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Welcome to the Treach Forums
A open forum for discussion of our developments of technology.
My name is Timothy Elders, and TreachForums at launch is set to be an open discussion board for students of ACC’s Web Design and Database Development class. However, if you are outside of this group, feel free to stick around and follow our development through this class until the end of this school year in June of 2023. After that, the TreachForums will evolve into something greater.
Until then, take a seat and welcome to the best resource of information sharing in the entire ACC.
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March 12th, 2023 – Update
Greetings. It has been a while. The last couple months have been a series of ups and downs for me. Through completely unproductive weeks and a multitude of bad decisions, I ended up in a pretty rough spot.
In my last essay, I wrote about how I was given the opportunity to intern at the School City of Hammond IT department. Unfortunately, since then I have been removed from the program. This was due to bad work ethic and poor attendance.
This was back in October. Since then, I have learned, developed, and adapted to the workplace environment much more effectively. Things like back on the uphill again.
That being said, I will resume regular posts to the Treach Forums. What started as the concept for a classroom blog, then a collaborative forum for a few students, will as of now be used as a personal and professional archive of my essays, general updates, and until June will also include updates on the classes Arduino project.
So stick around. After my high school graduation, I plan on making the Treach Forums a general portfolio and professional landmark for myself.
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Hangout, A Memoriam
Only a few years ago, I was not the person I am now. My name may have been the same, and I can recall experiences from that person, and I can put myself in the shoes in that person, and I still share a few of the friends as that person, I share the same family and friends as that person, but despite all of this, all of these bizarre and unexplainable coincidences, we are by no means the same. The person I am is someone who struggles with deadlines, expectations, pressures; concepts that the other Timothy wouldn’t even be able to comprehend. The other Timothy experienced the freedom of being able to let loose and have fun. No responsibilities, besides the occasional house chore. He could play games with his friends for hours, binge a whole season of anime, and in the few weeks of summer where the Hammond weather was habitable, he could spend the entire day outside, playing among the trees of the local woodlands. And among those trees was a large Oak, held into the ground by only a few determined roots.
On a summer day in 2013, myself and a few of my friends had found this Oak tree, being held up in this bizarre position, mere feet away from toppling to the ground. The effort of the last remaining roots allowed the tree to seemingly float in the air, allowing for a small bit of leaf cover over a small circular area, forming a natural canopy of sorts. It was here, under this great fighting Oak tree, where we established our clubhouse, dubbed the “Hangout” for it not only being a great hangout spot for the group, but because we were able to physically hang from the tree overhead. Over the next few hours, we would explore the nearby area and fully establish the woods as our own little territory. A bunch of kids had free reign over nearly two miles of woodland, and with no one to say otherwise, we conquered it, with our mighty blades, which were of course sticks we had picked up from the forest floor.
This group that had founded the Hangout consisted of my childhood friend DeAnna, who I still talk with daily as she recovers from her leg surgery; Mickey, DeAnna’s cousin who would always follow her around everywhere she went; Liliana, one of my earliest friends, who I have unfortunately drifted apart from over the years, and Julie, my younger sister, who for as ditzy and impressionable as she is I still love to death.
These people, alongside myself, would cherish this great paradise, the woodland expanse and the many things to be found inside it. There was, of course, the Elder Lake, which was really just a large rain puddle only a foot deep but surprisingly expansive. Further down the trail to the south lay a small sandhill, reformed with the tread marks of ATVs and dirtbikes, in which I can recall we attempted to encircle with our bicycles before inevitably getting stuck on the paramount.
A small entrance-way out of this sandhill clearing laid the great fallen Oak of the Hangout, conveniently placed nearby the middle point of the woods treeline, directly facing 138th Street. If you decide to trudge down the muddy trail further, you would eventually find a fire pit, with proper stones and the distant remains of a lit fire. And at the very end of the trail, the trees would open up to a lush, dreamy meadow, where many bumblebees and distinct flowers wavered in the wind. Continue through the direction the trail would have led and you will eventually hit the chainlink fence of the Hammond Mohawks lot.
The meadow is the setting for a particular memory, in which the group would play hide and seek. I had used my small “Obama phone” as they were called as a walkie-talkie of sorts, on a call with DeAnna, on the hiding team. We would taunt each other, although the purpose of the call was for safety, as we didn’t want anyone to get lost. At the time, the woodlands seemed big to us, although looking back in retrospect, you can most likely find another person through shouting out in around thirty seconds.
I also recall when we had first founded the Hangout, in which a decrepit loveseat lay alongside the hanging leaves of the Oak. We all had to try our hardest to lift the seat and carry it only a few feet away inside the canopy, but it took nearly a half an hour. After it was in, no one would dare sit in it. Simply the fact that we were able to accomplish the task and furnish our clubhouse was rewarding, and made the small dirt patch under a nearly toppled tree become a luxury suite. Later on, we would find a mattress dumped in the woods and carry it to the clubhouse to lay alongside the seat, although again no one ever dared sit on it.
