Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.: "A Strong Smell of Turpentine Prevails Throughout"

Noting this story only because I always seem to attribute it falsely, to Carl Sagan, and also for humor value.

From an 1870 lecture of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. (note: the physician, not his son, who served on the Supreme Court of the United States) which was published in 1879:
I once inhaled a pretty full dose of ether, with the determination to put on record, at the earliest moment of regaining consciousness, the thought I should find uppermost in my mind. The mighty music of the triumphal march into nothingness reverberated through my brain, and filled me with a sense of infinite possibilities, which made me an archangel for the moment. The veil of eternity was lifted. The one great truth which underlies all human experience, and is the key to all the mysteries that philosophy has sought in vain to solve, flashed upon me in a sudden revelation. Henceforth all was clear: a few words had lifted my intelligence to the level of the knowledge of the cherubim. As my natural condition returned, I remembered my resolution; and, staggering to my desk, I wrote, in ill-shaped, straggling characters, the all-embracing truth still glimmering in my consciousness. The words were these (children may smile; the wise will ponder): “A strong smell of turpentine prevails throughout.”
Sources:
http://quoteinvestigator.com/2012/03/31/turpentine-prevails/
http://books.google.com/books?id=xZs9AAAAYAAJ&q=inhaled#v=snippet&

Saturday, November 26, 2016

EcoSeb DD122EA-SIMPLE Desiccant Dehumidifier Maintenance

To my knowledge, no public service manual exists, for our EcoSeb DD122EA-SIMPLE Desiccant Dehumidifier, 15-Pint, White, 120V. EcoSeb has a 2-year warranty, and you can initiate warranty service here:
http://ecoseb.com/warranty-service.html

After ~18 months of use, it made a intermittent, high-pitched, rubbing/squeaking noise. Maintenance below resolved the issue.

If new to this, you'll probably want to start by oiling the small motor which turns the zeolite collector wheel. I think that did it, for me. You can also maintain the other things, as well, as below, but I'm guessing that's secondary.

TOOLS USED
  • Phillips screwdriver...removes most screws
  • 3-In-1 8oz Household Oil...got mine from local Ace Hardware
  • Pliers/wrench/spanner...to remove a hex nut
  • Vacuum cleaner and dusting brush attachment...cleans zeolite concentrator wheel, and so forth
  • Cotton swabs...apply oil, clean ports, and so forth
  • Old toothbrush...cleans smaller parts
  • Soft surface...I used bath mats
PARTS MAINTAINED
  1. Motor powering fan over the zeolite concentrator wheel - opened, oiled
  2. Motor turning zeolite concentrator wheel - oil applied to gear with cotton swab (note: couldn't see easy way to remove, without first removing large plastic cover, wiring bundles, and so forth)
  3. Zeolite concentrator wheel
    1. Vacuumed with dusting brush, removing heavy dust buildup (both sides)
    2. Be gentle, can dent/scratch zeolite material, if not careful
  4. Motor powering condenser fan - cleaned fan blades with toothbrush and casing with cotton swab, oiled motor shaft
  5. Condenser ports - cleaned with cotton swab
  6. Spot dusting, cleaning, as seemed reasonable
Most of the parts above need no detailed explanation...some additional notes on the following, for future reference.

REMOVING TOP COVER 
  • Unplug unit
  • At the top, gently remove plastic airflow director, by bending slightly, in the middle, then removing each side from hole
  • Lift the carrying handle, then, using a screwdriver, gently press on the carrying handle retaining tabs, on each side, to release each side of the carrying handle...pull to remove
  • Remove seven Phillips screws:
    • 2x - behind carrying handle
    • 3x - sides of unit, in plastic wells
    • 2x - bottom of unit
  • Remove water tank, from bottom of the unit
  • Remove dust filter, from rear of unit
  • Place unit with top-side facing up, then gently separate the top cover and set aside
REMOVING BOTTOM COVER
  • Remove screws attaching interior to back cover (2x-3x ???)
  • Remove top dial and switch:
    • Remove humidistat dial gently by using small flat-blade screwdriver...pull up off shaft
    • Remove Economy/Turbo switch gently, by using small flat-blade screwdriver...gently push in plastic tabs on each side and lift out
  • Gently (note: a bit sketchy, but it works...) pull up top control panel plastic and slide humidistat shaft under...now you can pull out the entire control panel module
  • Remove bottom cover
OIL MOTOR POWERING FAN OVER ZEOLITE CONCENTRATOR WHEEL
  • Remove hex nut
  • Pull up on black plastic fan cover, to remove
  • Vacuum fan cover
  • Note: not sure if needed...might just oil motor shaft (?)
  • When cool, oil motor:
    • Remove four Phillips screws holding motor to plastic cover
    • Remove two Phillips screws holding motor case together
    • Gently remove metal retaining clip--I used screwdriver
    • Pry open motor
    • Oil bushings, motor shaft, and so forth
  • Re-assemble
OIL MOTOR POWERING CONDENSER FAN
  • Remove back cover (??x Phillips screws...I think 2 or 3? Do not force)
  • Remove plastic condenser (4x Phillips screws)
  • Remove small motor and black plastic fan assembly
    • Remove 2-3 Phillips screws holding black fan assembly to case 
    • Gently bend back power cord mount and remove fan assembly...a bit tricky, but it does come out
    • Remove screws holding silver plate on back of black fan assembly
    • Remove silver backing plate (note: some adhesive)
  • Clean exposed condenser fan with toothbrush and cotton swab
  • Oil motor shaft
  • Re-assemble
TESTING

