Thursday, April 30, 2009

Black Holes

Phil Berardelli, of ScienceNOW, just posted an article on rogue black holes in the Milky Way galaxy:

Don't lose any sleep over it, but astronomers suspect that hundreds of medium-sized black holes are roaming loose in the Milky Way. These rogues, according to a new study, are the orphaned central black holes of the many smaller galaxies that the Milky Way has swallowed over its billions of years of existence. If one of them is discovered, it could provide important clues about the evolution of our galaxy.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

I’m Going to Rave About My Car

Don’t read this if love letters to a car are uninteresting to you. I get to be self-indulgent here, just for a little while.

You see, I continue to find things to love about my car. And I’m going to spill them here. You have been warned.

Image of 2004 Jaguar XJ8

The 2004 Jaguar XJ8 I’ve been driving since October has been a great choice. It came to me in such pristine shape, thanks to the previous owners. Judging from the condition (everywhere from the seats, to the trunk, to the lack of grime under the hood) this car has been pampered. Almost 70,000 miles on the odometer, but lightly used.

I’ve been putting 1,500-2,000 miles per month on the Jag so far. My daily commute is 25 miles each way, you see. We tend to use the Jag whenever we can to slow down the miles on the Odyssey and prolong the warranty. Pristine as the Jag is, its the car on which the miles really aren’t going to matter. So, I drive it. And I enjoy it!

The V-8 delivers 294hp to six forward gears. The body AND FRAME are all aluminum, meaning it weighs a minimum of 700 pounds less than earlier XJs. The two-program computer, with a Sport mode and a “comfort” mode, mean that I can cruise it, then pop up to a more aggressive shift pattern and firmer suspension. The difference is indeed noticeable – the kids call Sport mode “ROCKET MODE”.

The cockpit experience is simple. Luxurious, but simple. The automatic windshield wiper mode means that the wipers decide when to run; somehow the wipers sense water on the windshield and ‘just take care of it.’ The headlights have an automatic mode, too. They come on just before I need them, and turn off when conditions are bright enough. The climate control runs off a thermostat. Just set the temperature, and the car makes the appropriate adjustments. Shoot, the Jaguar even senses when the rear window defogger is required and turns THAT on for me, too.

There’s nothing left to do but twiddle the knobs on the stereo, keep my eyes on the road, and DRIVE! So, I do!

A few weeks ago, I drove solo from Portland to the family compound in Pacific City. The next morning, I drove the car fully loaded from Pacific City to Newport and back, then drove solo the day after that, straight to the Portland Airport. The route to/from the beach takes me over a curvy mountain pass. With the 290 hp and a snappy Jaguar gearbox, passing is super easy over any terrain constraints. Just groove the wheels over to the passing lane, goose the accelerator and feel the car immediately pop down a gear before BOUNDING forward like a …. like a Jaguar on the attack. Really!

Going to the beach this weekend, the roads were unusually traffic free. As I left the Tualatin Valley and entered the mountains, I set the cruise control for 70 mph, and wondered how long I could go before the curves got too tight for the speed. I got my answer: never. The Jag glided along at 70 through curves marked 35mph, through sweepers marked 45 mph, and along the long straights where the cops usually sit. Traffic behind me kept up fine on the straights, but give me two curves and they would all be gone in the distance behind me. NOT ONCE did the Jag’s traction control system kick in to assist me. Aggressive as such driving might seem, it was well within the Jag’s capabilities. When I found myself following traffic, I’d drop the cruise control.

Most of the time, working the gas at highway speeds requires a constant tap-and-coast foot action. I don’t hold the accelerator down most times, instead I have to back off often to keep speed down.

I did love the two Mercedes-Benzs. They, too were a pleasure to drive. I must admit, though, they drove like a train in comparison: they handled like they were on rails; they’d drive all day at incredible speeds; but their relatively slow acceleration meant that you had to plan well ahead to have the speed or power you’d need. The Mercedes’ were undoubtedly the finest cars I’d driven up to that time.

The Jag, though, is just different. SO high performance; and so beautifully refined.

