Oct 17, 2005
Getting it Out There

Me with my iRiver, jamming out to
U-turn Cafe and sporting my "creative commies" shirt
I've
been listening to
C.C.
Chapman's Accident Hash, a new indie music
Podcast, for a few months now. He describes his show as "the best mix in
podsafe music" and boy is he right. My musical tastes are fairly varied,
but I certainly found myself liking his "mellow" themed shows a bit
more than his normal all over the map mix.
So when C.C. launched U-Turn
cafe, a podcast with nothing but chilled,
mellow music, I was psyched. Listening to the first few shows, I heard
his call for artists to sit down with a guitar and a mic and just record
something raw and fresh, and well, I went and got myself inspired.
Saturday night, I fired up my
iRiver 899 and sang + played my heart out. The
result is undoubtedly
the most professional recording I've ever managed. This is slightly
ironic because it was done in 1 shot with a small mic and a little
device, rather than the hundreds of dollars of recording equipment I
have ready for the task, and the hours I usually spend futilely trying to
get a good mix.
I've also gotten in touch with some of my favorite indie artists to
encourage them to join the podsafe music network and get their music out
there for anyone to play. Edie
Carey has taken me up on my suggestion,
and her amazing music is now available
there. Anyone can go take a
listen, and podcasters can download her tracks to play on their show!
I sent C.C. my song with a quick message attached, and pointed him
to Edie's music, wasn't sure if I'd get a reply. After all, C.C. is a
very busy guy. Was I ever ecstatic when I read his email:
Ok dude, there is WAY to much goodness in this one single e-mail.
Thank you for it all. Everything is perfect.
I checked out Edie's music last night. I was editing together all
sorts of music segments that will be played on IT Conversations stream
of the Pop!Tech conference so I made sure to get her in there so that
she'd have her first play and thus start showing up in the Featured
Artist rotation on the site. Damn is she talented.
Now I need to find some time to do another u-Turn. I'm getting such
great music!
I LOVE what you did with your whole intro and then the song. I need
more people to do that.
PERFECT! Thank you!
-C.C.
That email made my morning.
Now, I realize, I have to get things ready around here - I don't even
have a proper music page to point people to!
3:51 pm | permalink |
/life/music |
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Oct 11, 2005
Rochester Fun

We
spent this past weekend in Rochester with Kate and Doug and it was amazing as always. We had a great time playing all manner of
games, seeing Batman Begins at "the buck" movie theater, and eating some fantastic meals. The first morning we work up there, we
were roused by the
strangest music you could imagine. An eerily happy and jazzy voice sang "naaaaa na na na na" and was backed by a full orchestra,
then followed by some crazy boppy j-pop (Japanese pop music).
After doing some of the morning ritual (my bag was still being "located" by the airline, so I basically just rolled out of bed and
put on my pants), we joined Kate and Doug downstairs where they were already preparing us a great breakfast. The music, Kate
explained, was the soundtrack from perhaps the greatest game to ever come out for the Playstation 2, Katamari Damacy. I finally got a
chance to play the crazy game at the Museum of the Moving Image for a few minutes a month
or so ago. The basic premise is that you
start out with a little, sticky ball that can pick up things like paperclips and coins. As you roll them up, you get bigger, and
move on to bigger objects (like tape dispensers, then toys, then you know, children, pandas, elephants, buildings, and mountains.)
We went out and bought the game later that day, and it's as addictive as it sounds. We beat the game over the course of the weekend,
but the great thing is that they challenge you to do each level better, so there's still tons of playability left, and Sara is
actually playing it right now.

