupt the nation's "yute"...


Gail was a very pretty and nice young lady. She was also "built" like
Annette Funicello.


Now you really are dating yourself.


What.... I had a crush on Annette.
She was darn cute way back in the Mickey Mouse years.



Don White October 18th 07 05:46 PM

Back to work
 

"HK" wrote in message
. ..

Summer jobs. Speaking of things built, about 35 years ago, I was in NYC
with a DC client, attending a meeting. The guy was president of an
international union. We had some time to kill, and he insisted on taking
me to the Empire State Building. Big secret. We got to one of the middle
floors, went to a utility closet, he opened it, and there, chiseled into
a bit of construction stone, was his first initial and last name, and the
date. Yep, *he* worked on building the Empire State Building.

Can you imagine the lifelong sense of accomplishment...seeing that
building, knowing you worked on it...wow!



I guess! Is the Empire State Building back to it's status as the tallest
building in New York?



HK October 18th 07 06:50 PM

Back to work
 
Don White wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
. ..
Summer jobs. Speaking of things built, about 35 years ago, I was in NYC
with a DC client, attending a meeting. The guy was president of an
international union. We had some time to kill, and he insisted on taking
me to the Empire State Building. Big secret. We got to one of the middle
floors, went to a utility closet, he opened it, and there, chiseled into
a bit of construction stone, was his first initial and last name, and the
date. Yep, *he* worked on building the Empire State Building.

Can you imagine the lifelong sense of accomplishment...seeing that
building, knowing you worked on it...wow!



I guess! Is the Empire State Building back to it's status as the tallest
building in New York?



For the moment.

BillP October 18th 07 07:06 PM

Back to work
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
On Oct 18, 10:50 am, "Eisboch" wrote:
wrote in message

ups.com...





On Oct 18, 8:24 am, "Eisboch" wrote:
wrote in message


oups.com...


"Eisboch" wrote in message
m...
I've been called in to help out today at.... (gulp) ....
*work*.
A long-time customer is visiting and I have to provide some

sense of
corporate continuity.


Gotta get this over with so Sam and I can go back to the
boat.


Eisboch


So how did it go?


Not bad. He awarded the company a $800+K contract for a new thin

film
system.


Eisboch (still got the "touch")


Wow! Hope you get a good chunk of that;) Went back to work
myself
this week, gonna' work on a local farm for the winter to get
loosened
up a little and trade off a little horsie time for my girls. Don't
think I will be making as much as you did though;) Of course
our
work could be somewhat similar, I was off shoveling ****, how about
you? ;)


Nah, I don't get any "chunk". I have a long term "consulting" deal

that
pays just about minimum wage, but keeps Mrs.E. and I eligible to

participate
in the company's health care program.


When I was a kid living outside of New Haven, CT., I had a summer job
mucking horse stalls for a guy that raised and trained thoughbred
racing
horses. Not for me. In addition to the .... well .... you know, I
was
also allergic to the hay dust. I swore I'd never do it again and I

haven't,
despite Mrs.E.'s three horses.


If you want to get bored to tears, here's what I ended up doing for a
living:


http://www.vptec.com/


Eisboch- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Not boring to me! Did you do much business with Corning Glass?


Yes, quite a bit. And still do.

Eisboch- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Cool, had a cousin that worked in the lab at headquarters in Corning NY


Sweeping the floors?



[email protected] October 18th 07 08:03 PM

Back to work
 
On Oct 18, 2:06 pm, "BillP" wrote:
wrote in message

oups.com...





On Oct 18, 10:50 am, "Eisboch" wrote:
wrote in message


roups.com...


On Oct 18, 8:24 am, "Eisboch" wrote:
wrote in message


oups.com...


"Eisboch" wrote in message
m...
I've been called in to help out today at.... (gulp) ....
*work*.
A long-time customer is visiting and I have to provide some
sense of
corporate continuity.


Gotta get this over with so Sam and I can go back to the
boat.


Eisboch


So how did it go?


Not bad. He awarded the company a $800+K contract for a new thin
film
system.


Eisboch (still got the "touch")


Wow! Hope you get a good chunk of that;) Went back to work
myself
this week, gonna' work on a local farm for the winter to get
loosened
up a little and trade off a little horsie time for my girls. Don't
think I will be making as much as you did though;) Of course
our
work could be somewhat similar, I was off shoveling ****, how about
you? ;)


Nah, I don't get any "chunk". I have a long term "consulting" deal
that
pays just about minimum wage, but keeps Mrs.E. and I eligible to
participate
in the company's health care program.


When I was a kid living outside of New Haven, CT., I had a summer job
mucking horse stalls for a guy that raised and trained thoughbred
racing
horses. Not for me. In addition to the .... well .... you know, I
was
also allergic to the hay dust. I swore I'd never do it again and I
haven't,
despite Mrs.E.'s three horses.


