Friday, August 21, 2009 
SanDisk Ultra II SDHC 4GB card

Before we left on our trip, I picked up a pair of 4GB SD cards for my point-and-shoot Canon Elph. I brought my Linux netbook along, which has a built-in SD card reader, and the cards worked fine with that.

But they didn't work at all in any of the external card readers that I have, and I had to resort to a USB cable to transfer photos from the camera to my other computers.

Wikipedia discusses compatibility issues with 2GB and larger SD cards, which is initially what I thought the problem was. On looking more closely at the cards, I see that they're the newer SDHC cards. The card readers were all a few years old and must have preceded the SDHC standard.

I spent $7.99 on a new card reader this evening, which supports SDHC and most of the other small card formats.

posted on Friday, August 21, 2009 8:23:03 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, August 20, 2009 
A Coffin for Two
Title: A Coffin for Two
Author: Quintin Jardine
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Headline
Copyright: 1997
Pages: 310
Keywords: crime
Reading period: 16–20 August, 2009

When we were in Spain in July, we visited the Dalí museum in Figueres. The museum is Salvador Dalí's monument to himself; he spent his latter years building it. The guided tour was well worth the money. I came away believing that Dalí was both enormously talented and full of shit.

The next day, purely by chance, we passed a sign for Gala's castle at Pubol while driving around in the countryside. We spent half the morning looking around the castle that Dalí had bought for Gala, his wife and muse. It's a small castle in a village that they renovated. The deal was that Gala lived there and Salvador could only visit when she invited him.

Several years ago, I had read A Coffin for Two whose climactic scene takes place in Gala's castle. I re-read it, now that I've seen many of the locations of the book.

Osbert Blackstone and his girlfriend Primavera Phillips are Scottish investigators who are flush with cash after an earlier case. They buy themselves an apartment on the Costa Brava and settle in. To stop themselves going to seed, Oz and Prim take on a few enquiries, and are asked to authenticate a previously undiscovered Dalí painting that was dubiously acquired.

The plot relies too much on coincidence and the denouement is ludicrous but inspired. That aside, I thought it was well-written and entertaining and I found Oz and Prim both likeable and believable.

posted on Friday, August 21, 2009 6:12:16 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, August 19, 2009 
Senator Patty Murray at Cozi

Senator Patty Murray visited us at Cozi this morning. She was there to hear from small business people about healthcare reform and she met with half-a-dozen local small business owners, including our CEO, Robbie Cape. I sat in on the meeting as an observer to take photos.

We heard a number of stories.

Jason runs a record store. When they decided to insure all of their employees, it meant that everyone had to take a pay cut. One guy didn't want to take part, but Jason convinced him. Weeks later, that guy broke his arm and ended up in the emergency room. Not long after, the same guy had another accident. Later he said that he'd have been completely broke without the insurance.

Debbie runs a restaurant on Capitol Hill. She said that she was ashamed to admit that she couldn't afford to offer health insurance to all her employees—her margins are too low. Debbie's insurance broker told that her premiums are higher because she's in the wrong zipcode—lots of HIV-positive people on Capitol Hill—and because she has a 60-year-old employee.

Jason's self-employed girlfriend became pregnant. They had to search hard to find a policy that did not consider pregnancy to be a pre-existing condition!

Will has a self-employed friend who is a healthcare exile. His friend has been unable to find health insurance in the US as he has diabetes. Instead, he and his family live in France where they're enjoying the French system.

Robbie firmly believes that it's important to have great healthcare for all his employees and their families. But this raises his costs and places him at a competitive disadvantage.

Karen is in her early sixties and has adult onset diabetes. She has insurance by the skin of her teeth, some grandfathered coverage. If she lost that, it would cost $500 to cover her, another $500 for her husband, and another $500 for her medicine. $1500 is almost the cost of her mortgage. She's trying to take care of herself and hang on for Medicare.

Robbie was galled that Cozi's insurance costs are going up by 25–35% every year. Small businesses have no leverage to negotiate with the insurers.

