Category: Uncategorized

  • All growed up

    You’re not a man until you can wear a lime green polo shirt.

  • As you feel

    Yesterday someone I’ve worked with since ’99 came by my desk for the first time in ages. She remarked a the picture thumbtacked into the bulletin-board wall of my cube, the picture of myself holding a large fish circa summer 2002. Readers who have been around since the classic B A Start era may remember this post, in which I discuss the benefits of having this picture in my office. This time, though, my guest’s response took me completely by surprise.

    “Wow, look how young you look in that picture.”

    It’s happening.

  • If there was any doubt

    These are really, really good.

  • Portentous

    This morning, as I brought my finished bowl of raisin bran to the sink, the milk swished around to reveal a single missed raisin. Is that an omen? And if so, of what? A potentially missed opportunity? If tea leaves can tell your future, I assume the same holds true for other consumable breakfast liquids in which things float.

  • Travelogue

    Had a conversation about vodka martini’s last night. This led me to try to back up the “fact” I heard somewhere that the vodka martini was invented by James Bond (well, technically that the gin-less vodka martini invented by the Smirnoff company after they got into bed with the Bond movie people), which brought me to a site about the various brands of booze Bond has imbibed, which pointed me to this site about just why the Commander wants his martinis shaken as opposed to stirred, which led me to this treasure trove. If you’re like me and look at this accessible list of alcohol recommendations as a checklist , you don’t have a problem — you have a solution.

  • Push ’em.

    Now this is some great marketing. Anyone surprised I’m posting about this? What with the name of this blog and everything?

    For those of you not pathetically geeky enough to get it, Sony is advertising their upcoming Playstation 3 here with a riff off of their four buttons “Live in your world. Play in ours.” campaign. By lopping a few lines off of their well-established set of symbols, they obfuscate them just enough to make even my nerd eye have to look twice before figuring it out. Turn the “e” backwards to get a “3”, and you’ve got one hell of a billboard. Good work, Sony people. Now make a wallpaper with those symbols on it and post it online for me to download. While you’re at it, send me some cool swag. You know, something subtle but not so obscure that no one in the world would ever get it. I love you.

  • The pin is quivering.

    I bring you a tale of Tiger Woods. Well, more of an image, really. Some time ago, a college friend came back into town for a few days and swung by the apartment to catch up on some much-needed videogame competition. I introduced him to Tiger Woods PGA Tour for the Xbox, a game which quickly devours the soul of all who play it — so fun, so addictive. He quickly built a character — Fish — and hit the links with vigor. Another friend came by to join in the fun, bringing with him a memory stick with the Alpha and the Omega of TW gameplay: his character, Victor Cracker.

    You see, Victor Cracker is to TW what a god is to mortals. When he descends from the realm of the ideal and interferes with the lives of men, he leaves a wake of destruction and lamentation. Tales of the visit last for generations. But, like gold inlaid over silver, Victor Cracker only augments the remarkable skill of his human. The guy’s got an unnatural knack for the game, and having a maxed-out character only adds to the point spread.

    So, we play a few rounds and Victor Cracker dominates. Everyone is fine, we shake hands and say good night.

    The next day, Fish is back. Something is different, though. His hands are as still as stone, and in his eye can be seen a faint gleam. He had come this day to topple Cracker. We call Victor’s human avatar and insist he come back for a rematch. At the end of the first round of play, Victor’s given name proves to be well-earned.

    In the middle of the second and final round, Victor Cracker unsurprisingly makes a magnificent shot, and the commentator responds with a loud “ooooh!”. TW has commentators judging your every shot, delivering a large number of phrases such as “should have used the nine-iron here” or “that’s straight at it, Billy”. The “ooooh” was new, and two of us found it quite funny.

    So, the image I present to you is of a lean, hungry man in the zone, possessed by the thought of ending a dynasty, stretched forward and focused on the TV with the steadiness of an eagle diving after its prey, flanked by two grown men who can’t stop saying “ooooh! No, no, it was like ‘ooooooh!’” and laughing heartily.

  • Keep your nose clean.

    As I was going through the airport security checkpoint on my way back from the conference, a woman with three children was behind me in line. As I took my laptop out of its bag so they could do whatever it is they do to it (can’t x-rays see through laptop bags?), one of these kids, let’s say ten years old, comments on it.

    “Nice laptop”.

    “Thanks,” I replied, instead of asking how we could tell what model it is just by looking at the top of it or grilling him on whether the IT department’s recommendation to purchase this one was valid since he was clearly an authority on the topic. “It’s work’s. I get to use it, though.”

    “Yeah, just like my dad.”

    “Look, kid. Just because when I was your age my father was younger than I am now doesn’t mean I should have a ten-year-old running around. Times are different now. Not a single one of my friends has a kid. Not high-school friends, not college friends, nobody! No one has kids before thirty anymore!

    “High-school and college educations don’t pack the same punch they used to, so to be at the same level our parents were at, my generation need initials after our names. So, while we’re scrambling to get to the level our parents were at when they were 21 (single income family, homeowner, had a functional car, ate three meals a day, etc), images of little tykes like you linger in the backs of our minds. We wonder if we’re too late. If we don’t have kids soon, the likelihood of having them drops off pretty sharply, and then what will happen when we’re elderly? Who will tend to us in our golden years? Who, you little bastard, who?!?

    “I mean, I don’t even want to have kids, but if I do, the family unit has been so scattered by high divorce rates, affordable transportation, and easy communication that a family is little more than obligation and guilt. We’re all alone in the world. Nevermind the fact that religion has become the domain of rednecks and none of us believe in an afterlife anymore. What’s the point of any of it? Answer me!”

    At this point I realized I was holding the kid several feet off the ground by his lapels and screaming in his face. I put him back on the ground, tousled his hair, and gave him a quarter before walking off to my flight.

  • Misplaced apostrophes do that.

    You’ll note I added a link to Lisa’s blog, it’s a marshmallow world. So go check it out.

    When I wrote that sentence, I typoed “Lisa’s” into Lis’a, making it look as if I had linked to a blog written by a member of an interstellar army bent on the destruction of Earth and all of its inhabitants. “Followers of Lis’a, attack!”

  • Slow Fade

    A few brief anecdotes about my trip.

    #1 – When eating in the outdoor mall a few blocks from the hotel, I couldn’t help but notice the heaters near the tables. It was at least seventy degrees out. On an unrelated note, the teriyaki chicken was indeed yummy yummy yummy as advertised by what I can only describe as one of the fast-food barkers in the food court.

    #2 – There were ten US flags visible from my hotel balcony.

    #3 – I ended up watching a bit of Adult Swim over the last couple days. While most of the shows are either poorly animated or unfunny, I enjoyed several of the remainder. One of my favorites is The Big O, a good-looking show with tolerable dialogue and very big robots. Now, anime shows are, of course, fairly deep into the realm of geek, but I don’t hide my affinity for them. Especially not this show. My wife loves it, so I have carte blanche to enjoy The Big O.

    The only interesting part of this story is the fact that I stated the previous sentence rather loudly at breakfast yesterday morning, well within earshot of dozens of people.