Any Video Games?
After a few minutes, my son walks up to me, looks at the games I am looking at and says, "They don't have any games here. We should go to a game store."
I am a lesser geek. In the dog eat dog city of geekopolis, I am a mangy cur tipping over garbage cans. I fear the dog catcher will spotlight me and throw me in the back of a cargo van to totter off with the siren wailing: "IM-per-SON-a-TOR". It is true that I am not a pure bred geek.
I develop software. That's my day job. I develop a Java based web application that allows customer service representatives to access data about people involved in State Health programs, perhaps enroll them or check their address. Stuff like that. It's interesting work, the writing of code, and I enjoy it. But I went to school for writing english and reading litrachure. There are times at work when I feel like I am in way over my head. The past week has been one of those times.
I jumped head first into a different area at work, something a bit more hard core than my usual romp through the world wide web side of things. This area is new for me, but is old bones for most, and for those that care, it involves Java Threads. We have a lot of really smart people at work. They absorb this stuff. They make jokes about it that pass way over my head ("So the way I fixed it was to extend Thread, HAHAHA"). They talk about patterns and object graphs. They have degrees in Computer Science. Some of them have been coding since high school. I'm trying to tell you these people go home after work and they continue thinking about work because the like to.
I think it's cool. Don't get me wrong. I admire them for their skills and devotion. But man, keeping up with these punks is hard work. Especially because when they start going off into virtual machine land, I start picking apart their interesting usage of some word, and pretty soon I've lost the whole conversation. It's disturbing because these people count on me to deliver quality code.
Maybe I am too hard on myself, however. They count on me now to deliver top notch code, and so far I have held up my end of the bargain. I may not be a true geek, whatever that means, but I can fill in anywhere when needed. In the dog eat dog geekopolis, I am no Mastiff power coder, nor am I a Sheep Dog herding the code into magical formations. But I might be that tricky little likeable mutt that gets into everything, which is useful sometimes, making marvelous junk-code contraptions from tipped over garbage cans.
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I bicycle to work everyday rain or shine. I have quite the trustworthy setup with a pair of very useful saddle bags, a fast commuter style bike, and all the lights I need for the early nights of Oregon winters. I like riding in the rain, actually. There's something peaceful and at the same time defiant when riding in a downpour. Aside from the forehead slapping realization that it's just water, riding in the rain brings the vast openness of outside up close. Visibility is limited. Sound is muted and any echoes usually come from splashing gutters along concrete walls. For what it's worth I also like the cold. But if there is one thing I cannot abide it is a headwind.
Nothing kills a ride like a headwind. Some might consider it a challenge. Others might simply ride slower, understanding that mother nature is boss, but I seem unable to submit entirely. Today, for example, was particularly illuminating on this as going to work in the morning I pushed straight into a slow but steady wind that dragged at my wheels all the way to work. I built up a sweat even though I barely broke 15 miles an hour. And to make matters worse, the wind switched direction at the end of the day and the ride home was just as plodding. At first, I scowled into the wind and clenched my teeth.
Somehow I always apply greater meaning to these occurrences. I look for cues to the state of the world, or simply the state of my life, in these tiny difficulties. What did I see in a headwind coming and going? Each trip to work, and each trip from work gives me a spectacular view of downtown Portland from across the river. I live in a spectacular city, I have to say. To me Portland has the warm attractiveness of a well used classic car: a clean style with thankfully little glittery pomp; the simple efficiency that makes living here easy; and a shroud of fantastic mist and rain that for me makes the city ever fresh from behind the clouds.
What greater meaning did the headwind provide for me today? It slowed me down to look.
A new means of propelling spacecraft being developed at the University of Washington could dramatically cut the time needed for astronauts to travel to and from Mars and could make humans a permanent fixture in space.
In fact, with magnetized-beam plasma propulsion, or mag-beam, quick trips to distant parts of the solar system could become routine, said Robert Winglee, a UW Earth and space sciences professor who is leading the project.
I Know a Man
As I sd to my
friend, because I am
always talking, -- John, I
sd, which was not his
name, the darkness sur-
rounds us, what
can we do against
it, or else, shall we &
why not, buy a goddamn big car,
drive, he sd, for
christ's sake, look
out where yr going.
--robert creeley
robert creeley because sometimes you gotta.