Happy Summer Solstice! Here is my latest contact information: robert (note: no stable address yet -- see below for more info) my Oakland voicemail number http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert http://www.purl.org/net/robert ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ News * Parting is such sweet sorrow, with the emphasis on SWEET. Noelle has found a job in . So, we're moving. She'll be going out there in a week and I'll be out there within a few months. (I'll be moving our stuff out there. Damn, she's lucky! :-) Noelle will find us some rental housing; once there's a stable address, I'll be preparing the move to there. A lot of work ahead. Lifestyle * Careers * She'll bring home the bacon, er, Fakin' Bacon. I'm still looking for a job. So, for the time being, Noelle will be the bread winner of our household. Luckily, I have a spartan level of living. Anyway, any job suggestions/leads are quite welcome! * Vacation * Travel * Utilitarian is the word of the day. I went to Ca a couple of weeks ago. I was hoping to have 2 interviews (thanks for Michael Abbott), but only 1 materialized, unfortunately. So, it was a jobless vacation. It was way cold in the Bay Area -- windy and overcast almost all the time I was there. Ugh. Nevertheless, it was nice meeting with people. It was especially strange to be agreeing with everybody I met -- something that rarely happens in Boston. And the relatively mellow drivers were a relief. * Yeah, it's French, I suppose. In late February, we went to Montreal. I had a terrible time trying to understand anybody there. It was nothing like the French movies we've seen -- they seem to slur the words together and it's much harder to understand. Contrary to popular belief, the people there were quite nice. But, man, it was cold. Every day there, it was below 0F with one day with a high of -10F. Burrr! * Home * How will we manage to pawn this off? There is strong likelihood that I'll be trying to sell this house (ha!). Perhaps because it is in such poor shape, it will be more attractive to more people? I hope that's the case. In any case, the house is in a good location; so, the value of the land may make the transaction be more tolerable. * Back to renting. Because housing prices in the Bay Area is outrageous, it looks like we'll be going back to renting. And because it's unclear whether I'll have a job there, the price must be low enough for only one income earner to afford. * Where have all the tomatoes gone? I don't know what will happen with the tomatoes and peppers we've planted after we leave. How sad! We started 'em inside in February and are coming along nicely. Oh, well. * Transportation * Dedicated follower of fashion -- carless fashion. Despite Noelle getting a job in 'burbs (), we're going to try to stay carless. We have two things going our way: (1) BART is much more bike-friendly since when we lived there and (2) there's City CarShare (ZipCar-like). Our goal is to live near the main bus line that runs relatively late (10PM) and on the weekends and also will bring Noelle to her workplace in . So, we're focusing our home search on a specific area in . * The main problem is the click-click-click. It only happens when I pedal. I'm pretty sure it's the chain, but if I have to change the chainring and the freewheel in addition, I cannot afford this right now. Perhaps an Ashby BART Fleamarket special will fit the bill. * Food * The burrito experiments continue. We've discovered one place that approximates Ca burritos -- Baja Bettys. They do use refried beans. And their hot sauces are actually spicy, which is nice. I did experiment with burrito variations over the winter. Two things I discovered: oil in the refried beans is the key to good refried beans, and lettuce is crucial to the correct flavor. (Good lettuce is impossible to come by here in Boston in the winter :-(.) * People * Missing persons. Last solstice message, some messages bounced. I no longer have email addresses for these people: Louis Dunne Dwight Moody Michael Teixeira Sundar Krishnamurthy Sridhar Seshadri Amanda Dahl Marc Berkowitz Clayton Glad Tracey Layman (Ingle) Michael Stack Susan Norris Chris Golden Joyce Young Mike Hamrick Ben Morss If you're in contact with any of these people, please tell them that I am missing their email addresses. Entertainment * Movies * Cheap entertainment. Catching up on movies is definitely one of the best parts of being unemployed. I can go to matinees when Noelle doesn't want to see the movie. (I saw "X-Men 2" which Noelle would never see. The special effects were great, but that's the most I can say about it.) * MovieLens to the rescue. So, we always have this problem when going to the video rental shop -- what to see. There's just lots of stuff and it's impossible to go through it all. My solution was to re-discover MovieLens. It turns out, I had signed up for MovieLens years ago using an old e-mail address because I had (and still have) an interest in collaborative recommendation systems (it was GroupLens which sparked this). And I've been using it to full. It's at http://movielens.umn.edu and it's free. * My recommended movies. Since MovieLens can be your personal recommendation system, I'll only mention movies which MovieLens doesn't list and which I recommend: Horns and Halos War Photographer Ay, Carmela! The Handmaid's Tale Revolution OS * Radio * Expansion and shrinkage. Sadly, CNET Radio is no more. At least, not in its original form. But, I've discovered http://publicradiofan.com and it totally rocks. Now, I'm not stuck listening to 7 years re-runs of Fresh Air. Yey. * Books * And yet I re-read books. Despite my being so hopelessly behind in my reading. I re-read "Welcome to the Monkeyhouse" by Kurt Vonnegut. I really