May 2, 2008: Walking Through the Tribeca Film Festival

I was pretty exhausted this morning when I pulled myself out of bed. It is going to be a long day. I am really looking forward to this weekend.

The weather is cooler, almost cold, today and very misty.

Dominica was doing some oil production research today for her environmental research class and it got me wondering about which countries consume the most oil per capita. The United States is always noted in any headline about how much fuel we consume and how demanding we are on the global petroleum production system. In the list of the largest oil consuming nations per capita, I found, the United States ranks fifteenth. Not number one as people so often lead us to believe. In fact the U.S. is well in line with similar nations around the world. We come in two spots below our Canadian neighbours who have a very similar space and income profile to us.

When looking at oil consumption numbers it is tempting to see the United States as a largely disproportionate consumer by forgetting that the U.S. is a country of over 300 million citizens (with a large unknown “illegal immigrant” population as well) while it is compared principally against relatively tiny countries like Canada, the United Kingdom or France. Additionally the U.S. suffers from the worst “open space” issues of any country with its major cities lying heavily dispersed over a huge longitudinal and latitudinal space.

Canada, the only other nation with an even comparable metropolitan separation, has all of its major cities lie along a single line near the U.S. border and it has only one truly major city, Vancouver, on its Pacific coast leaving the majority of its traffic to occur over a relatively small, confined space giving it much of the profile of a European nation rather than being like the United States. International shipping from American neighbour contries also involves most shipping distance to be covered inside of U.S. borders with almost all significant Canadian destination or origination cities being right on the U.S. border. (A truck shipping product from Montreal to Atlanta, for example, will travel less than fifty miles in Canada but well over a thousand in the U.S.)

The United States also has a disproportionately high military consumption of petroleum products.  This large governmental usage of oil, which most of the population would rather not expend, comes out of our “per capita” statistics and makes the average American appear to expend far more petroleum than we really do.  Taking all this into account the U.S. appear to use disproportionately low levels of petroleum per capita when compared to nations of similar wealth and logistical concerns.

I went into Tribeca for a meeting this afternoon but as soon as I arrived there my BlackBerry service went down and I lost communications with the outside world.  It is amazing how quickly we become completely dependent on having complete communications at all times and have made no plans on how to communicate without it.  We didn’t manage to connect for the meeting so I just grabbed a sandwich in Tribeca and then decided to take advantage of the location and grab the early train home and do my late evening, which went till eight, from home rather than Wall Street.

Today is in the middle of the Tribeca Film Festival which is a pretty big deal and the office in Tribeca is right in the middle of all of the action.  I had to walk through the big “street fair” and got to see many of the festival stands and activities.  Greenwich Street was alive with activity starting all the way south at the World Trade Center site at Barclay.  There was a lot of interesting food available out there and it smelled very good.

Dominica came home and made herself dinner.  I skipped dinner as my lunch was so late.  She spent the evening, right up until midnight, working on her homework and assignments for her class at Empire State.  The class officially ends tonight.  She has already requested an extension but the professor is allowing submissions throughout the weekend.  So her goal, which she accomplished, was to complete all assignments except the final project tonight and have nothing to do over the weekend except for the final project itself.

I spent quite a bit of the evening reading.  I was pretty exhausted this evening and so I finished reading “Herding Cats” and read quite a chunk of “Agile Java Development.”  At midnight Dominica came to bed and we watched two episodes of the seventh season of The Cosby Show.  And then it was time for bed.  I have to be up before eight tomorrow morning as there is work to be done at the office that is scheduled for that time.

May 1, 2008: Doggy Daddy Day

Happy May Day. Today begins what is expected to be the busiest month of 2008 for us (we think.) Although we know that there is a LOT going on in November as well. We don’t know exactly what is happening in November but a lot, for sure. For example, on November 1st we will be living somewhere. We just have no idea where. We don’t even know which state or metro area.

Today is a Thursday so it is Oreo and my regular doggy – daddy day. There was some nice sun this morning so Oreo got a chance to do his lounge thing for a couple of hours before the drear set in a little after lunch.

The spider mites have all but killed my awesome ivy plant that I loved so much. It was so alive and vibrant when we first got it. It was the shining star of our houseplants and now it is brown and almost dead. It is very sad. I am doing what I can to save it but so far my progress as been one step forward and five steps back.

I continued my Handbrake conversion frenzy today keeping all three machines working throughout the day. I am sure that this amount of continuous conversions is going to show up on my next electric bill. I am almost to the point where I need to invest in a dedicated, screaming fast quad-core machine just to do this all of the time. Something with multiple hard drives in a RAID 0 configuration to handle the massive I/O load that I am putting on all of these machines. As it is I am using five spindles between the three machines to even out the I/O as much as possible. I really wish that the x264 library had code to offload floating point processing to a GPU like the CUDA libraries can do with nVidia GPUs. Then i would just get a nice nVidia GPU and have one machine that ate VOBs for breakfast. (And poops MP4s to carry the analogy to its fullest extent.)

Today was another crazy day for me. One of those days where I was really feeling extremely worn out by the end of the day and just really want to collapse. But I don’t get to do that because I have homework and other stuff that needs to be done tonight so I am stuck awake until midnight at the very earliest.

Dominica wanted food from the deli downstairs again so we ordered from there and watched a little What I Like About You. Then she was off to bed and I was off to do homework.

