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  • Hello, my name is: LEGION

    July 17th, 2007

    For about the past six months, I’ve been working with an interaction designer named Grace Perez on one of my biggest projects. She’s really quite on the ball — her work is precise, she quickly understands the exception cases that result from a particular design, and she’s able to quickly envision and document page flows that also look beautiful. I’ve really enjoyed working with her — she reminded me a little bit of working with Grace Cham, who’s an interaction designer that used to sit just outside my office when we were all on the fourth floor, before we all shifted floors.

    Grace Perez is so good over email, in fact, that I hadn’t even met her in person — we’ve been swapping questions, designs, and technical documentation back and forth over the lifecycle of a pretty sizeable project. In fact, I’m not even sure where she sits.

    So today, in the course of clearing up some page flows, I asked Henry Min to show me where Grace sits. He took me to the wrong Grace though. “Oh, sorry!” I said to my old friend and colleague Grace Cham, sitting in her plant-filled cube on the tenth floor. “I asked Henry to take me to Grace Perez. I’ve been working with Grace Perez for about eight months now, she’s really good, and…”

    “…why are you looking at me like that?

    OH MY GOD EMBARASSMENT. Congratulations on your wedding last year, Grace! Sorry that I’ve been communicating with you over email AS TWO DIFFERENT PEOPLE since December! For what it’s worth, I really like both of your work.

  • Bill Irwin on Sesame Street

    July 14th, 2007

    Thank God for YouTube. Thank GOD for the network effect that turns the entire Internet into one giant distributed network of citizens putting content up. Because at last — AT FREAKING LAST — someone has put up the thing that I’ve been searching for since the day I discovered Netscape Navigator 0.8 in 1994.

    This is an incredibly important ingredient of my psyche. If my life ever flashes before my eyes, the walk down the street at the end of it is what’s going to be at the end. I first saw this i-don’t-know-when, but I was too young to know that this was Bill Irwin and that he’s doing a rocket-propelled Charleston. Okay, enough, here’s the damn movie. Ignore the static at the beginning; you just miss the part where he’s taking a boom box out of his briefcase BLAH BLAH BLAH here it is. Kieran, I think you’ll appreciate this insert from Sesame Street:

    The other jaw-dropping charleston I found through BoingBoing.
    And man, did I spend a lot of time studying this routine while wearing the baggy Marithe Francois Girbaud pants I stole from my dad.

  • Reel beach hanging muster mansion broccoli OF STEEL

    June 4th, 2007

    We went to the beach for Memorial Day weekend, and Lydia had a great time charging into the freezing cold water over and over again, and jumping over the waves. Jumping over the waves requires an adult behind her, arms in her armpits, counting one two THREE and bouncing her into the air, then grimacing as the frigid salt water slaps you in the thighs. Why am I complaining? It was a wonderful time. Oh, yeah, I remember why I was complaining: it was COLD! But it was still really great.

    Being at the beach made me I realize that a BMW sidecar outfit is awesome, but it is not the ultimate Family Fun vehicle. It is, of course, the ultimate “ride around with your german shepherd in doggles and a red bandanna” vehicle, but priorities change, and so I’m considering selling the BMW and getting something appropriate to this season of life — something where the whole family can ride around and talk to each other. Maybe to Highland Orchards or Dairy Queen, without burning five gallons of high-octane SUV fuel. And it should let you know you’re outside; modern convertibles are too optimized to reduce wind buffet. My old 1977 Land Cruiser FJ40 was a wonderful, awesome ride, but at 11MPG, I can’t justify getting another one. Plus, SUVs make people angry. Be honest, what emotion builds in your heart when you see Fratty Fratterson riding around in a jeep with a backwards hat and a fire extinguisher on the rollcage? God knows there’s enough rage out there, so an uber-jeep is out. And it should be cheap to buy, and easy(ish) to wrench on. So, given my priorities:

    • Fun and open to the elements;
    • Inexpensive, good gas mileage;
    • Does not foster rage in self or others

    …that pretty much narrows it down to a 1970s Volkswagen Thing, or its French cousin, a 1970s Citroen Mehari:


    You can either say “Citroen Mehari” with an American accent, or one hell of a French one: ‘see-troy-‘EH me-‘EARRH-eeeee’ (Gallic shrug)

    The Mehari is to the 2CV as the Thing is to the Beetle, so parts are (apparently) not that hard to come by. Plus, CAPTAIN HADDOCK IS PICTURED DRIVING A MEHARI in various Tintin books, so really what more do you want? I just have to convince myself that when people see a Mehari, they will file it under “ooh, what’s that, cool!” and not “YOU GODDAMN HIPSTERS WITH YOUR PROTO-SUV IMPORTS I WILL BURN YOUR COFFEE SHOP TO THE GROUND.” Damn, I guess I spent too much time walking past the Hamptons-bound antique Land Rover set at Cafe Gitane when I lived in NYC. Anyhow, fun summertime car, no rage, will start saving up.

    The news at home: Kate and I have been harvesting broccoli from the garden and eating it, and it is really good. It’s a little odd to be eating FOOD that our LAWN made, but when the broccoli actually tastes good, you feel relieved and hopeful that you might be able to live healthy one day. “Oh, I actually LIKE this stuff! Wow!” Kate sewed a really cool tablecloth for the table out back, and I (for my part) hauled the table out of the basement. Kate and I didn’t even get our outdoor furniture out of storage last summer. Neither of us knows why; we think maybe we were recuperating from the first two years of being a parent, or something. Kate’s having a friend over for lunch today, so we stopped by Waterloo Gardens and got some hanging plants for the porch (and I got out the wading pool and fixed the little internal sprinkler thingy.) However, we apparently angered the gods with our preparedness, and so now it’s raining cats and dogs outside.

    This is getting long, so I’ll type faster: Kate and I are now gripped by a Playmobil obsession; Kate came back from the toy store on Friday with a Playmobil flower shop, and it was SO COOL that we ran right out on Saturday and came back as the new owners of a dollhouse that looks an awful lot like Marlinspike:

    Kate and I spent two hours snapping together its little Teutonic parts, which were satisfyingly and efficiently designed, ja? and now we’re drooling over the catalog. It’s like the Second Coming of Fisher-Price Adventure People.

    Almost done with the blog backlog here: yesterday, Kate, Lydia, and I went to the second annual Firefighter’s Muster in West Chester, which reminded me a little bit of a mesmerizing game show I watched on TV in Texas as a young kid. Firefighters had to use leaky buckets to fill a leaky 55-gallon drum, and run up and down ladders wearing full regalia, and man does that look hard. I think it’s also really important to come out and cheer, since isn’t a big part of the draw of being a volunteer firefighter to be generally awesome and heroic? So as a citizen, it’s incumbent upon us to come out and be suitably impressed. I’m not being sarcastic, either — climbing up a three-story ladder in forty-pound pants while carrying a giant, steel-tipped, pointy stick is nothing to sneeze at. For several reasons, including good rasons like “if you sneeze, you might drop the axe on your buddy holding the ladder.”

    Also, where else in modern life do you still see Napoleonic heraldry in daily use?
    Act cool! I think some girls are looking at us!
    The big leather crests on the front of the firefighter’s helmets should be laughable, but they’re totally not, in context. Come to think of it, I suppose firefighters wear ten-inch leather crests on their helmets for the same reason that nineteenth-century soldiers wore two-foot bearskin shakoes — so you can tell who’s who when everything’s smoky and confusing. Wow, that’s pretty kickass that someone still has a good reason to wear that stuff that does NOT involve sacking villages and commandeering livestock.

    Our neighborhood’s fire company, First West Chester, had obviously been practicing for the event. Station 51, which is right around the corner, kicked the asses of the other companies in attendance, just like last year. Hurrah for station 51! Plus, Kate heard them yelling “LEEROY JENKINS!” before charging towards the ladder in the “carry a whole bunch of heavy, pointy stuff up a ladder to the top of the parking garage and back” competition. I wish I had more opportunities to wear a cool uniform and shout “Leeroy Jenkins.” before running somewhere.

