Wednesday, January 07, 2009 
George, Frank, Lyndol in November 2008

I wrote three weeks ago, that Frank's time was limited. He died yesterday at 3am of liver failure. He had been unconscious since Saturday, and he had been moved to a hospital bed in his living room on Thursday.

I was at a coffee shop near work yesterday morning when Emma called me to relay the news from Lyndol. We hurried over there and spent the rest of the day with him, helping out as various friends came over.

Lyn is doing as well as can be expected. He's sad, occasionally weepy, and sometimes a little manic. I think he's relieved that Frank's ordeal is over. After 32 years together, it's going to leave a huge void in his life.

I'm sad too, of course, but I'm coping well, if a little numb. Emma's more obviously upset. We're going back over there in a little while. I'm to close up Frank's eBay business and to accompany Lyndol to the mortuary. We expect to be back in the office tomorrow.

Frank had thoughtfully left a folder in his email called "friends to notify", a task that I took care of yesterday. I announced it too on his Facebook homepage. Over the next few days, I'll write up a longer appreciation of Frank and post it to his two favorite newsgroups, soc.motss and rec.arts.movies.past-films.

When I have time, I intend to put together some selections from his many postings. For now, a tiny sampler from Jess Anderson.

When I announced my nephew's birth on Monday, I didn't say where I had been when I learned the news. Lyn had invited another couple and Emma and me over on Sunday for a meal. We sat in the living room, talking, while Frank gurgled slightly on oxygen in the corner. It was somewhat surreal but Lyn desperately needed the company of friends.

My father's call came, I took it in the kitchen, then came back and told Emma that she now had a nephew. We toasted the baby. The circle of life: birth and death. As Eric said when I told him the next day, if it was in a movie, you wouldn't believe it.

I didn't really say goodbye to Frank then—I didn't expect the end to come quite so soon—and I regret it. The last time that I saw him conscious was the night of his anniversary when we brought dessert back to his house. He was still fully in command of his faculties then as his newsgroup posts on Christmas Day demonstrate.

As the social worker told us yesterday, Kubler-Ross's work was all about letting people die in character, and Frank very much died in character. I found it remarkable how little it seemed to bother him these last few months at home that his death was imminent. He seemed to get stronger after he came home from the hospital to home hospice care. He took as keen an interest in life as he ever did. I only saw him down once.

Frank Maloney, much loved and much missed.

posted on Wednesday, January 07, 2009 6:39:13 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Tuesday, January 06, 2009 
http://www.georgevreilly.com/blog/content/binary/Michelle-baby.jpg

David B just emailed me a handful of cameraphone photos of his wife and son. I like this one the best.

[Edit: This one is actually from my brother David, not my brother-in-law David. I'm telling you, one of them's got to go: it's just too confusing.]

posted on Tuesday, January 06, 2009 3:38:26 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Monday, January 05, 2009 
http://icanhascheezburger.files.wordpress.com/2008/02/funny-pictures-baby-blanket-cat1.jpg

At 12:44am Monday (Irish Time), Michelle gave birth to a 9lb 8oz boy. Mother and son are healthy but exhausted. I'm not sure quite how long the actual labor lasted; but I think she started late on Saturday.

My nephew is, as yet, unnamed. David and Michelle have yet to find a boy's name that both of them really like. Under Irish law, they have three months to do so, but Michelle hopes to pick a name within a few days at most.

posted on Tuesday, January 06, 2009 6:12:24 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, January 04, 2009 
Absent Friends
Title: Absent Friends
Author: S.J. Rozan
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Dell
Copyright: 2004
Pages: 541
Keywords: fiction, mystery
Reading period: 3 January, 2009

Rozan weaves together two stories here, past and present.

Seven children, four boys and three girls, grow up together on Staten Island in the 1960s and 70s. In early adulthood, one of the young men accidentally kills another, then is killed in prison. A third boy, Jimmy McCaffrey, becomes estranged from the others and moves to Manhattan where he rises in the Fire Department.

Jimmy dies in the Twin Towers on 9/11, doing what he did best: saving people. A month later, a washed-up newspaper reporter writes a story insinuating that there was something unsavory in Jimmy's past. Then the reporter leaps from a bridge, an apparent suicide. His lover doesn't believe it's a suicide and wants to dig deeper.

