posts | images | bookmarks
By
anders pearson
06 Aug 2003
once in a blue moon, reading the comments on slashdot actually turns up something interesting.
like this gem which points to the SEC documents filed by SCO. reading through them is quite enlightening. in the last couple weeks, the top executives seem to have dumped a lot of their stock. isn't anyone in the government paying attention?
i'm beginning to agree more and more with Michael Crawford that we should put the SCO executives in prison for stock fraud and extortion.
By
anders pearson
29 Jul 2003
i actually found myself implementing Dijkstra’s shortest path algorithm in some code yesterday. imagine that. actually using something learned in a data structures and algorithms class for real-life, useful code.
if i get really ambitious, maybe i’ll throw in some Floyd-Warshall or Johnson all-pairs shortest path stuff. (though for now, iterated Dijkstra appears to be more than fast enough and isn’t even remotely the bottleneck in the code)
By
anders pearson
27 Jul 2003
lani has decided to give up her glamorous temp job in NYC and go to grad school at UT Austin starting this fall.
while it will be sad for me to see her go, i can at least look forward to one thing: road trip.
in mid august, we’re taking a good 5 or 6 days and driving from NYC to Austin, Texas. we’ve enlisted Tuck to come along and help out with the driving (since i don’t really drive). the plan is to take our time and explore the interesting parts of the american southeast. definite stops for us are Memphis and New Orleans.
other than that, our plans are still pretty open-ended. none of us have really spent much time in the area so we don’t know what the cool places to see are. if you know of interesting sites that are roughly between new york and austin, please suggest them. are there any scenic roads that we should try to incorporate into our route? are there any areas that we should carefully avoid? any tips for yankees making it through the deep south without experiencing Deliverance first hand?
also, since none of us are terribly wealthy at the moment, we’d like to do this as cheaply as possible. a big chunk of our expenses will probably be hotels. unless we can find couches to crash on. we know people in richmond, va, and chapel hill, nc, but other than that we have no friends in the region. so if you know people who might let us sleep on their floor for a night, let us know that too.
By
anders pearson
27 Jul 2003
tim bray <a href=”http://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/200x/2003/07/26/NastyNeologo”>wonders about the origin of the word ‘frick’</a>:
Perhaps its an obvious variation of frigging, but one doesnt feel the need in the English-language ecosystem for such a variation, and words dont typically get any traction unless they meet some need, if only for novelty. Admittedly, in a spoken diatribe, fricking sounds a bit more percussive; is that enough? Interestingly, frigging is almost always slurred into friggin, while in fricking the -ing is sounded out fully.
i think it’s basically ‘frigging’ pronounced with a faux scottish accent. at least in my experience, it first came into popular use in the US in the early to mid 90’s because of the SNL skit with Mike Myers about the scottish store. you know, “we have three sizes: wee, not so wee, and FRICKIN HUGE!” it seems to have had a resurgence lately, i think because of the Austin Powers movies. so i think we can safely blame Mike Myers.
By
anders pearson
09 Jul 2003
found a <a href=”http://www.floridatoday.com/!NEWSROOM/peoplestoryA1172A.htm”>fascinating article</a> about an ex-military satellite image specialist who thinks he’s spotted a brand new oil pipeline running from the fields in southern iraq out through kuwait.
at the end of the article, he also makes a couple interesting points about the importance of the weather on the sept. 11th attacks. i do remember noticing and discussing with coworkers that the weather that day was absolutely perfect. at the time it seemed tragically ironic that something so horrible could happen on such a beautiful day. if this guy’s right, it could <em>only</em> have happened on a beautiful day.
By
anders pearson
07 Jul 2003
insane weekend.
tuck, angela, and i went up to syracuse for hellfest 2003. 3 days of hardcore and death metal. over 100 bands.
it was fantastic. the festival was really well organized and run. they had things set up with 3 stages. two of the stages ('A' and 'B') were right next to each other and they would be setting up on one stage while a band played on the other. a third stage ('C') on the other end of the fairgrounds had the smaller name acts. most bands played for about half an hour each except a couple of the bigger names which played for 45 minutes or an hour at the end of each day. the advantage of the setup was that there was almost no wait between bands. someone was playing at all times on at least one of the stages.
the bands were amazing. there were no real disappointments. standouts were Darkest Hour, Walls of Jericho, Lamb of God, Anti-Flag (who were excellent to see on the 4th of july: “you’ve gotta die / gotta die / gotta die for your government? / die for your country? / that’s SHIT!”), In Flames, Bouncing Souls, Shai Hulud, Dead to Fall, Jude the Obscure, Brother’s Keeper (they announced that they were breaking up and hellfest was their last show ever), The Locust, and With Honor. but seriously, pretty much every band i saw was good.
