Month: October 2007
A Shot at Redemption
So, Dice-K will be the starter in tonight’s ALCS game seven, giving the Japanese wunderkind an opportunity to justify his $100 million contract.
Consistent with the theme, “The Pursuit of Happyness”, the semi-fictionalized account of a year in the life of now-wealthy stockbroker Chris Gardner, was shown on cable last night.
Americans love hard-luck stories with happy endings, but the lead characters in both of these tales of the city are about as far from the mainstream as you can get: a mega-talented Asian ballplayer and an extraordinarily gifted African-American who got some equally extraordinary breaks.
They probably represent about 1/10 of 1% of the population in terms of their natural talent and abilities. And, did you notice, both are male. No bombing and killing of their supporters by misogynistic crackpots such as we saw in Pakistan earlier this week following the return of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, and no trashing of their work history and character such as we hear daily from the jealous anti-Hillary Clinton lunatics on talk radio.
I Don’t Want to Buy a Watch
I also don’t care to look at gigantic rear ends or grotesque male sexual organs (maybe it’s a pork loin), save on printer ink, sell my timeshare, mail order counterfeit pharmaceuticals or communicate with anyone who writes in pigeon English (“I am nice girl”).
Lordy, I do hate spam.
I’ve Got Brothers Around
The hosting company for A Blog for All Seasons phoned this morning to apologize for its being offline for the last couple of days, something about problems with a legacy server. So, this post is a catch-up.
Yesterday, I was able to set up the infrastructure for a user group meeting within two hours. It reminded me of the lyric from “West Side Story”:
When you’re a Jet, you’re a Jet all the way
From your first cigarette to your last dyin’ day!
When you’re a Jet, let ’em do what they can
You’ve got brothers around, you’re a family man!
Two Hours to Boston
As a general rule of thumb, during weekdays, if you plan to travel from the Upper Cape to Boston, you need to allocate at least two hours and sometimes closer to three.
This has not been alleviated by the multi billion dollar Big Dig, and it’s not due to the notorious bridges that connect the Cape to the mainland.
Part of the reason for this is the ridiculous lack of cooperation between the public transit authority and common carriers.
A major part is the selfishness of individuals who insist on commuting by private car, especially those with not even a single passenger.
This certainly explains the psychological isolation of being on or from the Cape, the “ews” when you tell people in “Town” where you live.
There has _got_ to be a pony somewhere in this bag of you-know-what, whether it’s rail or even boat service.
A Pleasant Sunday
James slept over on Saturday night, and we had a nice, low-key visit, ending with a short trip to the Christmas Tree Shop and a stop at the new playground in Falmouth.
I put up Halloween decorations, did laundry and other weekend chores, then a transfer station run with Peter.
Wound up the day at a friend’s house watching the Patriots beat the Cowboys, who embarrassed their talented young quarterback with a lot of dirty play, resulting in penalties totaling 98 yards: a disappointing performance, we expected better from Dallas.
Autumn Drive
This time of the year, it’s almost a requirement to take at least one site-seeing trip, and today the weather was ideal for a drive.
A friend and I headed out this morning to Padanaram, a coastal village in the town of Dartmouth on the South Coast.
We stopped first at Sid Wainer, a first-rate gourmet food store in New Bedford that offers samples of dishes made from their remarkable selection of produce, meats, cheeses and specialty items.
The little sandwich shop we’d hoped to find in Padanaram was closed for the season, so we opted for a drive through the village and wound our way through South Dartmouth, passing the Lloyd Center for Environmental Studies and Russells Mills, which is a gateway to Horseneck Beach.
We then headed north to Acushnet, where we finally found a ice cream shop that was still open; a Halloween decorations clearance sale; and two farm stands.
Altogether a fine day, and a trip well worth taking again.
Me Bad Leg
Another milestone this year, went to a physical therapist for the first time, to have a look at my right leg.
Her diagnosis is patellar tendonitis, a condition which is treatable with stretching exercises.
She also recommended better shoes, so after trying on almost a dozen pair at the discount outlet today, I bought sneakers that look like old lady lace-up shoes; thus, I can get away with wearing them to work.
I’ve been doing the exercises and definitely feel the effect: yesterday I couldn’t straighten the leg and today I can.
It will make me very happy if this is all that is required to fix this problem. Once you need leg surgery, they might as well take you out behind the barn and shoot you.
Boston Makes Me Feel Young…
…and the Cape makes me feel old.
More Cleanup
Since my bad leg precludes yardwork – and anyway, it’s raining – I tackled another long-overdue chore today, updating my MSDN subscription DVDs.
I dropped my subscription almost two years ago, but there’s still a lot of useful software, and this morning, I finally threw out all the deprecated versions.
In the meantime, I’ve been reading about AJAX, REST and JSON, residents of the wonderful world of SOA, and finally loaded the JDK 6, which includes JavaDB, on my laptop yesterday.
Since I don’t have a database front end, I had to execute SQL queries on the command line to test the install, and it brought to mind something I hadn’t thought about for years, running PL/SQL commands in the same way against Oracle 7.x.
Similarly, since I haven’t yet installed NetBeans, I had to test the Java install by writing a couple of test programs in Notepad and compiling and executing them on the command line.
Oh, what fun it is to ride in a one-horse open sleigh!