Down on the Cape

We’re down on Cape Cod for a long weekend. We own a week at a time-share condo in Brewster that usually coincides with mid-term school holidays; this year it also includes Easter. Surprisingly things are really quiet here: we drove down yesterday, and the traffic was light all the way. Today we visited “P’town” (Provincetown): we zoomed up Route 6 at the speed limit with hardly any other traffic in sight. When we got there at 11am it was still foggy, but it burned off within an hour. By the time we left late in the afternoon, the number of visitors was looking more respectable, and a drag queen diva with a karaoke machine was drawing a good crowd in the town centre.
Monday is the day of the Boston Marathon, which passes through Brookline; it’s a good day to be out of town. We plan to stay here until Tuesday morning and then head back quite early.

The only direction is onward

Andrew Sullivan has a couple of guest bloggers while he’s visiting England (sniff!). One of them, Walter Kirn, grabbed my attention with an account of how he’s writing his new novel…

…spinning a tale before one knows the ending, and doing so without the opportunity to double back and fiddle with the beginning, is storytelling in its wild, natural state…. Next time you make up a children’s bedtime story, you’ll see exactly what I mean. The only direction is onward. Trust in inspiration, not second thoughts. In foresight, not hindsight. In spells, not science. And glance around the bedroom for ideas. That painting of a sailing ship? It’s time to send one of your characters to sea, perhaps. That other painting of an idyllic farm? That’s what your character dreams of once he’s shipwrecked on the barren Pacific island.

What a lovely way to think about story-telling: as a performance, not as designing something to fit into a book-shaped container.

Administrivia – blogspam

I’m getting a steady stream of blogspam directed at my blog: around 100 hits a day. The combination of comment moderation and spam filtering means that none of it has got through to pollute the site, but checking for false positives is getting a little tedious. One change I’ve just made is to automatically disable comments on each entry 21 days after I post it. This is unfortunate: some of the most amusing comments have been from people who discovered one of my postings months or years after the event, but c’est la vie.

Random 10

It’s that (over)time again.

  • “Mooga (Hemstock & Jennings Remix)” by Digital Blond (from Trance Nation Future)
  • “Be For Real” by Leonard Cohen (from The Future)
  • “I Don’t Believe You” by Al Stewart (from Orange)
  • “Small Talk” by Scritti Politti (from Cupid & Psyche 85)
  • “Men Of Wood” by Porcupine Tree (from Stars Die – The Delerium Years)
  • “The Plasma Twins” by the Legendary Pink Dots (from Any Day Now)
  • “Please Mr Postman” by the Carpenters (from Singles (1969-1981))
  • “Sudden Life” by Man (from Psychedelic Years – Back In The British Isles)
  • “Born To Run” by Frankie Goes To Hollywood (from Bang! The Greatest Hits)
  • “Ska’d For Life (Instrumental Mix)” by Orbital (from Back To Mine: Orbital)

Of these tracks, the most unusual is probably “Sudden Life” by the Welsh prog-rockers Man. However my favourite is “Small Talk” from Scritti Politti’s brilliant Cupid & Psyche 85. Here‘s what the reviewer at MP3.com has to say about it:

Cupid & Psyche 85, released in June of 1985, was a landmark album in many respects. No prior pop album had integrated the techniques of sampling and sequencing to such a great degree, and the technology of that time was both expensive to use and barely up to the task Scritti Politti demanded of it. Gartside’s typically high-flown verbiage was as evident here as anywhere, but you didn’t need to understand what he sang in order to enjoy the music. Certain songs are dialogues between Gartside and a female singer; as such, “A Little Knowledge” is a rare pop song that retains the characteristics of a mini-tragedy. Likewise, the bonus track of “Flesh and Blood,” featuring Jamaican rapper Ann Swinton, sounds remarkably fresh and contemporary 20 years on. But the big hits from Cupid & Psyche 85 were “Wood Beez” and “The Word Girl” in the U.K., and “The Perfect Way” in the U.S., which reached number 11 in the Billboard Hot 100 and got heavy rotation on MTV. Not many albums from smack in the middle of the “Big ’80s” can be said to possess the quality of timelessness, but Cupid & Psyche 85 most certainly does.

Equal time for storks?

Here’s an apt comparison reported by the Guardian

Last night, the Royal Society gave a public platform to Steve Jones, the award-winning geneticist and author, to deliver a lecture entitled Why Creationism Is Wrong and Evolution Is Right. Professor Jones said that suggesting that creationism and evolution be given equal weight in education was “to me, rather like starting genetics lectures by discussing the theory that babies are brought by storks.”

Exactly so.
Update: Alec has more.

Boston and Logan from Deer Island

waste water treatment unitsFor a long time I’ve toyed with the idea of driving over to Deer Island to get some photos of the Boston city skyline from the east, and also watch the planes at Boston’s Logan Airport. As you can see in this Google map, Deer Island is close to the end of runway 27 (the east-west runway at Boston). When I saw that today’s forecast was for west winds and sunny skies, I decided that the moment had come. My hope was that the winds would be strong enough that they’d have to use runway 27 for landings; this would be great for photography since from Deer Island I’d have the sun behind me. Unfortunately the winds were light to non-existent, so most aircraft were landing on 33L and taking off from 27. LH 744 landing on 33L

Nevertheless I was able to get some decent pictures. I drove to the end of Tafts Avenue, left my car in the little public park, and walked widdershins around Deer Island, taking photos of planes, city, sea ducks, islands, and the extraordinary waste water treatment plant whose giant ovoids dominate the island. (Purists will point out that Deer Island is actually joined to the mainland, and thus shouldn’t be referred to as an island. In fact it was an island, until the hurricane of 1938 rearranged things.) I spent a couple of hours exploring the place, staying out of the way of the joggers and professional dog-walkers who seemed to be everywhere.

