Mon, 06 Mar 2006 20:59:00 GMT

Antsy

I can taste it.

Not yet shipped
Qty Product / Part No. Estimated Shipped By Estimated Delivered By
1 MBPRO 15/256VRAM CTO
Z0DF
 2.16GHz Intel Core Duo/256MB
 1GB 667 DDR2- 1 SO-DIMM
 100GB Serial ATA Drive@7200rpm
 SuperDrive (DVD±RW/CD-RW)
 iWork
 BkLit Keyboard/Mac OS
 Airport Extreme Card&BT
Mar 29, 2006 Apr 5, 2006

Fri, 24 Feb 2006 02:24:36 GMT

Psst!

Quick note people, the Cello has landed. I repeat, the cello has landed. More to come after I goof around with it.

Tue, 21 Feb 2006 06:20:00 GMT

My 4th Trip to France

Last week I was in Nice, France again, on assignment from my employer, TI. Even though it was the middle of February, the weather was rather mild and pleasant. Another engineer and myself only stayed for a week but we managed to get alot of work done. Each time I go over, I adapt quicker to the jet lag. This time, even though I was tired, I was functional most the time, with strategically timed coffee-breaks. At night we dinned at the local restraunts in St. Laurent Du Var's port area, like Le Kashmir which is a tremendously good Indian cuisine restraunt. Their rose lassi is to die for. However, I found that their concept of "hot" sauce was lacking. It had kick but no real heat. The next night we went to the Thai restraunt down the road. I had an appetizer of Nem (some fried rolls), an entree' plate of deep fried pork with pineapple, which seemed to me like a distinctly American concept but it was rather good. Everything was somehow light and somewhat creamy instead of heavy and fried. On the next night we hit a pizza place which serves Nice-style pizzas which are very thin, about 8" across and have somewhat large chunky toppings. You typically have to eat them with a knife and fork due to the thinness or the crust and the chunkiness of the toppings. They love putting eggs on their pizza's there, which aren't bad actually. On the next night we went out to a fancy place downtown with all the other TIers we were working with and some we hadn't seen in a while because they had ex-pat'ed (ex-patrioted) to France for their work assignments. It took us 4 hours to get through there. Waiters in France just aren't rushed to get you the check, even if you ask for it and look to be in a rush to get back to your hotel room to get to sleep so you can get up at 5 so you can catch the red-eye to Zurich. That's what happens when you don't work for tips ;).

The car I rented while I was there this time, a Renault Laguna, was not nearly as functional as the Kangroo I had last time (in terms of cargo space, fuel efficiency and passenger space), but had some cool features. First, the key was not a key! The "key" to the car was a credit card sized fob with lock/unlock buttons on it. This fob slide into a slot on the console. You would then press the Start/Stop button and the car would start. I imagine that the fob has some sort of RFID chip in it to match the fob the car. The car also was a manual shift. It had a really smooth clutch and shifter. The only real problem I had was the parking break. There was no level arm, or foot pedal. There was a pull-style switch on the dash on the lower-left hand side of the steering wheel along with a button. In order to engage or disengage the electronic parking brake you had to pull out the handle and then with the handle extended, depress the button. Unfortunately I didn't realize this until I got to the hotel. Let's just say that the car smelled funny for the first couple days. The brake worked fine after that though.

On the flight over to Europe I had a flash of insight. I can't explain what set it off exactly but I think it has to do with the amount of Guitar Hero I've been playing. I'm pretty good at the game and I enjoy it tremendously, probably due to my music background, but recently I've felt like the experience is a bit hollow, considering that it's just a game and that as the guitar player you are not actually playing the guitar, legitimately. I've had a "someday, maybe" task of pickup up a music instrument again, ever since we started playing Karaoke Revolution, but I've always thought that it would be the Tuba, since that was my last instrument. Well on the plane the thought crossed my mind that that instrument should be the cello, and I must say, I was intrigued by the thought. I remembered back to the first days of 6th grade when as a student who was interested in music, you had to pick either Band or Orchestra. I chose Band at the time, and the Trombone, specifically. But (and here is the personal insight) I had always wondered what would have been if I chose Orchestra, because I knew that Cello would have been the instrument that I would have played. It occurred to me (in the present) that there was nothing stopping me from picking up a completely new and untried instrument. I am well-off enough to fund my own music lessons and purchase a decent modem Cello. So I've convinced myself to rent one very soon to give it a try. I'll find an instructor and see how well my Band-style music theory holds over in an Orchestral setting.