I loosely re-assembled the core into either front/back case, then put in the water tank, then plugged-in and tested, to see if rubbing/squeaking noise resumed.

RESOLUTION

I suspect the small motor turning the zeolite collector wheel represented the source of the rubbing/squeaking noise. After oiling both the motor shaft and the gear, as well as parts of the zeolite collector wheel's gear teeth (note: not the zeolite itself), no more noise. It's great.


Friday, November 25, 2016

Chilean economist Manfred Max-Neef's Nine Basic Needs


Noting, for future reference only:
  1. Sustenance
  2. Safety
  3. Love
  4. Understanding
  5. Community
  6. Recreation
  7. Autonomy
  8. Creativity
  9. Meaning

An elaboration:
ROSENBERG: Let me give you all nine of them, because, according to the Chilean economist, Manfred Max-Neef, we only have about nine needs. Needs are very important to Max-Neef, because his whole, economic system is based on human needs. How do we measure them, so we really gauge our economy, its success, on the meeting of human needs - and not the tragic way we have been measuring it? 
The first one he calls, "sustenance:" food, shelter, and water - the basic, physical needs. Next, "safety:" protection. Next, "love." Next, "understanding." Next, "community." Next, "recreation:" play, rest; he lumps those as one. Then, one of the most important needs of all, "autonomy." Look in the newspaper on any, given day and see how many wars are going on over that need. Human beings have a strong need to be in charge of their own lives, to not have somebody claiming to know what they have to do or should do. Anybody who says that to them, it threatens his or her autonomy. You see all the wars going on between nations. Listen in on any family with children. You will hear autonomy wars. "It's time to go wash up for bed." "No, I don't wanna." "Did you hear me?" "No!" See? An autonomy war. Another need, "creativity." Then, according to Victor Frankl, probably the most important need of all, a need for "meaning:" purpose in life. How sad, how few people on the planet are getting that need met. They are educated to misrepresent needs, according to Michael Lerner. We have been educated to misrepresent our needs. We have been educated to think we have a need to consume, a need for money, a need for status - not realizing those are not needs.

Via:
http://www.goodradioshows.org/peaceTalksL36.html

More:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fundamental_human_needs

Sunday, October 30, 2016

South Korea 2016



Seoul


Daejeon

Gyeongju (night of 10/14/2016)
  • Hotel: 141 Mini Hotel
  • Food:
    • 10/14 lunch: Singyeongju KTX station restaurant (bibimbap)
    • 10/14 dinner: A Twosome Place (sandwich, cake)
    • 10/15 breakfast: hotel (hardboiled egg, fruit, corn flakes, yogurt, espresso)
    • 10/15 lunch: street vendor fare outside Bulgaksa (corndog looking thing with seafood)
    • 10/15 dinner: Seoul KTX station restaurant "Korean Traditional Restaurant) (bibimbap)
  • Seokguram grotto 
  • Bulguksa temple
  • Central Gyeongju:














Friday, October 28, 2016

Vacation apparel

Saw interesting backpacks:

Off Toco backpack
Schöffel
Nava

Thursday, October 27, 2016

Kevin Voted Today

President and Vice President
Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine

United States Senator
Kamala Harris

United States Representative
Jimmy Panetta

State Senator
Bill Monning

Member of the State Assembly
Mark Stone

NONPARTISAN OFFICES

City of Santa Cruz - Member of City Council
J.M. Brown
Cynthia Mathews
Robert Singleton
Martine Watkins

MEASURES SUBMITTED TO VOTERS

Proposition 51
School Bonds. Funding for K–12 School and Community College Facilities. Initiative Statute.
Yes

