Separately, an inspector suggested grading the earth around our house to make it slope outward, since, he said, it's currently directing water towards the foundation (not obviously enough that I would've noticed, but probably true). Nobody's been taking much care of the plants along the side of the house and in the backyard, which has gotten overgrown, so maybe this is a good excuse to get a landscaper?
Why do I have this?
What is this doing in a box full of stuff that is recognizably mine?
P.S. Also in this box: Finnish currency. Which means I packed it no earlier than 2002. Probably when I moved from Somerville to the Hawkes' house in 2003.
What is the funniest thing you've seen on the Internet (aside from George's tickets)?
Since Google is supposed to buy ITA as soon as government regulators approve the deal (don't know when that will be, my guess is late fall / early winter of this year), this is also a way to get into Google, in case you happen to want to work for Google.
Wanna? If you have questions leave a comment. Apply here, and for "How were you referred to ITA?" choose "Employee Referral" and put my name in (and also leave a comment or email me), and I'll get someone to look at it quickly.
Edit: "Apply here" link updated from original post.
Giant Robot Dance
- I mentioned the robots to the girl I gave a ride to Falcon Ridge to, and she told me the people she was camping with had also been telling her about them.
- At one of the dances they played, I danced with a friend who'd never been to Falcon Ridge before. I had no idea she'd heard of giant robot, but it turns out they were the reason she decided to go to the festival.
- Walking through the campground, I heard a group of people I didn't know discussing how awesome this band is.
- In the shower line I was standing next to a guy who dances at Concord, and the girl behind us was also a contra dancer, so we started talking about it, and just as I was pulled away from the line by my campmates for birthday cake (our camp is very close to the showers) they all started extolling Giant Robot Dance. Amusingly unaware that half the band was sitting a few yards away :)
Sunday, during their last set of dances, I sat one out so I could get a video:
(Note: at about 1:30 in, video switches to a vantage point where you can see the band clearly, and both trombones are playing)
... and also the waltz they closed their final set with:
I don't have a video of the dance they played Smells Like Teen Spirit, or the Lady Gaga contra dance tune... because I danced those :)
Off to Falcon Ridge
P.S. Vote online for Mac before Sunday!
Mac D'Alessandro is friendly, engaging, well-informed, hardworking, smart, personable, bold, and effective. He's the sort of candidate anyone who meets will want to vote for, and he'll be a Representative everyone will want to work with, yet he won't be shy about his values, and he'll fight for them.
Mac is challenging Massachusetts Congressman Stephen Lynch, in the 9th district, which is part of Boston and a bunch of cities and towns south of Boston, including Quincy and Braintree. The contrast between the two of them is big:
- Lynch voted for the Patriot Act, Mac would've voted against it.
- Lynch voted to invade Iraq, Mac would've voted against that
- Lynch voted against health care reform, Mac supported it
- Lynch opposes a woman's right to choose, Mac supports it
- Lynch voted for continued no-strings funding of the Iraq occupation, Mac would've voted against that
- Lynch voted for the Stupak Amendment, Mac opposed it.
Before running for Congress, Mac was the northeast political director of the Service Employees International Union, which represents janitors, healthcare workers, food service workers, and other low income people. Before that, he worked at Greater Boston Legal Services, which provides civil legal assistance to people who can't afford it. I've met Mac several times - the first was when he volunteered going door to door on another campaign I volunteered on. I've had long conversations with him about issues and about his campaign, and I've seen him talk to others. He says the things I keep desperately hoping members of Congress would say.
Election day is September 14th, less than two months away. Although beating an incumbent is always tough, polls show only 1/3 of Democrats in the district think Lynch deserves re-election. With enough resources and support, Mac can win. Wanna help?
- The Really Easy Part - this'll take you less than a minute.
90 candidates competed for Democracy for America's "Grassroots All Star" endorsement, and in the first round of online voting, Mac came in 4th! That's amazing, and it shows he could win the finalist round. DFA will lend a lot of organizational and fundraising support to the winner, and some to the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th place candidates as well. Voting ends this Sunday, July 25th.
Even if you already voted in the first round, please vote for Mac. - Pass it On - link to this post on Facebook, Twitter, your LJ, ...
- Give Mac a bit of your time or money.