Rozan cuts back and forth between the two stories. Each story informs the other. Some characters want to find the truth; others would rather conceal it. What is that truth? And are the costs of revealing that truth too high, especially for a community reeling from the losses of 9/11?

posted on Sunday, January 04, 2009 7:45:13 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Saturday, January 03, 2009 
The Sunrise Lands
Title: The Sunrise Lands
Author: S.M. Stirling
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Roc
Copyright: 2007
Pages: 512
Keywords: speculative fiction
Reading period: 3 January, 2009

This book takes place about ten years after A Meeting at Corvallis. The focus has switched to a younger set of characters, the first generation to grow up after the “Change”, the event that knocked the world back into the Dark Ages.

A traveler arrives in Oregon from the East, bearing a compelling prophecy that requires Rudi Mackenzie to travel to Nantucket, the apparent source of the Change. A group of nine (the number is traditional) head eastwards. But the fanatical Church Universal and Triumphant wants to stop them.

Plenty of action keeps the story moving as Stirling continues to explore the ramifications of his post-apocalyptic scenario.

posted on Saturday, January 03, 2009 7:44:37 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Friday, January 02, 2009 
http://farm1.static.flickr.com/191/443976046_32db29db32_m.jpg

It's now two weeks since Michelle's due date. She went into Holles Street Maternity Hospital this morning to have her baby induced. No progress yet. That kid doesn't want to come out! It may be Sunday before it's born.

Ironically, the Wild Geese Players read the Oxen of the Sun chapter of Ulysses last summer, which takes place in Holles Street. Bloom goes to visit his friend Mina Purefoy, who's been three days in labor, and meets up with a crowd of drunken medical students and Stephen Dedalus. Between them, they manage to recapitulate the development of the English language.

We fly back to Seattle in the morning, so we certainly won't see the baby before we leave. We'll be back at the end of July to help my parents celebrate their 70th birthdays, and we'll meet the kid then.

posted on Friday, January 02, 2009 11:25:29 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Thursday, January 01, 2009 
WD Passport

When my parents visited me in September, I bought them a second laptop and an external drive for backup. One laptop stays in Dublin, the other in Cape Town where they spend much of their year. Both laptops are in Dublin with me at present, so that I can clean them up and get them in sync. (I had to remove some very obscure registry settings to get one DVD drive working again. <sigh/>)

Their backup needs are simple. Both of them have web-based email at Yahoo!. The only personal data on either computer is photos. Inevitably the photos are out of sync between the two machines.

The WD Passport drive came with WDSync, which syncs specified data, encrypted with AES, between the computer and the drive. Different computers can have different profiles on the drive. If data is removed from the computer, WDSync will remove it from the drive.

I felt that this was overkill for my parents and I didn't like that the photos were not readily visible on the drive.

So I just wrote a simple batch file that treecopies the photos folder from the laptop to the external drive, and vice versa. They just need to run the batch file periodically, to back up new photos, and bring the drive with them when they travel to and from Cape Town, so that the other laptop can be updated.

posted on Friday, January 02, 2009 12:14:22 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Wednesday, December 31, 2008 
2008

2008 closes, leaving economic wreckage in its wake. Personally and professionally, it's been a good year. At the national level, it's been both a very good year and a disastrous one. Obama's historic victory is offset by the imploding economy.

My health remains good, I'm a little fitter than I was a year ago. I've notched up a few personal milestones, such as receiving my Competent Communicator award at Toastmasters and becoming the secretary of Freely Speaking Toastmasters.

My friends and family are, mostly, doing well. My sister is (still!) on the verge of having her first child. Emma's health is never great: she will have surgery to remove abdominal adhesions in a few weeks. And Frank is in slow decline.

I like my job at Cozi. I've learned a lot in the last year and I've seen our products improve enormously since the beginning of the year. I think we're well placed to ride out the downturn.

That downturn worries me. The economy was unsound and badly needs restructuring, but a lot of people are going to get hurt before it can be fixed.

I still have high hopes for Obama. I wonder how much he can achieve in that initial honeymoon. He certainly can't fix everything that's broken.

2009? We live in interesting times.

posted on Wednesday, December 31, 2008 7:35:42 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Monday, December 29, 2008 
Sovereign
Title: Sovereign
Author: C.J. Sansom
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Macmillan
Copyright: 2006
Pages: 583
Keywords: historical mystery
Reading period: 25–28 December, 2008

Sequel to Dark Fire. The hunchbacked lawyer Matthew Shardlake has been sent to York by Archbishop Cranmer to meet the Royal Progress, where Henry VIII is to accept formal surrender from those who had earlier rebelled. Shardlake is to hear petitions on the king's behalf, but really he is there to ensure that a high-ranking conspirator is brought safely back to the Tower of London. He stumbles upon a cache of secret papers, which leads to a series of attempts upon his life.

