Monday, September 10, 2012
Sunday, September 2, 2012
Oven Kalua Pork
Oven Kalua Pork
Demonstrated by: Dolly Bright, Pu'uloa Hawaiian Civic Club
Ingredients
4 lb pork butt1 tablespoon garlic powder
2 tablespoons Hawaiian salt
1 bottle (3.5 oz) liquid smoke
1 lb pork skin
5 1/2 cups water
8 ti leaves
Instructions
Make several deep slashes around pork butt. Rub garlic powder and 1 tablespoon of the Hawaiian salt on pork. Pour liquid smoke over pork. Remove and discard most fat from pork skin. Add 1 1/2 cups of the water to a roasting pan, then line with foil. Lay 4 of the ti leaves on the foil. Place pork and skin on leaves. Cover with the remaining 4 ti leaves. Cover tightly with foil. Roast at 400 F in electric oven for 1 hour. Lower temperature to 375 F; cook for 4 1/2 more hours or until pork is easy to shred. In a large saucepot, bring the remaining 4 cups water to a boil. Add the remaining 1 tablespoon Hawaiian salt. Shred pork and cut skin; add to boiling water. Cover and cook for 15 minutes. Makes 8 servings.Show Info
Hawaiian Recipes 8/1/1996Wednesday, August 15, 2012
SCA Computer Professional Exemption Criteria
Consideration of Computer Professional vs Non-Exempt
NOTE - this information and these values were accurate in 2010 and may no longer be valid or applicable in any way. Obviously, this is a process only as the comparison to job duties / job descriptions is not provided in the below explanation.
I compared the job duties outlined in the job descriptions to the duties listed in the FLSA's computer professional exemption test. I believe that under Federal law all positions would be exempt based on the job duties and the overall nature of the jobs. As far as California regs, I found that the computer professional exemption would apply as well. However, the minimum hourly rate for a California Computer professional is much higher than the minimum hourly rate established under the FLSA. For 2010, Computer professionals must earn a minimum fixed salary of $79,587.50 per year or $37.94 per hour for all hours worked in addition to meeting the duties requirements outlined below.
Monday, August 6, 2012
vlookup on multiple criteria
This site explains how to perform vlookup on multiple criteria using an array
I modified the forumla slightly to provide a "0" response if one of the lookup values is blank, thus preventing a N/A# error
{=IF(R5="",0,(INDEX('Rate Table'!$F$5:$F$63,MATCH(A5&D5&R5,'Rate Table'!$B$5:$B$63&'Rate Table'!$E$5:$E$63&'Rate Table'!$A$5:$A$63,0)))}
The absolute key here is that you cannot just hit ENTER, you must hit ENTER+SHIFT+CTRL in order for excel to recognize this as an array formula. You do not enter the "squiggly" brakets, excel will do that automatically if the formula is entered correctly.
Monday, July 30, 2012
Sunday, June 24, 2012
Dash's First Nosework 1 Trial
Dash was great! He went right in the room and straight to odor. I almost called it but wasn't sure *exactly* where source was and wanted to take my time to be sure. So he did one quick circuit of the room and I could tell he was working and not exploring and came right back to it and I called it and we were right. I feel like he found it in about 40 seconds. Will be interesting to find out our actual time. Not that I care about time at this point, I just want him to have fun and do well.
I was apprehensive about this element because we haven't practiced much. But told myself to relax and trust my dog. There were three vehicles and as Dash went over the start line he was walking a little timidly and not his normal forward walk. He was completely bypassing the first vehicle and was headed past the second vehicle. I was a little worried that he wasn't focused on the vehicles but I could hear Ron's guidance that he gave in the morning briefing: "Don't think for your dog! He knows what he's doing. Trust your dog!". As Dash got closer to the second vehicle he turned hard to the left and stuck his head right into the wheel well and was spot on source! He had basically bee-lined right to it! I think we were under 30 seconds.
Dash started this one a little distracted and was not very focused on the boxes. He wasn't being methodical. But I kept subtly redirecting him to different areas. I think he was somewhat working the whole time but not 100% focused. I could see his body movement change just a little and he hit a box and I called it immediately. I was right but maybe should have waited another second to be positive. The judge complimented me on my handling for staying calm and directing him without interfering with him (big grin - I have a great instructor!). Our time felt very very long. I think they said we were at 1:30.
Dash rocked this one! He came off the start line and worked his way down the wall of the planters and turned the corner and stuck his nose right on source. This one and vehicles were definitely the best. This one felt like 15 or so seconds.
- Container 1:31.98
- Interior 0:35.41
- Vehicle 0:12.89 we got First place out of about 48 dogs (and he received a Pronounced mark from the Judge)
- Exterior 0:10.02 we got First place out of about 48 dogs (and he received a Pronounced mark from the Judge)
- Total time 2:30.30
In hindsight I would change one thing about the way I worked containers. The setup was such that the start line was at about a 45 degree angle to the boxes. So if you "squared up" on the start line so that you were directly facing the line, that meant your dog was only looking at the top left corner of the search area with the majority of the boxes off to the right. Dash went straight to where I had him pointed...the top left area with just a few boxes. If I were to work it again, I would "square up" on the boxes prior to my search instead of on the start line since the dogs don't realize there is tape or a start line. We still would have crossed the start line, it would have just put his focus on the whole area. But truly, I couldn't be happier!
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
ITAR stuff
Current as of 16 May 2012
For ITAR Violations, in addition to the penalties to the company, the individual employee may be faced with:
Willful Violations: "Individual - A fine of up to $250,000 or imprisonment for up to ten years, or both, for each violation."
Knowing Violations: "Individual - A fine of up to the greater of $50,000 or five times the value of the exports or imprisonment for up to five years, or both, for each violation."
Note that a single case may involve multiple violations and these penalties are for each violation.
source: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode50a/usc_sec_50a_00002410----000-.html
TITLE 50, APPENDIX App. > EXPORT > § 2410 Violations
For ITAR Violations, in addition to the penalties to the company, the individual employee may be faced with:
Willful Violations: "Individual - A fine of up to $250,000 or imprisonment for up to ten years, or both, for each violation."
Knowing Violations: "Individual - A fine of up to the greater of $50,000 or five times the value of the exports or imprisonment for up to five years, or both, for each violation."
Note that a single case may involve multiple violations and these penalties are for each violation.
source: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode50a/usc_sec_50a_00002410----000-.html
TITLE 50, APPENDIX App. > EXPORT > § 2410 Violations
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