the crowd was just as impressive as the bands though. crowd participation and enthusiasm was mind-blowing. even after three solid days of moshing in 95 degree heat and clouds of dust (one of the few negative aspects of the weekend was that the fairgrounds were really dusty and it was hard to see or breathe quite often. i think i have gravel in my lungs now and all weekend my snot was black), they were still jumping around and stagediving every chance they got. at every single band, even the obscure Stage C acts, there were people going crazy jumping on stage and they all knew all the lyrics to all the songs.
i brought my new toy along and took a ton of pictures. it was hard to get very many good shots though. for many of the bands, the mosh pits were extremely violent and took up such a huge area of the floor in front of the stage that i really couldn't get closer than about 100 feet without risking getting my camera and my skull destroyed.
aside from going to hellfest, i would recommend that you just stay out of syracuse. driving around that area was a nightmare. they seem to have the most confusing system of roadways imaginable. there were hidden exits, ambiguous or just missing signage, an overall twisted street layout that felt like it had been designed by a spider on benzedrine with a cruel streak, and everything looks the same. we literally spent hours driving around just trying to do simple things like finding a convenience store or getting back to our hotel. every turn that we were supposed to make we would manage to miss the first time around and have to back track to it. just when we'd get back on the right track, we'd suddenly find ourselves in an exit only lane and have to spend half an hour just trying to get back on the highway (a process that would usually end up involving about 14 turns). it wasn't just one or two cases of bad design, the whole area seemed to suffer from it.
By
anders pearson
27 Jun 2003
the <a href=”http://www.webstandards.org/“>WaSP</a> has a new <a href=”http://webstandards.org/opinion/archive/2003/06/27/“>opinion piece</a> on microsoft’s recent announcement that MS IE on both windows and mac will cease to be developed as free standalone products.
now is probably a good time to mention that i am a WaSP <a href=”http://webstandards.org/about/bios/apearson.html”>member</a>.
By
anders pearson
22 Jun 2003
for future reference, i’ve collected all the little sketches i’ve posted here over the last couple years in <a href=”/images/sktchs/“>one place</a>.
By
anders pearson
20 Jun 2003
our gerbils managed to get mites somehow. not a big deal but annoying to the poor little guys.
so last night, lani and i instituted a little mite holocaust. we took the gerbils out of their cage and let them run around in the bathtub while we disassembled the cage and cleaned it thoroughly. then, before they went back in, we sprayed each of them with some kind of anti-mite spray.
in the process we’ve learned several things about baby gerbils:
- baby gerbils are the slipperiest objects known to man. if you pick one up and don't complete enclose it with your hands it will launch out of your hands like it was fired from a gun with absolutely no regard for its own safety and paying no attention to how high up it is from the floor.
- baby gerbils are, as far as we can tell, indestructable. making a parachute free descent of 5 feet onto a hard tile floor (thanks to #1) startles them for a second but otherwise seems to produce no ill effects (to the gerbils at least. lani and i both had mild heart attacks).
- if you turn the baby gerbil onto its back in the palm of your hand it seems to hypnotize it and it will lay there without moving indefinitely. if you ever need to transport baby gerbils, this appears to be the way to do it without them going aerial on you.
- wet gerbils are cute in a pathetic sort of way.
i’ll post some pictures later when i have time.
By
anders pearson
18 Jun 2003
i finally broke down last week and got a digital camera. i already have a really nice manual 35mm SLR that takes fantastic pictures. it’s just big so i never carry it around, setting up shots takes too long so whatever i wanted to shoot is usually gone by the time it’s ready, and i tend to just scan the pictures in anyway so i can put them on the web.
so my priorities for a digital camera were that it be small so i could easily carry it everywhere and automatic so i don’t have to spend a lot of time setting up a shot. with a little help from <a href=”http://www.thegogglesdonothing.com/“>peter</a>, i settled on the <a href=”http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/pentaxoptios/“>Pentax Optio S</a>. it’s 3.2 Megapixels, has a 3X optical zoom and is small enough to fit in an empty Altoids container.
so far i’m quite pleased with it. it really is tiny and light. i can just stick it in my shirt pocket and have it with me 24/7 in case i see anything photo-worthy (like the <a href=”/nodes/4601”>ass pizza</a>) while i’m walking around. the pictures that it takes are high enough quality for my purposes (i’m not exactly planning on doing poster size blowups anytime soon). i’m just worried that since it’s so small, i’ll end up losing it.
but until i lose it, expect to see more pictures posted here.