Monday, December 8, 2008

Thanksgiving Pictures

Just a quick assortment of pictures from the holidays:

First off, Alicia and I attended the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade:



Here's the crowd from left to right:




I guess we had to expect it would be busy: this is Time Square in New York City.

It actually wasn't bad, though. The police only let a certain number of people through to the parade. We arrived an hour early, so it worked to our advantage.

This girl:



... has pictures on her blog. In fact, she has so many posts about Thanksgiving, it would be awkward to post links to every one of them. They are on the front page right now, but if you're reading this months in the future, check out her posts on December 1st, 2008.

How'd the turkey go, you ask?



Pretty well. We even had a fancy setup for it:



The four place settings were to include Alicia's friend from High School, Tanya, as well as her boyfriend Jorge. It was a great Thanksgiving. Not as good as spending back in Minnesota, mind you, but a fine night indeed.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Update #5

The Great News: Everyone is healthy and happy:



The Good News: The holidays are officially here:



You can tell by the Christmas lights.

The Bad News: The end of the semester is looming. I've got a fair amount to get done, and blogging shouldn't be it. Expect this blog to lie dormant through December 2009.

What I've Thought About: Gotta admit, its the linux computer I built last weekend. It had been in the back of my mind for months. Black Friday (the big sale day after Thanksgiving) presented a $99 19" monitor. The next day, I headed over with Alicia to a computer store and purchased everything I needed to make the computer work.

It's running a AMD Phenom X3 2.4Ghz 64bit processor (meaning it has three processor cores running 2.4Ghz each), 4GB ram, and 500GB. Those components together only cost $230. The case, motherboard, DVD drive and others brought the price up a bit more, but I built it just a bit more expensive than a bottom of the line desktop computer available at any major computer retailer. And it has top of the line specifications. I'm relatively proud.

It's running Ubuntu Linux (as opposed to a Windwos operating system). I've mapped it as a hard drive to both Alicia and my computer, so we can treat it like a file server. I've added a streaming music application so that Alicia and I can listen to our music anywhere in the world. I've got a bunch of more ideas for it, but I just don't have the time to play with it.

Alicia has more on her blog here.

What I've Enjoyed: The Wire. Great show that used to air on HBO. Really top notch stuff. Alicia and I have finished season 2.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Update #4

The great news: Thanksgiving is here! Although I won't be home with my family, things are looking good. I received a package from my uncle Gary and aunt Mary containing Lefsa, my favorite holiday delicacy. They sent it to make me feel more at home. I can't believe how sweet they are too me. 

Alicia is handling the turkey this year. We've got a 14lb frozen butterball turkey that we're brining at Alton Brown's suggestion. Alicia's got more about that on her blog. My job on turkey day is stuffing (care of my grandmother's recipe), rolls, the veggi tray, and moral support.

We're also hitting the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. The parade route ends across from Macy's, which is one block away from my school (where I'm typing right now). Our plan is to start here and walk up the parade route until we find a nice place to stay.

The good news: Of course. Alicia passed the bar! This should be great news, but It happened almost two weeks ago now that most of you have already heard it. But I thought it required at least a mention here.

We celebrated with Nicole (Alicia's friend from Minnesota who happened to be in town), and good times were had. Hopefully, pictures will soon follow. But if you're not patient, Alicia has it covered on her blog already.

The bad news: Thanksgiving preparations resulted in an influx of groceries in our apartment, which has made our storage closet almost unbearable. My plan tonight is to clean it. Which isn't bad in itself. What's bad is I've been procrastinating on it. Shame on me.

What I've thought about: Klein bottles and mobius strips. The mobius strip is a one sided surface you can make by twisting then taping the two ends of a strip of paper together. Don't believe me that it only has one side? Trace one side with your finger, you'll reach everything on the paper. The klein bottle is a bottle that is one sided as well.

I've been studying them a bit lately and to be honest, I always thought the mobius strip was cheating... how could it really only have one side?? Apparently, it does.

What I've enjoyed: Eating out of the fridge. To clean out the fridge to fit the new food coming in, Alicia and I have been making an effort to eat all the food that doesn't ever seem to go away. This means frozen meals, sauces, etc. My mother warned me about "owning" food, and she is right. It can be bad if you don't keep up with it. So it has been fun trying my best to eat everything older.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Livia Pictures

Back by popular request, here are some pictures of Livia: 





Update #3


The Cost Co. load Alicia and I brought home last weekend.

The great news: Nicole (Alicia's friend from college) is coming to visit this weekend! Good times to be had. I've been scrambling to get enough work done so that I can be lazy while she's here. I can't wait to be lazy!

The good news: Midterms have left, and my students did fine. Both classes had students with 100%, and my second class only had ten students with a D or lower. That seems like a lot, but it's pretty good for a college math class.

The bad news: I've felt overwhelmed lately. So much to do, and I never seem to get it done. It'd sure be nice to not feel guilty all weekend.

I guess it's just hard to balance work that I will appreciate immediately (like doing the dishes) versus work I'll appreciate four days later (like reviewing class notes). Ugg. I've been in school most of my life and I still haven't gotten this "studying" thing down.

What I've thought about: Computers. I keep thinking of the many reasons why a new computer would be nice. I could buy a "Skype Handset" which would basically give Alicia and I a home phone. We could store all our photos on the computer, we could have all our music in one library, and we could have a central computer which allowed us to easily back up our files. 

Plus, if the computer was in the bedroom, we could have a monitor there and watch television. I haven't had a TV in the bedroom in about four years, so that thought tickles me. 

But, my laptop is still working fine four years later. I just can't reasonably go buy a new computer. But I can think about it. 

What I've enjoyed: Fresh chopped tomatos in salsa. I never knew it was so simple to chop tomatos and throw them in salsa. Up until this point, I've always bought canned tomatos. But fresh tomatos make a huge difference. 

