Sunday, November 08, 2009 
The Way of Shadows
Title: The Way of Shadows
Author: Brent Weeks
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Orbit
Copyright: 2008
Pages: 677
Keywords: fantasy
Reading period: 19–25 October, 2009

Kylar Stern apprentices himself to Durzo Blint, the city of Cenaria's most accomplished assassin. A truly successful assassin can have no friends or emotional attachments, something that Kylar struggles with.

This coming-of-age story set against a backdrop of intrigue and sorcery is entertaining but somewhat clumsy.

posted on Sunday, November 08, 2009 8:09:38 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Saturday, November 07, 2009 
Tri-Cities Wine Festival

It's shocking how few times I've crossed the Cascades into Eastern Washington in the seventeen years that I've lived in Seattle. We go up or down the I-5 corridor, usually heading for Portland or Vancouver, or we cross Puget Sound to the Olympic Peninsula. But we never go more than about 30 miles inland.

We needed a break and we wanted to celebrate our 12th anniversary. For once, we decided to head over to Washington's wine country. The Tri-Cities Wine Festival was being held in Kennewick today, so that was our destination.

We drove across Snoqualmie Pass yesterday, through sleeting rain and snow, arriving in Kennewick after dark. This morning, we wandered around Howard Amon Park on the Columbia, then headed west towards Benton City to visit some wineries. We were struck by how arid the landscape is once you leave the riverfront: scrub and tumbleweeds mostly, with the occasional orchard or vineyard. Such a contrast to verdant Western Washington.

We visited three wineries on Sunset Road in the Red Mountain Appellation. We liked Kiona Winery and Tapteil Winery enough that we came away with bottles from each. Tapteil provided us with a Syrah and some olive oil; Kiona, some Lembergers, a Merlot, and a Gewurztraminer. Were it not for the wine festival, we would have stopped at more wineries.

The Tri-Cities Wine Festival was held at the Convention Center, across the street from our hotel. More than 80 wineries were exhibiting there. We sampled wines from a large number of them. Neither of us are wine connoisseurs and the wines quickly started to blur together. Emma kept notes on the program, so there's some hope that we'll be able to buy our favorites later. Many of the smaller ones sell most of their stock through their tasting rooms.

Curiously, many of the wines we liked were grown around Lake Chelan. Clearly, another wine trip is called for.

Wine was not being sold at the festival. I imagine this was partly for logistics and partly due to the crazy patchwork of laws surrounding the sale and shipping of alcohol in this country.

Tomorrow, we plan to head south to the Columbia gorge, where it separates Washington from Oregon, and visit a few more wineries.

posted on Sunday, November 08, 2009 7:52:53 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Friday, November 06, 2009 
George & Emma at Waimea, Kauai, Hawai'i

Twelve years ago today, Emma and I met face-to-face for the first time. We had been talking on the phone for about three weeks after I had answered her personals ad in The Stranger. We might have met a little sooner, but she was busy meeting the other guys who had responded, and I was undergoing the IIS 4 deathmarch at Microsoft.

We were both nervous and we each responded characteristically. Emma babbled; I said very little. She told me later that she thought that she had scared me off. She hadn't, though. We had already talked several times on the phone and she had been less nervous. I liked her and I called her back and soon we went out on another date.

By the end of the year, we were infatuated with each other. By mid-January, I was spending most of my nights at her place in Ballard. In February, I bought her a new bed to replace her broken-down old mattress—some self interest was involved, admittedly. A couple of months later, after she had been laid off from an office job, I lent her money to attend some software testing classes. Within a year, her pay had doubled—one of the best investments I ever made. In August 2008, we rented a house together in Wallingford. We were engaged a couple of weeks after our first anniversary. That Christmas, we visited Ireland together for the first time.

