Home

Did some shopping today. Got the entire remastered Beatles catalog on CD. I'm burning them to mp3 while posting this. Also got a Les Paul CD, and a couple of XTC (Oranges and Lemons, Some Singles) CDs.

[info]dpgnat got a $100 gift card for [info]stochasticjack, so we went to Uwajimaya to get a rice cooker. He found a good one for $130, so it was only $30 out of pocket. Even better, for spending more than $100, he got a $10 gift certificate, so we turned that in for a 10 lbs bag of rice.

We stopped at Daiso to get some nice decorations for the house, and Kinokuniya for wall scrolls. My personal favorite is Belldandy as an umbrella girl next to a Benelli.

We ate lunch at Fu-Lin, a ramen house in the International District. The waitress was a Chinese hottie with long hair and wearing denim short-shorts and knee-high boots, and I had possibly the best bowl of Beef Noodle soup ever.

We stopped at the grocery store on the way home and got some Pepsi and Mountain Dew Throwback. We ordered some pizzas, played Wii sports, drank some rum and cokes, and watched Green Lantern: First Mission. Now I'm going to read my new copy of Lucky Star #3 inbetween burning Beatles CDs. It's been a pretty good day.

Posted via LiveJournal.app.

Tags:

Annual Traditions are Annual

  • Dec. 25th, 2009 at 2:27 AM
BRING US A FIGGY PUDDING!

(Ah, sleep deprivation my old friend, you make many things funny.)

Still dreaming of a white Christmas

  • Dec. 24th, 2009 at 9:41 PM
White Christmases seem to be the romantic ideal for this time of year, so I started to think, how many White Christmases have I ever experienced?

My memory is a bit hazy prior to the Berlin years (1989-1992). I'm fairly certain my Christmases in Garmisch were snowy, and that my Christmases in the first four years in Oly were not. I have no recollection of the Heidelberg Christmases, but my mother informs me that there was no snow. After moving back to the USA in 1985, we traveled to Logan, Utah for two Christmases, which I believe were snowy.

However, since then, I have only had one Christmas with any kind of snow. That would be 2007, when we got a light sprinkling of snow. None of it stuck to the ground, however. Apparently there was an abundance of snow last winter, but I was in Germany, and the part of Germany I was in...had no snow!

So, let's list these out:

1980, Heidelberg: No Snow
1981, Heidelberg: No Snow
1982, Garmisch: White Christmas
1983, Garmisch: White Christmas
1984, Garmisch: White Christmas
1985, Logan: White Christmas
1986, Logan: White Christmas
1987, Olympia: No Snow
1988, Olympia: No Snow
1989, Berlin: No Snow
1990, Berlin: No Snow
1991, Berlin: No Snow
1992, Olympia: No Snow
1993, Olympia: No Snow
1994, Olympia: No Snow
1995, Olympia: No Snow
1996, Olympia: No Snow
1997, Olympia: No Snow
1998, Olympia: No Snow
1999, Comodoro Rivadavia: It's Summer in Argentina
2000, Plottier: It's Summer in Argentina
2001, Olympia: No Snow
2002, Olympia: No Snow
2003, Olympia: No Snow
2004, Olympia: No Snow
2005, Olympia: No Snow
2006, Olympia: No Snow
2007, Olympia: Holy crap, a smattering of snow that didn't stick to the ground!
2008, Grafenwohr: No snow
2009, Olympia: No Snow

Dang, that's a lot of Christmases.

Xmas

  • Dec. 23rd, 2009 at 10:41 PM
It's a strange feeling to be at my parents' house after they've retired to bed, with nobody else home. Like any other situation in which there's no people to talk to and no forms of amusement immediately at hand, I am forced to entertain myself with my own thoughts (which can be a scary prospect). Frequently, my thoughts turn to where I am in my life, and where I'd like to be in the future.

However, being the Christmas season, my thoughts are of course turned to Christmas. I've been thinking about the "war on Christmas," which has become a big debate in the last few years. Conservative Christians seem very offended by the fact that many organizations no longer wish people a Merry Christmas, but they now simply use the generic phrase "Happy Holidays."

I don't really see what the big deal is. We have a lot of cultures and religions represented in this country, and there are many celebrations that take place around the Winter Solstice. Whether it's Christmas, Chanukah, Kwanzaa, Saturnalia* or Yule, somebody's celebrating something. Happy Holidays is a pretty easy way of including everybody in that statement. I don't see anything wrong with this because nobody's attempting to change your personal celebration of the season. In fact, frequently it's businesses saying Happy Holidays, for business reasons.

Of course, I don't really see why anybody would take offense at being wished a Merry Christmas, either. In fact, most people probably wouldn't. Christmas is the most popular of the solstice holidays and it's usually reasonable to assume that somebody is observing it. If they don't, I would hope they understand that there's nothing wrong with being wished a happy Christmas, even if you don't celebrate it. Yeah, I know, that's easy for me to say coming from a Christian perspective, and I'm trying hard to think of a situation where I'm on the receiving end - being a Mormon, maybe the closest equivalent is being offered alcohol when I'm a teetotaler?