Halloween Parade

I've got some Halloween pictures to share. Better late than never, right? 

First off, here's me: 




And here's Alicia:




There's a spooky atmosphere, as captured by this photo:



Turns out, the spooky atmosphere is caused by green hair:



In that last one, you can see the what the parade was about: cool puppets. I'm sure there were a ton of costumes, but we weren't in the front, so they remained invisible to us. Here's a better idea of what those ghosts looked like:



The old fashioned faces were a nice touch.

There were floats:



This one in particular was cool, but it stopped in front of us for about ten minutes.

It was fun though, costumes everywhere. I've never seen New York so crowded and that says a lot.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Livia



Just a quick picture of Livia sleeping. She's the bee's knees.

Update #2



The great news: I've finally gotten a handle on my Computability class. It took a new book from the library and a few hours reviewing an old proof, but I think I understand whats going on at a deeper level.

The good news: Halloween is tomorrow. I'll be going to the parade with Alicia, but we didn't manage to figure out a costume. We've been thinking about it since September, but nothing came to fruition.

The bad news: Guitar Hero: World Tour isn't great. GH:WT is the newest Guitar Hero game, and it expands the game to include drums and vocals. I was really upset with Guitar Hero 3, so I rented GH:WT. While things have improved significantly, the game still gets tedious. By that, I mean:
  • It seems the makers make music harder than it should be.
  • There are some bad choices of music included in the game. Songs like "Beat It" by Michael Jackson are fun, but not good for a music game (the notes just repeat over and over... it gets boring).
  • There's in game advertising. Nothing upsets me more than when I see a billboard for AT&T Wireless in my video game. It's distracting, and it makes me wonder why they still charge full price. I know it is inevitable that advertising will creep into video games, but I don't have to like it.
  • The characters are butt-ugly.
  • Alicia says the singing is bad. She's an excellent singer (She's about as good as it gets on Rock Band), but Guitar Hero: World Tour says she is failing on songs she knows. What this tells me is they didn't perfect the singing part of the game.
  • The loading and saving still sucks. After each set list, saving takes what seems like more than a full minute.

What I've thought about: Internet radio. I've always listened to Minnesota Public Radio over the internet, and I've always enjoyed it, even here in New York. But now Alicia is working at a computer for 8 hours a day, so she's using internet radio, too. She says New York Public Radio is good as well. So now I feel obligated to try it out.

What I've enjoyed: Cost Co. I found out there is a Cost Co. in Brooklyn, so I made my way there (I have to take a subway, walk two blocks, take a second subway, walk two more blocks). It was initially worried that it wouldn't be worth my $50 for membership. My worries were eradicated when I saw the food section. Holy cow. SUCH GOOD FOOD! Meat and vegetables are much nicer than my neighborhood grocery stores. I can buy great frozen food that is much cheaper than eating out. I think I'll be saving a ton of money now.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Death and Taxes


Today's my first Saturday that I don't have to run out and teach. I'm squandering it by surfing the internet.

But this caught my attention: Death and Taxes. It's a giant map of the discretionary funding of the United States of America. If you visit the website, you can scroll around and read all the agencies and sub-agencies that receive 200 million or more.

I feel like I learned something today! I had no idea how little money the FCC gets. I had no idea how much it costs our country for Air traffic organization.

Now you'll know, too!

Friday, October 24, 2008

Bacon Salt


Why would you have fries if you could have bacon fries??

What a good question. I love the company's motto: Everything should taste like bacon.

Even though I haven't tried it personally, I can't endorse this product enough.

[www.baconsalt.com]

Keeping in contact has never been easier

I understand the internet is scary . . .

But it has never been easier to maintain a presence on the internet in your own way. Besides Facebook and MySpace, there are many other possibilities.

The oldest internet technology is email. It would be easy enough to collect a bunch of email addresses of friends and family and send out a Newsletter.

I've already exulted the virtues of Google Reader, but I will mention that the Google Reader Shared Items feature can be used as a blog. It is much, much easier than creating your own Blogger account (which is pretty easy, too). Google Reader has a "Note" feature, which is basically a blog post without a website you've shared (to put this in laymans terms, you can just write something).

If you don't want to use Google Reader, you can simply sign up for Twitter and start tweeting immediately. There's a ton of people to follow, such as celebrities, etc. Even CNN was reading tweets on their broadcast of the Presidential Debates.

The only reason I'm pushing is that it is fun to read about people in your life. Alicia's got her blog, as do both her sisters Stacey and Vanessa. Alicia's friend Nicole maintains a Google Reader shared items page.

That's about all I've got on the internet. I'd love to add to my list! But that's up to you, isn't it?

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Grad School Report

Ofda.

Grad school is in full swing. I've got the feeling I could study 16 hours a day and still not get everything I want to done. I suppose that's what I'm supposed to be feeling.

Yesterday, I learned something about graduate school professors: they have much less responsibility to the student. This isn't to say they don't care. But, here's a quote from one of my professors last night:

"I guess this is the point the professor tells the class it makes sense to him and moves on."
The class had been working on a complicated proof and everyone sat silently, trying to write as much down as they could. I was pretty lost. The professor was talking out what was happening, trying to make sure he had it right.

He finally nodded his head, told us the above quote, and proceeded to erase the other half of the board and continue lecturing.

Well, some of my other professors make a lot of sense now. Viewed in the light of this lower burdon, perhaps some of my other professors aren't as bad as I thought they might be.

I don't agree with the notion that it isn't the responsibility of the professor to make the students understand. I certainly cover the same material two, three, or even more times to make sure my students have a firm grasp.

I do understand this teaching philosophy, though. There is only so much a professor can explain within the class period, and a graduate student does need to spend a lot of time going through it on his or her own.

Well, I went to the library and grabbed two more books. I'll be spending the next few hours trying to figure it out. So it goes, I suppose.

