Tag Archives: General

Firefly

Well as usual my sister has gotten me hooked on another TV show. Last time it was Farscape, which of course just got canned by the SciFi channel. On top of that, the only place I could watch it was at my sister’s house in Austin because I don’t have cable at home. Luckily she tapes all the episodes, so I was able to keep up, if with a giant lag. That’s also the reason I avoid like the plague any site that might give me spoilers about a Farscape episode I haven’t seen.

Anyway Charleen was in town for the weekend and we were hanging at her friend’s house when she asked me if I wanted to see this new series that just started airing a few weeks ago. The name of the show is Firefly, and though their website looks like something out of the nineties, the show is well done. If I was my sister I could tell you how the director is the same guy who did Buffy, or something like that. Regardless, it’s on free TV every Friday. Tivo or tape it if you have a social life! This is the show that’s going to get me to plug my television back in which, for the record, has been disconnected since January of last year.

Matt’s binary review, Firefly: 1

Secret of Age

I’ve discovered the secret of growing old—subtlety. As I get older I find myself starting to really appreciate the shades of meaning in everything around me from art to architecture to music. Especially music. Truly great artists or groups that I may have appreciated only superficially before—Mozart, Radiohead, Frank Sinatra, John Coltrane—I’m now beginning to appreciate with more depth. What’s beautiful about great art, in any form, is that everyone can appreciate it on different levels. At a symphony concert you might have some people just enjoying the atmosphere and letting the music wash over them, you might have a critic listening and comparing it to past performances of the same piece, you might have a musician listening intently to one voice, or you might have a composer listening to the intricacies on how everything fits together, point and counterpoint. Each is perfectly valid, and I think that each can enjoy the music equally, regardless of intellectual depth. By that same token I think younger performers who may be incredibly advanced technically oftentimes lack a depth of emotion that seems to only come with age; this is particularly apparent in jazz.

It’s not just applicable to art either, you could say the same thing about relationships, almost anything. Do any older more experienced people have thoughts on this? (Old = older than me) 🙂

Closure

There is nothing quite as nice as bringing projects to a pleasant close. (and getting paid of course.) Today saw the successful completion of one major project for a large business, and one small project for a local musician. Each is special in its own way, each satisfying in its own way. That is all.

Not Tonight

No curly quotes tonight, I’m tweaking to a bizarre degree, adjusting each for the relative strengths of each language’s regex engine. Of course once I run the benchmarks I could find that it doesn’t matter, but we’ll see. The more I learn about regular expressions the more I love Perl :).

Blah

I think this weather is getting me down, I just don’t feel like going out tonight. No Kaveh Kanes, no House of Pies, no girls, no car, no laptop, blah. The sky is bleak, colorless, moist, and utterly motionless. I want it to rain, brighten, darken, or do something! I think it’s time for a brisk walk.

Get the Book Man

After a long and extremely coincidental series of events, Alex, Jaime, and I decide to go to head to House of Pies (my third time in four days) for some dinner. When I’m almost there I get a call from Alex saying that the restaurant is closed until eight because of pesticides, and that they’re going to hang at the Border’s across the street. (I think it’s interesting that, knowing of why the restaurant was closed, we didn’t decide to go anywhere else.) Anyway, I’m thinking that would be a good way to kill the time, but I hate going to book stores because I either leave feeling unfulfilled or with a significantly lighter wallet. So I resolved not to buy anything and walked in.

Border's on KirbyI browsed around the store, picked up a few things, put them back. I wandered through the music section, seeing what’s new and noticing how outrageous the prices were. In fact, everything was just fine until I stumbled into the computer section. I was able to keep up my jaded no-spend attitude for a little while. “Look at these lame PHP books. Hah! The only ones worth having I already have. I can’t believe I was worried about coming in this place.” Then my eyes began to wander, and I spotted an Apache 2.0 book, just big enough to be juicy. I opened it up and immediately browsed to the mod_negotiation section, since that’s the module I know the most about and I use it as a benchmark for Apache books, which is the same thing I do with Caesar salad and restaurants. (House of Pies has no Caesar salad! Why do I go there so much?) The book had one of the most comprehensive overviews of the module that I’ve seen, and covered some of the differences between the 1.3 and 2.0 versions. However, it wasn’t good enough to overcome my resolution, so it went back to the shelf. However the thought dawned on me that I needed something to do for the next half hour, so I spotted an O’Reilly title I’ve had my eye on called Mastering Regular Expressions.

I’ll cut the suspense, and admit that I bought it. It’s an amazing book; the first two chapters I read really changed the way I think about things in general, a paradigm shift. I’m hoping to finish the whole thing this week and redo all my regex code with what I learn. The good news is that in rang up $5 cheaper at the register than the sticker said, so I’m not complaining.

The point is, however, I lost. The people at Border’s have my type so well figured out that they know I can’t leave without buying something. All those comfy chairs everywhere are really traps in disguise, hoping to lure you in to being caught up in a book. What I really want to do is go into a bookstore, and read an entire book, start to finish. I don’t care if it takes me a week, I want to go in every day, pick up the same book, and finish it. That would really stick it to the man, the book man. Will it ever happen? We’ll see. Has anyone had a similar experience?

