Friday, June 13, 2008
Vegas, baby! (part 3)
Thursday, June 12, 2008
Vegas, baby! Part Deux, the videos
The camera I was carrying around has a video feature that is useful sometimes. I have uploaded some videos to youtube at http://youtube.com/mzzw/ .
Here is a (long-ish) video of the dancing fountains in front of Belagio. Robert is singing in the background. It's a catchy pop tune that I had never heard before.
The original video is too big to upload so I chopped it up into 30-second pieces.
And here are some smaller videos:
The staff of the rocketeer burger place in the food court mall does a line dance to "Johnny Be Good." It was slightly too big for upload so I chopped the video up into 2 pieces:
Vegas, baby! (part 1)
My flight through LAX to LAS was late enough in the morning that I was able to drive some of the kids to school. Simeon had taken my car to participate in some junior statesmen event that started early. The shared van ride service was on-time and traffic was light. The driver was an air force brat from the SF Bay area.
Security was crowded, slow, inefficient, and incompetent.
LAX is large, smoggy, crowded, and my time there was uneventful. I sat in the departure lounge eating the veggie-burger lunch I had packed and listening to "The Forever War" audio book in my phone. I tried the MacDonald's iced coffee and it was disappointing.
Landing in Las Vegas the local temperature was 97-degrees Fahrenheit. I took one of the $6 buses to the strip. It's interesting how everything is air conditioned and all loading / unloading bus / taxi / car / limousine areas are covered. There is never more than 30 seconds where you are outside and even then there is air conditioning blowing at you from some large building. Vegas is also very crowded all the time with people trying very hard to "have a good time." They are constantly smoking, drinking, forced-laughing, shouting, or otherwise expressing some primal, base desire.
Arriving at the Imperial Palace, I discovered a long line to check in and a bustling crowd of gambling guests. The primal, base, carnal idd desires are on display everywhere. You are surrounded by ads for in-room entertainment. Many women and a surprising number of boys are showing off their bodies, undulating and posing. I found the music and fleshy displays nauseating and disgusting. I started regretting going to Vegas. Most people wore the same "uniform," men in shorts and Hawaiian shirts, women in short cocktail waitress-like dresses. Standing a few people behind me in line was David! He has grown a mustache but looks just the same as when we lived in Fremont. We called and messaged Robert who was in his room.
My nice, large room was missing standard business traveler amenities such as a mini-bar or coffee machine. The tv had a screen smaller than my laptop. We met at a bar downstairs and went for a walk along the strip. We had dinner at a food court where I got my favorite (rice and vegetables) dinner. We saw the dancing fountains, played the penny slots for $1 to get free drinks. We walked a few miles along the strip to see the free shows in front of treasure island and the dancing fountains. I bought a great pair of running shoes because I forgot to pack my own. Many of the casinos have look-alike rock stars from the late 20th century, including Elvis, Tina Turner, Freddie Mercury. Others have more primal, base T&A shows with "pole dancing." Many of the guests and gamblers had little kids with them.
Monday, June 2, 2008
direct neural impulse (brain control) for games now on store shelves
http://www.overclock3d.net/reviews.php?/input_devices/ocz_neural_impulse_actuator_nia_-_the_log/1
The device enables you to play video games without hands or voice. Just think about cursor movement or “fire!” game play and it happens without physical manipulation. The reviewer was able to play a game of pong the first time. I hope to live long enough to get my brain implant to use machines by thinking.
But we should also remember what killed the Krell!
Sunday, June 1, 2008
Kite Flying in Bellevue Downtown Park
We flew Eitana's kite today in the Bellevue downtown park. There was a brisk wind that kept the kite up until Eitana got bored. We watched the R/C boats on the pond and then played on the big play ground. It was a refreshing outing.
Cascade Striders Track Meet Network did not work
The great plans we had for applying technology did not work very well. It took 90 minutes to get the printers to work. The HP jet-direct card was invisible on the network. The wireless network broke down during registration. We needed to move all six machines and three printers into the finish-line tent. Next year I shall have three wireless routers strung out around the field with a repeater in the middle cranked up to 250 mW. Next year I shall make sure all the laptops have pre-installed printer drivers and pre-configured ports for the jetDirect and other print-servers. Next year we shall test under more extreme conditions and simulate network outages to accelerate recovery. Next year we may attach the WAN port of one of the routers to the public Internet, instead of using a coach's phone as a modem. Next year we shall keep the .mdb master Access database on a very fast flash drive so that the Microsoft Access transactions can flow faster.
Meet Manager does have some cool features. The fact the Microsoft Access can handle fifteen transactions per second from eight separate machines on a high-latency network is cool. Meet Manager enabled us to upload all results to the public Internet in two clicks. All results can be posted in real time. And using a phone in the announcer's booth to read the results from the public Internet did indeed work. The photo finish stuff enabled us to resolve a tie (going down to the thousandths of a second from the photo finish). And meet manager's interface to the electronic finish line stuff was flawless.
Friday, May 30, 2008
Cascade Striders Track Meet Network Set-up
So the Cascade Striders are hosting their track meet on Saturday, May 31 at Samammish High school and as a parent of one of the kids who practices and competes from that team, I have been enlisted to help host the meet. As a spectator, I have watched how the other teams host track meets this year (and last year) and I am always extremely disappointed. The meets are disorganized. There are not enough volunteers in the field events. The heats take forever to start. The athletes, coaches, and spectators wait impatiently as the meet coordinators lazily arrange for the next event or wait for some unknown reason. The meet is always hopelessly behind schedule by the second or third event.
Among the reasons for these failings is the lack of communication among the meet coordinators and hosts. They hand-write results, heat lineups, timings, then need to "run" (they usually walk slowly) these results to the different stations. So this year the Cascade Striders are trying to bring the organization of a track meet into the 21st century. We purchased a 6-license pack of Hy-Tek's "Meet Manager" software and arranged to borrow a bunch of laptops from parents. I set up a wireless network and we arranged for a blackberry to be used as a modem attached to one of the laptops to give it public Internet access.
The announcers in the booth can either WAP the results down from the Internet on a cell phone to announce them or access a text file exported by "Meet Manager" to read the results. The registration, awards, and administrative laptops in the concession booth and admin building keep track of who paid, who is registered, who gets which medal, etc. The start/finish machines interface via meet manager to the electronic start / finish equipment.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
What have you done for me lately?
There is some discussion today on a mailing list to which I subscribe regarding the question raised at the bottom of this blog entry. I would like to see some of the petro dollars going to good use.
Monday, May 26, 2008
Wonderful Weekend Weather
We went wading on the lake shore at Idylwood park where we built an awesome sand castle, complete with moat, draw bridge, and outer perimeter wall.
We had the best weather all weekend. Track practice was warm and sunny. We cooked and ate Bar-B-Q in the back yard every night.