    Oh, we got a reel mower from Sears — so far, the verdict is: COMPLETELY GREAT, since now one of us can mow the lawn while everyone else is also outside, holding a freaking conversation, instead of cowering indoors watching Angelina Ballerina and waiting for me to finish. So there’s my chance, I guess: I’ll simply need to create a Reel Mowing Uniform, and charge up and down the lawn, shouting my battle cry. My shako will be in the shape of a stalk of broccoli. This is gonna be utterly heroic.

    This post is long enough, so I’ll save the part about how I’m using a sixteen-year-old VHS tape to get a cyborg midriff for later.

  • Guerilla Drive-In: “Meatballs” at Northbrook Canoe Company

    May 21st, 2007

    1979 summer-camp movie “Meatballs” at Northbrook Canoe Company was a lot of fun. The weather was intermittently rainy, so we screened the film under the tin roof of the canoe barn (formerly a feed and grain store, before Ezekiel C. “Zeke” Hubbard started Northbrook in 1977.) Our friend and next-door neighbor Harold Ross brought a camera with an enormous, light-gathering lens, and took this awesome picture:

    "Meatballs" at Northbook Canoe Company

    I can’t say enough great things about Northbrook. Kate, and I have been taking a trip there every year, and the atmosphere is unbelievably, authentically, and gloriously summery. Someday soon, a Hollywood location scout is going to come through with a polaroid camera and a battery of cellphones, and they’re going to make a breathy, yoga-powered shriek, and summon a battery of helicopters packed with movie cameras, second assistant directors, and makeup artists, and they’ll remake Meatballs as a Will Ferrell vehicle. So go there while you can, before it gets littered with plastic latte cups and craft-service tables! Hurry!

  • Goodbye, Bob

    May 18th, 2007


    This is a hard blog post to write; blogging is a medium with narrow shoulders, and any blog is an edited sub-set of your whole life. So I haven’t mentioned my father-in-law Bob “Snuffy” Smith’s illness with cancer, even though it’s been a huge part of our lives since last fall.

    Bob was diagnosed with bone cancer in December, the day after Barb won her contested election for PA State Representative. He was in and out of the hospital (mostly in) since then, went through three rounds of chemo, and finally came home for hospice care about a month or so ago. He died at home two Thursdays ago, in the morning.

    I loved Bob very, very, very much. He had the gift of genuinely liking people. He listened carefully, spoke slowly, and was unfailingly honest, enthusiastic, and genuine. As Scott Seiber, a motorcycling friend of Bob’s said, “Bob was everyone’s hero — but he always made you feel like you were his hero.” One of the proudest moments of my life was when Bob and I were stuck in the big Northeast blackout of 2003, on the second day of a motorcycle trip, far from home with only 100 miles of range in our tanks. I was able to use my Mysterious Cellular Internet Powers to locate a luxury mountaintop hotel 90 miles away that had its own generator, and we slept that night in style. Bob always got a look in his eyes when he told that story, and that look always made me feel like a million damn dollars. And Bob made everybody feel that way, for about a million reasons. As Kate pointed out, he was making people feel that way who just met him in the last three weeks of his life.

    It’d be trite to say that he taught me about motorcycles, although it’s true. It’d be trite to say that I learned about the Cowboy Code from him (if anybody is “all cattle and no hat”, it was Bob and his mellow, grizzled, storied and honored friends — I still stumble across mentions of them in books), though it’s true. It’d be insufficient to say that I miss him, although that’s more than true. I miss him very, very, very much.

    P1030799.JPG

    Bob and Barb live two doors down from us. Having Bob go through hospice care at home felt right. We didn’t have to make pilgrimages out to where Bob was, we could just lead our lives all together. I learned that dying is a process, and we went through it together. We all got to say our goodbyes at home. I worked from home one day a week, and participated in his care, and was home the morning Bob died.

    I’m embarassed to be crying on the train, so I’m going to stop here. Well, rather, I guess I’m going to switch back to a more familiar heart-not-on-the-sleeve blog mode, and say that the day after Bob died, I finally got my motorcycle running again, after a year of tinkering on it.
    I’d like to be able to say that Mysterious Hands were guiding me. Except it’s not mysterious; I just tried to emulate Bob’s patience, and his careful approach, and to just see what was going on.