The following years were less hectic but no less enjoyable. Here's to several dozen more!

posted on Saturday, November 07, 2009 7:07:07 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Wednesday, November 04, 2009 
Joe Mirabella (lead blogger) and Josh Cohen (tech lead) being thanked by Anne Levinson (campaign chair) and Josh Friedes (campaign manager)

I'm fairly confident that Referendum 71 will be approved. It was leading by 51% this morning and by 51.8% this evening, and leading 2:1 in King County, the most populous, most liberal county in Washington state.

Ballots merely have to be postmarked by Election Day to be valid, and hundreds of thousands of them have not yet been received by the vote counters.

I attended the Election Night party last night and helped the tech team with some behind-the-scenes arrangements. In the photo, Joe Mirabella (lead blogger) and Josh Cohen (tech lead) are being thanked by Anne Levinson (campaign chair) and Josh Friedes (campaign manager).

The mood was cautiously optimistic about Referendum 71 passing, tempered by some disappointment that Maine's gay marriage law was sure to be repealed.

Tim Eyman's Measure 1033 also went down to defeat, which also made me happy. Anything sponsored by Eyman is ipso facto bad.

posted on Thursday, November 05, 2009 6:51:32 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Monday, November 02, 2009 
Bangkok 8
Title: Bangkok 8
Author: John Burdett
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Corgi
Copyright: 2003
Pages: 431
Keywords: crime
Reading period: 11–19 October, 2009

Sonchai Jitpleecheep is a devout Buddhist, half Thai and half American, and one of the few Bangkok cops who is not on the take. An American marine is murdered grotesquely in a manner that accidentally kills Sonchai's partner and soul brother. Sonchai must help the FBI investigate and seek his own revenge. The trail takes them through the foulest gutters and the palaces of the wealthy. We encounter prostitutes, monks, shemales, jade collectors, and gangsters in a tour of the Thailand that most Westerners barely glimpse.

posted on Monday, November 02, 2009 8:20:49 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Saturday, October 31, 2009 
Robot Snow White

When we moved to Beacon Hill in 2000, we were totally dumbfounded by the number of kids who came trick-or-treating to our door. In the prior two years, we had been renting a house in Wallingford, and we had only had one set of kids each year.

We had about 100 kids that first year. We were not expecting the onslaught and ran out of candy, which led to Emma being berated by some presumptuous mother. We live in a relatively affluent block and kids are brought quite a distance to partake of the goodies. One small boy peered up at Emma once and asked her, “Are you rich?”

And so it's been ever since: Hordes of kids. Even on cold, wet nights, it's never dipped below 60 kids.

This year, we had 150 kids. (Actually 149 kids and one dog in costume.) The doorbell rang every few minutes from not long after 6pm until 9 o'clock.

A few years ago, I started taking photos of them. The price of the candy is that they have to stand in the doorway for a photo.

I set the camera up on a tripod with a remote control and clicked away. You can see this year's set at Emma's Flickr account. Photos from previous years are there too.

posted on Sunday, November 01, 2009 5:56:40 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-08:00) 
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Tuesday, October 27, 2009 
Titus Andronicus

I saw Greenstage's production of Titus Andronicus on Sunday night. Normally, this is Shakespeare's bloodiest tragedy, but Greenstage chose to play it as a dark comedy. It's still bloody, extremely bloody, blood everywhere, spurting from severed wrists, spraying from cut throats, shooting over the stage (and some of the audience).

The first twenty minutes were very confusing. The actors spoke their lines very quickly and I had a hard time tuning in to what they were saying and what was happening. Then either they slowed down or I tuned in, but it started making sense, inasmuch as Titus Andronicus can ever make sense.

I've seen Greenstage do comedies and straight tragedies. Here they hammed it up, putting a non-traditional spin on the lines. It worked.

Three more shows coming up this weekend. And it's free!

posted on Wednesday, October 28, 2009 6:57:39 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, October 26, 2009 
DevDays Boston photos

I spent last Wednesday at Benaroya Hall, attending the Seattle edition of StackOverflow's traveling DevDays conference. It was well worth $99.