Fri, 10 Feb 2006 23:56:00 GMT

Snowbird 2006

Well I'm back from Snowbird Utah, my 5th Ski Trip. Scott has posted an enormously long and time consuming journal entry on the experience, to which I would like to snipe-in the following comments. I'll state these in relation to the timeline of events described in Scott's post/page/long winded emotional diary entry into the innerworkings of his heart.


Day Zero: When the "sisters" decended upon us, my first instinct was to engage in the conversation in a way to divert the flow away from overt religious dialogue and into something tangentially related and time-consumming. Basically I knew I had to stall them while Scott went and got the car. Now, every Mormon I've met in my life has been very friendly and hasn't pushed their religious beliefs on anyone. These two Sister were no different. They simply were trained (oh yes, highly trained) operatives in the art of conversation steering. I tried to throw obstacles in their way. I poured out every vaguely art-related item noteworthy of interest I could remember from the gallery and the wax figures and such. I definitely got the drop on them and sent them realing! Adam's artsy training must have rubbed off on me. But they countered hard with an assertion that they didn't get most of what I said (i barely did!) and inquired if I was an art major. At this point I think I relaxed too much and left my guard down. They then asked what else we learned while we were there! Ack! In one or two sentences more, they had dropped the bomb and the cat was out of the bag. We were enemy units in the very beating heart of the monster. Nicole became concise at this point and refused to answer questions with anything other than a yes or no or a brief commment. I decided that we could still stall them while buying Scott some time with the car. One of the sister started asking why weren't believers and I gave her an earful of talk about how your emotions should be a reflection of what you value and I tried to couch the langugae in something familiar to her. She countered with a bible verse. Scott messaged me that he had shown up before she finished. We stood there and took the quickly read and rather uninspiring passage with courteous patience as we edged to the door and told the Sister that our ride was here. We escaped into the snowy night, eager to be outside the compound walls.


Day One: While Scott and Nicole were having their Italian Dinner with Wishing Tree Shiraz (which I later found to be slightly tart), I was slumming at Friday's, watching the SuperBowl closing show and scarfing on a Zen potstickers appetizer followed by a Jack Daniel's Pulled Pork sandwich entree and finally closing with a Cinnabon Cheesecake (sinnfully delicious!). I felt awful after the first day of skiing. My calves were sore, my cold was drowning me in body fluids and I had a mild headache. All in all, better than I've ever felt after a first day skiing! ;).


Day Two: While I always feel that not taking the slope down the mountain is a cop-out, I plead that I am a fat lazy bastard with little endurance, oh and I had a cold. I knew that I was at the end of my rope after doing the Mineral Basin so many times on the backside of the Mountain that day. After getting to the bottom, my chest congestion decided that it wanted out and preceded to request shore-leave for several minutes. We all crashed in Scott and Nicole's Room afterwards. My raspy breathing caused concern on Nicole's part, but was not seriously imparing my ability to breath.


Day Three: I'm still not sure how Scott convinced me to run a blue/black, but he did manage to. At this point in my sickness cycle I was getting some stomach and abdominal trouble that was, shall we say, providing motiviation to get down the mountain. I found that by having this motiviation, I was not nearly as concerned about tumbling down the mountain-side to my untimely death as I might otherwise had been. I took to the slope rather quickly and with no reservations for height, as I would normally have. I think this was not only caused by my previous mentioned insiprations, but also by the visual elements of the environment. This run begins in a rather large bowl concavity in the Mountain. There isn't anything to fall off of (once you are past the road sections, which I'll speak about at length later), and there was a long section of area with which you could bleed off excess speed. To me, this indicates a rather safe environment for some slightly feckless recklessness. I let myself get going faster than I would normally be comfortable with and as a result got down the first part of the slopes rather quickly for my tastes. The rest of the run was a series of controlled bursts that would culminate in a protracted array of rest stops; normal skiing for me. The bathroom at 9000ft was never more inviting. All in all that day was turning point in the trip and in my ailment. I felt less tired than I did the previous days and my cold was more pronounced.