Between rounds of Katamari Damacy, we played a little
Halo 2, some
Apples to Apples, a
little
Clone Wars Risk,
Compatibility,
and
even snuck out to
Vertex, the local Goth club for happy hour. It was great
to see them, get to know their new dog, Benny, and say
hello to their
cats, Vega and Io
(I have no idea how to spell this, it's pronounced Eye-oh, and he's the most affectionate cat in history. I was trying to write
this post our last night there, and he was so intent on getting petted that he wouldn't stand for my hands being on the keyboard of
the laptop).
- Katamari Damacy at
Amazon
- Apples to
Apples,is an easy pick up game that can go as long as you want. Each player gets seven cards with words or names on them.
Each round, the "moderator" reads an adjective, and the other players throw in a card they think will match well with it. Whichever
one the moderator picks gets a points. Very good for a quick friendly game, and tons of people can play at once
- Compatibilty a great team game where you pick what
you think your partner will pick from a stack of cards, based on a different "topic" each turn. Great fun for up to 8 people in
sets of two.
- Clone Wars Risk is a twist on the original
Risk, with extra rules that would, in theory, make the game quite different. Not wanting to spend 30 minutes re-learning risk,
we simply played with the original rules, and it was as fun as ever.
- View the photos - Ooh, it's album 100, neat.
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Sep 29, 2005
Three Droplets
Watering my plants at work left three perfect droplets on the waxy leaf of this baby cherry tree. I was insanely busy, but sometimes you just have to stop, take a moment, and appreciate the
beauty around you.
This little trio sat atop the leaf until they evaporated, being perfect photography subjects as I snapped away. I was even able to get the Empire State building in the
background of the last shot.

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11:10 pm | permalink |
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Sep 25, 2005
Moonlit Clouds

Our first night in North Carolina was amazingly beautiful. The harvest moon was bright in the sky, illuminating everything in the eerie white glow
that defines edges but fails to give you details or any depth to the world around you. The effect was much like looking at a frozen daytime, and I
couldn't resist snapping some shots.
The way the clouds are rimmed with light here, masking the full moon, makes me think of classic old werewolf movies. I threw a lot of shots away, but
these really captured the amazing brilliance of the moon that night. It was like a sun on a black sky.
There's lots more photos from North Carolina in the album

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11:04 pm | permalink |
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Sep 14, 2005
Sweet Fashions
Dylan's Candy Bar is a crazy candy store on 60th and 3rd in New York City. The store is as much about the experience of shopping and the
childlike wonder of being surrounded by more candy than you could ever eat than the actual treats themselves. The posh location and expansive corner windows allow them to do a
booming business and have inspired impressive works of sweet window art.
Since the "Dylan" of Dylan's Candy Bar is Dylan Lauren, Ralph Lauren's Daughter, it was only fitting that Fashion Week in NYC would
bring some candied costumes, and sure enough, we caught the artist at work this past weekend.
The creations were amazing, covering a wide range of Haute Couture looks and even incorporating an actual Ralph Lauren design among them. Take a closer look at the pictures here. Everything,
and I mean everything down to the hair on the mannequins heads, is made from candy.
Sweet.
11:10 pm | permalink |
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Sep 09, 2005
Coloring in the Lines

A
few years ago I roughly followed one of
merekat's
tutorials and
learned how to
add some pretty good looking colorization to existing line-art.
I came up with this
little gem, and it was (and is) the
most popular
thing I ever posted on deviantart.
Recently I've been reading and extremely impressed with Colleen's friend
Kilo's 10,000 Drawings project, and decided to get my old skills out of
tool-shed and see if they'd gone rusty. She's re-teaching herself how to
draw by doing 10,000 drawings (as a series of slice-of-life and fantasy
comics) and she's not even 1/20th of the way through and they're already
amazing.
After finishing up the color-job on one of her recent comics, I'm really
really happy with the result, especially the clouds and ocean
in the "reveal" shot of the second to last pane.
I also got a lot more familiar with the free and open source Gimp working on this project,
and I feel like I can do just about anything I do with Paint Shop Pro
with it, although I'm still looking for the "lighten" and "darken"
brush.
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Aug 29, 2005
Weekend fun at the Bronx Zoo

