Of course the day after I post a note about how the work is draining, what would you expect to happen? Only the longest working day so far and a request from my boss to move to (near) full time status. The time off was fun while it lasted but I’m lucky (and glad to say) Intransa is great for me so far.
Category: Personal
The one thing about working again that bugs me is being tired at night. We don’t have to get up any earlier, yet, but the emotional energy level is so completely different.
Watching hockey can be fun but not being able to see the puck or understand the rationale behind certain penalty call decisions hurts. OTOH, seeing the Sharks score two goals in the last 19 seconds of the game today, to force OT in the last regular season game, and then win on a massively aggressive effort in the extra period is suh-weet.
Today’s book: Time Enough for Love
Released in 1973, Time Enough for Love is a massive work by SF grandmaster Robert Heinlein in which he combined two fairly different goals: a novel that covered much of the temporal territory of his Future History series and that also served as a forum to make clear his politics and morality. Especially the latter, which mainly says that all politics is about power over others, all religion is based on fear of the Great Void or, again, power over others, and that any and all sexuality is good as long as the interpersonal aspects are based on friendship and love (as opposed to, yes, power over others).
Though not as highly regarded or widely read as his 1960 modern messiah masterpiece Stranger in a Strange Land, this novel would be my preference between the two. The protagonist is Lazarus Long (I admit their might be some unavoidable bias due to the name), a man over 2300 years old as the story begins, and the book basically covers some biographical stories that allow Heinlein to indulge his sweet tooth in some transplanted Westerns and rebellions against authority. The last part of Time is a novella in which Heinlein apparently tries to relive his childhood with his mother as lover and inserts a time travel mechanism into his fictional multiverse. The connective tissue is how Long’s compadres renew his desire to live.
Heinlein continued exploring this basic character set in most of his books written subsequent to Love: the sequels include The Number of the Beast, The Cat who Walks through Walls and To Sail Beyond the Sunset. M.E. Cowan put together a very complete Heinlein Concordance, hosted by the Heinlein Society, including an entry for TEfL.
surely recommended
Earthquakes open the season with a road loss
Despite all the hype 14 year old phenom did not start for DC United, though props to him for the cool Sierra Mist commercial with Pele. First game for us with Dominic Kinnear as head coach, no major changes to the squad though Brian Ching is back from injury and Cliff Ronier out for the season on a bad ankle.
Sloppy first half by the Quakes, no shots at all for Landon Donovan and goals by Moreno on a header off a free kick and Eskandarian on a defensive blunder for DC and Ronnie Ekelund scored San Jose’s on a penalty kick.
Disappointing job by the referee Kevin Scott, who stopped play on too many foul occasions when he should have allowed the advantage to play on and who missed a couple of obvious yellows to DC players. ABC’s coverage was mediocre, they must have mentioned Adu, shown him on the bench or mentioned/shown his Mom at least once every 60 seconds, and I didn’t care for the play by play by JP della Camera nor for the in-game interviews with the coaches either.
DC United blew two empty net opportunities early in the second half, Convey the first time and Stewart the second. Good goal work by Onstadt to make up for defensive blunders.
Adu came on around the hour mark for second goal scorer Eskandarian, getting a standing ovation from the home crowd. Donovan finally got a shot off about the 65th, a blast which Rimando was able to leap and block off to the side. Quakes actually seem to finally be getting a rhythm, putting pressure on the offensive third. With just under 20 minutes left, Brian Ching comes on for Ronnie Ekelund and Donovan will drop back to let Ching play in the box.
Almost immediately after, Quakes defender Craig Waibel (the guy with the multi-colored goatee) gets sent off for a late harsh tavkle, a really bad call, even the color guy is saying the ref blew another one. Have to play the last 15 or so with ten men. After some sloppy play Scott called another red, this time on United’s Kovalenko, for a nasty elbow to the face which the league has warned are going to be called every time; Kinnear put on another out and out striker, Jamil Walker, now that the sides are even at 10 men.
Adu got alone in the box in the 83rd and went down under close marking but didn’t get a foul called–welcome to MLS, Freddy! Fouls and physical play all over the field, a yellow to Ben Olsen. Four minutes of stoppage time, giving us some hope but DC has had much of the last few minutes’ possession. Donovan not playing well at all, bad passes and dribbling. Nerves, nerves, can we get the equalizer??? NO, dammit, the second half whistle blows and we go down.
