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by Scott Hanselman.
Original Post: My Last Few Weeks Summary Post
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A couple of kind people have commented
on my recent silence in the blogosphere and said they missed me. Certainly I had trouble
keeping up with posting while on vacation…not a lot of connectivity where I
was. Additionally, with the recent
situation, not to mention getting back into the swing of things
at work as well as the worst jet lag I’ve had in a while (and lemme
tell you, mefloquine gives
one some FREAKLY dreams), I’ve been slow to blog.
However, as my mind awakens I’ve
been thinking of a few things I wanted to mention. I’ve actually been
too lazy to blog them, but I’ve not been to lazy to put them into notepad.
Here are a few thoughts/comments/interesting
things, in no particular order. Some have conclusions, others do not.
Remember the “Does
your code think in ink” contest? They
were giving away $15,000 in prizes to folks to write Tablet PC Power Toys. Well,
turns out I was a runner up and came away with $2500 cash and a copy of Visual Studio.NET
2003. Very cool, considering that my applet (which is apparently to be published
as a Power Toy) was not hard to right. Apparently winners will be announced
soon. There’s a second chance to write a winner with the new Application
version of the same contest. Looks like $100,000 this time. Cool.
Side
Note: I
now have a copy of Visual Studio.NET 2003 for sale. ;) $1000 OBO.
Nerds
with glasses. I went to the eye doctor for my 2 month
checkup since my LASIK
surgery. I’m officially 20/10 in both eyes. This is ridiculous
since I was 20/1600 and legally blind. I can see so well I can see your thoughts.
Seriously. Having a little dry eye occasionally, but otherwise a fantastic
outcome.
I was talking to the doctor and wondering why so many computer people (read: nerds)
wear glasses. You can call it a stereotype all you want, it’s still true.
;) He said there’s actually a whole segment of optometric psychology that
looks how personality types have different vision. I proposed that Type-A, borderline
ADD, uptight, detail-oriented people like myself should be more likely to have sharp
vision if only through shear willpower and want. He said it’s actually
the exact opposite. People “like me”
are so focused and driven and prone to perfectionism, they stress their eye muscles
at an early age and can actually CAUSE myopia. Interesting stuff. Anyone else agree or disagree? I know I was
reading early and taking small electronics apart at a young age when perhaps I should
have been using my eyes to avoid dodge balls. Maybe all that fly-tying when
I was 5 caused my problems?
Vacation. Anyone
who comes back from vacation saying, “I’m so refreshed and ready to get
back to work” is full of crap. The longer I am away from work, the more
I want to retire and hang out. This is a reflection on how nice NOT working
is, not in anyway a reflection on my current employer. It just would be nice
to NOT have to wake up one day, eh?
Coders
who are born. A friend is taking a SmallTalk class, and commented
on a fellow student who just wasn’t cutting it. I commented that maybe
he wasn’t born a coder. This turned into a discussion that culminated
in the conclusion that while developers can be created, they (the personality type)
are fundamentally in-born. If we weren’t developers, we’d be designing
the Jumble, or working in the fields of
Math or Physics.
Books. I’ve
just finished two amazing books that I recommend
highly:
The
Time Traveler’s Wife: This is a slow-moving, but perfect little
book. It is the story of Clare, a beautiful art student, and Henry, an adventuresome
librarian, who have known each other since Clare was six and Henry was thirty-six,
and were married when Clare was twenty-three and Henry thirty-one. Impossible but
true, because Henry is one of the first people diagnosed with Chrono-Displacement
Disorder: periodically his genetic clock resets and he finds himself misplaced in
time, pulled to moments of emotional gravity in his life, past and future. Truly
one of the best books I’ve read in the last decade.
Ilium: This
isthe new Space Opera from Dan Simmons,
author of Hyperion.
It is virtually a retelling of Homer’s Iliad, through the lens of SF.
Bizarre and amazing.
“On Earth, a post-technological group of humans, pampered by servant machines
and easy travel via “faxing,” begins to question its beginnings. Meanwhile,
a team of sentient and Shakespeare-quoting robots from Jupiter’s lunar system
embark on a mission to Mars to investigate an increase in dangerous quantum fluctuations.
On the Red Planet, they’ll find a race of metahumans living out existence as
the pantheon of classic Greek gods. These gods have recreated the Trojan War with
reconstituted Greeks and Trojans and staffed it with scholars from throughout Earth’s
history who observe the events and report on the accuracy of Homer’s Iliad.”
Video
Editing: We filmed over 8 hours of
digital video while in
Africa
. I use a higher-end
Digital 8mm Sony camcorder with an external microphone and polarized lens filter.
I did a bunch of Adobe Premiere work back in the day, so I figured when it came time
to make DVD with my DVD
Burner, I assumed I be using something like Premiere. I’ve used prosumer
things like Pinnacle, but I say again – Nero
Burning ROM is flat out the greatest single value in consumer software today.
In one day I ripped all 8 hours (via Firewire) about 90 gigs of DVD AVIs, edited,
added a soundtrack, created interactive DVD menus with animation and background music
and burned back to a DVD-R a very nice 2 hour tribute to my father in law. All
this with a US$70 piece of software.
Oh, and it also plays DVDs, has a full featured backup app, makes photo CDs, rips
MP3s, and squishes DVD9 to DVD4 or CD. Glorious.