So, after all my meandering observations, my point is that people need to relax and just enjoy the holidays for what they are. There's no reason to get irritated about whether it's PC to say your holiday by name, or get huffy because somebody assumed you celebrate one holiday and not the other.

'tis the season to not let yourself get ticked off!

And personally, I'm far more offended by the horrible, horrible pop renditions of popular Christmas tunes that are constantly being played on department store speakers.



*I am being needlessly clever.

Up in the Air Movie Review

  • Dec. 23rd, 2009 at 9:59 PM

Adapted from the novel of the same nameby Walter Kim that came out back in 2001, Up in the Air is the latestfeature from Jason Reitman who as made a name for himself among filmfans with Thank You For Smoking and Juno. With the leading roleshaving been cast with George Clooney and current rising star amongthe younger filmgoers in Anna Kendrick due to her role in Twilight:New Moon, the film is easily set to try and appeal to both audiences.Up in the Air is the kind of film that makes the attempt to bring inthe younger audience but will likely not go over well because theactual content here likely won't appeal to them.


The premise is quite simple as we'reintroduced to Ryan Bingham who works for CTC, a company that sends inpeople like him to companies that are too afraid to fire their ownpersonnel. These guys aren't efficiency experts but rather they'rethere to do the dirty work, take the verbal abuse and to try andpaint the firings as a golden opportunity to move forward instead ofviewing it all as a negative. Ryan lives his life traveling as hespends close to two hundred and seventy five days away from his smallone room apartment near the corporate headquarters in Omaha. Thedifferences between his home life and his travel life are stark asthe apartment is really very utilitarian in comparison to the flashand style he sees in all the places he goes, with his numerousfrequent flyer miles, gold card membership privileges and other perksbuilt up from so much travel.


Ryan loves this life but it's about tohit a real snag when the company hires a perky twenty-three year oldnamed Natalie Keener. In a company like this, the bulk of expensescomes from travel so she's looking at how to do it with moderntechnology and streamlining things, which means doing virtual firingsthat will cause the current team to be grounded. With a proposed dropof eighty-five percent it's easy to see why the company is pursuingit. But for people like Ryan, it's the end of their way of life.Before Ryan can really agree to any of this, he finds himself beingteamed up with Natalie so he can show her the ropes of the real worldof this job so she can understand what it is that the people on thereceiving end go through. There's a world of difference between whatyou do when firing someone in person and through web cameras onmonitors.


Up in the Air explores a couple ofinteresting areas over the course of its nearly two hour run. Thetechnology side itself is certainly intriguing as you can easilyimagine that there are companies that do this for a variety ofreasons, no matter how cold it is for a situation that is so deeplypersonal for those on the receiving end. The way lives are changingin that we do so much through the Internet now, socializing, fallingin love and interacting for business, it's a natural progression forthis kind of work to end up here as well. But it's the kind of workthat strikes me as one of those last frontier types where it's a signthat society is moving firmly into a new realm, akin to the reboot ofSuperman in the 80's where Krypton become a cold world where peoplenever see each other or the threeboot of Legion of Super-Heroes wheremuch the same was done.


While the technology is the drivingforce that helps to get Natalie out on the road to experience things,it's not the real focus of the film. Prior to going back to the homeoffice, Ryan meets a woman very similar to him named Alex. The twohave a very fun scene where they compare their various rewards cardsand membership cards and realize they have a lot in common in thisarea and that they're quite compatible physically as well. There's avery endearing modern moment where they start to compare theirschedules by booting up their laptops together and figuring it allout. They meet each other multiple times over the film, including atrip to Ryan's younger sisters wedding, and you can see that Ryan isdefinitely becoming more interested in her and possibly moving pasthis way of life where there isn't anything that's weighing him down.


And it's in there that the central ideaof the film comes out. Much of what Ryan teaches Natalie through theprocess of helping people in their being let go is that this is anopportunity for them to open that next door. That there's only oneending in life and everything else is just a series of newbeginnings. This applies heavily to the work aspect of the film asRyan works them through their rage, acceptance and frustration overwhat he's putting them through, but it also gets brought into therelationship side as well. Ryan's relationship with Alex is one whereyou very easily root for them to get together through the challengesof it all. Both Clooney and Vera Farmiga have great chemistrytogether and watching their relationship blossom over the course ofthe film is a real highlight. The little nods are wonderful, from theplayful texting to the way they are when they get together at varioushotels. There's a good comfort between them but also a good deal ofintensity as well.


Up in the Air is the kind of movie thatwill really depend on where you are in your life as to what you'lltake away from it. It doesn't just wash over you with action or witha drama that doesn't connect personally. There's something to takeaway from Natalie's relationship where she followed a guy to Omahaafter having the whole world at her feet. You can appreciate Ryan'sway of life in that there's a certain order and prestige to it butit's not truly portrayed as a negative. It's a life that's very muchright for him, but one he's willing to move beyond if the rightperson actually does show up. It's a new beginning for him and onethat is completely appealing. It's a reminder that even in ourpersonal lives, there's always a renewal and rebirth, but we have tobe open to accepting it and embracing it. It may not be what we thinkit is and it may not go as we hope, but like everything else, ithelps us continue down that road.