    And sure enough, I found the problem — a simple thing, once I finally stopped poking at the wrong end of the bike — and now I’m up and running with the 16MM Commando Projector, having built a platform for it for the sidecar, and I know Bob would have loved that. So we’re showing “Meatballs” this Saturday night at Northbrook Canoe Company, and Bob, I love and miss you very much.

  • Ancient Spirits of Nerdery, I summon you!

    April 25th, 2007

    Spirits of Old-School Nerdery, lend me your power! From your cinderblocked halls, glowing with the green light of oscilloscope displays, I summon you! From your recumbent bikes, I summon you! I need your Ancient Skills of Electrical Engineering! Please comment this post!

    Here are my challenges, O wise ones:

    Stepping down DC Power from 18v to 12 and 3v:
    The MacGuffin — the AM transmitter that broadcasts the Sekrit Code you need to sign up for Guerilla Drive-In updates — has three components, all of which go in a waterproof (and therefore poorly vented) plastic box:

    • An AM transmitter (requires 18vdc),
    • A Sony Sports Walkman (requires 3vdc. I think. Two AA batteries end-to-end. That’s 3vdc, right?) with a 6-minute endless loop tape in it, and
    • A red radio-shack panel light on the front (claims to be 12vdc).

    I want to power everything off of just ONE wall wart, which will live outside the box, and pass in the power through a jack mounted in the box (already done.) I own an 18vdc wall wart, a 12vdc wall wart, and a car adapter that can step 12vdc down to 3vdc. Could I power the transmitter on the 18v wall wart, and also step down the power to 3v for the sports walkman? How would I do that? Just by soldering some resistors into a small Radio Shack project box? Would that end up generating a lot of heat? When you live in a medium-sized town like West Chester, where could you go to get that done? Do you call a small mom-and-pop TV repair shop? How about the 12v light? If I give it 18v, will it explode, or will it just be a little brighter and live a little shorter? Helllllllp!

    Attenuating speaker-level output
    The 16MM projector has a quarter-inch jack on the front that is used to drive an auxiliary speaker. If I just use an adapter to adapt that to an eighth-inch stereo jack, then plug that into a transmitter, I’m assuming the signal is too… something. Powerful? Does anyone know how to, er… “attenuate” what’s coming out of that quarter-inch jack labeled “speaker”, and make it so it’s… good… for putting into the “audio in” RCA jack in the back of a transmitter? Here’s a picture of the speaker jack from the projector, if it helps any. Does anyone know how do to this, or know what dongle I should get?

    Thank you, O Spirits! I will leave a basket of capacitors and a crimping tool under the candles for you.

    UPDATE: O spirits, thank you for your replies! I will indeed look into buying voltage convertors from Tyco, since they seem to actually, er… convert the voltage, not just turn the extra voltage into heat in a resistor. Also, I’ll just be taking the wires that go to the battery box in the walkman and wiring the power into that, so the walkman is expecting 3V…?

  • First GDI showing went well!

    April 17th, 2007

    You can read more about the the Guerilla Drive-In Showing of “Pillow Talk” here. I had a great time, nothing dangerous and/or expensive exploded, and I’m looking forward to the next one!

    Meanwhile, I’m thinking about showings coming up and OH MY SAINTED AUNT we will TOTALLY have one with a giant refrigerator-box castle involved somehow:

    Refrigerator box castle!!!
    Mr. McGroovy’s Refrigerator Box Castle Plans, via BoingBoing

    Now to think of the perfect movie that goes with a giant refrigerator-box castle. Or that goes with the simultaneous construction of a refrigerator-box castle. Or that goes with the sudden destruction of a refrigerator box castle by a sidecar rig traveling at speed.

    This also might be one viable way around the bizarre Disney requirement that no Disney movie be shown outdoors from May through the end of August (no lie! I have no idea why, either!) I’ll just put on the 16MM rental form under “Venue:” Le Ancièn Chateau de Corrugué Enfrigidèur. Oh, yes, it’s been in my family ever since its construction… earlier today.