We
made our (almost) yearly trip to the Bronx Zoo yesterday, and it was
amazing as always. I'm a sucker for Zoo photography, and I always take
too many photos, but this time I had good reason. My awesome camera
(it's a
Canon
PowerShot A75 if you're curious) has a great zoom lens,
takes wonderful pictures,
and gives me lots and lots of control. I'm spending most of my time in
manual mode now forcing longer exposures than the camera would choose
itself and then taking 5 or 6 shots until I get one in perfect focus
without any motion blur. It really makes the colors pop and gives me
lots of detail when I get it right.
The camera also allows me to switch to manual focus, and I've been
bringing it
right down to 5cm and taking some amazing macro shots (as
you
might
have
noticed).
I'm going to queue up a few of the best ones here in the blog, but I've
thinned the herd a bit already and posted the better ones here
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Remembering New Orleans
One year ago this weekend
Sara and I were finishing up our honeymoon, escaping New Orleans just before a storm hit.
We'd learned a lot over the course of our stay there and had seen how the city had been built
to withstand (and rebuild after) storm after storm.
Exactly one year later, New Orleans is getting slammed with a category 5 hurricane, possibly
the most destructive in US history. I was
absolutely unaware until Wil sent his
mojo their way tonight. Good luck New Orleans. Here's
hoping everyone and all the wonderful history are still there in the aftermath.
"This is going to quickly go from a weather story to one of the biggest news stories in the
world, certainly the biggest either of us has ever covered... Everyone's saying "I hope I'm
wrong" when talking about this storm. The truth is that we've dodged this bullet so many
times before, this is going to be the one." -WWL TV, streaming live
here
...conditions are
already deteriorating along portions of the central and
northeastern Gulf Coast and will continue to worsen through the
night. Maximum sustained winds are near 160 mph with higher gusts. Katrina
is a category five hurricane.
Wikipedia's quickly evolving entry on
Hurricane Katrina
12:59 am | permalink |
/life/travel |
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Aug 19, 2005
Spiderman, Spiderman, Radioactive Spiderman

Lots and lots and lots of spidermen, in the "crane game" at Coney
Island. I think this one would make a really fun desktop background. The
top left is even kind of dark and our of focus - good for placing icons!

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4:12 am | permalink |
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Shattered Glass

Shattered glass on the F train. The spider-web pattern just looked kind
of cool to me.

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4:07 am | permalink |
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Photo Fun at Coney Island

The most ridiculous
picture of me ever.
Last
weekend, a bunch of us went to Colleen's and then to Coney Island
for some
Fluff in Brooklyn
fun.
I was hoping to catch Ravi the contortionist at the freakshow and see
how he's doing but I
guess that he's thought better of a career in the sideshow industry.
According to the barker there, his wife talked him out of it. Hopefully
he's pursuing college like he planned. I interviewed
and
photographed
Ravi last summer
after meeting him twice in a week by pure coincidence. He's a really
nice kid.
This weekend, I took quite a few pictures, and continued on my macro
photography and
long exposure kick. You can check out
my photos here and then see what Colleen did with her set in today's
comic here.
Speaking of comics, I hear-tell that our friend Chris
Moreno's real ink+paper comic #2 is hitting stores right about now.
King Arthur Vs.
Dracula sounds silly, but honestly, it's the first comic
I've enjoyed reading in ages.
Well, 15 straight hours of coding an IT Help Desk system in PHP/MySQL
later, I'm finally getting tired, so I'll close this up before I fall
asleep at the keyboard like I did last night.
Before I go, I figure I ought to mention the amazingness that is the
picture at on the right here. I didn't intend to do a patriotic photo
shoot, I just happened to be in the right spot at the right time, and
although I think the picture's ridiculous, it's just funny enough to be
my new favorite. That, and I'm really still quite enamored of my tattoo.
I guess that's a good thing seeing as I've had it almost 2 years now. I
figure if I can make it to 30 without regretting it, I'll have done
better than your average tattoo-getter.
"I do not regret the things I've done, but those I did not do." - Lucas,
Empire Records.
4:01 am | permalink |
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Aug 12, 2005
Seashell Cluster

Did I mention I was on a macro photography kick? I'm obsessed with the detail in this one. You can see every single grain
of
sand, down to its translucency and the little glint of light shining off it. This one will definitely also have a round as
my desktop wallpaper.
Anyone know what once lived in these little shells? they were about 2 cm long each.

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11:45 am | permalink |
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Vista

Before I even got 3 feet on my photo hunt, I was struck by the vivid contrast of the blues and greens in this shot. The sky
was almost unnaturally clear and the grass was thriving in the sea-spray and the hot sun of the dunes.
I'll probably set this to my desktop wallpaper on my linux machine at home just so I can say I had a Vista on my Desktop
long
before
Microsoft trademarked the
word.

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10:45 am | permalink |
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Beach Plum Blossoms
I was all set to do some snorkeling in the ocean Sunday, but it turned out to be super windy and the surf was up, meaning I
couldn't see more than 6 inches in front of me. No go.
Instead I went on a photo-safari, and got some amazing shots of the different flora in the area, the dunes, and the
amazingly rich colors of that sunny day. Check this one out in full res, it's all about the macro focus. I've always loved
photos with a tight depth-of-field, bringing just your subject into sharp resolution, but hinting at what's nearby with
fuzzy images and vibrant colors, and I spend a lot of time playing with it that day.