Proposition 52
Medi-Cal Hospital Fee Program. Initiative Constitutional Amendment and Statute.
Yes

Proposition 53
Revenue Bonds. Statewide Voter Approval. Initiative Constitutional Amendment.
No

Proposition 54
Legislature. Legislation and Proceedings. Initiative Constitutional Amendment and Statute.
Yes

Proposition 55
Tax Extension to Fund Education and Healthcare. Initiative Constitutional Amendment.
Yes

Proposition 56
Cigarette Tax to Fund Healthcare, Tobacco Use Prevention, Research, and Law Enforcement. Initiative Constitutional Amendment and Statute.
Yes

Proposition 57
Criminal Sentences. Parole. Juvenile Criminal Proceedings and Sentencing. Initiative Constitutional Amendment and Statute.
Yes

Proposition 58
English Proficiency. Multilingual Education. Initiative Statute.
SB 1174 (Chapter 753, Statutes of 2014), Lara.
Yes

Proposition 59
Corporations. Political Spending. Federal Constitutional Protections. Legislative Advisory Question.
SB 254 (Chapter 20, Statutes of 2016), Allen.
Yes

Proposition 60
Adult Films. Condoms. Health Requirements. Initiative Statute.
No

Proposition 61
State Prescription Drug Purchases. Pricing Standards. Initiative Statute.
Yes

Proposition 62
Death Penalty. Initiative Statute.
Yes

Proposition 63
Firearms. Ammunition Sales. Initiative Statute.
Yes

Proposition 64
Marijuana Legalization. Initiative Statute.
Yes

Proposition 65
Carryout Bags. Charges. Initiative Statute.
No

Proposition 66
Death Penalty. Procedures. Initiative Statute.
No

Proposition 67
Ban on Single-Use Plastic Bags. Referendum.
Yes

SCHOOL
Santa Cruz City High School District

Measure A: Santa Cruz High School District Bond Measure
Yes

Measure B: Santa Cruz Elementary School District Bond Measure
Yes

Measure D: County Transportation Tax Measure
Yes

Measure E: County Cannabis Business Tax Amendment
Yes

CITY
Measure G: Santa Cruz City Timing of Selecting Mayor/Vice Mayor
Yes

Measure H: Santa Cruz City Water System
Yes

Measure I: Santa Cruz City Cannabis Business Tax
Yes

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Dolphins

While waiting in line, for coffee, I noticed the person in front of us had a backpack with a button, which read, "I'm sick of these dolphins and their shit"

This appartently references the 2004 film "The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou". Video. The quote said, "Son of a bitch, I'm sick of these dolphins."

Exploratorium 08/27/2016

Dawn and I visited the Exploratorium's new location, for the first time, on Saturday. Dawn wanted to see the Strandbeest exhibit before it closed.

Overview:
"This summer, experience Strandbeest: The Dream Machines of Theo Jansen at the Exploratorium from May 27 to September 5, 2016. This special exhibition features enormous kinetic sculptures called strandbeests—“beach animals” in Dutch—that mesmerize with their eerily lifelike motion. Constructed largely of PVC tubing and equipped with sensory organs and ever-evolving survival strategies, these amazing beests walk a wandering, wind-blown line between art and engineering, mechanics and biology.

Physicist-turned-artist Jansen has been creating strandbeests since 1990. Iteratively designed and intricately assembled, Jansen’s self-propelled creatures have evolved over the years, becoming increasingly complex and lifelike, with specialized adaptations to help them survive in their seaside environment.

On tour for the first time in North America, the exhibition is illuminated by artist sketches, immersive video, live beest demonstrations, and the lyrical photography of Lena Herzog, who spent more than seven years documenting the strandbeests’ evolution."
We watched one strandbeest move, then watched a 30-minute documentary, "Strandbeesten", which featured music by Marcio Doctor.

Afterward, we drove down Highway 1 and ate, at Cameron's Restaurant & Inn, for the first time. I went with the "King's Draught", which turned out to represent Hop Dogma's "Pyros Prost":
"Pyros Prost - In the mood for something unique? This chili beer has an American rye as its base but then has habanero and jalapeño peppers added post fermentation.  It’s hot, but not overwhelming. The nose is of freshly cut peppers and it pairs quite well with many foods.  6% ABV (Honorable mention for specialty beer of the year at the Los Angeles International Beer Competition)"
Dawn had a can of Murphy's Irish Stout , and we split an "English Pastie: 'Pasty stuffed with beef, potatoes, peas, carrots, and smothered in rich gravy'" and a Chocolate Brownie Sundae. Dawn had wanted to go to Tartine Bakery, but we decided to postpone.

