Jury Duty in Las Vegas?

We are legal residents of Clark County, Nevada. Though we don't live in the USA most of the time, Uncle Sam insists we have a legal address. We chose Nevada because 1) there is no state income tax; and 2) David's mum and sisters live here and we can use their address. We have Nevada driver's licenses and have registered to vote (and do vote via absentee ballot) in the Silver State, so we meet the criteria of being residents … except we're not usually here. So when Mary informed me that a very formal “The People of the State of Nevada Send Greetings and Summons to Jury Duty” for me in the mail in December, I was surprised. jury duty summons

Jurors are chosen at random. It appears that though I'm not lucky enough to win PowerBall lotteries … I didn't match even one number on the PowerBall draw the other night ... I do win Juror Summons Lotteries. I was summoned twice while I lived in Colorado and twice while I lived in Wisconsin and I've served on juries twice.

clark county regional justice center

Since I was in Trinidad when Mary first let me know I was a winner, I contacted the Clark County court via their “ejuror” email address and explained I was out of the country. They responded that I had 90 days to change the date and could do it only once. Failure to respond could result in “contempt” charges and a fine of up to $500. Some lottery … you pay out instead of collecting. Knowing I'd be in Las Vegas soon, I set a date and sure enough, within a week, Mary informed me that my official Jury Summons notification had arrived. It required me to complete an on-line Qualification Survey within five days of my appearance date.

Are you a US citizen? Yes

Are you 18 years of age or older? Oh, yes x 3+

Are you a resident of Clark County, Nevada? Kind of

Do you understand English? Usually

Have you ever been convicted of a felony? Not that I know of

Have you ever served as a juror before? Yes

Are you breathing? Yes

“Congratulations and salutations”, I read, “you qualify”. With such strict criteria, I was feeling pretty chuffed. I was provided with all sorts of information regarding parking, smoking, proper attire (no shorts, halter tops, muscle shirts or jogging suits allowed), parking, security, etc. The next step was to wait till 6pm the night before I was to appear and call in with my special juror ID number to determine if I was really needed.

juror id number

I googled “Clark County jury duty”. Clark County even provides a 10-minute video describing jury duty and gives an overview of the trial process. Though I wasn't all that thrilled about serving on a jury, I was certainly willing to do my civic duty. I was a bit put off by several posts describing how to avoid being picked for a jury, bogus reasons to provide to the court to be excused, and generally getting out of the process. My reasoning? If I was the defendant in a case, I'd want the best possible jury of my peers to judge me … not the ones who had nothing better to do or who were too dumb to figure out an excuse. But that's just me, I guess.

lady justice

I called at 6:01pm. The verdict? I was excused … not needed for jury duty. Truth be told, I was a little disappointed. After all … I have experience.

A Phone Upgrade and Driving Lessons

new phone cartoon My sister, Lin, gave me a belated birthday present … an iPhone. We wondered if we were not the last people on Earth to have acquired one. Everywhere we go, we see people attached to their phones. Since we travel from country to country, we usually use a small Samsung and buy a new SIM card for it in each country … that is, if we feel we need a phone. When you don't know anyone and nobody knows you, it's kind of pointless to have a phone.

The Samsung is quite a utilitarian phone. One young person asked how old it was … he'd never seen one like it. Really? It's only four years old! We can use it make phone calls and send/receive texts. It's not a flashlight nor a camera and we can't access the internet with it. Sending texts is a chore. It's the old A-B-C variety where you scroll through and find the letter you need, click on it, then proceed to the next letter. There's no auto-correct (which I think is a plus), nor suggestions for how you might like to finish a word or sentence. But … it does make phone calls.

marcie is perplexed

David has pretty much claimed the new phone. After all, only one person can use it at a time. He's the gadget guy. Lin has given us a brief tutorial on its operation and David's been working his way through all its many features, uploading our Yahoo address book, entering new phone numbers, etc. I've managed to answer the phone a couple of times and I've turned on the flashlight ... accidentally.

Along with the new phone came a new phone number which, of course, we haven't managed to memorize yet. Someone asked for the new number the other day and then had to show me how to find the number on the phone. We usually tape the number on the back of the phone, but David hadn't gotten around to doing it yet. We have a new number in each country, and we've never been anywhere long enough to learn our phone number in one country before moving on to a new one.

Whenever we're away for awhile and return to the USA, we're always surprised by what's new and trendy. For instance, we just learned that McDonalds now serves breakfast all day long. (Thank goodness, no need to rush to get there before 10:30.) Also, we can now monitor our phone calls on our TV (if we had one). I can set reminders, set up schedules and do lots of other things with the new iPhone … most of which we haven't discovered yet. 2016 will certainly be a year of exploration.

Having the iPhone has eliminated all sorts of frustration and it was indeed a splendid gift. Now we've just got to learn how to drive it. And I'm sure that in a few weeks, we'll no longer be able to function without it.

Our New Website...

with a little help from our friends

Our website, www.nineofcups.com, is becoming pretty antiquated, and we've come to the painful decision that we can't put off updating it any longer. We have a prototype of the new version, and are hoping we can enlist our friends to give us some feedback before we get too committed.

new page

We started building our website in 2002, and the tools available at that time were pretty rudimentary. We were using a predecessor to Yahoo Sitebuilder which required an online connection to build each page … a real pain when we were paying by the minute for a verrrry slow connection at an internet cafe on some remote island. Then, we discovered Yahoo Sitebuilder. This gave us the capability of making updates and building new pages offline, then posting them to the website in batches.

old web page

Marcie took on the task of updating the website, and has been continually adding to it over the years. It now contains almost 300 pages. She has posted not only thousands of photos and the associated text documenting our travels, but dozens of “how-to's”, reprints of many of our articles, insights into the cruising life, a host of other photo collections and a miscellany of useful information.

We've continued to use Sitebuilder and have kept the same format all these years. Unfortunately, we are discovering more and more issues with our website. One problem is that Sitebuilder doesn't make it easy to construct a “mobile friendly” website, A page that looks good when viewed by a laptop is marginal when viewed on a tablet and totally garbled on a smart phone. To add insult to injury, we recently received an email from Google informing us that we would no longer be included in their searches if we didn't make our 300 pages mobile friendly.

Another problem is that a page that looks good on one browser often appears poorly formatted on another browser (or even a different version of the same browser, for that matter). The text often gets re-positioned behind a photo, for example. Marcie went through all of our webpages and reformatted each and every one one not too long ago, only to have the problem crop up again a few months later.

There were a number of other annoying issues with Sitebuilder, and so, we bit the bullet and decided to redo good old nineofcups.com. It would be great if there was a software package that would allow us to just import our old website and reformat it into something new and sleek, but this just isn't possible. We will have to manually cut and paste the contents of every page from the old format to our new format. This is obviously going to be a big job, something we might be able to get a large portion of done on our Atlantic crossing. Before we go to all that effort, however, we want to make damn sure we do it right.

After researching the available packages, we bought some new website software, and have started experimenting with new website templates. We figured out one we like and have constructed a few pages using it. Before we really jump into it and start converting those 300 pages, we thought we would pass it by you, our friends, and get your input.

If you go to our website, www.nineofcups.com, and click on the link on the right side of the webpage, it will take you to the new format. Alternatively, especially if you you want to check it out on a mobile device, click here.

click here

We would really appreciate any feedback you have – good or bad. Did we miss something? Do you have suggestions? How can we do it better? Are there other similar websites that you really like and could recommend for aesthetics, ease of use, functionality or content? We're open to all suggestions. We'd love your input.