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Happy Winter Solstice!
- To: robert-friends
- Subject: Happy Winter Solstice!
- From: http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert (Robert)
- Date: Tue, 21 Dec 2004 06:27:47 -0800
Happy Winter Solstice!
Here is my latest contact information:
Robert
where-I-live
my-Oakland-voicemail-number (voicemail)
our-Hayward-phone-number
our-Oakland-cell-phone-number (cell)
http://dummy.us.eu.org/robert
This is short and sweet this year.
[Sorry to those who received my "test4" message. Its mailing was an
accident.]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lifestyle
* Careers
* Is it contingency or temporary? I'm working at So_ny in San Jose
through an agency. I found my job by posting my resume on
Craigslist. (Surprisingly, all the networking groups I was involved
in didn't help me at all. Oh, well.) The work is quite fun
(machine learning research), but the commute is miserable. Whether
I get a ride from my co-worker (usually a 50 minute drive) or take
public transit (a 1.75 hour trip).
* No common tragedy here. Up until I started this So_ny position, I
was working occasionally for a programmer co-operative (co-op).
(And, actually, even after I started the So_ny position, on the
weekends.) It's in and are a fine bunch of people. It is
unfortunate that the work is not steady.
* Breathing a business-friendly atmosphere. To deal with taxes and so on
as a computer consultant, I found out that I needed to acquire a
business license. (Not that I have had a lot of consulting gigs. But,
I was trying to be safe 'cause penalties for not paying business tax
can build up.) It was unbelievably complicated here in Alameda County
and I am not even sure if I still met all the requirements for holding
the license.
* Money
* It's your money. It took 3 months to get our full tax refund.
Apparently, a Robert who lived on in had
piled up $300 in parking tickets in Oakland. This other Robert
(interestingly, by merely calling the Oakland Parking Citation Dept., I
was able to find out what kind of car this rogue Robert drove
as well as his full name and address; so much for privacy) had a
different name and lived (lives?) there at a different time than when
I lived there. But, despite that, the state of Ca usurped
part of the refund to pay the City of Oakland. I had to make numerous
calls, send lots of documentation, and eventually had to show up there
in person to finally get the money back. I'm glad I was unemployed
during all this, so I had the time.
* Transportation
* Commuting
* Some take the high road. I was very lucky to find that the
administrative assistant for the group I'm working in at So_ny
actually lives in the same city (where-I-live). So, she gives me a
ride, usually 3 or 4 times a week. It gives me more free time.
The other days I commute by bicycle and public transit. This
gives me a chance to go through my bills, record my receipts, and
get some reading done.
* Bicycle
* It's still trash. I am still been riding Noelle's old beat-up
Peugeot bicycle for commuting to work. It still has a lot of problems.
For example, the rear tire was constantly going flat, even after trying
various solutions including Slime Tire. I finally went with a solid
polymer inner tube and it works great. But, no matter what problems
it has, until I know that I'll have a steady job at So_ny, I'm reluctant
to buy a new bicycle.
* Not too annoyed. The drivers don't seem as aggro as Boston during
the Critical Mass bicycle rides. While I was unemployed, I was going
nearly religiously every month to the Critical Mass. But,
being employed has put a damper on that.
* Buses
* You get what you pay for. I've been slowly discovering that despite
San Francisco (MUNI) buses being only $1, they are chronically late
and slow. When using http://transit.511.org, I think you have to
assume that bus trips will take about 3 times longer than it reports.
Account accordingly.
* Travel
* Not since I was 2. At least, that's what my mom tells me when I asked
when I was last at Yosemite Park. We visited Yosemite end of October.
We stayed in a hotel in Mariposa (since it was cheaper) and drove to
Yosemite. We went to both the valley and the giant Sequoia trees.
It was raining on and off and there was snow on the ground. Because I
wore my rain boots and not hiking boots, my feet were killing me for
several days after that. Our original plan was to go to Mono Lake, but
the pass was closed due to an early season snow storm.