Patty talked for a while about the work that her HELP committee has been doing. They've passed a bill out of committee, but the Finance Committee is still at work on their own bill. Under the public option, her bill reimburses half of the cost of the premiums to companies with fewer than 50 employees.

The public option would spread the risk across a much larger pool, which should help drive down costs. Those of us who have insurance now are paying about $1000 each to cover the costs of catastrophic care for the nearly 50 million who are uninsured.

There was unanimous agreement that the current system is unsustainable and becoming ever more unaffordable. All present were in favor of the public option.

Patty is having a number of small meetings. She feels that they're more productive than town halls. I can only agree. She said that her office is getting constant calls from both sides.

Patty posed briefly for group photos, before leaving for her next meeting.

There was more, but that's all I can dredge up from memory at this late hour.

Afterwards, we posted an innocuous update to the CoziFamily fan page, “WA State Sen Patty Murray just stopped by our office to talk about small biz perspectives health care reform. With more than eight of us in the room, there was UNANIMOUS support for a public option!” A firestorm immediately broke out in the comments. Our very own townhall :(

(Why Cozi? Back in June, a handful of us, including my colleagues Will and Mira and I, met with our representatives to push for the public option. We got an enthusiastic reception from Patty Murray's office; less so from Maria Cantwell's staff. A couple of weeks later, our group put on a rally outside the Federal building where both senators have their Seattle offices. Then Robbie was asked to make a statement for a press release from Patty, which led to his being asked to host this meeting.)

Update: Robbie's take

posted on Wednesday, August 19, 2009 7:43:21 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, August 18, 2009 

Barney Frank Confronts Woman at Town Hall

Those town halls are getting uglier.

A dozen gun-toting paranoid guys walking around at Obama's town hall in Arizona yesterday, some of them with ties to the violent Viper Militia.

In the video above, Barney Frank takes a question from some woman who's comparing Obama to a Nazi and tells her she's talking “vile, contemptible nonsense”.

I hope it's not going to escalate into outright violence.

posted on Wednesday, August 19, 2009 6:16:47 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, August 17, 2009 
You Suck: A Love Story
Title: You Suck: A Love Story
Author: Christopher Moore
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Harper Collins
Copyright: 2007
Pages: 328
Keywords: humor
Reading period: 15–16 August, 2009

Tommy Flood is another of Chris Moore's Beta Males. He's also a brand-new 19-year-old vampire, newly turned by his girlfriend Jody—herself only a vampire for a few months. He's not too keen about his new state, but he's trying to cope. It doesn't help that his former crew of shelf stockers at Safeway are trying to hunt his vampire ass. And he has a 16-year-old Goth chick for a minion who thinks the Lord Flood is like OMG totally hot.

Funny but not mean-spirited.

posted on Tuesday, August 18, 2009 5:40:08 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, August 16, 2009 
Moving Photos in Lightroom

When using Lightroom before, I was never able to figure out how to move photos from one folder to another. You'd think that you could just click on a photo and drag it. I just spent twenty minutes figuring out what I've been doing wrong. After you've selected multiple photos, click on the photo thumbnail and not the surrounding gray frame, and then you can drag the photos to the target folder.

I had become accustomed to clicking on the frames to multi-select photos, so naturally I assumed that was also how you dragged a set of photos. But clicking on a frame of a selected photo merely deselects all the other photos.

posted on Sunday, August 16, 2009 9:02:30 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, August 15, 2009 
Layer Cake (movie)
Title: Layer Cake (movie)
Director: Matthew Vaughn
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Copyright: 2004

After reading Layer Cake earlier this week, I decided to rewatch the movie. The screenplay was written by J.J. Connolly, adapting his own novel. Although the convoluted plot has been much simplified and somewhat rearranged, it's still complex and tricky to follow. Most of the humor is gone, as director Matthew Vaughn didn't want to make Lock Stock III. It's more of a straight thriller. The Cockney is toned down, making it easier for a non-UK audience. And Daniel Craig is somewhat older and calmer than the narrator of the book.