Blog Update

Three permanent additions to my blog:

1) I've added a status bar to the top. Nothing fancy, just some text above my posts to let you know what I've added.

I'm adding this because of my infrequent updates. As is typical, I might go two weeks without posting anything new. Then, when I sit down and write a lot, posts might get pushed down too low to notice.

Now, one quick visit to briancopeland.blogspot.com will inform you as to how new material has arrived.

This shouldn't be displayed to readers using my RSS feed, as you are already aware of how much I've updated.

2) I'm using Twitter. Twitter is the new rising star on the internet. Instead of writing long blog posts, internet users are "Tweeting," or writing a 140 character (or less) message and publishing it on their Twitter account. This is nearly the same as what other websites call "status," but the twitter posts (called "tweets") could be anything. They call it "microblogging," and it is much easier than regular blogging.

I'm using http://ping.fm/ to publish my Twitter'ing everywhere. Thus, if you follow me on Twitter, you'll see the same thing as my status listed on the right side of my blog. This will be the same as my MySpace profile and my Facebook status (to find me, search for cope0053@d.umn.edu).

3) Around the Internet is finalized. If you haven't noticed this section of my website, it is on the right hand side under my Status. It's basically displaying my Shared Items from Google Reader. So, if you aren't visiting my website, you could certainly subscribe to my Shared Items to see what links I've thought were cool. I usually include a description of the link through the Shared Items feed.

Update #1

To try and give a glimpse into my day-to-day world, I'm going to attempt a systematic update every week (if not more!). To make it easy, I want questions that are easy to answer. Here are five that seem to have promise... I'd love other ideas in the comments, if you've got them.

The great news: Every semester, my teaching is evaluated. Basically, a full time professor sits in my class, then gives me notes afterwards. I was evaluated on Tuesday (10/21), and it went great. My lecture was on top form.

The good news: I'm done teaching my Saturday class. There was a debacle with attendance, but I no longer have work on Saturdays. Over all, I'll have made $450 pretax for teaching six consecutive Saturdays. Not bad.

The bad news: I haven't played Rock Band in three weeks. Too much to do. Doesn't sound like this will change anytime soon, as I'll be giving Midterms next week, which means more correcting.

What I've thought about: I can't figure out how to properly feed Livia. I don't want her getting fat (not that it would be the end of the world). The problem is that when I follow the diet recommendation on Livia's dry food, Livia wants food all day. She's constantly sniffing her bowl, then looking up at me. It breaks my heart, so I cave. Will she finally get used to one can of food in the morning, half a cup of dry food in the evening?

What I've enjoyed: Fringe is the only TV I've caught, but its enjoyable. It's no Sopranos, but it makes me happy on Tuesday... too bad we've got 3 weeks until new episodes.

Livia is healthy!

As you may have read on Alicia's blog, Livia wasn't feeling very good after we brought her home.

But I'm happy to report Livia is fully healthy. Here's the story:



This is Livia on her way home from the shelter on Monday, October 5th. She seemed pretty lively when she got home, but perhaps a little weak. We blamed this on her operation, as she had just been spayed.

She was very cuddly, but not much for running around. Come Thursday, she starts sneezing. By Monday, Livia was sniffling and sneezing and sleeping all the time. So it was time for the vet.

I took Livia to the Vet on Monday, October 13th. He explained that shelters can do their best to keep the place clean, but when you get that many stray cats in one place, disease will spread. He'd even worked at the shelter we adopted Livia from.

He prescribed Livia amoxicillin, to be given twice a day. He also gave her two shots, to aleviate her congestion in her lungs. He mentioned that it might take a week until she stops sneezing.

The next few days were tough. Livia only seemed to get worse. Now, she was still eating and she was moving around a lot more; but she was really sneezing and sniffling. It took some faith in the vet that she really was getting better.

This was combined with the fear of allergies. The vet mentioned there was a slim possibility that Livia was allergic to something. Alicia was starting to catch something, so we were worried about Alicia being allergic as well.

To top it off, Alicia is allergic to penicillin. Livia had a tiny drop of amoxicillin on her chin, and when Alicia scratched her chin, the back of her hand broke out in hives.

But, rest assured, everything worked out. When Alicia got the hives on her hand, she washed her hands and it immediately went away. I became more careful giving Livia the amoxicillin (I wipe her chin off, too). Sure enough, she stopped sneezing by Monday.

Now, Livia's perfectly healthy. Here she is stretched out on the bed:



Alicia is healthy now, too. We've finally got a happy, healthy household.

New Look

Here's the new me:



Compare with the old me:



What's new? I've got new glasses and I've decided to forgo the beard.

It was quite nice shaving, actually. I haven't shaved with a standard razor since 2005~6. Up until about March, I'd been using (and loving) my Norelco Electric Razor. Around March of 2008, I decided the beard was for me.

Alicia likes the beard, but I wanted some smooth skin. The beard will most likely return, but not anytime soon (read: give me at least a week beardless).

Monday, October 13, 2008

Columbus Day

Happy Columbus Day!

I don't know about you, but I've got today off. It's the last day I've got off for awhile. (As you may recall, I've had 6 days off in the past three weeks).

I've still got a lot of work to do, so I can't blog too much. I plan on writing a bit tonight after Alicia gets home, so there will be more about Alicia's Birthday and other fun things that have happened in the past weeks.

For now, here's a picture of Alicia's new cat, Livia:

From Brian Blogs in Brooklyn

Monday, October 6, 2008

Alicia's first day!




The tradition of taking a picture on the first day of school lives on. Here's Alicia on her first day of work last week. She looks happy because she was able to sleep in, her first day of work started at 10:55.

As for the job, she's loving it. She's joyfully employed by Bloomberg, a news and legal service started by the current mayor of New York City. She talks about it on her blog, Put on the Glasses.

Wedding Announcement

We've set a date and time!

On Saturday, August 15th, at 5pm, at the Wynn Hotel in Las Vegas, NV, I'll take Alicia's hand in marriage.

