Friday, March 31, 2006

Sweet Jazz Podcast #1

Here it is. The inaugural Sweet Jazz Podcast. It's probably a little ruff on the edges but it will get better as I go. Please take some time to listen and provide some feedback. Thanks.

Play List

1. To tired at twelve - Lima Baterflai
2. Electrostatic Jam #1 - Dana Rogers
3. Blues in the Fast Lane - Westlake Highshool Jazz Band
4. When a Woman's Had Enough - The Mighty Bad Habits
5. Cat's Pajamas
6. Cold Rainy Night - Alec Haavik
7. Third Floor Loung - El Rey
8. Again Remember - Chris Mosley Trio
9. The Sentimental Way You Are - Larry Williams
10. Is It The End - Tim Watson

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Thursday, March 30, 2006

I yield to the Fat Cyclist

I read a lot of web site, blogs, user groups and so on. Every once in a while I come across a site that just fits my interests. The newest site is Fat Cyclist. Get writer. Can't wait to read more.

I just bailed out of a triathlon I was working towards. My work schedule just caught up with me and my training and I'm in no shape to compete. So, as much as it pains me, I'm out.

The question was asked by Fat Cyclist, can you compete in a triathlon with our really training specifically for one? What would you think?

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Monday, March 27, 2006

Our children’s cultural deficiency

I was listening to NPR this morning and a reporting was talking about the decline in cultural participation of today's children. He sited things like iPods, video games and satellite TV and cell phones as the main culprits. He stated that fewer kids are being exposed to Mozart, Bach, Van Gogh, Shakespeare and many other great cultural icons in history. The reporter felt that the decline in our children's desire to learn more about or be exposure to classical music, live theatre, poetry, great novels and great actors will keep our children from passing on the value of these historical and cultural events to their families

We as parents should be responsible for teaching them about these types of cultures. Take a look at what your kids are exposed to. Do they spend all their time watching TV, playing video games or text messaging on the phone? Do you? Take some time to teach your kids about the world around us and the world of the past.

I'll never forget the day my daughter and I were driving in the car and she asked me very plainly, "daddy, when did we turn color?" I asked her what do you mean "when did we turn color?" She said that she had watched some TV shows that were in black and white but most are in color. When did our earth turn to color? Wow, her little mind actually thought the world had been black and white at one time. Of course I explained how TV evolved. She seemed to buy it.

So take the time to pass on what you know and get your kids involved low tech activities.

[1] NPR

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Sunday, March 26, 2006

Stewart moves up the latter

Looks like Tony has moved up the points latter into the top 10. He was in a really good shape Sunday but pittered in the end, again. Way to go Tony.

[1] NASCAR.com

[2] Tony Stewart

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Sunday, March 12, 2006

Another sad Sunday for Tony Stewart

So it looks like Jimmie Johnson takes another victory and moved ahead in the points standings.Tony Stewart on the other hand had another bad day. Engine problems again. Joe Gibbs should be really pissed off at this point. This is really costing him big time. Current points standing, 19th. See the where your favorite driver stands here.

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Saturday, March 11, 2006

Thursday, March 9, 2006

Bad morning commute

This has got to suck on your morning commute. Closing all 4 lanes of traffic durring the rush.

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iPod - Microsoft style…

Thank's David for sharing. Check out this great video on Microsoft and what would be their version of the iPod.

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Wednesday, March 8, 2006

What is your color?

This is an interesting question. I was eating lunch today in a place that was very colorful. They had all kinds of decorations on the wall; rugs, paintings, pottery. As I was looking at all the color, there was one that kept getting my attention. Blue. That's right blue.

I know there are scientific processes that help you determine your "color". But I don't really care about that. My color is blue. So for those of you I work with that may be reading this, bite me. It's not girly, or femmie, or any of that. It's a legitimate question. Think about it; when you buy things, what color do you tend to look for? When you are designing something, what color do you always try and use? When you paint, or draw, what color to you try and use?

Some people may choose colors because it has some perception, like red is fiery or seductive, yellow; soft and non-threatening, pink; frilly, black; dark. I could go on.

What color are you attracted to?

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Tuesday, March 7, 2006

This weeks selection

Each week I am listening to two new recordings. This weeks selections are:

Brian Culbertson, It's on Tonight

Bruno Walter, Mozart Symphonies 39, 40 & 41

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A day in my life…

Monday morning:

My alarm clock hardly ever goes off. My internal alarm is way too powerful. The only reason I even turn the damn thing on is because I'm afraid that once in a blue moon when I will sleep longer than anticipated. For all of my life I've slept with a click, staring at me, with bold red numbers, and hardly ever needed its service. The first thing my wife and I bought when we got married was a stupid black alarm clock with bold red numbers, and guess what, we still have it.

I always wonder if I should shave after my shower. What do I care if my face has day old stubble? Do you know what a pain in the ass it is to have facial hair that requires shaving every day? So I try and pull my schedule up into my mushy brain cells. Do I have something happening today that I should shave for? Mondays are always full meetings and so generally I'll shave. But I hate it.

I'm looking at my closet. My wife and I have this thing... we hate our wardrobes. For me, I'm losing weight and I'm in between sizes. So everything is a little loser than I want but I can't bring myself to buy a bunch of new clothes I'll grow out of in a month or so. Ahhh, I just hate it. So I grab the main stay, a t-shirt, and then the jeans. Is it sneakers or Dockers today? What did I wear yesterday? Who cares, grab whatever's closest.

Breakfast has to be the worst part of a human's day. You just spent 6-9 hours sleeping, it's probably been at least 10-12 hours since you last ate, but you're too tired to care about eating. If I don't eat before I leave then I tend to not eat. By 9 AM I'm shaking. Have you seen what your kids eat for breakfast? One morning its cocoa pebbles, the next it's sugar smack something, the next it's the wife's kashi. Cereal always leaves a bad taste in my mouth. I dream of breakfasts at Denny's (which is why I have to lose so much weight.)

I typically get to the office when it's dark. Zero dark thirty we used to say in the Marine Corp. That means any time before dawn, which is usually when Marines do things. Typically, I'm one of the first to arrive. There is always someone there before me, but I like going in early. If you start asking me questions about work crap before I've even taken my coat off I'm bound to ignore you or at least ask you to wait until I've had a chance to sit down and get settled. I have a routine. I love my routine. It's like drinking coffee only not.

Email is my worst enemy. I hate it. I love how fast people can communicate and allows people with great distances between themselves to communicate. But on the average I get 100+ emails. Not trivial spam email, but actual email that I have to at least evaluate if it needs a response or not.

I spend the next several hours working on various projects, writing some C# code, working with a new intern on his goals and objectives to get university credit, lunch, foos ball, and a meeting.

You know, there is one thing I hate more than any other type of work experience. It's when someone calls with a problem that needs to be resolved immediately, and they do it at 5 PM. Why? Why can't people discover problems at 9 AM? Even noon. But no, they have to wait till the very last minute to ask for help. Ahhh! I worked with a guy once who used to enter emergency bugs on a product he was testing and I was the developer, and then quietly walk out the door. At the time the culture was no one went home if there was an emergency bug. We needed it fixed right away, no matter the hour or the complexity. But this guy would do it at least once a week. Ruined my whole night. We should have adopted a policy that required the tester who entered the bug to stay as long as the developer. But, that's a whole nother story.

Finally, home, throw off the work clothes and jump in my sweats. Kiss the family (who are all about to head off to bed), grab a little food and chat with my wife. Just glad the day is over. Stressing about the next because I know it will be just as bad.

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