Joel Spolsky, owner of FogCreek Software and co-founder of StackOverflow, opened the conference with a keynote about the dichotomy of power and simplicity. People are happier when not overwhelmed with choices. Many of the choices that software forces users to make are essentially meaningless to the users. However, even though people want simplicity, they also want features and different people use different features. Powerful software sells more copies.

He argues that developers and designers should put in the extra work to make good choices on behalf of the users: don't make users feel bad about themselves. Undo is better than a confirmation dialog. You are not in charge of what your users do.

Scott Hanselman spoke about ASP.NET MVC. We're moving away from ASP.NET to Python, but if we were to use ASP.NET again, MVC would be a compelling feature. His presentation was entertaining, if gimmicky.

Rory Blyth introduced iPhone development, in a tone of snarky ambivalence. He mentioned the Stockholm Syndrome. He stressed that Apple's Design "Guidelines" are effectively laws: violate them and you won't make it into the App Store. Looks like there's a lot of tedious messing around to hook things up in Objective-C. At the very end, he briefly demoed MonoTouch, which seemeed a little less tedious.

Cody Lindley introduced jQuery. I've done a lot of work with jQuery, but I still learned a few things. He worked through five facets of jQuery: Find something, do something; Create something, do something; Chaining; Implicit iteration; and jQuery parameters. He has an ebook at jqueryenlightenment.com, which I just picked up.

Daniel Rocha of Nokia talked about the cross-platform Qt (/cute/) toolkit, which runs on Windows, Mac, and Linux. More importantly from Nokia's point of view, it runs on their smartphones. Nokia has changed the licensing of Qt—once very expensive for closed-source apps, it's now free for apps that don't modify the Qt source. Qt is for C++, but there are bindings for other languages, such as Python.

Joel Spolsky came back and treated us to a half-hour demonstration of Fogbugz 7, Evidence-Based Scheduling, and Kiln, their new hosted Mercurial repository. Not terribly interesting to me, but the conference was only $99.

Ted Leung gave us a rather dry Hacker's Introduction to Python from slides rendered unreadable by a poor choice of colors. I've done a lot of Python, so I didn't learn much new. pip is an easy_install replacement that uninstalls; zc.buildout assembles apps from multiple parts; bpython is a fancy REPL.

Dan Sanderson talked about Google App Engine and demoed building apps with Java and with Python. Looked pretty cool and straightforward. We probably won't go that route, since we're pushing data to Amazon's S3, so EC2 makes more sense for us.

Finally, Steve Seitz from the University of Washington gave a cool talk on Modeling the World from Internet Photos. Some of this technology ended up in Photosynth. See Building Rome in a Day for some demos.

posted on Monday, October 26, 2009 7:16:14 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, October 18, 2009 
Pragmatic Version Control Using Git
Title: Pragmatic Version Control Using Git
Author: Travis Swicegood
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Pragmatic Bookshelf
Copyright: 2008
Pages: 179
Keywords: computers
Reading period: 10–18 October, 2009

As part of my personal conversion to Git, I read Swicegood's Git book. It's a decent introduction to Git and you learn how to do all the basic tasks as well as some more advanced topics. The examples are clear and well-paced.

I would have liked to see more about collaboration and workflow in a DVCS world, perhaps a few case studies: how is Git used in the Linux kernel development process; how a small, distributed team uses Git and GitHub; how a collocated team migrates from more traditional tools.

The book avoids discussing the lower levels of the Git object model, which is a reasonable choice for a pragmatic guide.

Recommended.

posted on Monday, October 19, 2009 5:43:22 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, October 17, 2009 
Football, dogfighting, and brain damage

In Football, dogfighting, and brain damage, Malcolm Gladwell writes of the rather startling findings concerning brain damage that American footballers sustain over their careers.

The constant butting of heads leads to an enormously high rate of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (C.T.E.), which has symptoms like Alzheimer's. It's not just the concussions that cause it, but all the subconcussive contact. It's almost as dangerous to one's long-term health as boxing.