We've set up a website where you can get more information. Head over to:

http://copelandglaserwedding.blogspot.com/

for the wedding blog.

I'll try and drop a note here when big info is posted.

Monday Morning

Alicia just went out the door, and it's 7am. I can't believe I've been getting up at 6am every morning (minus the weekends, of course). But it feels great. I'm already working, and there won't be any regrets today.

Last week feels like a phantom. I had Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday off, and I feel as if I squandered them. I shouldn't feel that way, as I finally gave the apartment a good cleaning that was needed. I also corrected exams and relaxed. I guess I'm sorry to see it go.

The biggest disappointment was waking up on Monday to discover a cold. It was mostly gone by Thursday, and it is just barely lingering now. I can certainly blame my lazy week on the cold, but that doesn't make me feel any better. Oh well, it feels good to wake up healthy again.

But even if I'm not proud of last week, this week can certainly be redemption: I've got Wednesday and Thursday off. I know, I know, I can't believe how much time I've got off either. I've even got next week Monday off as well. Being a student is so lazy.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Gearing up for the debate tonight, debating alcohol. Think I'll need it?

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Brian is trying to use http://ping.fm/ to update everything: twitter, facebook, myspace, blogger, ...

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Alicia update

If you haven't been reading Alicia's blog, shes had a lot happening.

First off, she got a job! She started yesterday (Monday) working for Bloomberg doing legal research. It is great pay and she says it is mindless and easy. I won't go into detail, but I will say she is very happy to have the job search over for the time being. It is a temporary job, so the job search will begin again eventually, but she's employed at least for the foreseeable future.

Even better, she has a birthday coming up. On Friday, October 1oth, she'll turn 27. I've been doing my best to plan it, gifts, etc. Considering it is on a Friday, I'm sure we'll have fun.

Lastly, the wedding planning is going well. We might have a date and time confirmed soon. I'll keep you posted!

Rosh Hashanah

Happy Rosh Hashanah, everyone.

No, I'm not Jewish, but I'm off of school! I've got Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday off this week, Wednesday, Thursday off next week, and Tuesday off the week after that. Follow that?

What it comes down to is that I've got a lot of class off. Wednesday is my big study day at the Graduate Center, so two consecutive Wednesdays off is huge for me. I needed it. I've got a lot of stuff to do, and this is a great opportunity to get it done while relaxing.

But, wouldn't you know it, I caught a cold on Sunday. Not to worry, it is very light. It was a small sore throat yesterday, and it has just been the sniffles today. It is so minor that I got a lot of errands done in Manhattan today. So that is great.

Tomorrow, I'm staying in and studying more. I've also got some homework to finish correcting, so the time will be well used.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Weather

The weather has gotten perfect! It was about 70 degrees today, which is exactly the weather I want. It is perfect keep-the-windows-open weather for us. Any hotter and Alicia and I don't do very well.

The problem with this apartment (the only one besides mice since we've redone the apartment) is that most of our apartment has no ventilation. The living room only has a door, nothing else. So even if it is a nice day out, we have to keep the windows shut and the AC pumping, else it will climb to 85/90 inside that room.

But 70 and below is the tipping point, the point where that room doesn't heat up.

I still fondly recall waiting for the bus to come pick me up on an early fall morning before school. I remember the grass frosting in September. I miss that. That doesn't happen here until November. Eww.

At least we've got some nice cooler days coming. The worst of summer is over.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Fall Update



Well, the first day of school has come and gone. A few weeks ago, it seems. Above's what I looked like going out to teach for the first class of the new semester. I wanted to command a little respect, thus the tie. I really liked wearing a tie with a shirt not buttoned to the top, and I've done it a few times since. Alicia and I even went shopping at Century 21 (a really big department store that's really cheap) and bought three new shirts with matching ties.

I've had requests for pictures of the garden. Here's one of the best flowers:



A lot of them have flowered, and we've got mostly orange and pink. But the huge rainstorm last weekend (apparently it was a tropical storm that made its way north) knocked over most of them. They've only recently started to stand back up.

This semester, I'm teaching a Precalculus class and an Algebra II class. Sure, they are both still technically high school math. But it feels good teaching them. The student's have a decent grasp of what's going on. I even get to use a graphing calculator in Precalculus!

My last post probably gave the impression that I'm only studying. That's not entirely true: I've taken up reading on the subway. I'm averaging about one book every two weeks. I'm almost done with a book about Harvard MBAs, and I'm excited about picking what is next.

The wedding is chugging along. Alicia has been working hard on it, and I'll post more information as I get it.

I'm off to work again. Math calls. Until next time, stay good internet!

School is in Full Swing

Whoa! Guess time just got away from me.

I've been aware of the common stereotype that graduate students are stressed, no life, shut-ins that don't have time for anything. I'd even heard of mathematics students having to schedule casual down time, or else they'd not do it. Last year, I kinda felt that way. I had a decent amount of homework, and I had things to keep me busy, but I never felt an overwhelming pressure that eats up all my time, even Saturday nights.

Until about the third week of class this year.

I've got this giant amount of work I want to do. Last year, I had homework to finish, and that was about it. But now, wow. There doesn't seem to be enough hours in the week.

Perhaps this is how I should have been last year. But it didn't feel this way before.

The good news is that it feels a lot better. Last year, I felt like I knew nothing and was going to fail out of grad school. Now, I can see all the new first years from a different perspective. I can see that more than half of the students I met in the first year are no longer here. Things make sense that didn't previously, and I'm getting things done.

In short, the overwhelming feeling that I am stupid has diminished. I still feel stupid, but now I feel like I can do something about it. Which is why I have been studying so much.

I've got a few more things to say, but I'll split them up into different blog posts to avoid one long sputtering post.

Friday, August 29, 2008

Hello!

It's Friday night!