* Family
* My vas is still gone. We still occasionally go to S.F. No Kidding
events. Noelle goes to a monthly No Kidding book reading group. And
I've been involved in the East Bay Childfree Meetup.
* It's hard being a vegan. So, we held our wedding reception/party on
Feb 14. My parents and my sister came. We all drove down to Santa
Barbara. I wore my outfit and various people made toasts and so on.
It was good, except all I could eat was salad, bread, wine, and water
since they failed to make any vegan items. Darn. We all hung out at
Santa Barbara for a day and then we drove back towards the Bay Area,
dropped off my mom in Santa Cruz, and my sister and dad hung out
in the Bay Area for a while longer before picking my mom up in Santa
Cruz.
* Home
* More Boston realizations. I was thinking about the Childfree Meetup
group in Boston and remembering that it almost always met at a pub.
Here in the Bay Area, there are far fewer pubs and it's easier to
find places to meet where I am able to eat vegetarian and not have
to drink. Just a small level of culture difference, but something
that makes me understand my values and where I am.
* Holidays
* Oh, foo. Tofu, that is. I went back to tofu this year on Thanksgiving.
It was good. I also didn't bring rutabaga and other stuff. So, it was
a pretty minimalist T-day.
* Nothing changes on New Year's Eve Day. My friend in invited
us for an Ethiopean Feast on New Year's Eve. It was interesting and
good ('though quite crowded).
* Health
* Back to the chain. I had been exercising at the gym regularly before
I started working, but now I only work out once a week at Bally's
Fitness (the same club chain I went to in Boston).
* Breakfast of Champions. I tried an experiment and tried cutting wheat
out of my diet as much as possible. I've found that my RSI (repetitive
strain injury) is better if I don't eat anything wheat-based in the
morning.
* Food
* Got 'shrooms? We went to the Fungus Fair early December, all about
mushrooms. We bought a small amount of matsutake mushrooms and fried
them with some garlic at home. Quite tasty. We attended a presentation/
lecture on psychoactive mushrooms. It was really entertaining and very
interesting.
* Books
* Getting a job is a job. I only read two books this year:
The Overnight Job Change Strategy
I'd Rather Have a Root Canal Than Do Cold Calling
I've started other books, but haven't finished them.
* People
* Missing persons. Last solstice message, some messages bounced. I no
longer have email addresses for these people:
Louis Dunne
Michael Teixeira
Amanda Dahl
Marc Berkowitz
Clayton Glad
Tracey Layman (Ingle)
Susan Norris
Chris Golden
Mike Hamrick
Ben Morss
Debbi Baird
If you're in contact with any of these people, please tell them that
I am missing their email addresses.
Entertainment
* Movies
* We sold out. Or perhaps bought in. Regardless of which, I bought
a DVD player. It turned out that there was a bunch of stuff that was
only available on DVD. The other side effect of this is that we signed
up for Netflix. (At first, I signed up for Facets, but that turned out
to be a mistake.) So, the bad part of that is that we are no longer
supporting the mom-and-pop video places, in addition to feeling less
drive to actually go to a movie theater to see a movie. (There are
some movies at the Pacific Film Archive which do not seem to end up
in Netflix.) We'll find out whether it was all worth it.
* Lens or net. MovieLens (http://movielens.umn.edu) database has been
bad about keeping up with new movies. Netflix's recommendation system
seems fairly lacking, but I still use it. Here are the significant
movies we've seen at Netflix which are not in MovieLens:
Hearts and Minds (1974)
NoMeansNo/Hanson Brothers
Here the movies that we saw in the theater but is not in MovieLens:
The Corporation
The Yes Men
BTW, if you'd like to see our Netflix queue, click on
http://rss.toolbot.com/?feeds=http%3A%2F%2Frss.netflix.com%2FQueueRSS%3Fid%3DP8598597045281752300300559819027949%0D%0A
* Idle hands. A couple of my team members at Prosearch (the job search
group) and I saw a lot of movies in the theater while unemployed, but
none of which aren't listed in MovieLens or Netflix. It certainly gave
me the opportunity to see a lot of movies which Noelle would never see.