The film succeeds both in its own right and as an adaptation, though I prefer the book. It was Daniel Craig's first starring role. He carries the story in his role of a coolly professional drug dealer whose world starts falling apart. The other characters are rather thin; only Colm Meaney and Michael Gambon have any heft.

Worthwhile.

posted on Saturday, August 15, 2009 8:05:35 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Friday, August 14, 2009 
Layer Cake
Title: Layer Cake
Author: J.J. Connolly
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Black Cat
Copyright: 2000
Pages: 309
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 11–14 August, 2009

The unnamed narrator—My name? If I told you that you'd be as clever as me—is an up-and-coming London drug dealer who wants to retire by his thirtieth birthday. He's professional, low-key, and a little bit cocky, and he has every chance of pulling it off. He reluctantly does a favor for the crime boss Jimmy Price and suddenly his plans are derailed. Double-crosses, snitches, betrayals, murders, hold ups, and stings ensue. There's little honor among thieves, save for our hero's immediate circle.

It's easy to see why Layer Cake was made into a movie. It's very funny and quite serious—our hero learns some hard lessons. Connolly has an excellent ear for dialog, particularly Cockney dialog, and perhaps a soft spot for London villains.

Recommended.

posted on Saturday, August 15, 2009 4:59:33 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, August 13, 2009 
Light Rail confusion

I rode Seattle's new Light Rail system for the first time yesterday morning. I walked to the new Beacon Hill station. It took me just over 20 minutes at a brisk pace, so I'm not likely to walk there often. I could have taken the 60 bus to the station, but it only runs every 30 minutes.

When I got to the Beacon Hill station, I couldn't figure out if my book of $2.00 tickets for Metro bus tickets were valid on the train or not. The first three workers I asked didn't know either. The cop I asked said “yes”, so I took the elevator 167 feet down to the platform and rode the train into the Pioneer Square station next to the Smith Tower. After looking on the Sound Transit website, I don't think the cop was right.

I'm not the only one who's confused either. Seems like everyone else is confused too. Bus transfer tickets work, at least, and light rail tickets are accepted as transfers on the bus. Unlike the buses, there's no ride-free zone for the light rail in downtown Seattle.

We took the light rail home from the Mariners game last night and transferred to the 36 bus after a short wait. (The 36 runs down 15th after 7pm; the 60 and the 39 stop running about 9pm.)

I found the trains and the Beacon Hill station to be clean and pleasant. The train reportedly runs every 7½ minutes, which I haven't confirmed. It certainly travels faster than the bus.

The light rail seems nice, but I'm not likely to use it often.

posted on Friday, August 14, 2009 6:16:25 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, August 12, 2009 
14th Inning

Tonight was the annual Irish Night at the Mariners and we bought tickets for $11.

Even after 20 years in the States, I still know next to nothing about baseball. I picked up a copy of the Baseball Field Guide before last year's Irish Night, and found the first chapter very helpful in explaining the basics. I re-read it last night and it helped me follow tonight's game.

Neither the Mariners nor the White Sox could score a run. Inning after inning the game went on, zero-zero. No one had scored by the bottom of the ninth, so play continued. A tenth inning. An eleventh. We called it a night and took the new Light Rail to Beacon Hill.

The game finished in the 14th inning when the Mariners finally pulled ahead.

posted on Thursday, August 13, 2009 6:37:14 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, August 11, 2009 
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Title: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Author: Stieg Larsson
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Vintage Crime
Copyright: 2005
Pages: 590
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 8–9 August, 2009

After crusading financial journalist Mikael Blomkvist is convicted of libel, he reluctantly agrees to investigate the 40-year-old disappearance of the teenaged Harriet Vanger for her great-uncle Henrik, a rich industrialist. He is aided by the antisocial hacker Lisabeth Salander, the eponymous tattooed girl.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo was published shortly before Larsson's untimely death, and later became an international bestseller. It's a classic locked-room mystery—Harriet disappeared from a sealed-off island full of the extended, ugly Vanger clan. It's an indictment of the Nazism buried not so deeply in Sweden's past, of sexual violence and misogyny, and of the ethical failings and complicity of financial journalists. It's a dark thriller where Blomkvist and Sanger are hunted by a sadistic killer. It's a Ludlumesque technothriller where Sanger “stings” a rich crook. It's a character study of a disturbed and brilliant young woman.