I regularly have strangers approach me, as I’m parking or filling up at the gas station, just to comment on how beautiful the car is. The previous owner had swapped out the factory wheels for some chromes that  clearly say 21st century-style but still evoke the classic spoked wheel look from mid-century Jaguar classics. Coupled with the gleaming silver paint and the elegantly creased and curved body styling, the car seems to ooze class. Truth be told, it's not the men who comment me on my car, its the women.  (Don’t tell C that, okay?)

The kids remark that the S-Class Mercedes smelled better. They’re right; the S-Class, even though it was 14 years old, still smelled so heavily of leather upholstery that you could smell it on your coat for the rest of the day. The olfactory sense of luxury and pampering in the S-Class was just massive. But that was the point of the S-Class – comfortable travel. Think express train club car.

The Jag, for all its performance, delivers a cabin that’s just as spacious, with just as much leather and wood trim. But the atmosphere is not that of a club car – it hints too strongly of the ‘pounce’ waiting under the hood.

So, I’m grateful for the opportunity to own and drive this particular Jag. It’s a luxury car that performs better than my own driving skills. So I get to have fun, comfort, and a bit of peaceful quality during my commute. It’s a good thing…

Well, She Wasn’t Exactly Left At The Altar…

I posted about the upcoming wedding earlier? [Blog post here] It’s a trainwreck.

train_wreck_at_montparnasse_1895_small.jpg

The daughter apparently had a durable Power of Attorney, and used it to issue a restraining order, stopping any and all contact. Two days before the wedding. Lots of people are distraught.

Real feelings definitely got hurt; real damage was definitely done.

My prayers to all affected. May the hurt heal, may the hurtful see fit to change their ways. May unity prevail.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Neko? Is that YOU?!??!!

From Youtube, via BoingBoing. This is all too true.

 

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Coming Soon To a Theater Near You!

"Catie's Mom Gets Married", a Modern Day AARP-crowd Cinderella story about a divorced former airline hostess who raises two lovely daughters, changes career paths, becomes a nurse, and finally relocates a source of love and acceptance, in her mid seventies, with a retired businessman and politician who's name appears on numerous pieces of historical legislation. Of course, any good movie has to include a conflict. Enter the daughter who wishes the marriage not take place at all, seemingly doing all she can to throw a spanner in the works. The groom, in the role of prince, is torn between his new love and his devotion to the actively dissenting daughter.

Can harmony be achieved? Does it have a happy ending? Can Catie's Mom somehow triumph, and win over the trust of the unhappy daughter? Or will the daughter succeed in stopping the wedding, can she turn the day into a trainwreck?

We pick up the story one week before the date of the wedding.

Like, right now.

This moment. Right here.

C's mom is scheduled to get married on Sunday next week. This is her story. Truly storybook, isn't it? The wedding hasn't even happened yet, and I have already christened this M-A's Cinderella Wedding. I can hardly wait to see how it all plays out. Oh, I"m SOO hoping for a triumph, but the train-wreck is threatening at every turn of events. It's a nail-biter of a story and great theater. If only it weren't real life... because real feelings could get hurt; real damage could be done.

All that more compelling, it is...in the movies we can generally expect a happy ending to a Cinderella story. Here, though, we can't guarantee the happy ending...

Mind if I borrow your fingernails? Mine are chewed to the quick.



Saturday, April 25, 2009

Light ‘Handedness’ Indicates Life on a Planet?

I found this posted to slashdot; the original sourse is the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).

Visiting aliens may be the stuff of legend, but if a scientific team working at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is right, we may be able to find extraterrestrial life even before it leaves its home planet—by looking for left- (or right-) handed light.

The technique … could allow spaceborne instruments to see a telltale sign that life may have influenced a landscape: a preponderance of molecules that have a certain “chirality,” or handedness. A right-handed molecule has the same composition as its left-handed cousin, but their chemical behavior differs. Because many substances critical to life favor a particular handedness…chirality might reveal life’s presence at great distances.

Why do the scientists think this is a viable technique?

“If the surface had just a collection of random chiral molecules, half would go left, half right,” Germer says. “But life’s self-assembly means they all would go one way. It’s hard to imagine a planet’s surface exhibiting handedness without the presence of self assembly, which is an essential component of life.”

Chirality sensing is possible from great distances – in theory. The scientists responsible for this work have apparently already tested a prototype sensor. But it’s not ready to be pointed at an exoplanet yet.