To run an effective campaign in such a short time, Mac needs to pay for: staffers, offices, a web site, a voter contact database, office supplies, phone bills, postage, hiring people to do some internal polls, food for volunteers, some advertising... every little bit helps, and all of it can go to good use. How much is it worth it to you to have a Congressman who'll fight for clean energy, ending wars, fairness for workers and immigrants, to protect civil liberties? Donate at my fundraising link.
And on Saturday, July 31st, I'm going to volunteer on Mac's big Boston canvass and it would be a lot more fun if you joined me! Who's coming?
Among the things you'll see: ( Spoilers, but no worse than you'd see from skimming the program... )
LiveJournal's awful plan
- Purging inactive accounts: ... A journal is defined as inactive if it has not been logged into for 24 consecutive months. A community is defined as inactive if has not been updated for 24 consecutive months. Once an account is eligible to be purged for inactivity, the owner will be sent an email to alert them of the inactive status. The owner will then have two weeks to log into the journal or post to their community to prevent it from being deleted. If the owner does not log in or post, the account will be deleted and treated like any other deleted account ...
If you've got any friends who have left their LiveJournals, and possibly changed email addresses since then, or just aren't likely to pay prompt attention to an email from LiveJournal, and they've commented on your posts, or you've commented on their posts, LiveJournal wants to delete all of that. Why? So that if someone else maybe wants the username, it can be available. Who cares about existing content - people's past writing - when someone new might possibly someday want that username.
If you think this is as bad an idea as I do, please leave feedback for LJ, and please repost or link to this.
Edit: I think they got a lot of feedback, because they've edited the post to change the definition of an inactive account or community: It's not inactive if it has more than one post.
Edit2: A private response to feedback I left yesterday tells me about the changes and the edited news post, and adds that comments of inactive accounts won't be deleted. I asked them to re-edit the news post to add that.
East African rains
- That one's gonna miss me. Off to the left.
Ahh, this one's headed here. It'll be here in about 25 minutes and it looks like it'll last less than 10 minutes before it moves on.
Now there's a big one, looks like a half hour of rain! But it's going to pass to my right, not too far, I'll probably get some peripheral rain, but not the real downpour.
Today at lunchtime I went to the farmers' market, and picked just the wrong time. *boom* the sky opened up, and I hadn't seen it coming. I ducked inside Harvest to get some groceries there, and when I was done, pulled up the weather radar on my phone. I could see the spot of red, a small one right over Camberville, and I could see how fast it was moving, so I waited out it. About ten more minutes 'til it waned, I guessed, and I was about right.
Today's technology makes this almost as easy as East Africa. Pity it can't bring the 60s-to-80s medium humidity air here, too.
- Support a Constitutional Amendment to overturn the Citizens' United ruling that corporations have the same rights as people*.
- Public financing for political campaigns.
- Lobbying reform.
I'm also planning to bring along a copy of these polling results from People For the American Away to reinforce the pledge.
Wanna join me? It'd be nice to have a couple of other people along.
* Actually, that idea has been treated as precedent for over a century, but the pledge states it in terms of overturning the CU decision, and I think that's okay - the goal is the same.
A backslash: \
Slashfic is named after the slash: Kirk/Spock
Fractions are written sometimes with slashes: 1/2
When you list alternatives in a sentence, you may say "slash": his/her
There are slashes in URLs: http://cos.livejournal.com/profile
Backslashes appear nowhere in the natural world, aside from a crufty old operating system from Microsoft and some of its descendants. Unfortunately, it seems to have gotten half the computing world into saying "backslash" wherever either a slash or a backslash appears. This creates confusion, and wastes syllables. I know syllables aren't such a limited resource and we can always make more, but conservation of syllables seems to be a driving force in the evolution of English, so we should be able to defeat this annoying anomaly.
If in doubt, just say "slash". You'll rarely be wrong (as opposed to being wrong almost all the time if you're in doubt and say "blackslash").
Please pass it on! Thank you :)
Strike first, question later?
Ummm... I'm glad they figured that out.
Airport ride, Sun June 6th
The Brattle's artistic director promised "lots of watermelons, killer cats, and pianos that eat people" to those who watch it.
