Monday, June 29, 2009 
Freely Speaking Toastmasters

The Toastmasters year closes tomorrow. We held our Annual Meeting tonight at Freely Speaking Toastmasters and elected a new set of officers. One new person was elected to the board, replacing the one person who stepped down, but everyone except the VP Education and the Webmaster changed roles. I am the outgoing Secretary and the incoming Treasurer, and I also continue as the Webmaster.

posted on Tuesday, June 30, 2009 6:51:21 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, June 28, 2009 
Portland's Union Station

I can't believe that I've never taken the train down to Portland before. It's easy, it's inexpensive, and it's about as quick as driving without the hassle.

The photo is from the set of photos that I posted to Flickr for motsscon XXII, on which more later.

posted on Sunday, June 28, 2009 7:05:13 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, June 27, 2009 
George on a Segway

I rode on a Segway today, for the first time. It was a lot of fun: a two-hour of Portland's waterfront with nine other motsscon people. I could have done without the 80°F heat though.

It took a few minutes for me to find my balance and to feel comfortable. After that, it came pretty naturally.

Highly recommended.

posted on Saturday, June 27, 2009 7:42:37 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Friday, June 26, 2009 
Patty Murray's aide

Today, I did something that I've never done before. I visited my US Senators' offices, with a handful of others, to help stiffen their spines on healthcare reform.

It started by accident last night when Mira mentioned on Facebook that she was going to visit Rep. Jim McDermott, Sen. Maria Cantwell, and Sen. Patty Murray's Seattle offices today to talk to them about the “public option”.

McDermott and Murray were already supporters of the public health insurance option. Cantwell's position was murkier and she came out in favor of some kind of lame “co-op” compromise earlier this week. Mira and her friends had no difficulty in setting up meetings with McDermott and Murray, but Cantwell's office refused to schedule a meeting.

I joined them at the Jackson Federal Building, where both Senators have their Seattle offices, after they had already met with one of Jim McDermott's aides. That had gone so well that they had difficulty in tearing themselves away in time.

We went to Maria Cantwell's office first, where we spent ten minutes in an unsatisfactory exchange with the staff at the front desk, who wouldn't commit to anything more than passing on comment forms. As we were leaving, her State Director, Chris Endresen, came out of the ladies' restroom asked us what brought us there, and invited us in for 15 minutes.

Ms. Endresen's position was that Senator Cantwell is a policy wonk, who is working hard on various health-related bills. We were very clear that we were all in favor of healthcare reform and the public option, and would like to see Maria take a lead on it. Moreover, polls indicate that 72% of the public feel similarly. The aide remained non-committal, though she did tell us to look out for an op-ed next week from Maria, outlining her position.

We went downstairs to Patty Murray's office, where we had an appointment with Mary Conroy, one of her aides. She has been working on healthcare issues for nine years and sees this summer as a major opportunity. There are two bills being developed in the Senate, one from the HELP Committee, the other from the Finance Committee. Murray sits on the former, Cantwell on the latter, so Washington State has more influence than most.

We asked Mary what we as ordinary grassroots activists could do, and she told us that Washington CAN had been taking the lead locally, that they had done good work with rounding up small business owners to advocate for healthcare reform and tell their own stories. We told her some of our stories.

One woman said she had been unemployed for 18 months, that she could no longer afford COBRA, that she would fall apart without her depression medication, and for now she had managed to get a year-long grant paying for that medication from a pharmaceutical foundation. Paul said that only yesterday his wife had been diagnosed with a heart murmur. She's thinking of changing jobs and that would constitute a “pre-existing condition“. He had thought of starting a business a few times, but that the cost of providing health insurance had always been a huge obstacle. Isn't it ironic that America venerates small businesses, but makes it so difficult to start them? Will mentioned a friend of his in France who's a “healthcare exile”. His friend is a self-employed consultant who works on constitutional issues with countries like Bosnia. He's also a diabetic who would find it difficult and expensive to get good insurance in the US. And I mentioned that my wife's health is poor and that she has not been well enough to work this year. We have insurance through my job, but were I to lose my job, health insurance would be a big worry. (Some recent COBRA change that I hadn't heard of seems to partially mitigate this.)

Mary also referred us to the Herndon Alliance who have been doing good work on framing the issues around healthcare reform. She said that the main tactic of those who oppose reform is more subtle than the Harry and Louise ads of 1993. They are playing for time and urging more study, in the hopes of making us lose momentum. There's about two more months before whatever bills are written get locked down.

Anyway, we spent an hour there and felt far more welcomed than we had been at Maria Cantwell's office. Night and day.

Next stop: look more closely at Washington CAN.

posted on Saturday, June 27, 2009 4:48:13 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, June 25, 2009 
Google Maps for Collaboration

I'm heading down to Portland tomorrow evening for Motsscon XXII, of which more later.

