Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Thinking about my Grandmother

My mom sent me a poem about missing one's hungarian grandmother, which inspired me to find the words to a song mine sang to me.

Mókuska, mókuska, felmászott a fára.
Leesett, leesett, eltörött a lába.
Jaj, jaj, jaj, jaj, szegény, mókuska,
Hogyan megy el este a bálba?
Doktor bácsik, hamar jôjjetek,
Mókuskának, lábat tegyetek!

Mókuska means little red squirrel... not sure what the rest of the lyrics mean. If I remember correctly, however, the poor little red squirrel ends up dead, or at the very least with a really sore stomach. Anyone have a translation?

Friday, March 24, 2006

Michael Manring and Don Adams

Last night, I went to the Cedar Cultural Center with James and Jon Parshall to hear Michael Manring and Don Adams play. Wow. What a show! Manring upheld his reputation as an world-class bass player, and Don Adams, whom I had never heard before, was also a joy to listen to. Watching Manring play the songs Selene and Helios from his Soliloquoy album was as sight that no bass player should miss. He uses multiple tunings, changing tunings mid-song with a special bridge and extender keys at the head of the instrument. This is amazing to watch - if you didn't know what was going on, you'd think he'd broken his bass. He also uses an e-bow in some compositions, getting haunting sounds out of the instrument.

One of the highlights of the show was hearing them play together on a 12-bar blues number. During the course of the song (again - a basic 12-bar blues number), Manring changed the tuning of his bass at least twice. Frankly, I think Manring couldn't not change his tuning. He just couldn't not do it.

If you're a bass player or just like wonderful music that's outside the mainstream, and you respect the combination of musicianship and technical ability, you owe it to yourself to see him.

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Who loves ya, baby?

I got an email late last week...

Return-Path:
Received: from [212.227.126.202] (helo=perfora.net)
by mrelay.perfora.net (node=mrelayus0) with ESMTP (Nemesis),
id 0MKoyl-1FIkpv38ZF-00021d; Mon, 13 Mar 2006 06:03:40 -0500
Received: from [217.160.230.169] (helo=infong254 ident=8)
by mrvnet.kundenserver.de with smtp (Exim 3.35 #1)
id 1FIkpv-0006zs-00
for xxxx@xxxx.edu; Mon, 13 Mar 2006 12:03:39 +0100
Received: from [207.44.180.3](IP may be forged by CGI script)
by infong254.perfora.net with HTTP; Mon, 13 Mar 2006 06:03:38 -0500
X-Sender-Info: 151512662@infong254
Precedence: bulk
To: xxxx@xxxx.edu
Subject: Someone Has Sent You a Love-O-Gram
From: LoveOGram
Message-ID: <0MKoyl-1FIkpv38ZF-00021d@mrelay.perfora.net>
Date: Mon, 13 Mar 2006 06:03:39 -0500

Dear Peter,

Someone has sent you a LoveOGram through LoveOGram.com! A LoveOGram is an anonymous way to show romantic interest in someone you know. (No Kidding: Your LoveOGram sender is a real person, maybe a friend or colleague, who knows your name and email address.)

Is the feeling mutual?

The sender of this LoveOGram indicated that your name is: Peter

If this information is not correct, then please disregard this email. To find out if the person who sent you this message is someone you like, come to http://www.LoveOGram.com/recvd.html.

Good Luck!

(By the way, replying to this email won't work. You have to come to www.LoveOGram.com to play. It's completely free.)

*** LoveOGram.com - Delivering Free Love Around The World ***



The idea of someone anonymously sending me a love-o-gram is a little weird. Kinda a neat thought, in some ways, but weird. Highly unlikely to be true, though, unless it were from my wife, and she proclaims innocence. Other suspicious items:
  • My .edu address is publicly visible.
  • The site shows me an ad for student loan consolidation before showing me the love-o-gram
  • The site has a publicly-visible site stats bug at the bottom.

The site stats bug is the interesting item - the site load seems to spike every week or so - I'm guessing the love-o-gram is really a spam-o-gram, send out to harvested .edu addresses.

If I'm wrong, and someone did send me a love-o-gram, I don't generally respond to anonymous solicitations. Be brave enough to talk to be.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Minnesota Malaria, Part III - here we go again

The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has issued an air quality warning for the twin cities for high particulate matter in the air. The air quality scale is at 118 as of 7:00 AM this morning, heading into the thick of rush hour. 0 would be pristine air, 200+ is basically toxic. 118 is listed as being "unhealthy for sensitive groups" - the sick, elderly, small children, anyone wanting to get some exercise. It's supposed to last all weekend, but clear out by monday or so.

We had the same thing last february, and it sucked.

Friday, March 03, 2006

OK, finally some kid pictures

I've had lots of geek-oriented postings lately, so here's some kid pictures to tide you over. These are from my new cellphone - the image quality is surprisingly good!

Here's a grinny Laurel:
Laurel

And a somewhat blurry Bea
Bea

And lastly, a movie of Bea showing off her new trick - jumping!. The image quality here really feels like the 35mm home movies that my parents took of me and my siblings. Except, of course, that Bea is dressed, and the home movie that my parents took didn't always feature kids with clothes on. Right, Autumn?

Grad School and the GRE

I work at the University of Minnesota. One of the key benefits that the U offers employees is free tuition. This isn't free classes, really, because there's usually a couple hundred bucks of fees, and generally a textbook or two, to pay for, but the tuition itself is indeed free. One could contend that there's also an opportunity cost to this, since the U (at least the College of Liberal Arts tends to pay below-market wages for IT staff, but that's a separate issue. Given that it's part of the benefits package, it'd be silly not to take advantage of it, and in fact the opportunity to take classes is one of the reasons I wanted to come work for the U.

Anyway, I'm applying to the master's program at the Computer Science department. There are three different master's degrees offered; only one of which is non-terminal, and that's the one I'm applying for. Part of the application process for this degree is taking the GRE. The GRE isn't required for the two terminal masters degree programs, but, well, I guess I'm a glutton for punishment. And I did OK on the PSAT and the SAT, well enough to qualify for a national merit scholarship from Macalester back in the day. So, standardized tests weren't that scary twenty years ago, but it's been a long time.

So, I took the GRE on Feb 10th. With a fever of 102. It turns out that you can't reschedule an appointment less than 3 days before the day of the test, so I was kind of stuck. I figured, if the scores suck because I'm sick, I'll take it again in a month. Early this week, I got the score report.

Analytical Writing: 5.5
Quantitative: 740
Verbal: 670

Cool. Not stellar, actually, but not that bad. It at least puts me in the upper 50% of the total graduate school student body, assuming 2005-2006 scores are comparable to 2006-2007. So, at any rate, I'm happy I don't have to take it again after all, despite the fever.

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Yahoo Web Component Library

Yahoo is giving away a bunch of really nice little javascript thingies. One of them does a nice TreeView with checkboxes. I was looking through the source, trying to learn a bit of javascript, and came across the following comment in the TaskNode.js file.

/**
* Emulates OmniOutliner's task view.  The check box marks a task complete.
... (rest of the comment deleted...)

Nice to see OmniOutliner being given credit by the Yahoos...