With a new exoplanet seemingly being identified every week, a straightforward tool that presumes little about the chemical makeup of a life form will likely be the ultimate tipping point in locating extraterrestrial life.

How elegantly simple yet powerful!

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Well, I can't call it a MEATBALL...

BoingBoing posted this... I'm reposting it here.



Dried spaghetti, inserted into hot dogs, then boiled. All sorts of strikingly weird and undoubtedly delightful for children. I think we'll just have to try these!

Monday, April 20, 2009

Forward More Than Backward

Life is comprised of steps forward and steps back. Victories and setbacks. Let’s take stock of a few of those in the Typhoon right at the moment.

The weather has broken a bit here in the Pacific Northwest. Today’s outside temperature is70 degrees, with 80 degrees on tap for tomorrow. The weekend just finished was fine weather, too.

M is as always. School work? check. Piano practice? check. Room clean? check (most of the time). Social and upbeat? check.

R and I joined the Boy Scout troop for a hike-in campout on the Deschutes River in central Oregon. It was a good time, all-in-all. R increasingly succeeds in more and more areas/skills,  and he also continues to fail in some others. But then, don’t we all? The width and breadth of his areas of success are rapidly increasing, leaving him a smaller core area of weaknesses. The experience of watching him grow is a fun one.

The Cottage is receiving continued action with home buyers. Now that the flowers are in bloom, the grass is verdant, and the trees have budding leaves, the ‘wow’ factor is much, much higher. I’m optimistic we’ll get something real – like an offer – soon.

C continues to make amazing and profound progress on her book. I may have mentioned before that she most often writes between midnight and 3am. Not necessarily because that’s her best time for writing, but because the daily duties of running the family don’t leave her much more than that. So she makes time happen. She doesn’t resign herself being a victim and blaming “no time” for never achieving her dream. Instead, she crawls into bed and writes while the house is nearly silent, while a cat sleeps at her feet, while her dog and her husband softly snore nearby. And, if she’s a little bleary eyed in the morning, we all just try to be kind and supportive. Because the book is important -  important not just to her, but to all of us.

And me? Work is challenging but secure. That’s very good in these times. I would call my surgery recovery completed; I feel better than ever. I’m craving gym time and physical activity. And that’s good.

I’ve been invited to join the Badasht Task Force again this year. That invitation is an honor and a privilege. The family agreed that I should serve. And so I shall.

Our Friday night Ruhi classes continue, with good attendance and amazingly cool harmony amongst the attendees. That’s about all I can say here, but the process has been deeply gratifying, using our house to make a place for teaching, even if we’re not the best teachers for the Faith in a direct fashion.

So there’s strength in our condition. There actually is some stability in the world, and some deeper stability in my family. Once we resolve the uncertainty, exposure and stress of the two-house situation, we’ll be even stronger, more secure and more peaceful.  The real estate issue is our only backward-heading component at the current moment.

That’s better than it could be, I submit!

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Log Jams

Financial log jams, to be more specific. Big as this one. Big enough to actually shift the operation of the economy. Affecting everyone by grinding momentum to a complete standstill. 

Even after the jam is cleared, like in the photo I’ve chosen, there will be repairs to make. And solutions implemented to avoid the same mistake again.

Am I speaking about the US government? The Global Economy? No. I’m speaking about the business that is Typhoon Johnson.

We’ve received some news today to indicate that a log or two have been pulled out of our personal log jam. No, not any BIG news like an offer on our house, but some good news that gives us a bit of wiggle room that we can control ourselves for a change.

It’s good news. I wouldn’t say I’m happy, but I’m encouraged. Clearing out a log jam starts with the first log, afterall.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Blast From The Past

I stumbled across this photo of C and I. This was back in 1995 or so. We were hosting some Asian students of mine on a spring hike at Silver Falls. 

cate and nolan 001

That was a great day…what a singular time in our lives. We were a duo for all of 18 months; we’ve been a family for twelve years.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

From BoingBoing – Segway & GM Collaborate

 

A two-person electric car, courtesy Segway and GM. 35mph, 35 mile range. I have to presume NO FREEWAYS. So, in all, a great in-city runabout.

puma_gm.jpg

For most of the US it won’t replace a car; it’ll merely reduce (drastically?) the amount of driving one does. Since we won’t avoid having to buy a car too,  price will have to be way down there … less than a motorcycle, I’m afraid.