It seems no-one thought to set up a map of the events and restaurants, so I spent half an hour in Google Maps creating a custom map. It was surprisingly painless and the suggestions for businesses near an address really helped.

Update: 10 minutes after writing the above, Google Maps crashed Safari 4 while trying to print the map.

posted on Thursday, June 25, 2009 7:33:27 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, June 24, 2009 
The Wandering Soul Murders
Title: The Wandering Soul Murders
Author: Gail Bowen
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: McClelland & Stewart
Copyright: 1992
Pages: 216
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 23–24 June, 2009

Sequel to Murder at the Mendel. Teenage prostitutes are being mutilated and murdered in Regina. Joanne Kilbourn and her family become entangled with some of these “disposable” girls, in a case that touches too closely to home.

In the previous novels, her children were important secondary characters. Here they become central to the story, each in their own way.

posted on Thursday, June 25, 2009 5:31:49 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, June 23, 2009 
Shakespeare

Greenstage continue their Shakespeare in the Park this year with performances of King John and Comedy of Errors at a number of Seattle-area parks over the summer. Emma and I enjoyed their Twelfth Night at Seward Park last year. Best of all, it's free!

The play starts at 7:00pm. Come at 5:00 and have a picnic with us near the Amphitheater. Bring food that's ready to eat—the Seward Park PCC is less than a mile away. There's some seating but you might want to bring your own chairs.

If you come even earlier, Seward Park is worth a trip in its own right. Old growth forest trails and a 2.5 mile lakefront walk.

Please RSVP to the Evite. Feel free to invite more people to join us.

posted on Wednesday, June 24, 2009 6:53:17 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, June 22, 2009 
Murder at the Mendel
Title: Murder at the Mendel
Author: Gail Bowen
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: McClelland & Stewart
Copyright: 1991
Pages: 216
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 21 June, 2009

Joanne Kilbourn has moved to Saskatoon after the events of Deadly Appearances, and renewed her childhood friendship with Sally Love. Sally is now a famous artist and the focus of controversy: a huge fresco that she painted for the Mendel museum of the penises and vaginas of her former lovers is being picketed. As events turn ugly, Joanne will learn more than she ever wanted to know about Sally's and her own history.

Bowen writes knowledgeably about art and artists and frustrated ambitions. Joanne's long, entangled history with the Love family adds texture to the story—and blind her to some of their failings.

posted on Tuesday, June 23, 2009 6:55:54 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, June 21, 2009 
Up
Title: Up
Director: Pete Docter
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Copyright: 2009

Up is another gem from Pixar. A shy little boy Carl Fredricksen meets the exuberant Ellie, who also hero worships Charles Muntz, noted explorer of Paradise Falls. They grow old together and Ellie dies before they can achieve their lifelong dream of an adventure. With nothing left to lose, Carl attaches 10,000 helium balloons to his house and floats off to South America in search of Paradise Falls, inadvertently taking Russell, a Wilderness Explorer, with him.

The movie appealed just as much to the kids at our showing as the adults. The storytelling is first rate, combining humor, adventure, love, and pathos. The story is rooted in the lifelong romance between Carl and Ellie, which is beautifully told at the beginning, mostly without words. Pixar's animation and artwork gets better with each film: it looks gorgeous, evoking the feel of the Lost World.

Highly recommended.

posted on Sunday, June 21, 2009 7:07:10 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, June 20, 2009 
Deadly Appearances
Title: Deadly Appearances
Author: Gail Bowen
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: McClelland & Stewart
Copyright: 1990
Pages: 280
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 16–18 June, 2009

Andy Boychuk has just become the leader of the opposition party in Saskatchewan when he is murdered. His advisor, Joanne Kilbourn, sees him drink the poison. Her own husband was senselessly murdered a few years earlier, and Andy was not only her boss but an old friend, so it's difficult for her. When she decides to write a biography of Andy and learns unexpected things about him, her health mysteriously begins to fail.

Joanne is a middle-aged widow with children, who has spent her life working behind the scenes in Saskatchewan politics. She is a shrewd judge of character and a perceptive observer, albeit with human frailties and blind spots. This is the first of a series of novels.

posted on Sunday, June 21, 2009 6:55:03 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Friday, June 19, 2009 
Blown Capacitors

I complained a week ago about my display driver going berserk. I blamed Windows Update, since it happened within hours of a pile of updates being installed. I upgraded to the latest beta NVidia drivers on Monday and it helped for a while, but by Wednesday, it was almost as bad again as it had been last Friday. It was infuriating and I was both entertaining and alarming my neighbors with my cursing.