This is definitely a difficult movie inmany places simply because of the subject matter of the firings as ittakes heavily from the present day economic realities. A company likeCTC is poised to take advantage of it, but the hardships that theydeal in and try to be unaffected by are profound. You can't help butfeel impacted by it, which in turn makes you feel far more for Ryanand Natalie as they perform their task. I left this movie with a lotin my head, knowing that I enjoyed it immensely but that it's thekind of movie that really does leave a mark. It makes me want to takesome of these chances, to feel like I'm moving and not stationary.

Tags:

Microsoft products

  • Dec. 21st, 2009 at 10:32 PM
Being a Microsoft employee, I am compelled to use our own products for the betterment of the company.  I do this, to a point.  If a Microsoft product meets or exceeds my minimum level of acceptability, I will use it, but if a far superior option is available, I will use that instead.

So, that raises the question, what Microsoft products do I use, and which ones do I eschew?  Time to make a list!

Microsoft products I use
  • Windows 7
  • Office
  • Bing
  • Visual Studio (for home use as well as work)
  • Mesh
Microsoft products I don't use
  • Internet Explorer (I use Firefox)
  • Windows Mobile (I have an Android phone)
  • Virtual Server (Currently looking for a better VM player)
  • Zune (I have an iPod, although I'm trying to figure out if I can sync it with Windows Media Player instead of iTunes.**)
So as you can see, I "eat my own dogfood," but only when I consider the dogfood good enough to beat out the alternatives.

*Please note that I did not say "begs the question," as begging the question is a logical fallacy, not an occasion in which someone asks a question.

**I dislike iTunes.

Losing Respect

  • Dec. 21st, 2009 at 9:19 PM
Like many kids, I grew up respecting my parents even if I didn't exactly like them at times. i had a fairly adversarial relationship with my father once I hit my teens as he set the stage all too well by telling me after my thirteenth birthday that "We're not going to get along now that you're in your teens." I understood that he didn't know how to handle having kids because his father died when he was little more than a baby so he grew up without a father and the experience that it gives.

I can justify anything sometimes.

But even if I had a really hard time with him in our relationship, I always respected him because he was someone that believed in science and mathematics. Wtih his background in technology and programming, he often had various kinds of math books around and all kinds of science related books from his time at working at Little, Brown Publishing. The last couple of years have really challenged all of this for me though because he's gone in a very different direction. I've read studies done that show that white men tend to become a lot more conservative as they get older and it seems to be proving true here. Conversations that I used to be able to have with him about things based in math are now completely in dispute.

A discussion earlier this year about high definition video was incredibly frustrating. I can certainly understand the perception issue in that people do NOT see a difference between standard def and high def. I think they may have eyesight issues, but I certainly can understand it as some of us just don't see things the same way. What was frustrating about it was in expressing the differences through mathematics resulted in being told that it makes no difference. Trying to work this angle just didn't work.

As my father is one of the faithful for FOX News in the last few years, the science of climate change is certainly another controversial topic. This in a lot of ways is even more infuriating because he grew up reading science fiction novels since he was young. Science Fiction novels, particulalry many from the days of yore, were novels that dealt with the whole what if aspect of the future in many ways, from social to technology to environment and more. I always felt that science fiction starts the conversation early about the reality of our future. So I know he spent decades reading books with many that dealt with climate change and the impact people have on an environment. To see him become such an absolute denier of even the possibility that we're having an impact on the planet is honestly saddening. With the way he goes at things some days, I honestly expect him to become an evolution denier at some point soon.

I always had respect for my father in these areas, but watching him go through this change in such a dramatic shift, a shift dominated by the fact that he is no longer mobile at all and spends the bulk of his day watching FOX News or reading their website, is crushing because it was the last area of honest respect I had for him.

On a happier note...

  • Dec. 19th, 2009 at 1:50 AM
Christmas cards are probably going out as soon as we can dig ourselves out of the snow. Unfortunately, it's too late for a lot of the people I'm sending cards to for them to get them before vacation... again --;;

Also, for those who have paid LJ accounts still and don't watch [info]paidmembers, paid members can offer non-paid members a $10 coupon until the 15th.

Just in case you hadn't noticed.

*whistles*

Dec. 18th, 2009

  • 1:13 AM
Why hello LJ, my old friend. How I have neglected you. But, alas, I am running on a critical spoon shortage and the only things I've had the urge to post are diatribes on some insanely sexist studies and articles that have come my way lately, but I lack the mental resources to actually follow a thought through to completion. Like that last sentence - I totally started out with a plan, lost it midway through, and then flailed along to the end. Sigh.

Gray has been doing entertaining impressions of Cookie Monster and Mario when he hasn't been trying to split his head open. Lots of family coming next week, I'm getting increasingly resigned to the fact that I'm just not going to be getting any sleep since I have to work, too.

But look, I made a sock!

Profile

[info]malrock
Malrock

Advertisement

Latest Month

August 2007
S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 
Powered by LiveJournal.com