Is the Sun shining where you’re sitting?
Following up on the Sun-MS deal, the oft-criticized Orlowski presents a well-developed, interesting perspective that essentially boils down to: What is Sun’s defining mission going forward? There are some rumors that one outcome of this will be Sun adding Windows, at least the server versions, to its price book!
The money’s nice, and I’m not sure the legal challenge presented any better future for the company, but this doesn’t bode well for Sun’s future that I can see. HP has its PC, printing and digital media businesses and IBM has its Global Services group accounting for more than half of revenues but Sun has none of that. Especially damning is that a few years ago, when stock prices were still high and shares could be used like Monopoly money for acquisitions, both of those server competitors bought major consulting practices but even though many were urging Sun to do the same, McNealy refused and I think now the company will be paying the price for his arrogance.
A personal note: I have a feeling that this new round of layoffs will pretty much cost all my remaining friends their jobs. Hey, Intransa’s hiring!
A list that says I’ll gladly pay you a nickel on Tuesday
By day of the week, more or less:
- Las Vegas
- Red Cap
- BBC America Mystery Monday (Wire in the Blood, Waking the Dead, Rebus)
- 24
- NYPD Blue
- The Shield
- Nip/Tuck
- Enterprise
- Smallville
- That ’70s Show
- Angel
- Law and Order
- South Park
- Friends
- Tru Calling
- Tripping the Rift
- Without a Trace
- Stargate SG-1
- Joan of Arcadia
- Monk
- Penn & Teller: Bullshit!
- Trust
- SNL/Mad TV
- Sopranos
- Deadwood
- Carnivale
- The Wire
- Six Feet Under
- The Simpsons
- Alias
- Arrested Development
- The L Word
- Jeremiah
- MI-5
- English Premier League
Iffy:
- Charmed
- Scrubs
Laugh if you got’em!
Liv Tyler is who Sherilyn Fenn wanted to be.
What’s it all about?
Scoble alerts me to news I find simply shocking: Sun and Microsoft have settled their legal differences. Slashdot has a discussion and The Register has an article. Biggest parts of the news to me are that:
- Sun gets $2 billion cash from the nearly bottomless MSFT coffers;
- Sun drops all outstanding litigation–meaning their very significant antitrust lawsuit–pending against MSFT and neither company will sue each otherover patent issues for the next 10 years;
- Sun is firing yet another 10% of its employees, meaning it has now dumped over 14,000 employees (out of what was 44,000) since 2001 and I truly wonder what this will mean in terms of product development; and,
- Sun promoted software head Jonathan Schwartz to president and chief operating officer, giving McNealey a bit of support he hasn’t had since Zander left and announced preliminary Q3 results of a loss in the 6-8 cents per share range not counting extraordinary items, below Street expectations.
On this news, MSFT stock is up 2.31% (58 cents) while SUNW is up 19.81% (83 cents).
April Fool’s joke or serious threat?
Internet infrastructure: how does the physical infrastructure of the internet cross oceans? Big ass cables! (AskMetaFilter, I just wanted to put big ass cables in the blog.)
Big day for the national sides
The Summer will see a lot of big matches. The top European national teams will try to take the quadrennial contental title at Euro2004 while most of the Western Hemisphere’s national teams will begin their 2006 World Cup qualification rounds (the US plays a home and home with Grenada in mid-June). So in a day for international friendlies, 21 in Europe, how did we do?
Well, for starters, I watched as the Americans pitched a 1-0 shutout over Poland, who beat them in the previous, more meaningful 2002 World Cup meeting. Brad Friedel made a decent showing in goal (where was Tim Howard?) though he was rarely challenged and did not handle a couple of late balls as well as one might desire and in a more important match would probably have led to problems. DaMarcus Beasley was really strong, scoring the only goal and showing nice maturity and width. Coach Bruce Arenas used most of the Americans playing in Europe in this game and is still trying to choose the best 18 or so for the qualifiers, with only an April 28 game against Mexico and a still to be settled opponent June 2 to prepare.
