It’s been a while since I posted a Linux desktop screenshot. Click the little cropped image for the whole thing. Bonus points if you notice things that seem like they shouldn’t be there. |
Monthly Archives: December 2004
Everything Must Go!
In the spirit of the holiday season, and my obsession with simplifying my life, I bring you the Great Holiday Giveaway of 2004. I’m going to start posting items that I will give to anyone for free. The catch is you have to arrange to get it from me. I’ll ship stuff but only if you somehow cover the cost. If you live in the New Orleans area then it shouldn’t be too much trouble to get stuff from me. I may post several items at once, but for now I’m starting with this one. Glow in the dark stars!
They’ve served me well, but I’m just not using them anymore. Want them? Drop me a line. (Note, these would be good ones for shipping, I’m sure it’s cheap.) NOTE: they include non-damaging sticky-tac stuff for putting them up.
Vanderbilt trip, &c.
I had an interesting trip to Vanderbilt. We left on Wednesday evening via Southwest airlines, which was a new experience for me. I’m used to assigned seating, rather than the whole A/B/C thing they do. Imagine how much less they have to spend on keeping track of who is seated where. We got to the airport well in advance, but were still given ‘b’ boarding passes. We figured out later that this is because most of the A people use online check-in. We used it on the return trip. Anway, the trip basically consisted of two pretty intense days of research discussion. Both days we had coffee and boxed lunches provided, and basically sat in one room all day.
As the Vanderbilt group we were meeting with does a lot of magenetic work, many of the rooms we saw were Faraday cages, which got to be kind of eerie. Nothing like the comfortable feeling of a metal box for a room. Also, Vandy has basements in all of the buildings, with the numbers starting at 1 for the lowest floor. This was somewhat confusing. I prefer ground to be 1 and basement levels to be reverse order, B1, B2, B3 etc as you descend. Ah well.
Anyway, here’s a link to a picture (because it’s kind of big) of all of us toward the end of the last day. We had one absentee who was added via the magic of photoshop later. Can you figure out who it was?
The trip home was uneventful, except for one minor incident on the plane. On the way out, the person in front of me put her seatback in the full reclining position, cutting into my already seriously deficient personal space. On the way back I was prepared. I put my feet up on my briefcase in such a way as to be able to block the seat from moving back. Sure enough, the only person in the row in front of us who decided to put her seat back was the one in front of me. She seemed very frustrated about the seat not moving as far back as she expected, though she never looked behind her to see what might be preventing it. Score one for me and my (barely) adequate seating room on the way home.
First 10k
I’ve got whatever cold is going around, and nothing I’ve been doing has really helped. Therefore, I took some of my own advice (and Sam’s, he reminded me) and did some aerobic exercise. I ended up running from home up Broadway to St.Charles, and on St.Charles ran all the way to Louisiana Ave. Mapquest tells me that this is approximately 3 miles (5K) one way. I of course ran back as well, which makes a total of, if not exactly 10k, almost that far. That’s far and away the furthest I’ve ever run. Granted, it took me an hour and four minutes but I did run it.
Generally I’ve been keeping the exercise logs to myself but this is definitely a personal best, so I’ve logged it here.
MSN Epaces – The Usual Disregard
So Robert Scoble was talking about how the HTML on some Microsoft site or other was perfect, standard HTML. I thought, “that doesn’t sound like the Microsoft I know.” Sure enough, their new blogging site is invalid 6 ways from Sunday.