The pub had a book on the shelf, "Folklore of the Australian pub", by Bill Wannan (1972), ISBN 0333139062.

Links:
http://www.exploratorium.edu/strandbeest
https://www.jwz.org/blog/2016/06/backstage-at-the-exploratorium-heat-exchanger-is-a-truly-epic-series-of-tubes/

Monday, August 22, 2016

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty


  • LIFE MAGAZINE - Negative Asset Manager, 16 years. Reference: Sean O'Connell (address upon request)
  • One of 3 known non-Navy SEALs to helicopter “free release” in gale-force waters (North Sea).
  • In a single day: Biked, ran, and long-boarded over 17 kilometers to Eyjafjallajokull volcanic eruption.
  • Scaled highest peak of Noshaq Mountain (northwestern Afghanistan face)
  • On Icelandic fishing trawler, earned keep as boatswain (unpaid deckhand) for one day


Sunday, August 14, 2016

Radio Song

Iron & Wine (Sam Beam) and Jesca Hoop's, "Every Songbird Says", from their 2016 album, "Love Letter for Fire", on the Sub Pop label. Audio. Lyric: "I'm a mountain side, I can wash away."

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Santa Cruz Apartments

Surveying the area
  • Capitola Cove Apartments
    • URL: http://capitolacoveapartments.com/
    • Pets:
      • Cats OK
      • Pet deposit: 
      • Pet rent: 
    • Floorplans:
      • Floor Plan A (850-950 Square Feet): Same as B, but no balcony
      • Floor Plan B (850-950 Square Feet): Balcony
      • Floor Plan C (1000-1300 Square Feet): Same as C, but no pantry
      • Floor Plan D (1000-1300 Square Feet): Pantry
      • Floor Plan E  (1300-1650 Square Feet): No balcony
      • Note: all 2 bed, 1 bath
      • Utilities:
        • Water and Garbage included
    • Corporate: Elizabeth/Liz Hirata (and Mel); E&M Properties, PO Box 2869, Santa Clara, CA 95055 Santa Clara, CA 95055 
    • Property Management:
      • Hours: Tuesday-Friday: 9am-12pm 1pm-5pm Saturday: 10am-2pm Sunday-Monday: Closed
      • Resident Manager: Jennie Machado
      • Contacted: 
        • Thursday, August 11 (a.m.), via web site contact form, requesting info
    • Site visit: Saturday, August 13, around noon
      • Small complex
      • Met Jennie Machado, resident manager (1905 Wharf Road, Unit A, Capitola, CA; 831-475-6342; fax: 831-475-8054)
      • Met resident, lived there a number of years, suggested rent keeps going up; most expensive: $2,600; least expensive: $2,100
  • Capitola Gardens
    • URL: http://www.capitolagardensapts.com/
    • Pets:
      • Cats OK (max 2)
      • Pet deposit: $500
      • Pet rent: $50
    • Floorplans:
      • 1 bed, 1 bath
        • 589 square feet: 
        • Rent: 
      • ??
      • Utilities: 
      • Note: only seems to show available floorplans (?)
    • Corporate: Goldrich & Kest Industries
    • Property management
      • Hours: Mon: Closed Tue - Sat: 9:00AM to 6:00PM Sun: Closed
      • Resident manager: Tiffinie
      • Contacted: 
        • Thursday, August 11 (a.m.), via web site contact form, requesting info
  • Breakwater Apartments
RESOURCES

Monday, August 08, 2016

GOES - Global Online Enrollment System

KEVIN

Jul 30 - Submitted form
Aug 4 - Conditionally approved for interview
Aug 24, 2016 - Interview
Aug 24, 2016 - Full Approval with number.
Aug 30, 2016 - Receive card in mail.

DAWN

Jul 30 - Submitted form
Aug 8 - Conditionally approved for interview
Aug 24, 2016 - Interview
Aug 24, 2016 - Full Approval with number.
Aug 30, 2016 - Receive card in mail.