For example, one protocol it describes has a field called a "TPR". A TPR is an arbitrary 3-20 character string that starts with either P or Q: It starts with P when it's created by the system sending the initial query, Q when it's created by the responding system. Simple enough, right? Too simple for the SCR. Instead, we get a table ( like this... )
This bit of obfuscation is typical of the description of one of the most commonly used message transport protocols in the airline industry, HTH - "Host To Host Protocol". One of the other most common message transport protocols is BATAP, "type B Application To Application Protocol".
Actually, HTH is an application to application protocol, because it handles getting messages to specific applications. (For the networking geeks: HTH actually has separate headers for each of OSI layers 4, 5, 6, 7. Yeah, OSI isn't as dead as I thought :/) BATAP, on the other hand, isn't an application to application protocol, or even a host to host protocol - it has no addressing at all, it's just a point-to-point protocol.
BATAP got its name, I think, from the fact that it's generally used to transport teletype messages, and teletype messages have addresses inside them that can be used to route them to specific applications. So even though BATAP is not at all an application to application protocol, it's usually used for application to application messaging. *sigh*
"Teletype" - huh, you may think, where have I seen that term before? Or if you're old enough, you probably know right away: a teletype was one of these things. Think "telephone", "television", ... "teletypewriter". Early TTYs appeared in the 1920s, and computers and printers made them obsolete around the 1970s.
This is not a coincidence: those "teletype" messages airlines send were designed for actual Teletype machines. They're still in all caps, with lines limited to 69 characters, and a compact format full of few-letter codes that makes them read sort of like newspaper personals. These messages are how airline computers tell each other about availability of seats on flights, communicate schedule changes, make flight reservations on each others' flights, and many other things. Yes, today.
Early airlines designed these messages for humans who handled reservations before they had computers to do it, and they used teletypes to communicate with their booking offices. People at these offices processed computer-like workflows by hand until IBM met American Airlines and automated it. But even now, when most of this stuff is handled by software, there are places in the protocols where it explains under what conditions a human who has just received one of these teletype messages needs to pick up the phone to call some other airline's booking office. Once they relay the information, that other airline's agent will type it in, which may cause a new teletype message to be sent somewhere.
What we have here are messages designed for computers pretending to act like humans who are pretending to act like computers.
- 1/2 bowl of spicy peanuts from the Green Street Grill1
2/3lb ground beef
3/4lb fresh snow peas
a few mushrooms
frozen edamame, frozen peas
high heat stir fry oil or peanut oil
toasted sesame oil
soy sauce, lemon juice
... some spices ...
Clean and slice the mushrooms.
Wash the snow peas, and cut all the tips off.
Chop up the ground beef.
In a pan, mix stir fry oil (enough to cover the bottom generously) with garlic powder and onion power2, then heat and add mushrooms to saute. Stir quickly.
When mushrooms are all coated in garlicky peanut oil, add ground beef, stir to break up the pieces. Add spicy peanuts.
When beef is about 4 minutes from done, add the snow peas.
Stir in some soy sauce and toasted sesame oil. Keep frying over medium-high heat.
2 minutes before done, sprinkle in some frozen edamame and peas.
Turn off heat, stir in a bit of lemon juice3. Maybe about 2tsp?
1 - I bet this would work quite well with Trader Joe chili-lime cashews, which is what I'm going to try next, because I won't always have gone to the Green Street Grill recently and have leftover spicy peanuts :)
2 - I was unexpectedly out of fresh garlic, and cooking for someone who doesn't like onions, but I bet chopping up some actual garlic and onions to saute would work quite well! Speaking of which, she doesn't like tomatos either, or I probably would've added them somewhere later one.
3 - Lemon juice was a last minute thought, and I wish I'd thought of it earlier and bought a lime. Both test eaters agreed that adding bits of lime would be even better.
Six candidates are running in the Democratic primary. All of them attended a candidates forum in Central Square a few weeks ago.
I went, took notes, and posted about it today. Read if you want to know more about these candidates. And pass it on to people you know in this area.
Go to this list of Oscars for "Best Costume Design" and scroll down to 1982, where you'll see:
- 1982: Bhanu Athaiya, Madeline Jones and John Mollo - Gandhi
Albert Wolsky - Sophie's Choice
Piero Tosi - La Traviata
Elois Jenssen and Rosanna Norton - Tron
Patricia Norris - Victor/Victoria
You know what other movie came out that year? This one.
What's the point of an award that doesn't even have a credible pretense of being about merit?