    Any suggestions for good giant-corrugated-castle movies?

  • Guerilla Drive-In first 2007 showing tomorrow night

    April 13th, 2007

    Making Movies Inconvenient Again! I’m (mostly) all ready to go for the Guerilla Drive-In’s first showing of 2007 tomorrow night. Which is actually the first showing since 2005; last year, things just never got off the ground.

    Thanks to Harold Ross’s awesome photograph, the MacGuffin made it to uber-blog BoingBoing on Tuesday, so there was a flurry of (really nice and enthusiastic) e-mails from people that want to come. Hurrah!

    Also, thanks to Chris Smith’s donation of five-minute one-reel educational short “Families”, I was able to verify that the projector does, in fact, still work after its 18-month hiatus, and that it still is noisy as hell, and it still makes that awesome hot-grease elevator-shaft smell.

    All in all, it’s about 75 pounds of stuff not counting the heavy wooden tripod. That’s about 74 pounds and 15 ounces more than a Netflix DVD. “The Guerilla Drive-In: Making Movies Inconvenient Again!”

    Click on the photo to see details of the heap of gear.

  • Announcing The International Federation for the Betterment of John Young

    April 11th, 2007

    So when your name is “John Young”, there’s a lot of you out there. Why, as a kid, there were no less than FOURTEEN “John Youngs” in the suburban church we attended. Four of them even shared my middle initial. A Google search for “John Young” returns 161 million results. LinkedIn has more John Youngs than you could shake a stick at. I am John Young, and I am legion.

    Famous John Youngs are John Young the Astronaut and John Young the classified-intelligence activist. Also, there’s John Young the musician from Liverpool.

    Oh dear sweet Jesus, and let’s not overlook new Internet arrival John Young, Environmental Consultant, in Australia, who has the BEST BIO PICTURE IN THE HISTORY OF THE INTERNET OR ANY OTHER COMMUNICATION MEDIUM:

    OMGOMGOMG

    Okay, so that covers the famous John Youngs. But that’s not the end of it.

    Since my personal email address is john dot young at gmail dot com, I get all sorts of email intended for other John Youngs. Especially since any combination of “john DOT” or “john UNDERSCORE” sent to Gmail will still reach me. Every week, I get emails like (I am not making these up):

    • Adventure John Young: Congratulating me on my recent completion of a sailing trip all the way around Australia, and (separately) congratulating me on summitting the toughest multi-patch ascent of a mountain in North America,
    • International Casino Architect John Young: Telling me the time and place of the Macau Congress Centre Construction Site Walk, to check on progress,
    • Model John Young: Letting me know the location of my Apple Computer and Abercrombie & Fitch go-sees for Monday morning, and
    • Considerate Husband John Young: Reminding me to pick up milk and snow tires on my way back home to my flat in the UK.

    All of these fine, adventurous, considerate gentlemen are John Young. None of them are me.

    So I hereby announce the formation of the International Federation for the Betterment of John Young. Membership is open to John Young. The IFBJY (pronounced “if-BIDjy”) will exist to promulgate the welfare, happiness, and advancement of John Young, and to increase the quality of life of John Young generally. Also, to reroute John Young’s misdirected email when it has mistakenly been sent to John Young. Because I don’t want John Young to keep missing his go-sees.

    Charter membership is now open to John Young! John, shoot me an email at john dot young at gmail dot com, and I will add your name to the membership roster, and assign you a serial number based on the order in which you joined. (Sorry, I am John Young Number 001, since I have to do SOMETHING to compete with the International Hero and the two-fisted australian camera operator pictured above.) There is also a John Young number 002 (Nicole’s friend; hi John!)

    Those of you that know a John Young, those of you that love a John Young, please copy and paste the following email to them so they can be John Young number 003. Thank you!