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9:45 am | permalink |
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The Sunset Panorama
This sunset in Cape Cod was unbelievable. Over the course of an hour, the sky turned every possible color,and some I didn't
know it can do. In this picture alone, there's yellows, greens, blues, purples, pinks, and reds. It was even more stunning
in person.
If you click the picture, you can see it in all its super-high-res glory. This was 6 pictures stitched together, and will be
hanging on a wall here in the apartment sometime soon.

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2:18 am | permalink |
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The Photostream
I've been taking a lot of photos lately, and I'm really happy with how some of them have turned out. Since I've got my own
webserver, I don't need to host photos at Flickr, but lately I've been jealous of the
cool tagging, sorting, and
photo-stream functions there. For example, check out the "cute" clusters to get a feel for how it works. Neato.
If you want to see the whole bunch, you can check out the Cape Cod
photos here, but I'm going to be featuring some of the best of them right here in my blog over the next few days, as my
own sort of tagging and photofeed, letting google do the sorting for me. If you check back later, you'll probably see a
bunch of photos here, but those
"reading
the feed" (I recommend Mozilla Thunderbird or Feedreader if you don't have an RSS
reader already) will get to play along as I pick my favs and fill in some details.
Enjoy!
2:17 am | permalink |
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Aug 01, 2005
Hello Dollar!
Well, things are a little quieter around here for the moment, but rest
assured that I've got some stuff brewing behind the scenes that should
set up the next few months rather nicely. I'm not one to hype things
too early here, but the words Podcast and
Invention have
something to do with it, although the two
aren't related.
In the meantime, I've been spending my self-allotted
web-browsing-minutes nightly flipping through the Oishii feed, checking out what
other people
find cool enough to bookmark. HelloDollar.com is
tonight's stand out for
its level-headed advice on building wealth. Anyone starting to save (or
struggling to do so) should take a look at this blog. In daily doses,
advice like "Brown-Bag
It to Half a Million" is actually quite
palatable, and I like the Author's measured approach to building wealth.
10:34 pm | permalink |
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Jul 26, 2005
Dispelling Kitchen Myths

Okay, two quick posts in one.
First, del.icio.us has been around for a while, but I never really found a need for bookmarking things on a website rather than in my browser. I didn't really "get" it. The
appearance of Oishii, which gives you an instant snapshot of what other people are bookmarking right now and how popular they are, made it all sink in for me. Just
watching the oishii stream for a few minutes can blow your mind, as cool stuff comes across here just about once every second. There's even an RSS feed for your
favorite feed reader.
Watching the stream, I came across "Kitchen Myths". I often find myself combating kitchen "laws" which seem dubious at best, and debunking a few of those was right
up my alley. Definitely worth a look, whether you're new to the kitchen or know a few of these "laws" yourself.
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Jul 25, 2005
No Subway Searches