My school semester began Wednesday, with several classes. Wednesday's are my big day. But already it started going well. And has continued through today. Where I normally keep an eye on the clock, this semester I've been upset when class ended.

I'll elaborate more later, but things are going good. Alicia and I are going to grab some food for now.

Sorry about the lack of updates!

Friday, August 15, 2008

USB Aquarium

I mentioned the Woot-Off a week ago or so. I bought a USB Aquarium. It was five bucks, and here it is:



Awesome. Totally Awesome.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Backyard Update



Well, my Zinnias are huge. The big news is the flowers are finally coming in. Above, you can see the first bud that will be flowering soon. Here's a shot of the garden to give you some perspective:



Yeah, they are huge. I didn't realize it when I planted Zinnias. I'm not much of a flower guy. My biggest regret is they kinda look like the weeds that surround the garden. Oh well!

Otherwise, things are good back there. Alicia and I go about once a week and enjoy the outdoors, and I feed the cat (Oreo) about every other day. Clearly, she's got another owner, as she doesn't even come by every night.



For the record, the food is on the ground because I can't pour the food without Oreo putting her head in the path of the bowl. I've gotten to the point of just pouring and letting the food land wherever. Of course, Oreo is too good to eat the food of the ground. Bah.



The ivy has doubled in size. In July, I felt stupid because the ivy just wasn't climbing up the poles I bought. Now I feel stupid because the poles will be too short.



Construction has added another full story. Alicia found the permits online and found out that the building should go up six stories. Two down, four to go I guess. It's loud about once every two weeks when they are putting the huge beams up. But now you can't even access the construction site from our backyard, which has significantly quieted down the construction. Early May, we woke up every morning to the sound of construction workers on the other side of our bedroom window. Good riddance.



The tree directly above our backyard is still my favorite, but this one has really started to look gorgeous. Ample rain and sunshine has turned the leaves into a great color, especially when back lit by a cloudy white sky.

And that's the news from Lake Wobego... er, um, the news from our back yard.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

News, otherwise

I'm on my way home! I'll be in Minnesota Thursday through Tuesday. I've got my cell phone with me, feel free to give me a call: 347-260-6862. My time is pretty booked, but I'm sure I could say hi if you're around.

I've got at least three posts scheduled to be published while I'm in Minnesota. So check back to see what I've got coming.

After I'm back Tuesday, I'll have until Sunday to relax, as class starts Monday, August 25. I'll be right back into the teaching and learning mode.

Schools out for the summer

I finished teaching today!

I've been teaching a summer session of Developmental Mathematics (read: pre-college math). It met Monday - Thursday, 8:30 to 12:15ish. It has been all prep for the final and the ACT Compass exam, an exam students must pass to enter college math. Thus, all my students had taken the ACT Compass exam and failed it, meaning this course was prep work for it.

I started out with 18 students and it dropped down to 16 by the end. Of those 16 students who completed the class, three passed.

Yes, three. Today I failed 13 students. Ouch.

I talked to the head of the math department, as I was concerned. He said it was mostly the luck of the draw. He personally had taught a class where only one person passed. Still, I've been upset today. I feel like I failed as a professor.

I know that isn't true. I know I did as much as I could. Because I corrected the final exams, I know that the mistakes made were covered. Several mistakes made I specifically warned the students that "Students always make these mistakes. Tests will ask you this. Don't be one of those students!" For instance:

-1 - 6

The answer is -7. Most of my students thought it was 5 or -5.

Oh well. I did pass three students. They did a great job, and I am sure they'll pass the ACT now. As for me, I'm just going to leave it behind and relax in Minnesota this weekend.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

More about my Phone Plans

As a followup to my recent post about leaving my T-Mobile Contract for prepaid service, I thought I'd share my thoughts about my phone service in the future.

Skype

Currently, I'm using Skype. Skype is an international calling service that is really cheap. Think of it like an instant messaging program (Like AOL's AIM or MSN Messanger) that's connected to the phone system. Using your PC speakers and a microphone or a headset (like mine below), you can sign up for free and call anyone else who also has a Skype account. Alternatively, you can pay about $2 a month for the ability to call regular phone numbers. You turn it into your full phone line by purchasing a real phone number (in any area code!) for only $24 a year.



I like Skype. I love how cheap it is, and the flexibility it gives is great. There are "Skypecasts" which are basically radio shows you can call and listen in. There are chatrooms and other conference calling featuers.

The cons are that it relies on your internet connection. If your internet is down, you can't answer the phone. Sure, you can have calls forwarded to a different number, but then you're required to have a different number anyway.

One last pro is the software involved. I've downloaded an add on program called "PowerGramo" which records every call I make. I can save the calls as an MP3 file, or use any of the archiving features.

The biggest reason that Skype hasn't replaced my phone service is that it doesn't include emergency services. Thus, you can't call 911 from Skype. That's a serious problem.

For now, I'll use it for cheap calling out. Besides, when I want a new phone number, I'll probably use ...

Grand Central



Grand Central isn't yet available. The company was purchased by Google and is currently still being tested. When testing is over, it makes a fabulous promise:

One phone number for the rest of your life.

Here's how it works: You obtain (for free) a phone number from Grand Central. Then, by accessing the internet, you can specify where that one number should be sent. You can have it forward calls to your cell phone, your home phone, or your office. You can even do this depending on what time it is! You can have it forward your calls to all your phones at once. So when you've got a new cell phone number or new office number, no one has to know.

Grand Central offers a ton of features: You can pick what area code your number is in, you can record all your calls, it handles voicemail, it can play custom ring tones depending on who is calling, ... You've really gotta check out the website to read them all.

As for the cons, I really don't know. Perhaps Google will be embedding advertisements somewhere. It's hard to say until the service is actually available to the public.

As far as me, I will be signing up when this goes live. Until then, I can only dream.