Shardlake, once an ardent support of the reform of the Church of England, has grown disillusioned and cynical. His exposure to the king and the Court only increase his disillusionment. The king has become an unabashed tyrant and Shardlake grows sympathetic to the rebels.

posted on Monday, December 29, 2008 7:04:20 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, December 28, 2008 
http://www.brianorndorf.com/images/2008/04/24/baby_mama.jpg

Michelle and her husband David B† came over for dinner. Her baby is now nine days overdue and she's more than ready to give birth.

† Not to be confused with the other David, our brother, who is currently living at my parents' house in Dublin.

We had lunch with Alan and Sheena in Dundrum and met their new baby.

It's been very hard to hook up with my old friends here. We landed seven days ago and the only other meet up was a couple of pints with Jimmy on Monday. They're (almost) all middle-aged, mortgaged, married, and bechilded, and otherwise busy with their own lives. We are to have lunch with Hilary tomorrow and to get together with Austin on Tuesday, but the rest of the remaining week looks socially arid.

I have completely lost count of how many hats and mittens, mostly for babies, that Emma has knitted since she got here. Prodigious quantities, to be sure.

posted on Sunday, December 28, 2008 11:02:30 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Saturday, December 27, 2008 
Dundrum Mental Asylum

When I was a boy, anytime we said ‘Dundrum’ (a suburb of Dublin), it was with a snigger, because it was synonymous in our minds with the mental asylum located there. Nowadays, Dundrum is much better known as the home of a large shopping centre. I'm so out of touch with Dublin that I hadn't realized that there was a major new shopping centre there. I assumed that people were talking about the unimpressive little centre that I remembered there from my childhood. Until today, when we went there to return the mobile phone that we had given my mother for Christmas.

Dundrum was, indeed, a madhouse. There's much talk of a recession in Ireland, as in the United States, but there was little evidence of it in Dundrum today. The Centre was oppressively full: heat, noise, jostling crowds.

My mother wanted a new mobile phone for Christmas. Her only requirements were that it have a camera, that it be easy to use, and the buttons easy to read. The Samsung Tocco has a nice-looking touch screen and David and I thought it would be just the thing, based on our brief experiment with one the other day.

Not so. My mother was totally flummoxed by it. David and I found it confusing and irritating too. The scroll works opposite to the way I expected from the iPhone. Texting was horrible: instead of an alphabetic keypad on the touchscreen, it showed the ten digits with three letters on each digit—just like a traditional mobile phone. And the UI locked you into a nasty series of modal dialogs that were not easy to work with. I probably would have returned it had I bought it for myself, and it was insupportable for my mother.

posted on Saturday, December 27, 2008 9:11:13 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Wednesday, December 24, 2008 
Resurrection Men
Title: Resurrection Men
Author: Ian Rankin
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Little, Brown
Copyright: 2002
Pages: 510
Keywords: crime, fiction
Reading period: 22–24 December, 2008

Troublemaking cops–the Resurrection Men–from all over Scotland have been sent to the Police Training College to make them into team players. DI John Rebus is one of them, though his real job is to get the dirt on three bent cops. The senior officers who sent Rebus in seem to mistrust him too, since the Resurrection Men have reopened an old case where Rebus's behavior was questionable.

Back in Edinburgh, DS Siobhan Clarke is investigating the murder of an art dealer, where Rebus's old nemesis, the crime boss Big Ger Cafferty figures prominently. This seems to be the first book where Clarke comes in to her own as a character. Rebus and Clarke traffic in gray areas and moral ambiguity. The world they must work in is neither clean nor simple, and their actions cannot always bear close scrutiny.

As in other Rebus books, the two investigations end up being linked far too neatly for my liking.

posted on Wednesday, December 24, 2008 7:26:35 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Monday, December 22, 2008 

Captain's Fury
Title: Captain's Fury
Author: Jim Butcher
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Ace
Copyright: 2007
Pages: 508
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 20–21 December, 2008

Captain's Fury is the fourth book in Jim Butcher's fantasy series, Codex Alera, and the sequel to Cursor's Fury.

Tavi is still undercover as the captain of a legion fighting the Canim invaders; an ambitious senator arrives from the capital to take over. Tavi finally comes into his own, learning that he is Gaius Octavian, the hitherto unsuspected son of the First Lord's long-dead heir. Far to the south, Amara and Bernard accompany the First Lord, Gaius Sixtus, on a secret mission, walking into the rebellious Kalare. Their journey bears not a little resemblance to Frodo and Sam's epic walk into Mordor.