It's a bit too much really: there are too many things going on. But it is quite entertaining.

posted on Tuesday, August 11, 2009 7:07:56 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, August 10, 2009 
Torchwood: Children of Earth
Title: Torchwood: Children of Earth
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Copyright: 2009

Torchwood began as a more adult spinoff of Doctor Who, but came into its own right in its third season, the five-part mini-series, Children of Earth.

One day, all the children of Earth freeze up and announce, “we are coming” over and over, before carrying on unawares. The aliens known as the 456 are announcing themselves. What soon becomes apparent to the audience is that the British government had dealings once before with the 456 back in 1965—and they don't want it to be known. They attempt to destroy the Torchwood team, blowing up the immortal Captain Jack Harkness, to keep them silent. The 456, it turns out, were given a dozen children in 1965 and have come back to take 10% of all the children of Earth.

It's a powerful tale, where bad decision after bad decision threatens to topple humanity into the abyss. Two actors deliver noteworthy performances, John Barrowman as Jack and Peter Capaldi as John Frobisher, a senior civil servant. Jack cannot die and he can barely live with himself after he betrays several trusts. Frobisher is a man who's worked hard all of his life, only to discover that his masters consider him an expendable pawn. Some of the minor characters keep the story rooted in the human experience, saving it from technobabble, and shed light on the main characters' backstories.

Highly recommended.

posted on Monday, August 10, 2009 7:15:52 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, August 08, 2009 
Shadowfall
Title: Shadowfall
Author: James Clemens
Rating: 3 stars out of 5
Publisher: Roc
Copyright: 2005
Pages: 507
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 4–8 August, 2009

For four thousand years, the gods have dwelt in human form amongst the people of Myrillia, rooted to the very land. When the goddess Meeryn is found murdered and the disgraced Shadowknight Tylar de Noche is found at her side, miraculously healed of his maiming, he is accused of being the godslayer. He escapes and uncovers a dark conspiracy of corruption and evil.

As an exercise in world building, this book succeeds. For example, the gods' humors—blood, seed, menses, sweat, tears, saliva, phlegm, and yellow bile and black bile (“piss and shite”)—are collected by their acolytes, since they contain the much-treasured Grace, the blessings of the gods. The writing, however, is clumsy and the plot, pedestrian.

Mildly enjoyable.

posted on Saturday, August 08, 2009 6:56:15 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, August 05, 2009 
Winterbirth
Title: Winterbirth
Author: Brian Ruckley
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Orbit
Copyright: 2006
Pages: 654
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 3–4 August, 2009

A century and a half ago, the believers in the Black Road were forced into exile. Now, in some bloody surprise attacks, they've conquered the Glas Valley. The story is largely told from the viewpoints of three brother-sister pairs: the young leaders of the Black Road attackers; the adolescent nephew and niece of the thane of the Lannis-Haig Blood; and a warrior of the Kyrinin race and his sister. Each side believes that it is in the right: the clash between two human cultures was inevitable, as is the war between the Kyrinin tribes.

A strong debut. Lots of swords, a little sorcery.

posted on Thursday, August 06, 2009 5:11:41 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, August 03, 2009 
Thunderer
Title: Thunderer
Author: Felix Gilman
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Bantam Spectra
Copyright: 2008
Pages: 527
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 27 July–2 August, 2009

Ararat is vast, unknowable, unmappable, home to many living gods who make their presence felt. Arjun comes from his far-distant home, seeking the Voice, the god that abandoned his people. He arrives as the Bird sweeps through the great city, transforming it by its passage, only to be captured in the warship Thunderer. A boy, Jack, also captures part of the Bird's power as he flees the workhouse.