Apple's iPhone

Some of you might have wondered why I haven't jumped on the iPhone bandwagon. Well, mostly price. I can honestly say that it is pretty awesome from all the reports I've heard. I was able to play with Nick Massahos' phone, and it seemed great. Especially now that Apple has released the ability to add applications, there seems like nothing it can't do.

But to get the iPhone, you've gotta pay $200 up front and about $80-100 a year for two years. Total price: $2120. I can't afford that. Checking the internet and my email isn't worth paying that much. I'm on the internet too much as it is.

One thing I would be interested in is the iPod Touch. Lifehacker (a personal productivity blog) recently had an article about why the iPod Touch does almost everything the iPhone does without having to pay $80 a month (link):

"Back in June 2007, I couldn't convince my wife that checking my email in grocery lines was worth $1,320—the cost of an original iPhone and one year of the cheapest plan. These days, the trend-setting phone costs even more money over its life, and it's more than a little restrictive and even a bit buggy. So I'm amazed at how little love the iPod touch gets. It's a slimmer iPhone with almost all its features, it requires no contract, and when you can't get a Wi-Fi signal, your plain, humble cellphone can step up to take its place."
Pretty convincing if you ask me. Besides, I'm waiting with baited breath for ...

Google Android



It isn't a Google phone, but a Google Operating System for Cell Phones. Android is for cell phones as Windows is for Computers. It's the basic software that runs your phone.

The big difference is that it is open. Anyone (even me!) can make an application for the phone. This is compared to the current phone situation, where you have to pay $5 to download a ring tone, and upwards of $15 if you want a game.

If you haven't caught on by now, I'm a big Google fan. While other people were waiting in line to buy an iPhone, I'll be waiting in line to buy a phone with Google Android.

The real advantage for Google is that any phone maker can include Android. So I'm hoping I can stay with T-Mobile. The iPhone, on the other hand, requires AT&T.

The last estimate was that Android would start appearing on cell phones in Fall 2008. I'll be waiting. (I basically canceled my contract with T-Mobile so that I could get Google Android).

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Leaving T-Mobile Contract

I'm a frequent reader of the Consumerist, a consumer rights blog. I've learned a lot about what rights I have when I'm shopping and paying utilities, etc. I'm proud to say that with a good knowledge of the system, I've managed to get a great deal with my cell phone service.

One thing I've read about are Early Termination Fees (ETFs). These are fees assessed by your cell phone carrier for leaving before the contract expires. They are usually about $200, which prevents you from getting a free cell phone and then leaving your service one month later.

In early July, I read that T-Mobile was changing the price per text message. It was going from $0.15 to $0.20 a message, which constitutes a "material adverse affect." Basically, they've changed the contract I signed, which allows me to leave the contract without paying an ETF.

My contract wasn't scheduled to end until August of 2009, still a long time away. So getting out of my contract sounded nice. But I like T-Mobile. So I didn't really want to stop my cell phone service, just get out of my contract.

I called up T-Mobile and asked about my options. I wanted to switch from being under contract to paying month to month. They wouldn't let me out of the contract unless I ended my service. I've liked T-Mobile. Good service, good customer service. No real complaints. But here they were making me decide whether to leave or stay under contract. Sneaky.

So I started looking at my cell phone usage. I was paying $60.00 a month (including taxes) for Unlimited nights and weekends, unlimited calling from my home (using my wireless internet), and unlimited calling to five numbers of my choice. I also had 300 minutes to use any other time I wanted. Despite all this time to talk, I was usually only using about 150 minutes a month. Back when I talked to Alicia every night, I needed a lot of talking time. Now, not so much...

That's when it occurred to me: Why don't I use a prepaid cell phone? It just so happened that T-Mobile offered prepaid services. For $100, I can get 1000 minutes, which have a full year before they expire. If I use 150 minutes a month, $100 will last me over six months! That would have cost me $360 under contract.

So I called up T-Mobile to ask about prepaid services. They inform me that I can use my same phone number, use my same phone, and it would only take a few hours to change services. The only problem was that I was currently under a cell phone contract.

At this point, I smiled. I started uttering the magic words, "You've recently changed my contract, which had a material adverse affect..."

As of last week, I've got the same number, the same phone, and I'm still with T-Mobile. I can change services and get a new phone anytime I'd like because I'm not under contract, and I'm saving a ton of money.

I'd say I'm pretty happy.

P.S.: I've also started using Skype internet phone services. For $2 dollars a month, I can make unlimited calling over the internet using my computer. I can't receive calls, so I'll still use my cell phone for that. But I'm saving even more minutes a month using Skype. Yay!

Friday, August 1, 2008

Brian Blogs the Internet, take two.

If you checked out this blog within the first few days of its launch, you'd have noticed the "Brian Blogs the Internet" sidebar where I posted links to websites I enjoyed. When you clicked on a link, it brought you to a separate blog that would link to a website I enjoyed.

That blog was essentially a "link farm," meaning it had no original content of its own. In my humble opinion, link farms are bad for the internet. They are essentially middle men. They operate like a door-to-door salesman, getting in the way.

So here's my dilemma: I do want to share good websites! I read my Google Reader religiously and I want to share my favorites. But if I post links and websites here, it'll clutter up my blog. I assume you, my readers, are interested in me, not other websites. If this blog became 50% links, 50% Brian info, it would no longer be my personal blog.

My solution is to use Google Reader's "share" feature. I can simply choose to share articles I enjoy and Google will automatically create a "Shared Items" blog for me.

You can see this at <http://www.google.com/reader/shared/01179481704014780557>. To simplify things, I've added an updating list on the right side of this blog (under my status updates). It displays the headlines of the last five things I shared, along with a link to "read more" of my shared items.

This way, you can ignore them if you're not interested. But if you're interested in what's going on in the world of technology and the internet, you can see what I recommended. You can even subscribe to the website if you're using an RSS feed reader like Google Reader. I've described this previously.