The intrigue and the action come thick and fast, holding our attention to the end.

posted on Monday, December 22, 2008 7:10:22 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Sunday, December 21, 2008 
Dublin Airport

Normally, we have Shuttle Express take us to Sea-Tac airport, but they were completely booked up when I tried to make a reservation earlier in the week. Lyndol very kindly came over at 6am and drove us down to the airport.

Our plane left an hour late from Seattle, as it came in late the night before and the crew had to wait for the statutory FTC minimum stopover. The late departure from Seatac was no problem, since we had a scheduled 5-hour layover in Philadelpia. After being shoehorned into the plane, we needed to stretch and wandered through several of the terminals. The only excitement was when I realized an hour before leaving that I had mislaid a credit card in another terminal. Luckily the restaurant was still open and had found the card.

Our second flight was also delayed, so we got to Dublin an hour late. We were very tired and spent the afternoon sleeping. Back to bed soon.

It's approximately 50F here at the moment—unseasonably warm.

If Baby Bowles has not yet put in an appearance, we're going over to Michelle's tomorrow afternoon, to see her and her new house.

posted on Sunday, December 21, 2008 6:37:14 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Friday, December 19, 2008 
Bus hanging over the interstate

I tried to take the bus into work today, but no bus showed. I later learned that the #39 had been “temporarily suspended”. Emma drove into downtown Seattle, getting off at the James St. exit. James is steep and it was closed to traffic. She let me out at 7th and James and I walked down to the Smith Tower.

Other people were not so lucky on the steeper streets, as you can see in the photo of a bus hanging over the interstate.

This is the worst snow we've had in several years, and Seattle is not equipped to handle it. Most years, we only get a day or two of snow, leaving at most a couple of inches. It's not economic for the city to have a lot of snow-clearing infrastructure, though I did see two big trucks with plows attached this morning. Most drivers have little experience in driving in the snow or on ice, and do about as well as you'd expect. All of this is compounded by Seattle's hills: it's hard to go any great distance in this region without having to traverse a hill.

And there's a big weekend storm coming in Saturday evening. I'm glad that I'm flying out in the morning and will miss it.

And so to bed.

posted on Saturday, December 20, 2008 6:50:39 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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My street

When we went to bed on Wednesday night, most of the weekend's snow had melted. We were woken around 5:30am by two large thunder claps, attributed to thundersnow. The snow was falling again and fell for most of the day.

We were sensible and stayed home. So, it seems, did almost everyone else at Cozi. I worked remotely for part of the day. Otherwise, we watched movies. I felt no desire to go outside and make snowmen, though we certainly could have.

We fly to Ireland on Saturday morning. I'm a little worried about getting to the airport.

posted on Friday, December 19, 2008 8:50:57 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Thursday, December 18, 2008 
Butter

I'm Irish. I was raised on butter. Not margarine. Butter. Good Irish butter. Yellow, creamy, with a little salt.

Melted onto toast. A soft yellow layer on bread. A pat of butter on your potatoes. Fry your eggs in butter. Let butter melt on your chips.

I knew butter was important in baking, but I didn't realize until today how carefully it should be treated:

The most common mistakes made by home bakers, professionals say, have to do with the care and handling of one ingredient: butter. Creaming butter correctly, keeping butter doughs cold, and starting with fresh, good-tasting butter are vital details that professionals take for granted, and home bakers often miss.

Butter is basically an emulsion of water in fat, with some dairy solids that help hold them together. But food scientists, chefs and dairy professionals stress butter’s unique and sensitive nature the way helicopter parents dote on a gifted child.

“Butter has that razor melting point,” said Shirley O. Corriher, a food scientist and author of the recently published “BakeWise: The Hows and Whys of Successful Baking” (Scribner).

For mixing and creaming, butter should be about 65 degrees: cold to the touch but warm enough to spread. Just three degrees warmer, at 68 degrees, it begins to melt.

“Once butter is melted, it’s gone,” said Jennifer McLagan, author of the new book “Fat: An Appreciation of a Misunderstood Ingredient, With Recipes” (Ten Speed Press).

Warm butter can be rechilled and refrozen,but once the butterfat gets warm, the emulsion breaks, never to return.

More, with cookie recipes, at the NYT Dining section.

posted on Thursday, December 18, 2008 8:41:23 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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