wish someone would make a made-for-TV movie of the story "Welcome to the Monkeyhouse". It's really called for in these days of extreme right-wing twits. * No, I don't buy from them! Yes, I do use Amazon, but I have never bought anything from them and do not intend to. But, after discovering that they use Net Perception's recommendation system technology (which drives both GroupLens and MovieLens), I dug up an old e-mail address that I had signed up to Amazon with, and have been using it for giving me recommendations. I've entered everything I own into it that it actually has in its catalog and rated it all. I'm impressed how books recommend music which recommend movies which recommend household hardware which recommend kitchenware which recommend software. I've actually discovered new stuff. I just hope they never cut off invalid e-mail addresses :-). * Television * Only the good shows die. "Monk" hasn't been on for several months now (we don't get cable) and "Scrubs" are all re-runs. Ugh. But at least there's "NOW with Bill Moyers". That show is the only reason for owning a TV. (Although, you must admit that a lot of it is public-radio/public-TV biased. For instance, the coverage of the FCC decision on media ownership was a bit too much and it was obvious that NPR/PBS has some personal stakes in this issue.) * Comics * The Republican Matrix. Amazon recommended a bunch of Tom Tomorrow comic books. Ah, so many comics to read. Sadly, Amazon doesn't know anything about a political cartoonist well-known in England named Steven Bell. I heard about him on a Working Assets Radio show. (Interestingly, you can access his books via the Amazon UK site.) Politics/Society * Ecology/Environment * Overpopulation * A not-so-great Friday. I went to the Brookline women's clinic to defend it against the gaggle of anti-choicers marching on Good Friday. Apparently, everybody forgot about this so there were only two of us standing there. Luckily, they didn't become violent or anything. (I was told that the police in Brookline are notoriously uncooperative with the pro-choice side.) * Passing on. Since I'll be moving, I'm trying to pass responsibility of Boston No Kidding! to someone else. Thankfully, one fellow has been particularly vocal in the group and seemed like the ideal candidate for passing the baton onto. There seems to be an established No Kidding! chapter in the San Francisco East Bay. It'll be nice to be a participant rather than an organizer. * Winding down the protests. My posters are all falling apart, mostly due to all the precipitation during the last 12 months. So, it's just as well that we're moving. I know there is a Planned Parenthood in (that's where I got my vasectomy). I doubt that it could be as crazy as it is at the Boston Planned Parenthood -- I don't think I'll need to protest the anti-choice people in . Perhaps I can be more cooperative and become an official Planned Parenthood escort. * Labor * RSI * Back to my roots. I guess, since I'll be in the East Bay again, I'll probably be joining the East Bay RSI Support Group again. I've been discovering that if I do low-weight-bearing repetitive exercises, my hands feel better. But I still would like speech recognition... * Misc * Don't desert the dessert. It looks like our last and only event at The Lucy Parsons Center will have been The Anarchist Vegan Dessert Potluck. It was interesting. I made a dish I got from an Indian recipe book (but veganized). It didn't come out that well -- it needed more sweetner. Also, it was a little too gritty. I thought that I should bring something out of the ordinary so as to minimize redundancy. Oh, well -- live and learn. The other desserts were quite good and we had to leave before some of the more scrumptious desserts arrived. Too bad! Health * RSI * Talking to myself. Since I was continually unemployed, I kept up my role in the Boston Voice Users as the main contact person. But, since I'll be moving, I'll have to give that up. There are plenty of people to pick up the slack -- I think it'll be OK. * There are some good things about Boston. One of them is Bromfield Pen Shop where I got all the nifty do-dads for my fountain pens. I hope I can find something like it in the San Francisco Bay Area. If worse comes to worse, I can always order stuff through the internet, but that's highly inconvenient. I'll probably build up my supplies before leaving Boston. Technology * Software * My personal projects * Speech, speech. I've been too busy lately to work on my speech projects. I can't tell you how guilty I feel about not working on them. Perhaps when things are a little more settled I'll have time to hack a bit more on it. * Hardware * Networks * is civilized. Surprisingly. DSL is available in a number of places in . I'm so ready to drop Verizon like a rock. My DSL service was down an _entire_week_ with no dial-up back-up. (Dial-up is an extra service with Verizon with an associated extra fee-per-month.) Thankfully, I discovered a free local dial up service (at 14.4Kbps!). They kept saying it was only going to be a couple of days of outage -- it turned out to be an entire week. It looks like Speakeasy covers all of the areas in that DSL is available. I'll definitely sign up with them with a static IP address. Then, I can run my own web server and email server and be completely independently. * Telephones * Can't be completely wireless, unfortunately. We decided that a cell phone is going to be our main telephone. It costs about the same _except_ that I'll ultimately need to a get a physical line for internet access. Unfortunately. If there's a neighborhood Wi-Fi network, then perhaps I can avoid this (but probably won't be able to run my own servers, then); but, I suspect I'll need a telephone line. Sigh.