Day Four: This day was actually quite good, even with the bad powder experience. I did the backside runs far more times than I thought I could. Even though, in retrospect I think that I could have gone down the front side of the mountain with Scott and Nicole, I didn't want to chance the possibility of doing something rash or foolish on the way down since I have another trip schedule for Sunday (to France, on business). I felt distinctly less tired on this day than any other. This, of course, could have been due to the side effects of the medications I was on, but I like to think that I was getting my wind, you know, after I needed it.

And finally I'd like to leave some general comments.

  • My skiing style (the controlled skid or differential sliding) does not work at all in "powder". As such I detest it (powder) and refute any claim on it's awesomeness. It is quite unawesome, Sir; quite unawesome indeed!
  • Roads turned into ski paths suck, ... hard. I'd rather ski a choppy blue/black run than hit a long 9% grade road covered in snow. These runs drain the very life from your body, much like a level 20 Lich would.
  • Courvoisier is a man's drink; a Ladies Man's Drink.</wink>

Even if you can't get a room in the "The Inn" while you're nursing that baby skiing addiction, I would suggest that you take a trip up that windy Little Cottonwood Canyon road. All in all it was a great trip.


Tue, 17 Jan 2006 21:02:00 GMT

Firefly / Serenity

I'm joining the chorus on this issue. Internet, this is big your chance. Step up to the plate and knock this one out of the park. Josh needs our help to let Firefly live again. This time our happiness is directly linked to DVD sales. You remember how we brought back Family Guy? It's back and better than ever. We can do it again. Let your money do the talking that the movie figures could not.

Buy the Firefly DVD. (referral link)
Buy the Serenity DVD. (referral link)

These will directly fund the next season, if we make enough to push it way over into the black. Do not dissapoint me, Internet! I want Cowboys in Space!

Mon, 09 Jan 2006 17:36:00 GMT

Main Site Upgrade

I've updated my main portal to be a centralized link "hub" for all the personal sites and personalized sites that I have. I also added some old applets that I haven't had on the site for a while like Planets III and SimpleSimulation. Enjoy!

Wed, 14 Dec 2005 00:27:00 GMT

Asterisk Worklog

I've been eating up alot of my free time installing and configuring an Asterisk server. Asterisk is an Open Source PBX (private branch exchange) which you can use as a mega-answering machine, a conference center for your family, and a home automation interface, amoung an infinity of other clever things. I've cataloged my worklog of installing and configuring it so that I can come back later and not worry about forgetting what I did. It should be a fairly concise, if not obtuse, guide to installing it yourself. It's not quite complete yet, I've got to add some more config information but the bulk of it is there.

Fri, 02 Dec 2005 09:05:00 GMT

My New Shame

I can't believe I actually wrote this up. All the movies I've seen since I've lived in Dallas.

Fri, 04 Nov 2005 03:32:00 GMT

Office Reorganization

Over the last week I've been reorganizing my home office. Last weekend I went to IKEA and picked out a GALANT Desk, after I played around with their IKEA Office Planner. Having this tool is completely invaluable! I got the explicit list of components I needed from the tool once I settled on the layout of the office. I printed out the list, went to IKEA, walked up to the cashier and paid for the list, then went over to the stock area and got the stuff after waiting about 30 minutes (it was jam-packed busy because of their recent 20th anniversary). I've been posting photos my progress on my Flickr page. I'll post a before and after when I complete my metamorphosis. So far the IKEA desk had been put together without a hitch and is, in my opinion, top quality. I received 2 redundant sets of instructions, with all the components I bought, so I have plenty of help in putting it together, which I don't think I really needed, since it was actually quite easy to put together.

Sat, 29 Oct 2005 05:01:00 GMT

2 New T-Shirts

You'll find 2 new t-shirts in my pixel tee's store. Ruby Life and Workout Shirt (that one's for working out). These are in addition to the normal stock of fine nerd-related t-shirts, such as Katamari Damacii. Enjoy!