Today was the last day of a very busy sprint for me and at last I had the time to dig into it. I opened up the case and took a look at both video cards—I have two dual-head cards connected to three monitors—and one of them had partially blown capacitors like those in the picture. I removed the bad card and did some graphics-intensive things for an hour, and the other card behaved flawlessly.

Oddly, until someone mentioned that it might be a hardware problem yesterday, it didn't occur to me, even though a video card blew in this machine last year. I came in one morning to find a black monitor, and when I pulled out that card, I found that some of the capacitors had popped right open with stuffing protruding.

On general principles, I had been meaning to repave this machine for a while. I've had it since December 2007 and it was still running the original installation of Vista. I booted from a DVD, reformatted my C: drive, and installed Windows 7 x64 RC1.

I finally have a 64-bit OS as my primary Windows desktop, so I'll actually be using the Win64 build of Vim that I maintain. My first impressions of Windows 7 on this machine are very favorable, but there's plenty more that I need to install before the machine has everything that I need.

posted on Saturday, June 20, 2009 4:40:37 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, June 18, 2009 
Maximus / Minimus Pig

I walked past this truck at Second and Pike on Monday and did a double-take. Eric was intrigued too when I showed him a photo later, and we went back to investigate yesterday.

They only opened a few weeks ago. As yet, the menu is limited. The Maximus is a pulled pork sandwich with a hot sauce, while the Minimus has a tangy sauce. They have a vegetarian sandwich, chips made from potatoes and vegetables, and hibiscus and ginger lemonades.

I don't much care for barbecue as a rule. The Minimus with a sprinkling of Beecher's cheese was good, but not outstanding. The pork was flavorful and not overwhelmed by the sauce. The sandwich was a little small and inevitably messy. The ginger lemonade was pleasantly tart. See Yelp for more reviews.

The pig is very cool and undoubtedly draws a lot of business. There's nowhere to sit near the Pig. We sat down at First and Union and looked down at the waterfront.

I'll be back. Occasionally.

posted on Friday, June 19, 2009 5:49:16 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, June 17, 2009 
Dozens of gay rights protesters demonstrate outside the Beverly Hills hotel in Los Angeles in May.

Candidate Obama talked a great line in gay rights, selling himself as a “fierce advocate”. He'd get rid of the Defense of Marriage Act, Don't Ask Don't Tell, and more.

President Obama has been a big disappointment on gay rights. He hasn't done anything about DADT, he hasn't spoken out about gay marriage, he hasn't made any gay appointments. John Aravosis has a good roundup at Salon.

But now a shitstorm has blown up. On Friday, the Department of Justice filed a brief in defense of DOMA. First of all, the DoJ is not actually required to defend all laws. More importantly, the brief was gratuitously offensive, invoking incest and pedophilia.

People are outraged. A major fundraiser for the Democratic National Committee celebrating the 40th anniversary of Stonewall is falling apart as the attendees are declining to attend.

I don't know what's going on in the White House, but I don't like it.

posted on Thursday, June 18, 2009 4:51:44 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, June 16, 2009 
[Wikipedia] Bloomsday performers outside Davy Byrne's pub

Today, June 16th, is the actual Bloomsday. For expediency, we in the Wild Geese Players usually perform our reading at the nearest weekend.

The Irish Times writes its usual report of a crowd of posers re-enacting fragments of Ulysses in Dublin. Perhaps the best line:

Back in the city centre, a sign outside Davy Byrne’s advertised a Bloomsday special: Gorgonzola cheese sandwiches and burgundy for €12.90. Someone nearby complained loudly that prices had gone up since 1904.

A Spanish translator of Ulysses remarked:

“You don’t have to be a Joycean to enjoy this day,” he said. “It’s wonderful to see literature taking over the city and there are lots of ordinary people, not just scholars.

“That’s a very Joycean act. Yes, he’s difficult and demanding to read, but look around you, and see how people have responded to him. That’s what happens when you capture the soul of a people.”

Colum McCann had his own take on Bloomsday in the New York Times:

Soon my grandfather was emerging from the novel. The further I went in, the more complex he got. The man whom I had met only once was becoming flesh and blood through the pages of a fiction. After all, he had walked the very same streets of Dublin, on the same day as Leopold Bloom. I began to see my grandfather outside Dlugacz’s butcher shop, his hat cocked sideways, watching the moving “hams” of a young girl. I wondered if he had a penchant for “the inner organs of beasts and fowls.” I heard him arguing with the Citizen in Barney Kiernan’s pub. I felt him mourn the loss of a child.

Vladimir Nabokov once said that the purpose of storytelling is “to portray ordinary objects as they will be reflected in the kindly mirrors of future times; to find in the objects around us the fragrant tenderness that only posterity will discern and appreciate in far-off times when every trifle of our plain everyday life will become exquisite and festive in its own right: the times when a man who might put on the most ordinary jacket of today will be dressed up for an elegant masquerade.”