* Music
* A midsummer night's rock. Noelle and I finally saw Rush at the Concord
Pavillion. It was good to see them, although the parking arrangements
at the Concord Pavillion leave a lot to be desired. There was not
supposed to be any smoking, but someone was there violating the rules
and it was unpleasant. We got the cheap tickets so it was hard to see
'em. What I thought was funny was how Geddy Lee kept saying "thanks a
lot" because another Canadian band we know (No Means No) always says
that, too. I was trying to convince Noelle that that was how they
say it in Canada (just in case we have to flee the country due to the
outcome of the presidential election).
* It's spelled different than the company or train set. My Prosearch
team members and I went to the San Francisco Asian Museum. They had
a no-entrance fee day (just the price I was looking for while unemployed)
and we walked around. We also saw some Taiko drumming. It was really
cool and impressive. I never got to see it so close before. The
rhythms are fairly complex but performance plays a big part.
* Television
* What do we want? NOW. When do we want it? NOW. NOW (with Bill
Moyers) is one of the few shows we still watch on television
regularly. Sadly, since Bill Moyers has left the show, the show
will be cut down to a half-hour. It's already painful to see it as
it is (10pm on a Friday on our local PBS station) and cutting it
down to a half-hour will severely restrict the show. Probably the
sole corporate underwriter of the program will stop its funding once
Bill Moyers leaves and the extreme right wing conservatives don't
want any public money going towards a left/progressive show,
especially one that's so well-produced and poignant.
* Radio
* A commercial alternative. The one thing that makes the marginalization
of NOW (see above) tolerable is Air America Radio. They finally started
broadcasting it here in the Bay Area (a Clearchannel Communications
station, unfortunately) and we especially like The Majority Report with
Janeane Garofalo. We tolerate the ads, but it's programming that we
can't get anywhere else, not even Pacifica (KPFA) nor PBS/NPR (KQED).
* Frankly speaking. We went to see Joe Frank in person (or perhaps
"in concert") for Noelle's birthday. He's a monologist (see
http://www.joefrank.org) who is broadcast from KCRW and from
Pacifica radio stations.
Politics/Society
* Economics
* An oldie but goodie. Over the summer, Noelle and I attended
Thursday nights classes held by Doug Dowd (http://www.dougdowd.org),
an 85 year old radical economist who knew Roosevelt. He tells it
straight and doesn't mince words. The classes were held in
at the Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library. The classes provided a lot
of insight into modern U.S. society and some glimpses of Italian
society. He's author of several books, of which we'll probably
never have time to read.
* Ecology/Overpopulation
* The Supreme Court may decide. I didn't know that Bush would win
and Rehnquist would be a goner when I took classes at the San
Francisco Planned Parenthood to train as an escort earlier this
year. This involved not only attending classes, but also signing
all sorts of forms and ultimately getting a TB test and a physical
exam. It wasn't as complicated in Boston. Anyway, I was hoping to
help out in the where-I-live office, but it looks like there are no
anti-choice protesters. I do occasionally get e-mailings for the
San Francisco and San Mateo offices, but I haven't volunteered yet
for those offices.
* Squash hasn't been quashed. I did table for Planned Parenthood at
the where-I-live Zucchini Festival. I can't say that it was exciting, but
I did feel I was doing my part towards supporting Planned Parenthood
Golden Gate.
Technology
* Software
* PC
* Users from another planet. I've finally started attending some
Linux Users Groups in the area. Conveniently, the where-I-live Linux Users
Group (it took me forever to actually find out when and where they
meet -- it seems a well-kept secret) meets on Saturday, which means,
even with this job, I can participate. I did attend a couple of
San Francisco Linux Users Groups meetings, but, since I've been working
a full week, I can no longer make those meetings. (Even the users
group in Fremont doesn't completely work out for me because the
meeting runs 'til after all the buses stop running.)