If you want to get bored to tears, here's what I ended up doing for a
living:


http://www.vptec.com/


Eisboch- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Not boring to me! Did you do much business with Corning Glass?


Yes, quite a bit. And still do.


Eisboch- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Cool, had a cousin that worked in the lab at headquarters in Corning NY


Sweeping the floors?- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


No, Stalker Dan.


D.Duck October 18th 07 11:25 PM

Back to work
 

"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 09:10:06 -0400, "D.Duck" wrote:


"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
. ..
On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 08:57:07 -0400, "D.Duck" wrote:

I finally convinced marketing that a much less costly acid etch process
applied directly to the CRT glass was appropriate.


Ah - so your the dumbass that came up with that.

You are on my list. :)

(It's a long story - just accept the fact that I was ordered to follow
the same process for...well, let's just leave it at that.)

~~mutter~~


Sorry....


Not to worry - it's a short list.

It's got a single name on it - "the guy who convinced..." :)

I hired a engineer out of Bell Labs - Herb Cortis - name ring a bell?


Herb Cortis doesn't ring a bell. I spend most of my 30 Bell Lab career in
the Chicago area. Several trips to Holmdel, Morristown and Middletown. The
last three working years were spent here in Florida after ATT bought NCR.
Retired in 1994.



D.Duck October 18th 07 11:35 PM

Back to work
 

"Eisboch" wrote in message
...

"D.Duck" wrote in message
...

"Eisboch" wrote in message
...

wrote in message
ups.com...


"Eisboch" wrote in message
m...
I've been called in to help out today at.... (gulp) .... *work*.
A long-time customer is visiting and I have to provide some
sense
of
corporate continuity.

Gotta get this over with so Sam and I can go back to the boat.

Eisboch

So how did it go?

Not bad. He awarded the company a $800+K contract for a new thin

film
system.

Eisboch (still got the "touch")

Wow! Hope you get a good chunk of that;) Went back to work myself
this week, gonna' work on a local farm for the winter to get loosened
up a little and trade off a little horsie time for my girls. Don't
think I will be making as much as you did though;) Of course our
work could be somewhat similar, I was off shoveling ****, how about
you? ;)


Nah, I don't get any "chunk". I have a long term "consulting" deal

that
pays just about minimum wage, but keeps Mrs.E. and I eligible to
participate
in the company's health care program.

When I was a kid living outside of New Haven, CT., I had a summer job
mucking horse stalls for a guy that raised and trained thoughbred
racing
horses. Not for me. In addition to the .... well .... you know, I
was
also allergic to the hay dust. I swore I'd never do it again and I
haven't,
despite Mrs.E.'s three horses.

If you want to get bored to tears, here's what I ended up doing for a
living:

http://www.vptec.com/

Eisboch


Not boring at all. Brings back memories of my work at Bell Labs, about
20
years ago, as a CRT monitor design engineer. I worked with a West Coast
company, OCLI, on a custom CRT panel with an AR coating.

The process was great for no reduction in display resolution and
anti-reflective properties. The disadvantage, cost. The panel added

about
20 bux to an already too expensive, custom size CRT.

The zero loss is resolution was just not appropriate for a plain jane
alpha-numeric display. Now for something like medical monitors it was
justified.

I finally convinced marketing that a much less costly acid etch process
applied directly to the CRT glass was appropriate.


We built sputter deposition equipment for Tectonics, applying a conductive
coating to the inside of ceramic CRT tubes. That technology was obsolete
before it went to production, and a spin-off was started doing
electroluminescent displays. We built equipment for them as well, and the
company became what is now known as "PanelVision", a major supplier of
flat
panel screens.

OCLI ? Very technically capable in their day, but a terrible company
for
an equipment manufacturer like us to deal with. They had quite a
reputation
of routinely sending out requests for technical proposals for systems they
said they were going to buy.
They would then review all the technical approaches taken by the various
responders to meet OCLI's requirements, select the best of them, and then
build the equipment themselves, using the technical specifications
supplied
by those of us that responded.

In all the years that we dealt with them, they never bought a system from
anybody.

We have had more recent contracts with JDS Uniphase, the successor to
OCLI.

Eisboch


I heard rumors about some unsavory business practices and OCLI. We only did
business with them for a couple of years in the early 80's.

Ahhhh, JDSU. Back in the 90's when I was a very active investor, JDSU is
one I "wish" I would have dabbled in. Made quite a bit of money leading up
to the "bubble". Should have listened to Greenspan and his "irrational
exuberance" speech. Oh well, I did very well and never complain.

Now as I approach 70 it's much more conservative investments. I do have
quite a bit of Intel stock, but I feel that's reasonably safe. "When" is
gets over $30 I'll get out and buy a bunch of CDs. My have things changed
for me as I get older and more cautious.



BillP October 19th 07 05:31 AM

Back to work
 

wrote in message
ps.com...
On Oct 18, 2:06 pm, "BillP" wrote:
wrote in message

oups.com...