I grew up hating rugby and transferred that hatred to American football. I have no time for the game, which I find violent and repellent, nor for the jock culture that surrounds it.

Regardless of my feelings about football, Gladwell's article (as so many New Yorker pieces do) makes for compelling reading. Though I found the digressions about dogfighting to be strained and irrelevant.

posted on Saturday, October 17, 2009 7:34:53 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Friday, October 16, 2009 
C is for Cookie

Over the last few weeks, I built a PHP application that overlays Approve 71 banners on profile pictures. The actual application is hosted in an iframe and lives on a server in a different domain, eq.dm, than the main server at approvereferendum71.org.

This works fine in most browsers. Then we started getting reports that it wasn't working in IE8 on Win7 RC1. The iframe content was blank.

Poking around, I found the problem with the Fiddler proxy. The landing page on eq.dm was supposed to stick some information into the PHP session, then redirect to a second page at the same site. The second page was in an endless loop, redirecting to itself. In Fiddler, I saw a different PHPSESSID cookie on each response, and no cookie in the requests.

After reading IE 8 only has access to session cookies, I told IE8 to Accept All Cookies and the iframe content appeared. That fixed it for me, but we could hardly ask people to lower their security sessions.

I created a P3P file for the second domain, using the IBM P3P Policy Editor. (KB 323752 has more background on P3P and third-party cookies.)

IE now worked at its default security level. Problem solved! Or so I thought.

A day later, we got reports of similar problems with Safari 4 on Mac OS X.

I sniffed the traffic with Wireshark. Same problem: the “third-party“ cookie wasn't being accepted by Safari.

Unfortunately, Setting cross-domain cookies in Safari indicated that there was no reasonable workaround.

We overcame the issue up playing some DNS games, which was only possible because we control both servers. The second server is now also acting as a subdomain of the first, at dev.approvereferendum71.org. We used ini_set("session.cookie_domain",".approvereferendum71.org") to scope the iframe cookies. I've tried it in a variety of Windows, Mac, and Linux browsers, and it works in all of them.

posted on Friday, October 16, 2009 7:15:10 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Thursday, October 15, 2009 
March to the Stars
Title: March to the Stars
Author: David Weber, John Ringo
Rating: 3.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Baen
Copyright: 2003
Pages: 589
Keywords: science fiction
Reading period: 4–10 October, 2009

Third in a series, but the first that I've read.

Prince Roger and his Marine bodyguard have been marooned on an alien planet for six months. With local allies, they fight their way halfway around the world to the spaceport. And then the trouble really starts.

Well-done military SF: plausible, hard-bitten characters; good plotting; and exciting battle scenes.

posted on Friday, October 16, 2009 6:38:06 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Wednesday, October 14, 2009 
Git logo

In the last few weeks, I've switched over to Git for most of my version-control needs, at home and at work, after putting it on the long finger for months.

We continue to use Subversion at work, but I've recently followed Pavel and Eric's lead in using git-svn. I work locally on my own private branches and git svn dcommit and git svn rebase occasionally. I'm primarily on Windows at work, but I have a Linux box and a Mac Mini too, while at home, I have a MacBook, a Linux netbook, and a Vista desktop. I'm using msysGit, occasionally supplemented by TortoiseGit and QGit. Pavel's on a Mac and Eric's mostly on Ubuntu, so git adoption was easy for them.

When I first tried git-svn under msysGit about a year ago, it didn't work worth a damn. Git-svn works fine now, but it's slow compared to the *nix implementation. The developers say that's due to the fork() emulation of the MSys/Cygwin layer. The rest of msysGit is much faster.

For my home needs, I've had private Subversion repositories at DevjaVu.com and OpenSvn.csie.org. DevjaVu has gone out of business and OpenSvn has been unavailable too often for my liking. It was time to find some new hosting.

I've experimented with private Git repositories at GitHub and ProjectLocker. GitHub is very nice, but charges for private repositories. ProjectLocker provides free private repositories, but is comparatively clunky.