A lot of the Liverpool players were in action but did not fare as well. England lost 1-0 to Sweden and this put Jamie Carragher, Steven Gerard and Emile Heskey down in a game they really wanted to win. Jerzey Dudek was another loser, handling the goal for Poland, though except for Beasley’s shot through Dudek’s legs he answered what little power the US showed. Milan Baros scored a goal for the Czech Republic but his squad lost 2-1 to Ireland; this was the Czechs’ first loss in 20 games, so perhaps a good time to losen up a bit ahead of Euro2004. Bruno Cheyrou played the second half of a goalless draw for France at Netherlands. On the brighter side, Dietmar Hamann scored for Germany as they defeated Belgium 3-0 and Harry Kewell played for an hour in Australia’s 1-0 victory over South Africa.
Wednesday is my day off
Because some people refuse to go GUI: DR-DOS 8.0 ships [via Larkfarm]
The WB unveils the new Batmobile and boy are those tires big! Is it me or does the new bat logo seem awfully LotR-influenced?
Why is ManU new boy Louis Saha proclaiming that Arsenal’s Henry is better than teammate Van Nistlerooy? Trying to put a spur under his man’s heels ahead of this weekend’s FA Cup semi-final where the two will matchup and in which Saha cannot play? One can only hope. Then again, Saha is Henry’s teammate on the French national side and perhaps looking to help his place ahead of Nicholas Anelka.
The decline of Western Civilization is nigh: a Harvard professor was so caught up in a 419 scam that he raised over $600k from his fellows allegedly for SARS research that actually fed his own predators! Prof. Xu refuses to admit he himself was being victimized though he did admit his own fraud; guess that’s typical of almost any ego.
My turn
I’m the victim for interview #15 over at SpoFi, which is just getting started. Remember that I am very difficult to embarrass.
Sunday’s movie: Starsky & Hutch
An out and out police farce–compared to the original TV series–Starsky & Hutch is plain funny. Not smart and funny like, say, a Woody Allen or Coen Brothers film but more in line with the better National Lampoon movies. Director/co-writer Todd Phillips (Road Trip, Old School) is showing increasing skill and improving timing. Ben Stiller gets a role and a director that keeps his more obnoxious habits in check and Owen Wilson is smooth and smart.
recommended
Did PG&E and it’s bankers just cost California taxpayers another $100 million? That’s certainly the position taken by critics of the utility’s recent getting out of bankruptcy bond sale say, and the argument sounds reasonable to my ears. Then again, what’s another hundred million dollars after all the billions that have been wasted in recent years through the state’s so-called energy crisis?
Another HBO show to watch
I was going to take a pass on Deadwood, at least until HBO repeats the run before the second season premieres, but curiosity and the great reviews got the better of me. After two episodes, I must report I’m intrigued and will be watching weekly. Don’t know how HBO does it but they almost always hit the target dead center. Timothy Olyphant and Ian McShane really stand out but so many of the cast are making a meal of their characters.
Dawn has an amusing idea on how to solve her office politics issues. Sweetie, I just hope you find some attractive hard guy to play with at night.
Bushinations: Protestors take the protest home
Props to the leaders of National People’s Action, or whichever of them thought this up, but a bunch of protestors took their placards and chanting to the home of chief Bush advisor Karl Rove yesterday and got right in his face. I would love to see some newsvideo footage of this event, especially the bit at the end where Rove was screaming in the poor woman’s face. Great idea, something liberal protestors ought to do more of–right wingers, particularly anti-abortion protestors, have been doing this for years.
Sunday afternoon and the living…are living
TV Alert: New BBC America drama from the creator of Cracker, State of Play, premiering Sunday, April 9.
They sure do things different down in Louisiana: Warrantless searches OK’d, sometimes. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, man those guys just suck.
Amuses me no end that the last two weekends have seen movies featuring the undead unseat that nasty Gibson flick on the top of the charts.
But speaking of service, this weekend was the annual call from my mortgage broker. I didn’t realize mortgage rates had gone back down again, after rising through the summer and fall, but she says I can go from five percent to 4.5% on a five year ARM and save nearly $100 a month. Still no cost to me, just have to turn in the past month’s bank statements. Also restarts the clock on that five year countdown until the rate can change for the worse. If you live in the South Bay and want a referral to a great broker, let me know. Nice!