On Oct 18, 10:50 am, "Eisboch" wrote:
wrote in message


roups.com...


On Oct 18, 8:24 am, "Eisboch" wrote:
wrote in message


oups.com...


"Eisboch" wrote in message
m...
I've been called in to help out today at.... (gulp) ....
*work*.
A long-time customer is visiting and I have to provide
some
sense of
corporate continuity.


Gotta get this over with so Sam and I can go back to the
boat.


Eisboch


So how did it go?


Not bad. He awarded the company a $800+K contract for a new
thin
film
system.


Eisboch (still got the "touch")


Wow! Hope you get a good chunk of that;) Went back to work
myself
this week, gonna' work on a local farm for the winter to get
loosened
up a little and trade off a little horsie time for my girls.
Don't
think I will be making as much as you did though;) Of course
our
work could be somewhat similar, I was off shoveling ****, how
about
you? ;)


Nah, I don't get any "chunk". I have a long term "consulting"
deal
that
pays just about minimum wage, but keeps Mrs.E. and I eligible to
participate
in the company's health care program.


When I was a kid living outside of New Haven, CT., I had a summer
job
mucking horse stalls for a guy that raised and trained thoughbred
racing
horses. Not for me. In addition to the .... well .... you know,
I
was
also allergic to the hay dust. I swore I'd never do it again and
I
haven't,
despite Mrs.E.'s three horses.


If you want to get bored to tears, here's what I ended up doing
for a
living:


http://www.vptec.com/


Eisboch- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Not boring to me! Did you do much business with Corning Glass?


Yes, quite a bit. And still do.


Eisboch- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Cool, had a cousin that worked in the lab at headquarters in Corning NY


Sweeping the floors?- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


No, Stalker Dan.


My name is not Dan, it's Irvin...........Walter Irvin.



Eisboch[_2_] October 19th 07 07:31 AM

Back to work
 

"D.Duck" wrote in message
...


Ahhhh, JDSU. Back in the 90's when I was a very active investor, JDSU is
one I "wish" I would have dabbled in. Made quite a bit of money leading

up
to the "bubble". Should have listened to Greenspan and his "irrational
exuberance" speech. Oh well, I did very well and never complain.

Now as I approach 70 it's much more conservative investments. I do have
quite a bit of Intel stock, but I feel that's reasonably safe. "When" is
gets over $30 I'll get out and buy a bunch of CDs. My have things changed
for me as I get older and more cautious.



You mean the Telecom bubble? That period was an amazing example of a
technology based feeding frenzy based on hype. Companies were scrambling to
acquire other companies that had anything at all to do with optical
multiplexing filters. It's why OCLI is no more. I remember Corning bought
a company called "CoreTec" for 1.4 billion. (that's with a "B"). CoreTec
had been financed with a relatively small amount of venture capital money
and had never produced or shipped a finished product. I met with the
founder and president of CoreTec about a month before Corning's acquisition
of them. We were discussing a possible joint venture between my company and
them. He wanted to continue discussions but was up front and told me of a
possible major event for them in the near future and had to hold off until
after that decision.

Corning ended up having to write the whole $ 1.4B off and it did a number on
their stock. I had a feeling they would recover, so I bought in while they
were low. Turns out it was a good move. I also hold a bit of JDSU.

Eisboch



D.Duck October 19th 07 11:33 AM

Back to work
 

"Eisboch" wrote in message
...

"D.Duck" wrote in message
...


Ahhhh, JDSU. Back in the 90's when I was a very active investor, JDSU is
one I "wish" I would have dabbled in. Made quite a bit of money leading

up
to the "bubble". Should have listened to Greenspan and his "irrational
exuberance" speech. Oh well, I did very well and never complain.

Now as I approach 70 it's much more conservative investments. I do have
quite a bit of Intel stock, but I feel that's reasonably safe. "When" is
gets over $30 I'll get out and buy a bunch of CDs. My have things
changed
for me as I get older and more cautious.



You mean the Telecom bubble? That period was an amazing example of a
technology based feeding frenzy based on hype. Companies were scrambling
to
acquire other companies that had anything at all to do with optical
multiplexing filters. It's why OCLI is no more. I remember Corning
bought
a company called "CoreTec" for 1.4 billion. (that's with a "B"). CoreTec
had been financed with a relatively small amount of venture capital money
and had never produced or shipped a finished product. I met with the
founder and president of CoreTec about a month before Corning's
acquisition
of them. We were discussing a possible joint venture between my company
and
them. He wanted to continue discussions but was up front and told me of a
possible major event for them in the near future and had to hold off until
after that decision.

Corning ended up having to write the whole $ 1.4B off and it did a number
on
their stock. I had a feeling they would recover, so I bought in while
they
were low. Turns out it was a good move. I also hold a bit of JDSU.

Eisboch


That was an interesting period. So many supposedly intelligent people in
high places made some very not so intelligent business decisions.




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