ProjectLocker lets you set up a fresh repository on their server. They tell you how to clone from that, which is great for a new repository. But they don't tell you how to hook it up to an existing local repository. Since I had some difficulty in figuring it out, here's the recipe:

git remote add origin git-foobar@freeN.projectlocker.com:foobar.git
git pull origin master
... merge, local edits and commits ...
git push origin master

I found Git, Xcode and ProjectLocker and Cygwin, SSH and ProjectLocker useful in figuring this out.

posted on Thursday, October 15, 2009 6:56:59 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Tuesday, October 13, 2009 
The Lighthouse
Title: The Lighthouse
Author: P.D. James
Rating: 4.5 stars out of 5
Publisher: Vintage
Copyright: 2005
Pages: 383
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 22 September–3 October, 2009

Nathan Oliver is a great writer, but a horrible man. Adam Dalgleish of Scotland Yard is called in when Oliver is found murdered on an island that is exclusively reserved for VIPs. Only a handful of people could possibly be the killer.

P.D. James adds psychological insight to a tightly plotted classic mystery. Dalgleish is both a poet and a detective. Both aspects are required to get to the heart of what happened on Combe Island.

posted on Wednesday, October 14, 2009 6:21:51 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Monday, October 12, 2009 
Spook Country
Title: Spook Country
Author: William Gibson
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Publisher: Berkley
Copyright: 2008
Pages: 384
Keywords: fiction
Reading period: 14–21 September, 2009

William Gibson has abandoned cyberspace for the present day. No matter. The same elements of paranoia, adrenalin, and technospeak are present.

His story follows three sets of characters, all of whom ultimately intersect, chasing the same mcguffin.

Enjoyable, if confusing.

posted on Monday, October 12, 2009 7:16:47 AM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Sunday, October 11, 2009 
National Coming Out Day

Today is National Coming Out Day, a day to promote awareness of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people. For anyone who doesn't already know: I'm bisexual.

I'm married to Emma. That leads people to tacitly assume that I'm straight. Too often, I do little or nothing to challenge that assumption, either from straight people or gay people.

I came out in grad school, a couple of years after leaving Ireland. It was difficult at first, but ultimately rewarding.

I'm married to a woman, but I could have ended up with a male partner, a partner whom I could not legally marry in Washington state. Emma and I married because anything else is second class. This is the root of my passionate involvement with the Approve 71 campaign. It's also why I've been a leader of BiNet Seattle for more than a decade.

The National Equality March takes place in Washington DC this weekend. Forty years after the Stonewall riots, LGBT people are rallying for equal protection in all matters. This is also the Seattle LGBT Equality Weekend.

There's a march this afternoon, starting from Volunteer Park at 2pm. I'll be there. Will you?

PS Let me refer you to Tim Wilson's Coming Out as Good Citizenship.

posted on Sunday, October 11, 2009 6:50:51 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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Saturday, October 10, 2009 
Approve71 silhouette

I'm breaking radio silence to explain the uncharacteristic drought of blog posts. In my last post, I mentioned that I had created a Twibbon overlay for Approve71.org, allowing you to overlay Approve71's badge over your Twitter icon.

The next day I went over to Approve71's headquarters and introduced myself to the tech team, Josh, Joe, and Adam. One thing led to another, and I spent that weekend writing my first-ever PHP code, which allowed you to upload a photo to Approve71's website, stamp a banner on it, and then save it so that you could subsequently upload it to Facebook for your profile picture.

It's been a big success, used a couple of thousand times.

Since then, I spent a lot of time working on a second version, which lets you crop the photo (using imgAreaSelect) and choose from a set of overlay banners. Some of the banners are for the NO on 1 campaign in Maine, where they're fighting an attempted repeal of their same-sex marriage law.

George on Facebook George on Facebook

The second site went live earlier this week. Try it out: Create a Profile Picture.

posted on Saturday, October 10, 2009 6:59:44 PM (Pacific Daylight Time, UTC-07:00) 
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