I'll occasionally post a link roundup with the best of the lot. That way, you'll get a personal recommendation behind good posts.

If you've got a better idea on how to handle this kind of thing, let me know in the comments. If you've started using Google Reader because of my post about it, let me know your shared items page! To the comments! (this means you, Nicole)

P.S.: Alicia's got a shared page, too. She shares a ton of items.

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Woot-Off Debriefing

Well, the Woot-Off is over.

For those of you not in the know, Woot.com is a website that sells one item a day, for a pretty good price. You can get cheap computers, cheap pens, basically anything.

But every once in awhile (about once a month) there is a "Woot-Off." They sell an item until it is sold out, then they put up another. The prices are usually really cheap, and you can get great deals. Alicia has blogged about this previously, so you can read her thoughts on her blog. She describes it better than me, so do give her post a read.

This Woot-Off started the day Alicia began her bar exam, so we couldn't follow it very well. But now that she's done, I have been compulsively pressing refresh to see what else was up for sale. And I got two items!

Mighty Kite Mini-Kite


They were only a penny each, plus $5 shipping (every single item is $5 shipping, whether it is ten pounds of salt or a penny kite). But, since the difference between getting one and three was $5.01 versus $5.03, I GOT THREE!

Satzuma USB Fish Tank


This guy is a USB Aquarium (fake fish) for only $3.99 plus standard $5 shipping. Not bad, considering it will make a nice addition to my USB gadget collection. Huzzah!

It was really exciting, considering these two came up one after another.

Too bad there weren't any Bags of Crap. I read online that if you can manage to get one, they've been valued up to $1000. And they only cost 5 bucks each. It's basically the lottery. Maybe some other time.

WOOT!

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Rock Band versus Guitar Hero


Unless you've had your head under a rock for two years, you've no doubt heard of Rock Band or Guitar Hero. I've purchased Guitar Hero 1, 2, and 3, as well as Rock Band. Those who know me know I've been into music games since way back before College.

Since both Guitar Hero and Rock Band have a similar concept, it seems one of the biggest determining factors now-a-days is the music included in each game. Today I was reading an article in Ars Technica about the music licensing in the next two games (Rock Band 2 and Guitar Hero: World Tour). Here's my favorite part:

"Right now the holy grail of music licensing seems to be the Beatles, and it's hard to fathom the amounts of money that Activision and MTV Games would throw at Apple Corps for that music."
Indeed. I know I have salivated over that thought. It was about a year ago that I seriously started to listen to the Beatles.

What is strange is that the Beatles' music is not available online at the moment. It is curiously missing from iTunes catalog. The link in the middle of the quote above is to a separate article about the Beatles and licensing. It hints that a deal may be inked within a few weeks, but that was back in June.

I might have mentioned before that I don't like the Guitar Hero franchise anymore, and that I'm strictly with Rock Band now. If Activision (the makers of Guitar Hero) managed to make an exclusive deal with Apple Record (who controls the Beatles music), I would begrudgingly purchase Guitar Hero again.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Also new in the apartment...



Alicia purchased the new shelf during our first trip to Ikea back in June. It's nice having a place for straws and napkins. The picture above the table is also new. She added the green backdrop. It didn't work until the orange shelf went up, now it looks pretty good.

Alicia actually spray-painted the shelf herself. Good job? Indeed!

Hacker Conference


Last weekend (July 18, 19 and 20th) I attended The Last H.O.P.E., a hacker conference here in New York put on by the magazine 2600, the Hacker Quarterly. H.O.P.E. stands for Hackers on Planet Earth.

What's a hacker conference about? Well, this one was about the hacker community, security, and general internet connectivity. Plus a lot of computer geeks.

Really, I don't consider myself a hacker. I could understand the presentations, but it just isn't my cup of tea. I don't really want to spend a lot of time learning computer security systems, coding, etc. I'd have stayed as a Computer Science major if that was the case.

But this conference was exactly the kind of thing that made me excited to live in New York. You just don't see these happening much in the Twin Cities.

Ultimately, I fluctuated between really enjoying it and being a bit bothered by it. Given that it was a conference made up of 80% guys between 15-30 that pride themselves on their ability to stay indoors, body odor was a problem sometimes. But there was some interesting stuff. And great speakers!

Here's some tidbits:

The ID card you got to grant you permission to the conference areas was a white circuit board as pictured below:


The backside had a small battery. It was a functioning tracking device. Basically, it could tell where I was when I was within the conference areas. I was able to log in to the conference website and see where I currently was, where I had been, what talks I had attended, where others who registered were. Near the big conference rooms, there was a screen displaying the current data:


Theoretically, I'm one of those red dots. If there weren't so many dots, mine would have read 3225, which was the id number. It was pretty cool, as the tag flashed red every five seconds or so as it sent out a signal.

There were talks from about 10am until midnight Friday, Saturday and Sunday (talks ended at 7pm). As you can see from the empty conference room below, attendance was at capacity. The conference rooms were named after famous Computer Scientists, the one below is named Turing:




I didn't take the picture of the crowd, so theoretically you can see me in there somewhere (but don't look too hard. I knew where I was and I couldn't find myself). This talk was made during Steven Levy's talk. Levy is a technology writer who writes for Newsweek. He also wrote the book "Hackers" back in 1980ish.

Other cool speakers include Lazlow (who co-wrote GTAIV and has done radio work for many of the previous other Grand Theft Auto video games), Adam Savage from Mythbusters, and the guy who was the consultant for Sneakers (early 90's spy movie with Robert Redford).

I learned about safe cracking, lock picking, telephones, internet testing, and a ton of other things technology related. Speaking of lock picks, here's the beginner set I bought:



Alicia and I have both gotten a tiny luggage lock, but that's it. Neither of us has managed to get the master lock pictured. It really feels like an art. You use the S shaped thing to spin the lock like a key would. Then, while providing torque (turning it), you use the blue handled tools to push the "pins" into the lock. When you first start, it feels easy. But then you have trouble getting the pins right. It just doesn't wanna work.