Gilman has created a city reminiscent of China Miéville's New Crubuzon, a vast baroque tapestry of neighborhoods, ruled by heavy-handed oligarchs squabbling to enlarge their fiefdoms. Miéville is a better writer, but this is a fine debut novel from Felix Gilman.

posted on Tuesday, August 04, 2009 4:54:34 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, July 27, 2009 
Careless in Red
Title: Careless in Red
Author: Elizabeth George
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Harper
Copyright: 2008
Pages: 725
Keywords: fiction, mystery
Reading period: 26–27 July, 2009

Out of his mind with grief after the senseless murder of his wife Helen in What Came Before He Shot Her, Detective Superintendent Tommy Lynley has been walking along the Cornish coastline for weeks when he stumbles across a dead body. Reluctantly, he becomes part of the police investigation. Half the village seems to have a motive for killing the victim. Old slights and recent fights have festered, pitting family members against each other.

Elizabeth George is noted for the depth of her characterization. Even the supporting characters are well-drawn, complex individuals. But they're almost uniformly grim and unpleasant people who make bad choices. Aside from the late Helen Lynley, there are few light-hearted cheerful people in George's books, which can make her books heavy going.

Recommended.

posted on Monday, July 27, 2009 9:23:21 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, July 26, 2009 
Wilfred the Hairy

This may, perhaps, be old news in bear circles, but I only read it ten days ago on the plane over, in Robert Hughes' quirky Barcelona the Great Enchantress. The founder of Catalunyan/Catalonian/Catalan national independence a thousand years' ago was the Visigoth known as Wilfred the Hairy. History does not record with any clarity how Guifré el Pilós earned that name.

I haven't visited the Iberian peninsula since the 1970s when the well-founded stereotype was that Spanish men had mustaches. That seems to have gone out of style: almost all men, young or old, were cleanshaven. And after having seen countless women wearing tanktops in the heat, I can say that the stereotype about unshaven armpits is equally dated.

The enervating heat aside (high 30Cs = high 90Fs), Barcelona, the Pyrenees, and Figueres (Dali's hometown) were all most enjoyable.

posted on Monday, July 27, 2009 4:06:19 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Ink and Steel
Title: Ink and Steel
Author: Elizabeth Bear
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Roc
Copyright: 2008
Pages: 441
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 20–25 July, 2009

The Prometheans are a secret society sworn to protect England and Elizabeth I. Kit Marley (Christopher Marlowe), playmaker, poet, and intelligencer, has been killed by a dagger in the eye, at the behest of a rogue faction in the Prometheans. Another talented polemicist is required and Will Shakespeare is recruited. But Kit is not dead. He has been spirited to Faerie, where now he must serve their two queens. He becomes the lover of one, Morgan le Fay, and her son, Murchaud. Kit can return to the land of the living, but only briefly. Meanwhile, Will is drawn ever deeper into a web of intrigue.

Bear brings the Elizabethan era to life and builds plausible personalities for two great dramatists about whom we know little. And it's a rare pleasure to read a novel where the protagonist is a male bisexual. The complex plot is confusing at times and the Elizabethan dialog is betimes tiresome.

For a' that, 'tis well done.

posted on Sunday, July 26, 2009 10:46:35 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, July 25, 2009 
Barcelona the Great Enchantress
Title: Barcelona the Great Enchantress
Author: Robert Hughes
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: National Geographic Directions
Copyright: 2004
Pages: 169
Keywords: history, autobiography
Reading period: 15–24 July, 2009

Robert Hughes has been in love with Barcelona and its people for four decades. This book—part selective history, part memoir—is adapted from a much larger, earlier book about Barcelona. Hughes is a partisan of Catalan culture and food. He brings us from its Roman origins as Barcino, Catalunya's founding as an independent nation a thousand years ago by the Visigoth Wilfred the Hairy, up through the Olympics in 1992. This is no comprehensive survey: he spends more time on submarine inventor Monturiol than on the Spanish Civil War.

Well-written and opinionated, if overly selective.

posted on Saturday, July 25, 2009 10:18:54 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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