I've ranted nonstop to anyone who will listen about the inherent stupidity of random searches on the subway. I've gone on about the fact
that it violates the very freedoms on which this country was founded, all for
naught. It will not increase security, only create the barest illusion of it at best.
Luckily, I'm not the only one who feels this way. NoSubwaySearches.org sums up rants into concise arguments and distills speeches and diatribes into handy flyers.
Good work guys.
NoSubwaySearches.org
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Jul 13, 2005
The Final Table
Jon was still in the tournament (you may want to stop here and read
part
one if you haven't already, otherwise this might be a bit
confusing), and the final table was all starting to sit in their
positions.
The blinds had gone up all through the last round, and they traded up
the chips, leaving the players with smaller stacks of big chips. The
purple chips were worth 2000 (it cost $20 to get 2000 in chips at the
beginning of the game) and they were spread across the table pretty
evenly, save for the two giant stacks that came over from table 1. Jon
had a purple, 4 greens (500s) and some ones. He wasn't the shortest
stack at the table, but he was close.
He played it tight, as usual, and the blinds nipped at his stack,
pushing him to action. He had 4 9, not a great hand by any stretch, but
he was going to be all in here just on the blinds soon anyway. He
flopped a match for the 4, and then hit the 9 on the turn. If it didn't
move now, he'd be out of it.
"Once again, I'm going to go on record as saying I think this is a bad
idea" He said, laughing, and was called by two of the players with big
stacks.
The super-stacked bald man from table one was one of the callers, and
was holding pocket 8s, and one of the regulars at the club was holding
A 9.
Jon just needed to keep either of them from making another match on the
river.
4 9 - 8 8 - A 9
4 5 K 9
?
It came up Queen, and we both smiled. I think silently, inside we both
went "YES!"
Jon did a little better than tripling his stack, and was now sitting
even with just about half the table at 7200.
Play went around a while, and Jon finally hit again with "Miss Slick," K
Q suited.
He called for about 4000, and it was again him and the big player to his
right.
The flop came out 4 7 K rainbow, and Jon had paired his Kings. Not bad
with a Queen to back it up.
K Q - ? ?
4 7 K
The turn was a 3, and Jon checked. So did his opponent.
The river was a 9, and they both showed their hands.
They both had K Q.
"Are you kidding me!?" Jon exclaimed. He sat back in his chair, and
turned to the player at his right. "I'm sorry, it's not at you," he
said, starting to smile a bit "but that's just ridiculous, that's the
second time that's happened to me tonight on that hand!"
He took half the pot, which was about 1600 more than he'd put in with
the blinds and some early bets added in.
His cards got tough for a while, and the table got exciting. The stacks
were trading back and forth, and several of the players made amazing
comebacks from stacks less than the big blind. They played for almost an
hour without losing a player. At blinds this high, that was amazing.
The even-keeled play gave Jon a chance to bide his time and wait for the
right cards, and pocket Kings rolled up his driveway and honked.
He was all in after drawing another player in, and was heads up
against Jack Ten.
There was junk on the board, and by the river, Jon's opponent was
drawing dead. A 3 on the river made a pair on the board. Kings and
threes to his opponents nothin'. He doubled his stack again.
The blinds climbed upwards every 15 minutes, and by now they were
playing with almost exclusively purple chips.
Jon was practically forced to play pocket twos on the big blind, and
turned up against A 8. We all waited as the flop came out 4 k k. Jon
had 2 pair, Kings and Twos, but an ace or and 8 could put him out of it.
The turn was
a 7 and a Queen came down the river.
Jon had doubled up again, and the table was starting to thin out.
The blinds marched ever upwards, and ate away at Jon's considerable
stack. By the time the big blind came around he was in for 8000, almost
half of what he held, and he hadn't even seen his cards yet.
With J 7, he was drawn in for another 8000, and then finally the rest of
his 2500. He was all in against the player to his right, who was on the
small blind, once more.
The beauty was, the other player had junk too, in the form of 4 6. Jon
had read him well, and gone in knowing it would probably be a fair
match. The
flop missed them both,
then the turn came out garbage. All Jon had to do was survive the river,
and he'd be sitting pretty to make some money (he was one of 6, and 4th
or better split the nights winnings, up to a 1st place of $720)
The river came over in slow motion, and a 6 hit the table.
The other player had paired up. Jon was out.
Jon stood up and we chatted for a few and decided to watch the rest of
the game play out. It was very back and forth now, and they dropped like
flies after Jon went out.
It only took another 15 minutes for the game to wrap up, and Jon and I
said our goodbyes. There was a secondary cash table going, but neither
of us wanted to drop tons of money here tonight, and we'd had a great
time.
We rode down in the elevator with two of the others from the final
table, and all talked about how solid each of the players was and what a
great group of people it seemed to be.
He and I were buzzing from the experience out on the street, and as we
walked from 57th down to the 40's to get some food, we couldn't stop
talking about how great it had been.
Over a late deli sandwich and a panini, we relived the week, and
marveled at how filled and great it had been. From the amazing Aquabats
concert when Jon arrived to the fireworks to his trip to Yankee stadium,
to the RC planes, to karaoke and the diner, and now to poker, we'd
filled just about ever moment with good stuff.
I crashed pretty soon after we got home, and we both slept in Sunday.
Hurricane Dennis threatened to cancel his flight, and Jon prayed for it
to happen so he could stay an extra day, but his flight was re-routed
north for plane maintenance anyway, and he was off.
Now Sara and I just have to figure out how we're going to get out to
California for our turn visiting.
1:18 am | permalink |
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