All in all, the hacker conference was great for getting out of the house and doing something. I don't go to many bars, and I'm kind of a bum about seeing music shows. This made me feel like I've gotten something out of living here. Huzzah!

---

Footnote: I've usually only posted pictures I personally took so that copyright issues weren't a problem. I couldn't find much in the way of credits or limitations on some of the photos in this post, so I've included links to their original source. Just click the picture for credits. If you own the rights to any of these photos and do not want me using them here, feel free to email me. You can find my email at the top right under "about me."

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Status Updates on the Right

Perhaps you've noticed my status update on the right side of this blog. That is courtesy of Twitter, a big name on the internet as of late. It is entirely centered around status updates a la Facebook. Each update is called a "tweet," and you can follow people who are texting their "tweets" via cell phone.

I haven't really gotten into the Twitter community. Apparently, it is all the rage in the blogosphere (world of blogs where everyone reads everyone else). But it makes it easy to let you know what I'm doing. It's much easier to write a tweet (160 letter maximum), so you'll see that updates much more often. And if you'd like to twitter back and forth, I'd love to follow your tweets. Comment me up!

Yeah, yeah, yeah

Okay, so maybe you can never trust me on this blog when it comes to my posting frequency. I'm sorry! But you got a really long one! With pictures!

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Apartment Shuffle

I've been living in my apartment in Brooklyn for over a year. Which is a lot, considering I've moved four times in the past five years. Outside my time back home in Eden Prairie, the longest tenure I've had in an apartment is one year 10 months, give or take (this was when I broke up with my ex and was essentially living with Alicia in her place).

So Alicia and I starting thinking about this place. We are paying $1600 a month, which is a lot, but much cheaper than Manhattan. Was it a good deal? Should we stay another year? Is there a better neighborhood to move to?

With those questions in mind, Alicia and I had fun surfing the internet looking at apartments in New York. Part of the fun was the thought of actually moving, part came from verifying whether we had a good apartment.

At first, we thought we were getting screwed. I got out the tape measure and discovered our apartment is somewhere between 450 - 550 square feet. Which is small, compared to what other apartments had. This was amplified by our feelings of claustrophobia, brought on by all of our stuff. Sure, we've lived with it for a year, but it took a year to realize we had a very full apartment. There wasn't much open floor space, most walls were covered with shelves, and our living room really felt cramped. Suddenly, having 700 square feet sounded really appealing.

The listings on Craigslist.org and others indicated that most one - two bedroom apartments in the 700 square feet range were about what we were paying, $1600-1800 a month. Moving was sounding better and better.

But I had to see the apartments. I managed to check out two open houses. The first was $1700 a month in a nicer building just four blocks away from where we are now. The problem was the space was in very awkward places. There were no right angles in the apartment and it turned out (by my estimate) to be nowhere near 700sqft as advertised. Really, it felt like there was no advantage over this place. It was almost equal. Not worth moving for.

Next, Alicia and I tried a step up in price ($1800 a month) for bigger (actually 700 sqft), but in a worse neighborhood (about two subway stops deeper into Brooklyn). We arrive at a newly built building that was originally meant to be condos until the real estate market took a turn for the worse. The agent brought us to this incredible apartment with a deck, huge windows, a nice stainless steel fridge, beautiful bathroom, full kitchen, . . . I could go on. So, what's the catch?

It's the model, and it is $2200 a month. We go down the hall to see the $1800 a month apartment. Still feels like the same size as our apartment. The kitchen is smaller, there's no deck, and there's no decent light. It just isn't worth taking the trouble to move into. Plus, $200 more a month? No thanks.

The implications of moving were becoming clear. For our price range, we weren't getting any improvement. And it would certainly be more expensive every month. But that model apartment, Wow. It was nice. We've come to the agreement that we should hold out on moving until we can step up to that level.

So Alicia and I start looking at our apartment and tried to determine what we could fix. As some background, when we moved here over a year ago, we were very excited. We spent two or three months planning the layout of this apartment. Every piece of furniture was in its ideal spot. But still, everything felt cramped. If only we had more storage. . .



Here's our solution. We went to the new Brooklyn Ikea and purchased two "Wardrobes" to act as a closet. These huge monoliths hold our clothing, freeing up both closets to be used for other things. They are from the Hopen line, which matches the dresser you see to the right, my bed and my bed side table. I love the frosted glass!


I won't kid you, these were rather expensive. Not four figures, or even close. But their price is justified in my mind when I consider how much moving costs alone would be. And if Alicia and I live in this apartment for another year at $1600/month instead of somewhere else at $1800/month, we've just saved $2400.

But they've worked. The space we have taken up in the bedroom is now free in the rest of the apartment. What used to look like Alicia's closet now looks like this:


We've got all of our food, most of our cleaning supplies, and lots of other junk in there. That is all junk that used to sit in our living room. Now, it is tucked away in our newly acquired storage space.

The most startling shuffle in the apartment that resulted from the Ikea wardrobes is the lovesac's new home:


I know what you're thinking: "Aren't you shunning it??" The short answer is yes. I've had the Lovesac for four years now. It is the most comfortable piece of furniture I own. This apartment just doesn't have the space for it in the living room. Heck, it took up 1/4th of the floor space! It has it's own little corner now that I can still sit on it to read, and it stays fluffed almost all the time. And by shoving it back there, look at the living room now:




What is hard to convey is the floor space. This room doesn't heat up as much anymore. It feels wide open and comfortable. It has made this apartment feel half as cramped as it used to feel. Heck, I can even use my orange chair now.

The configuration you see above isn't permanent. Alicia is planning on shuffling the desks around after the bar exam (she's done Wednesday, 7/30!).

The best part is that the apartment now feels fresh. I'd be happy living here for another year, and that will save us money.