April 30, 2008: Site Down Most of the Day

Our hosting service at Burst was out most of the day so people coming to visit SGL were mostly presented with a blank screen all day.  To make matters worse that meant that my email and many other things were gone all day as well.  We are really getting fed up with the amateur network antics at Burst and I am going to figure out some other hosting strategy because no amount of “cost effective” is worth being down all of the time and this happens far too frequently.  This is not something that I wanted to deal with right now but it looks like I am going to have to since they just cannot be trusted to do their one job – provide reliability.

Today was a day at home.  Oreo stayed home with me which was nice.  The weather has been a little colder since our “early summer” spell that we had there for a few days.

It was a heavy work day.  I was exhausted after having pushed through until three in the morning last night.  So I was home because I needed a chance to do some catchup on my sleep.  Oreo was very surprised when we didn’t have to get out of bed this morning until later than usual.  But no complaints from Mr. Snuggles.

When Dominica got home we got food from the deli downstairs and just watched a little What I Like About You before she went to bed and I stayed up late working on one project or another.  I have been really busy this week.

Today was a very heavy Handbrake day.  I have managed to get all three workstations in the living room able to pretty easily do continuous compression work so I am making a serious dent in the physical to virtual collection conversion process.

We got a new shipment in from Amazon this afternoon.  The final two seasons of The Cosby Show, and the first season of The Love Boat and two classic movies: Move Over Darling and A Summer Place.

April 29, 2008: Hanging at South Side Seaport

Dominica keeps getting linked from an online directory because they think that she is an island nation in the Caribbean Sea.  It is pretty funny that we get tons of incoming links here because the bots have no idea when someone is talking about a tourist destination or just a person.  They don’t put much thought into these things.  What really amazes me is that so many people will go to just any website and read anything there that this actually is a financial viable thing to do.

My morning was pretty slow.  The walk into Wall Street was pretty nice.  It was cool and overcast.  A little before noon work started getting really busy and I ended up having an incredibly crazy day.

Katie and I decided to do lunch today and I wasn’t able to get out of the office until after three in the afternoon.  At least by the time we were able to go for lunch the sun had come out and it was very nice outside.  So we decided to walk up to the Southside Sea Port on the East River in Lower Manhattan.  We ate at the Pacific Grill on Pier 17.  Lunch was very good.  Lobster bisque, lobster ravioli with honey chipotle sauce, grilled sea bass, coconut creme brulee… it was all quite tasty and the weather was perfect.  I really needed the long lunch away from the office after how busy it had been.  And there is a ton of work for me to do later after-hours so this is my one chance to really just relax.

The afternoon continued to be very busy and I didn’t manage to get home until seven.  I spent the next hour and a half cleaning as quickly as I could as we have the Dungeons and Dragons game at our apartment tonight.  The apartment was quite a mess and there was a lot of work to be done.

We played D&D with Kevin, Pam and Ramona from eight thirty until just after eleven.  After everyone left and Dominica went to bed I stayed up until three in the morning doing the after-hours work that got held over from today.  That made for a long night.  I was really exhausted when I finally managed to get to bed.  But I got a lot of work done that needed to be completed so it was good that I had stayed up.  Getting this type of work done during the day is nearly impossible – especially when there hasn’t been time to schedule it ahead of time.

April 28, 2008: Happy Birthday Garrett

Today Dominica and my first nephew, Garrett Grice, was born!  We haven’t heard a lot of details yet but as far as we know everyone is doing well.  We have already seen a picture of him and he looks to be very healthy and happy.

Cherry Blossoms in Branch Brook Park, Newark, New Jersey

It is dreary and drizzly in New Jersey today.

My big surprise came this morning when I was contacted by a marketing firm representing Prudential.  They had discovered some of my Newark Branch Brook Park Cherry Blossom pictures on Flickr and wanted to purchase several of them for Prudential.  Prudential is interested in using them to make gifts for Japanese clientele.  It is very cool to have my pictures noticed!

After Dominica got home this evening, she made us dinner which was Frito pie.  Frito pie is like Fritos and vegetarian chili.  It is really good.  We are very excited that Dominica discovered new low-sodium Fritos which are much better than regular “super salty” Fritos.

After we ate we spent forty or fifty minutes playing Mario Kart on the Wii.  This was Min’s first time playing the new game.  Francesca was using being in labor all day today as an excuse to not run out and pick up her own copy so that she can race against us.  She will be sorry when we have mastered all of the courses!

We tried playing a bit online again but quickly realized that we really aren’t ready to face the online players until we have played through all of the maps and learned them pretty well.  You can’t go into the online play blindly or you are going to get destroyed.  A lot of the online maps are very difficult and if you don’t know what to expect you are at a pretty significant disadvantage.  A lot of those maps are based on you having memorized them to be able to get through them at all.

Today is my first day writing the site using WordPress 2.5.1 which is just awesome.  The admin interface is so much smoother and easier to use than the old one.  It really makes my job easier.  And the site really does appear to load quite a bit faster too which is nice.  I am really happy about the new “widgets” function that allows me to turn on cool functionality like the “tag cloud” that you can now see on the left.  That makes it much easier to track down topics.

Tonight was a fairly relaxing night.   I did a little web work and did a little homework reading and spent a bit of time managing a troublesome bit of Handbraking.  Obviously the SGL changes were a bit of an evening project as well.  I woke Dominica up at half till midnight so that she could come out to the living room and see the first picture of Garrett that had been sent through.  She had spent the evening text messaging her sister and everyone in Houston.

I will be on Wall Street tomorrow.  Hopefully it won’t be raining on my as I walk.