Work, work, anime, work, work

Not a lot to blog about this week…. I’m in Broomfield, Colorado, doing a ton of interesting but completely unblogworthy work; when I get a chance, I’m reading… work-related books; even the evenings have been working sessions….

However, while waiting for some colleagues to join me for dinner, I dived into a video store and picked up a delightful anime DVD, Makoto Shinkai’s “The Place Promised in Our Early Days”. I’d seen the trailer for it on the Anime Network a couple of weeks ago, and was impressed by the luminous colour – somewhere between “Spirited Away” and “Haibane Renmei”. Some critics are calling the director “the new Miyazaki”. I wouldn’t go that far – he loses the pacing a bit in the final third of the film – but it’s visually stunning and really draws you into his strange alternate history. Recommended. (See also this glowing review.)

Mentoring

Our mistress of mentoring, Katy Dickinson, has just posted a status report on the FY06 SEED mentoring program: “we have 35 of the 71 SEED Engineering Mentoring participants for 2005-2006 matched with mentors.” I’m really proud of the fact that I’m going to be mentoring two of those participants, both based outside the US. As a non-US citizen, based 2700 miles from the company headquarters for all of my 20 years at Sun, I’ve always been especially sensitive to the issues that arise when you’re a remote worker: when your preferred keyboard layout is not “U.S.”; when you have to be able to exert influence without hanging out in the cafeteria in Menlo Park or Santa Clara; when you have to remind people to use fully-qualified domain names in their URLs, because not everybody is in the “.sfbay.sun.com” domain. I hope I can be of use to the folks I’m mentoring this year; I’m also really looking forward to learning from them. For me, mentoring is a two-way street.

Technical difficulties

We’re experiencing some technical difficulties on grommit, the system that hosts geoffarnold.com. Steve and I are scratching our heads; he’s taken the drastic step of rebooting grommit once so far, but problems are recurring in classic Heisenbug style. Browsing should be OK, but comment posting is likely to be iffy….

(Of course it remains to be seen if this post will make it through… but then if it didn’t, how would you know?)

Between the lakes (I guess)

Travelling again. I just flew from Boston to Denver, then drove over to Broomfield where Sun has a major campus. (The flight was full but uneventful; it was nice to fly United again so that I could listen in to channel 9.) As I set out from the airport, it turned very stormy and windy: I found myself driving through huge dust clouds, dodging tumbleweeds and construction marker cones, and holding my speed down below 45 so that I could stay in lane. I’m now in the Omni Interlocken hotel: as soon as I had checked in, someone offered me a glass of champagne. My kind of place… though I’m not sure why this complex was called “Interlocken”. It doesn’t look like Switzerland, and Google Maps doesn’t show any prominent lakes in the vicinity.

Standing in for Chris

Tommy christeningOur grandson Tommy’s christening was yesterday, so we headed up to Lynn. The plan was for Mark’s sister and Kate’s brother to be the grandparents (nicely symmetrical), but Chris was 2500 miles away getting packed. (He and Celeste are relocating from Seattle to the Oakland/Berkeley area this week.) So I had to stand in for Chris, which I was happy to do*. (Perhaps I should Photoshop Chris’s face into this picture!) And of course Tommy took it all in his stride….


* The deacon conducting the christening was one of those loud, enthusiastic types that shouts out the prayers and the responses, so I didn’t have to profess any beliefs that I didn’t have. On the other hand, the priest who conducted the regular mass (and who appears in this photo) was a fascinating character; we had a long discussion with him afterwards. At one point when he was talking about how he’d like to conduct services, I pointed out that he had nearly 1700 years of imperial pretension to get rid of; he agreed that the problems he was thinking about really started with Constantine. Let’s hope Benedict’s authoritarianism doesn’t squeeze all of his imaginative aspirations out of him.

Blair's "naive, all-consuming self-belief"

Paul Routledge has an excellent opinion piece in today’s Daily Mirror. (Things have come to a pretty pass when the Daily Mirror is a more reliable source than the New York Times.) The question: why is Tony Blair so consistent in shooting himself in the foot?

Just when it had become possible to be optimistic after the terrible events of 7/7, the Prime Minister… picked a needless argument, not just with his own security services, but with the British people – claiming that the London bombings have nothing to do with Iraq. This attitude is so manifestly absurd that it was immediately repudiated by two thirds of voters in an opinion poll. The Joint Terrorist Analysis Centre also gave the lie, reporting: ‘Events in Iraq are continuing to act as a motivation and a focus of a range of terrorist-related activity in the UK.’ These are Blair’s own spooks, whose findings presumably go across his desk in Number Ten….

Nobody, certainly not me, says that the war in Iraq is the sole, direct and immediate cause of 7/7. It wasn’t. Nor is it any form of justification. But it is pointless to pretend that this conflict has not helped to create a climate in which it is easier for hard-line Muslim clerics to corrupt young minds and for terrorist godfathers to recruit suicide bombers.

So why does Blair do this, squandering good-will and stirring up trouble for himself? Routledge argues that the cause is his “naive, all-consuming self-belief”, and cites the damning verdict of Lord Roy Hattersley, the former deputy Labour leader

‘The ultimate justification for the war in Iraq – when it was no longer possible to pretend that weapons of mass destruction were only 45 minutes away – was that Blair’s conscience allowed no other course of action.”

(Driving in to work this morning, I heard John Howard, the Australian Prime Minister repeating Blair’s absurd “nothing to do with Iraq” claims. Maybe it’s a virus – Howard is visiting Blair, and had just visited Bush.)

Deja vu, or a tape loop

‘Twas spooky: I was driving to work, and at 9am EDT I turned on WBUR to listen to the BBC World Service News, and heard them talking about “incidents at three tube stations and on a bus”. For a minute (probably less) it sounded as if they were replaying a tape of the news from 7/7… until someone made a reference to “the events of two weeks ago”.

All of this is unfolding right now, and it seems likely that the final account will bear little relation to the initial reports, speculation, and contradictions. Right now the BBC is reporting that: “A number of Tube stations have been evacuated and lines closed after three blasts in what Met Police chief Sir Ian Blair says is a ‘serious incident’.” However further down in the same report we see that “Police in London say they are not treating the situation as ‘a major incident yet'”. Serious but not major. Let’s hope that it’ll turn out to be neither.