Let’s use me as a case study. In my, ahem, 25 years of working, this vehicle would have been suitable for my commute for the first 15 years, but not suitable for the last ten years. Having said that, though, I’d still have needed a car for all the travel off-commute. But then, we have a family of four, and we live in the Western States. Do business on the East Coast for a few weeks, and you can start to see how this vehicle would address a whole bunch of in-city needs when you have the opportunity to rely on Amtrak and other non-car transport to get from city to city.

I love one of the comments on BoingBoing, though.  The reader say:

“Makes you look like Captain Pike.”

I practically died laughing at that one. What? You don’t get the Captain Pike reference? You know… Original Star Trek. Pike was the…. oh heck, here’s a photo….you’ll remember:

That’s Pike on the far left. From The Menagerie.

Monday, April 6, 2009

He EATS! He SLEEPS! Amazing!

Those close to Typhoon Johnson know just how hard it was for R to get to sleep. Oh, he tried. He was such a good sport about it. But every other night inevitably ended with him still up past midnight, trying to sleep.

We suspected that his drug mix contributed to all this sleep issues. I think we’ve been able to confirm our concerns. I now feel confident claiming that yet another side-effect from the previous drug has dropped off the list.

In the past, getting to sleep often meant he had to sleep with us in our bed. He’s eleven. and nearly five feet tall.  I love the kid, don’t get me wrong, but this sleeping with Mom and Dad has lasted a good seven years longer than what’s considered cute. We were accommodating him by letting him sleep in our bed because it was clearly a medical need.

No, really. A medical need. Not a developmental or a maturity issue. The drug side-effects gave him no real choice.

Of course, waking him up in the morning was just as difficult as getting him to sleep in the evening. It all balanced out…and yet, I believe we’ve put the sleep issues behind us.

Here’s what went down last night and why I make such a claim:

C had a rental movie for Sunday evening viewing. R and M had their homework done, and had slept well over the weekend. So, they settled down on the bed in the master bedroom to watch the movie.

R didn’t really get INTO the movie, as it was a bit of a character study. Not his cup of tea. Rather than being disruptive, however, he politely but firmly informed his mother that he wasn’t enjoying the movie and was going to bed to read. Which he did, at about 9:30pm.

A little after 10:00pm, I went upstairs to check on him. His light was out, and he was snoring softly.

No cat-herding him to bed. No pumping him full of warm milk to calm him down. No sneaky, sleepless late night prowling.

He just put himself to bed, felt the urge to sleep, and went with it.

In the morning, he was already waking up when I checked on him. This wakefulness in the morning is also becoming his standard. In fact, I think we can try an alarm clock again. The alarm was an abysmal failure before, but I think he’ll hear it now.

I just can’t seem to wrap my head around the fact that my son now both EATS and SLEEPS.  We weren’t sure we’d ever see this day arrive.

Saturday, April 4, 2009

Trade Show Recap

My tradeshow Week was pretty darned busy.

Sunday – Tuesday  - IPC APEX Show, Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas

  • Main contributor at two press roundtables that included all the trade media and representatives from three multi-billion dollar companies who’ve lined up with us on my project.
  • Received and industry award from SMT magazine for the new software functionality that the team put together over the last year or so.
  • LOTS of networking. Increasingly at these events, people whom I don’t know, certainly seem to know me. I’m starting to get people coming up to me out of the blue to introduce themselves. Now, it’s one thing when I staff a booth and people introduce themselves, but walking the show floor has usually allowed me to just blend in. Not any longer; and that’s when I started to notice this point.

Wed – Thurs   -  Embedded Systems Conference, San Jose

  • We shared booth space with our assembly partner, and talked to a LOT of actual customers.        
  • Networked even more than in Las Vegas. This is because lots of potential collaborators were at the show. I got to do a lot of recruiting and vetting for fit.
  • Demos of our new functionality were received universally with acclaim.

Meanwhile, at home,  both my children have located and joined a FIRST Robotics team just starting up in our neighborhood. Both children want desperately to particpate. R called me at the show, to deliver a well-organized request to join the team. Of course I told the future robotics engineer “yes”.