Amen.

posted on Wednesday, June 17, 2009 6:13:51 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, June 15, 2009 
Old Boys
Title: Old Boys
Author: Charles McCarry
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Orion Books
Copyright: 2004
Pages: 484
Keywords: thriller
Reading period: 11–15 June, 2009

Paul Christopher, septuagenarian and former superspy, was last seen in a remote Chinese province. His ashes are delivered to his cousin Horace, also a retired spy, who is not convinced that the ashes belong to Paul. Then he learns that Paul is on the trail of Ibn Awad, a mad sultan with nukes who covets a first-century manuscript (a Roman spymaster's report on Jesus) that is thought to be in the possession of Paul's 94-year-old mother, who hasn't seen since 1940, when she was abducted by the Nazi Reinhard Heydrich. So Horace recruits a handful of creaky-kneed retired spies and goes after Paul.

Anyway.

If you can get over the wild improbability of the plot, it's actually well-written, coherent, and plausible on its own terms.

posted on Tuesday, June 16, 2009 6:14:29 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, June 14, 2009 
Yard Waste

I filled six densely packed barrels with yard waste today, before and after the victory barbecue for the Wild Geese Players. No wonder I'm tired.

Three barrels from the pile of clippings left over from circumcising the camelia tree on Memorial Day weekend, and another three from the big bush that Emma hates in the front rock garden. The latter barely looks pruned at all.

posted on Monday, June 15, 2009 5:56:03 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, June 13, 2009 
Leopold Bloom and Mrs. Breen

Our 2009 Bloomsday reading is over! I thought it went very well. We had quite a large audience by our standards—about 30 people, we got a lot of laughs, and most of them stayed until the end.

Of all the spaces that we've performed in, I like the University Bookstore the best. The events area is sunny, airy, and spacious, and easily discovered by customers in the store. The staff were very helpful and easy to work with. I'd prefer not to do another event on the same day as the University of Washington's Commencment, however.

Eric came along with a big lens and took hundreds of photos. Emma took a few as well. The best of them are up at Flickr.

Thank you, everyone.

posted on Saturday, June 13, 2009 5:18:48 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Friday, June 12, 2009 
Display driver lddmkm stopped responding and has successfully recovered

This morning, the video adapters on my Vista dev box were resetting 2–3 times per minute.

After a pile of Windows Updates landed on my machine at 3am yesterday, it would occasionally freeze solid for a few seconds. Once in a while, all the monitors would go black briefly, then restore. Each time, I would see a status update pop up from the system tray, "Display driver nvlddmkm stopped responding and has successfully recovered."

This was irritating enough that I downloaded the latest NVidia drivers this morning, 185.85_desktop_winvista_32bit_english_whql.exe. That really screwed me. The video adapters started resetting 2–3 times per minute, rendering the machine almost unusable. I have two video adapters, NVidia GeForce 8600 GT and NVidia GeForce 7600 GT.

The eventlog was full of Event ID 4101 - Display Driver Timeout Detection and Recovery.

I reverted to the 178.24 drivers and that helped. When I'm not touching the machine, the adapters only get reset every few minutes instead of several times a minute. When I am using it, something as simple as clicking a window to bring it to the foreground can trigger a reset.

It's very irritating but I can live with it for a little while, unlike the other. I don't want to repave my box: apart from the time loss, I'm not convinced that it would help if I got the same driver config all over again.

I contacted a friend at Microsoft who tried to hook me up with a driver guy, who is unfortunately out of office. I'm hoping that it can be fixed early next week or my temper is going to fray rapidly.

Update: June 19th: See When Video Cards Go Bad.

posted on Friday, June 12, 2009 7:27:43 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, June 11, 2009 
Shadowplay
Title: Shadowplay
Author: Tad Williams
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Daw
Copyright: 2007
Pages: 737
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 3–10 June, 2009

Sequel to Shadowmarch. Southmarch is under siege by the fairy army and the teenaged regent, Briony, has been deposed by an ambitious noble. Briony is on the run, fleeing for her life. Her twin, Barrick, is lost, mentally and physically, behind the fairy lines. Far to the south, Qinnitan has successfully fled from the autarch, but now the autarch is besieging the city of Hierosol where she is hiding.

The second book in a trilogy often suffers from Middle Book Syndrome: the first book establishes the characters and the plot, the final book resolves everything, but the middle book has to somehow keep things going, and the author's energy often flags. Williams moves the plot along nicely, from one cliffhanger to the next, and we see the main protagonists mature as they are tested.

posted on Friday, June 12, 2009 2:51:51 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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