    Dear John Young:

    I wanted you to know about the creation of the International Federation for the Betterment of John Young, which is forming now, and will soon be live at http://www.ifbjy.org. The IFBJY (pronounced IF-BIDGE-ee) is open to John Young, and exists to promulgate John Youngs’ welfare, happiness, and quality of life. And also to forward John Young’s misdirected email that has been mistakenly sent to John Young. And to try to get out from the shadow of the GODDAMN ASTRONAUT. Come on, right? You’ve driven on John Young Parkway in Florida and had to explain about the W. Are we right, John? Sure we are.

    Membership is free to John Young. In order to join, please fill out the following form:

    ==============
    APPLICATION TO JOIN THE INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION FOR THE BETTERMENT OF JOHN YOUNG
    ==============
    All fields except name are optional. Fortunately, name is already filled out for you.
    YOUR NAME: John Young
    YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS:
    DO YOU WANT YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS:
    [ ] Not published
    [ ] Published, but obfuscated through Javascript
    YOUR BLOG, MYSPACE, OR WEBSITE, WHAT HAVE YOU:
    YOUR CITY, STATE, AND COUNTRY:
    WHAT YOU DO FOR A LIVING:
    A 100-WORD BIO ABOUT YOU, JOHN YOUNG:
    Please use the third person, and lard your bio liberally with references to “John Young”: “John Young enjoys helicopter skiing, NASCAR, and the soft feel of marabou”, etc.:
    —

    —
    URL TO A BIO PICTURE FOR YOU:

    Please send the completed application to John Young, at john DOT young AT gmail DOT com.

    Once your membership application has been received, you will be assigned a serial number based PURELY on the order in which it arrives. It’ll then be published at the website of the International Federation for the Betterment of John Young.

    Thanks, John! If you have questions, they may be directed to John Young at the email address above.

    Cordial regards,
    [your name]
    on behalf of John Young

    UPDATE: It turns out that John Young, pictured above as the living, breathing embodiment of a Fisher Price Adventure Person, traveled to virtually impenetrable Australian wilderness and brought back photographic evidence of a hitherto-thought-extinct species of Blue-Fronted Fig Parrot. But the haters don’t believe John Young. The IFBJY’s first mission will be a letter campaign reminding the members of the press that John Young is a busy man, and that when John Young completes his research, all questions will be laid to rest. John Young has total confidence in John Young.

  • Dirt Draws Kids

    March 27th, 2007
    P1030418.JPG P1030454.JPG P1030465.JPG P1030477.JPG

    Kate and I had our third (fourth?) spring garden class in Oxford on Sunday, and our guru revealed his double-wall polycarbonate cold frames, planted with lettuce two weeks ago, now completely bursting with wall-to-wall red and green lettuce. I am not a vegetable fetishist, but… well, I guess now I am a vegetable fetishist. That lettuce did things to me, man.

    So Kate, Lydia, and I spent Sunday afternoon turning over one of our five-foot by five-foot beds, and adding a year’s worth of nice, black household compost to it. Which immediately drew a crowd of neighborhood kids, each of whom was delighted to help. You’re never more aware that garden tools are basically big, heavy pieces of sharpened metal on long sticks than when you have three five-to-eight-year-olds eagerly waving them around. Lydia, of course, was unutterably delighted to have the Big Kids around.

    Things turned out really well; the bed (one of four, though we may only two two this year) is looking good, and Kate and I have a bunch of lettuce to get in the ground tonight(?) or tomorrow morning(?). Or sooner, if the Local Gardening Mafia keeps after us. A knock on the door at about six PM last night revealed one of the local, cherubic five-year-olds:

    • Cherubic Five-Year-Old [Gravely]: “You said that you were going to work in the garden today, and that you would tell us, and that we could help.”
    • Me: “Oh, you know, we spent today with Kate’s dad, and didn’t work in the garden. On Sunday, we said we might work in the garden today.”
    • C5YO [Even more gravely, after a pause]: “No, you said that you were going to work in the garden today, and that we could help.” [Glances significantly at hose]

    Other kids were ranged out on the sidewalk, anxiously watching the result of the conversation, and hoping no doubt for some pre-bedtime pitchfork use. Clearly, we are now the proud owners of a Community Garden, and we’d better start considering our responsibilities.

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