Work Work

This looks like it’s going to be a very busy week, at least in terms of business work. Lot’s of things to catch up with, and lots of projects to finish up. I have a couple of scripts to add to the scripts section, including a nice form mailer, curly quotes for b2, a syntax highlighter, and some other odds and ends. I’ve always been a bit paranoid about releasing code publically, because I always wonder if there’s a way to do it better, and I can’t imagine anything quite as embarassing as releasing something with an obvious bug or something. Sometimes this is for the better I think, for example the mail script is about a third of the size that the first version was, and more functional, but it’s also over a year old! Anyway watch this channel for some fun stuff this month. Any requests?

History of Tilde and Google Change

I’m a little behind, so I’d like to point out two very interesting articles over at Mark Pilgrim’s weblog. First he has a nice summary of the change to Google’s ranking algorithm. There are links to all the threads and articles I’ve seen around the web; it seems Mark has an uncanny ability to find relevant links quickly. I do not agree however that this is the “beginning of the end” for Google, it’s just an adjustment phase; they’re still committed to having the very best search results possible, and they’re merely responding to an obvious and well-known exploitation of their previous system. If relevancy is temporarily suffering, just them a little time.

Mark’s History of the Tilde also piqued my typographical interest. One of my Human Situation professors remarked the other day that the Greek alphabet wasn’t even finalized until several years into their war with the Spartans, meaning that at the beginning of what would be a thirty-year war, they still found time to debate and codify a standard of writing. He then asked what new characters were in the western alphabet lately. The first thought in my mind was the euro, but that was a little too obvious. A examination of my keyboard yielded three characters—~, @, and *—that I can’t really see a use for before the time of computers. I’m going to look into it.

Close Call

I had the biggest scare on the way to Psychology this morning: as I was driving on 610 South when I saw a police officer sitting on the side of the road. And it wasn’t just any cop car, it was one of the Camaros. So I naturally checked my speed, and then went on my merry way. Next thing I know, I see the cop whip out of the shoulder in the rear view mirror and head straight towards me. His lights were blinking and I was panicking and . . . he pulled over the person behind me. In hindsight it was actually pretty interesting to watch it happen, almost like something from a nature show. It was a lot like the lions that you see jump out of the grass and pick off a zebra from the pack.

Jish Goes to Houston

Had a wonderful time tonight at Market Square Grill with a number of new people who I hadn’t met in person before. The guest of honor, Jish, was an extremely nice guy. I think he really enjoyed his visit, because everything is bigger in Texas. It was wonderful meeting everyone, such colorful personalities, and I’m definitely going to make it out to the next event. In attendance were (Kathy’s list helped me out here) Katie, Mike, Jish, Elaine, Chuck, Ted, Robert, Hanna, David, Kathy, Christine, and Kymberlie.

The pictures from tonight are now online. I’ve also gotten around to putting up the entire morning shoot from the Sights Unseen series. I also added some photos from 9-27 with some interesting ones in the downtown area that Sarah took. Actually she didn’t take all of them, just the good ones.

Lili

Okay it looks like the hurricane isn’t heading this way, but from the size of it I hope where it does hit is well-prepared and has the best of luck.

Ever wonder why hurricanes always have girls names? Well, there’s no such thing as a himicane.

Okay, that was painful even for me. That’ll be all for the day.

Spaghetti Supper

Every year the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, where I studied jazz and classical saxophone for four years, puts on a fund-raising extravaganza called the “Spaghetti Supper.” It features performances from all of the music groups, from the orchestra to the big band. You can go enjoy the music for free, or you can support the school and get some decent food for just a couple of dollars and enjoy the music. The first performances start at 5:15 today, and they go all the way till about 8 or 9. Also at any given moment there are two or three groups performing. HSPVA is located at 4001 Stanford, 77081.

Nice Breeze

It’s a really beautiful day outside, with just the right amount of wind and shade. It’s just warm enough in the sun to be comfortable, but not to hot to make it oppressive. Even though it feels like it might rain, my weather source says clear skies ahead, so I don’t need to stress again about weather or not I brought an umbrella :).

I hope everyone is having a wonderful day!

Whoops

To those of you, well all of you, who have been getting 403 Forbidden errors when you try to access this website, I sincerely apologize. I turned the site ‘off’ when I was upgrading the gallery to everyone but me, but since everything looked normal to me, I forgot to turn it back on. No need to adjust your set, everything should be groovy now. Thanks again to those who emailed and called letting me know something was wrong.

Yummy Site and Birthday

Before I cram for my pyschology test, I have to get one more post in. If you haven’t yet been exposed to the Big Pink Cookie formerly known as Blah Blah Blog, run your mouse over there. BPC was one of the very first blogs I started reading, I believe from a link from H-town blogs where the name caught my eye, and it’s had me hooked ever since. On top of that, today is Christine’s birthday! Ack, I always take to long to write these things and now midnight has passed. Let’s make this a happy belated birthday =). Happy thirty-three Christine!

Lexus SC 430

I saw one of these on the freeway today, in “Absolutely Red.” All I can say is, I want one! Either that or a Mini. (A note on the Mini USA site, it’s one of the most usable flash sites I have seen. It lets you link to each page individually, and even has forward and back buttons. It still has non-standard interface chrome, which I tend to dislike, but it’s very well done. Cool.)