So now that I know how to get there (MassPike -> Ted Williams Tunnel -> Rt.145), how to negotiate the mess at the Rt.1A/Rt.145 intersection, and where to park, I shall be watching the NWS for predictions of bright, sunny mornings with strong westerly winds….

Not in good faith

Andrew Sullivan has just posted a lengthy email from a correspondent about the US invasion of Iraq. Kudos to Sully for posting it, because, as he says, “I disagree with much of it. But I disagree with it less than I did a year ago.” Money quote:

I could have supported intervention in Iraq. Saddam was a monster. But not Bush’s intervention. If his Dad, and Powell, had put together a true global coalition, with a real commitment to pay the high price in money, manpower and years necessary to free Iraq, secure the peace and rebuild the country, yes, I could have supported it. But I knew GWB and his team would never accomplish those ends, because those ends were not his ends. His ends, and his means, speak for themselves. All the rest is lies.

Many of us who opposed the invasion undoubtedly conflated two emotions: our strongly-held feelings about Bush in general, and a rejection of the rush to war. Bush certainly evoked powerful negative feelings, based on his illegitimacy, his lack of vision and intelligence, and the way his puppet-masters cynically exploited divisive social issues to cover up the looting of the country for their fellow plutocrats. But that didn’t mean that we were wrong when we came to the conclusion that Bush was not acting in good faith about going to war. Nor does it necessarily mean that we were against war under all circumstances. I myself am no pacifist: I supported the first Gulf War, and – reluctantly and controversially – the Falklands campaign. But this wasn’t about “war in general”, or even whether Saddam was a monster or not: it was about this war, at this time, conducted by these people, in these circumstances, for these ostensible reasons.
I think that where people like Andrew Sullivan and the former editor of the Economist get it wrong is that they frame the question as “in principle”: Are you in principle in favour of overthrowing Saddam? Such questions are always presented as simple dichotomies — yes/no, black/white, good/bad — and are assumed to be logically prior to the “how” questions, the in practice. But this is simply a way of allowing the ends to justify the means: you commit yourself to a course of action, and must hold to it however badly it turns out. Why not, instead, judge each fully articulated proposal for action (and inaction) on its own merits, with a full assessment of the consequences? (Yeah, utilitarianism – why not?) Reject the seduction of the false dichotomy, reserve the right to vote “none of the above” and demand that the principals go back to the drawing board and try again. Because it seems to me that only a neocon bigot could have accepted that the course of action proposed by Bush was the best possible, that it clearly addressed the standards for the moral and legal conduct of war established by the US at the Nuremberg Trials and subsequently by the UN, that there was a clear and present danger that could not have waited months or years until Afghanistan had been secured and Osama captured.
“Agreement in principle.” It’s the way the card-sharp sucks in the mark; once you agree to play, you can’t back out even if you see that the game is rigged. And then you salve your bruised pride by comforting yourself that the original choice was justified, instead of recognizing that, just possibly, there was no “in practice” available to justify the “in principle”.

Getting down to work

Now I’m back from that unfortunate vacation, it’s time to get to work on my post-RIF “What comes after 20 years at Sun” plan. The next stage has two components: information gathering and making contingency arrangements.

First, information gathering. I’m going to talk to many colleagues — ex-Sun, still at Sun, never at Sun — about the state of the computer business: who’s hiring, what’s hot, and how they see things shifting between on-shore and off-shore, US and international, full-time and contract, in-house and consulting, and so forth. At this point, I’m trying to keep an open mind about almost everything. As part of this, I’m flying out to California for a few days at the end of the month. I’ll arrive at SFO on the morning of Monday April 24th, and I’ll be heading on to Denver on the afternoon of Thursday April 27th. I’ve set up meetings with quite a few people already, but if you’d like to chat, drop me a line.

Second, contingency planning. A couple of people have already asked me about whether I’m available for consulting work, and I’d like to try one or two short-term gigs to get a feel for the gestalt of consulting.* Therefore I’ve gone ahead and incorporated Clueweaver, Inc., “just in case”. Could be necessary, unlikely to be wasted.

* I can’t decide whether or not consulting would be right for me without actually trying it. Apart from two stints at university, I’ve had “regular jobs” ever since 1968. And I’ve been warned by a good friend, who said of his time as a consultant, “The pay was great, the work was cool, but the boss was an asshole.” Point taken.

Following Gene

Emulating Gene Bob: Cause I’m a follower:
Go to Wikipedia and look up your birth day (excluding the year). List three neat facts/events, two births and one death in your journal, including the year.
Events:
– 732 – Battle of Tours: Near Poitiers, France, leader of the Franks, Charles Martel and his men, defeat a large army of Moors, stopping the Muslims from spreading into Western Europe. The governor of Cordoba, Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi, is killed during the battle.
– 1971 – Sold, dismantled and moved to the United States, the London Bridge reopens in Lake Havasu City, Arizona.
– 1979 – The Pac-Man arcade game is released to the Japanese market by Namco.
Births:
– 1930 – Harold Pinter, English playwright, Nobel Prize laureate
– 1959 – Kirsty MacColl, British singer and songwriter (d. 2000)
Deaths:
– 1979 – Christopher Evans, British psychologist and computer scientist (b. 1931)
Bonus fact:
– 1582 – Due to the implementation of the Gregorian calendar, this day does not exist in this year in Italy, Poland, Portugal and Spain.