After nearly two years of use, the Hangout began to become less exciting. As we grew up, so did our passions, and we were less excited for a tree as we were going into middle school. This would all come to a head when on our last club meeting with everyone present, Mickey would fall out of the overhead tree and break his arm. After that, DeAnna and Mickey were forever banned from the Hangout by their parents. Soon after, Liliana would fade away from the clubhouse as well, and with the club gone I would soon abandon it as well.
Today, the tree is still present, however its battle was lost with time. Now it lays a few feet of high grass, weeds, a few dandelions and the great Oak as a large log. The loveseat and mattress, however, still remain. The Hangout was no more, and looking back, it was for the best.
I recall the Hangout for a few reasons. It was a bonding experience for us, and the itch of exploration I had as a child was definitely scratched among those great woods. But for me, what the Hangout most represents is myself, in a way.
The childhood wonder is gone. What remains is now a distant memory of what once was, what the other Timothy lived and experienced. And as the tree lays there abandoned, awaiting to be visited, my memories of those times live on just the same. And although the tree may have fallen in the end, as the battle for childhood was lost with time, the impressions and actions of the people there before still remain, the old loveseat and mattress, as the impressions and actions of the people I have met and were raised around still lay in my soul, and my actions.
The Hangout is not gone. It’s still there, laying in disarray and abandoned. Yet on rare occasions, it should be revisited, remembered, and cherished, as my childhood memories should be as well. God bless the mighty Oak, toppled by time. -
Upcoming Project
I have devoted my project to a site for a card game I have become fascinated with over the past few months, the One Piece TCG, based on the anime and manga series of the same name. Since I was first introduced to the card game in question, I have observed that official support for the card game by Bandai Namco is satisfactory at best, but has some obvious and unaddressed downsides. Fan support is fantastic, but lacks the certain polish present in official support websites and forums. I wish to bridge the large gap between the professional look of the lackluster website and social media design with the unbridled enthusiasm and creativity possessed by the fanbase.
My website will act as a hub of sorts, a place where fans, observers, new-comers, and even investors can peruse and learn the mechanics of the game, the cards presently released in both English and non-localized markets, fan creations, an open forum for discussion, an FAQ section including both questions about the card game itself and the website and fan creations, and even an interactive in-browser simulator to learn the game.
I wish to allow a version of the game to be playable in a browser, something that would have been a much easier task before the removal of Flash Player from web browsers. I hope this comes to fruition, as it will be very exciting to see and will allow new learners an interactive experience in order to learn, something I wish I would have had access to.
This is all I have planned as of now, and I wish to execute on it and have aimed for a release of the website with a static tutorial page, card catalog, and an FAQ for End of Year 2022. Stay tuned here. -
Cybersecurity to Me
Over the last two weeks, I have been given the tremendous opportunity to intern with the School City of Hammond. I, along with Brandon Burgess, have been closely following the lead of Jon Emery of the IT department. There I have done a tremendous number of things already.
One thing from the last two weeks that I will value most looking back in the future was my opportunity to talk directly with the men in charge of crucial responsibilities within the school district. One was Bryan, the lead of Cybersecurity in the district, and Travis, the lead programmer and network architect for the district. After nearly 2 hours of discussion with both of them individually, it has given me real insight in what I actually want for my own future. I learned a powerful lesson from both of them.
For Brian, he told me that you can never be a one-man army. My aspiration to be a near cybersecurity supersoldier was challenged by one phrase. He explained that being able to identify a problem and applying a solution are two wildly different skillsets. Although his attention may have been to assure me that my goal, yet impossible, isn’t unattainable because of my own circumstances or skillset, but rather the unbreakable rule of human ability. I shouldn’t be disappointed when I do inevitably fall short, while also making clear that aiming for such a goal, with the expectation of inevitably falling short, isn’t flawed.Travis taught me something a little more superficial and specific, but something just as important for me to learn and process before continuing my IT pathway. He emphasized the importance of programming languages, and how fundamental that information is in ALL fields of IT. Whether you are writing complicated scripts every day, or are simpl someone who rights on Word documents, being able to write and read the most common and accessible types of code are essential to efficiency and optimization in the field.
My goal to become a figurehead in Cybersecurity has become different to me now, I feel like I am looking through it less as a daydream and more as a marathon, where building stamina and skills are the only way to ever achieve it. These men have opened my eyes to the field that I was demoted with only a few weeks ago, and now that flame glows stronger than ever.
Thanks for reading.