Geeky amusement at work
Recently at work, I've had to debug some problems involving software that reads flight schedules. In the airline industry they have this really old-skool file format called SSIM for flight schedules - fixed format all-caps ASCII with two-digit years, the sort of format that pre-dates the invention of more modern formats such as, say, CSV :)
I've had to learn a little bit about reading SSIMs, so I decided to put that to the test. One of the servers I take care of has a SSIM file, updated regularly, of pretty much all the airlines' schedules. Knowing only what time she was scheduled to arrive in Boston, and which city she was flying from, I grep'ed appropriately through that SSIM ... and easily found the flight!
I know enough to be able to read the airline, flight number, departure and arrival times and airports, which days of the week, and what dates that schedule entry is for. It has other info, like type of aircraft, that I don't know how to read, but that was pretty cool; it made the data I've been working with feel a lot more real to me.
#2. We have movies at work on Wednesday and Thursday evenings, along with free food. I usually don't watch the movies in the actual movie room, but they usually also show them on some screens we have in the cafeteria next to it, so those of us who are just eating sorta see them in the background. One day, the movie was Kill Bill.
Although I wasn't expecting as much of a reaction as I got, I randomly put this comment into a gap in the conversation around our table: [gesturing up at the screen] "Little known fact: This is actually the ninth movie in a series called Signal Bill."
I managed to silence the entire table as one by one people got it. Some took over a minute. It was beautiful!
Note: I expect only some of my readers to get that; it's very unixgeeky. For a particular subset of those of you who did get it (especially
Up in the Air
You know how sometimes in a movie there's a perfect line of dialogue followed by another followed by another, and the scene is almost unbearably fun to watch, and you remember and quote it later? I can't easily remember those moments from Up in the Air because there were too many of them. I think more than of total screen time was that sort of dialogue. I haven't had this much fun watching people talk in a movie that wasn't of the witty/silly comedy genre often, or maybe ever.
I'm not yet sure how good a movie I think it was, because it usually takes me a while for a movie to sink in and my opinion to settle, but I can say that they did not take the easy way(s) out in resolving the plot, and that even though this was essentially a movie about relationships, it still passed the Bechdel Test.
Response to a testy comment
I confess that I spend more time than I wish angry that so many of the people I'm close to are white and that comparatively few of them spend any time thinking about white privilege--or any privilege. I think a majority of my community fail to examine the privilege that they live steeped in. Worse than that, a lot of them consider themselves oppressed because they are geeks. I know my anger is mine to deal with, but I really think others could help by owning their privilege more often and more vocally.
... got this response (among many others):
This is going to sound horribly argumentative, but i'm going to say it anyway.
why should i? if i'm living my life purposefully, and treating people right, why should i spend my precious time and energy thinking about a mental construct dreamed up by people who have significant negative energy invested in trying to make me feel like an asshole and a prejudiced jerk -- just because i happened to be born white?
i understand that there *is* white privilege, but instead of spending my days angsting about it and perpetually apologizing to every non-white person i meet, how about i get on with the business of living my life purposefully and treating people humanely and well?
There were several responses, some snarky, some reasonably attempting to make a point, none of which seemed to get through to that commenter. I tried to think about what this commenter's actual question, hidden under the aggression, was. When I thought I saw the question, to which I had an answer, I noticed that the answer I had in mind had not been given in any other comment. So I wondered, what if I ignored the snappishness and aggression in that comment, and just tried to answer the question, on the assumption that it was a real question and I had a real answer and it was perfectly understandable that this person had not yet thought of or come across this answer, and that didn't make them stupid.
( So I wrote this response... )
I got a letter...
It is addressed to "POLYMORY c/o Sir Ofen Inber" and then my street address.
A handwritten letter from a guy who says he lives in the Netherlands, heard something about polymory (it's consistently spelled that way), wants to know more, will I please tell him about it? And do I know of any poly groups ("like-minded organisation of polymory") in the Netherlands, and what their postal address is.
I'm almost sure he got my name and address from the domain registration of polyamory.org (although I did spell my name correctly in the domain registration), but he sent a postal letter and says he doesn't have email, and the only contact information is his postal address. Knowing myself and my weird mental block about sending postal letters, I wouldn't be surprised if I never reply, or take a year or more to do so, but ... it's strange and out of the blue enough that I might get through that and send something soonish. If I knew what to say.
Ummm, what do you think I should reply with?