PARKING
  • When on 101, remain on the road towards International departures. You will come across a fork in the road as you drive up, stick to the left of the fork (do not go up the ramp) and once you take the left, stick to the right to get to the hourly parking A section of the garage (this will turn into G after a bit of navigating through the garage). Once in, make your way to the "G" section of the garage (follow the green lines on the road). At one point, you will completely exit out of the garage in order to reach the G section. 
  • Enter international departures, park in garage g. Go to the third floor of the parking garage. Keeping following signs for arrival. You'll see the signs for the office and a bunch of people waiting in line. (costing $38 for the entire time)
  • Anza park & fly and took the shuttle over as the Anza daily parking is $14, far less than the airport. 
  • Long Term parking and took the Bus to the international Terminal. It spits you out and just take the doors closest to you and go down to the staircase on the left. Tahdah.


https://www.yelp.com/biz/global-entry-office-san-francisco?sort_by=date_desc

24/7 Pilot ends Aug 10

INTERVIEW STEPS

  • Room can hold four appointments at a time, but dependent on staffing levels (that is, may only have three workers)
  • questions: 
    • have you ever committed a crime, where did you travel to, do you travel for leisure/business, etc. 
    • what countries did I visit, was I dual nationality, did I have my other passport (no), have I been arrested, have I had issues with customs or immigration?
  • fingerprinting
  • picture using a webcam


TIPS - WAITLIST

  • Arrive around 8 or 8:30pm--longer wait, but go home earlier
  • Put time on the waitlist, to avoid mixups
  • Get a seat very close to the office door or even just sitting on the floor near the office door, that way you don't have to get up and stress every time they come out and start calling names.
  • Charge devices
  • Water bottle, light snacks
  • Smile at staff--they're human too
  • slow or no work btw shift changes
  • "We were told 2 to 4 am is a good time to come for an interview. " on a weekday.
  • print out my letter and suggest you do to make things easier.
  • bring your passport and drivers license (with current address; if not up to date bring a utility bill with a current address. ) to the interview.if not up to date bring a utility bill with a current address. 
  • Each appointment lasts approximately 10 mins.

Oversized book display

Want to display the Phaidon book "The Art Museum", at 420 x 320 mm (16 1/2 x 12 5/8 in) and ~8kg/18lbs, on a coffee table.

I bought a $40 Taschen acrylic book stand but it broke under the weight.

SEARCH TERMS

book cradle extra large
book mount
book display stand
folio large book stand
dictionary stand
book blanket (blankies)
acrylic book cradle

More:
https://www.librarything.com/topic/205762


RESULTS

So far, lots of expensive options.

I like the idea of Mindell Dubansky's book blankie:


Acrylic costs much less, but I'd prefer wood/metal.

Laughing at Google returning "Cradle of Filth", in search results.

Update: We went with a rolled up bath towel. Works great.

Build Your Dream House for a Song

http://www.buildyourdreamhouse.com/index.htm

Saw David Cook's class at Cabrillo College, this fall, about how to build a home yourself.

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Radio Songs

Heard on KPFA 94.1 FM out of Berkeley, California, on Friday, July 22:

Dr. Loco's Rockin' Jalapeño Band's "Migra", from their 1992 album "Movimiento Music", on the Flying Fish label. Audio snippet

Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Plesiosauria Columba domestica: “The Monster of Monterey”

Dawn and I saw this artwork, on Monday:
Plesiosauria Columba domestica
“The Monster of Monterey” is inspired by the history, places and myths of Monterey Bay. Its humorous construction is taken from the 20th century stories of sea monsters found washed ashore. Its body is a larger than life pigeon skeleton combined with the tail, flippers and skull of a Plesiosaur suspended from the long boom of a luffing crane common to docks and ports. The sculpture is a hybrid built from disparate pieces just as myths are constructed from memories of everyday and unexplained experiences, fishing stories, and tall tales.
The Monster is currently installed in Santa Cruz, CA at the intersection of Pacific Ave. and Front St.
http://arnoldmartin.com/art-works/construct/the-monster-of-monterey-bay-santa-cruz-ca/

It's between Lulu Carpenter's and the post office.

Hair: Fashion and Fantasy by Laurent Philippon

Hair: Fashion and Fantasy
by Laurent Philippon

http://www.thamesandhudsonusa.com/books/hair-fashion-and-fantasy-softcover

Coffee table book I read, while waiting for Dawn's Sunday morning hair blowout, at salon Ginger Stylebar.

Monday, July 11, 2016

South Korea

PHONE


UCSC
  • TODO:
    • Before travel:
      • Complete form "Payee Setup 204"
      • Request CruzID Gold, if not yet obtained (for Connexxus access, and so forth)
      • Travel Advance Request (?): Complete for conference fees, etc.
      • Get Departmental Pre-Approval for Your Trip
      • Make Sure Your Payment Information is Up to Date
      • Pick a Way to Pay for Your Trip
      • Book Your Travel Through Connexxus or Another Means
        • Prepare an airfare cost analysis, comparing the cost of direct travel to the business destination, to the cost of mixed personal and business travel (an example, via Mixing Business with Pleasure? > Example of a Cost Comparison, and/or Getting "There" > How to Prepare a Cost Comparison)
          • Generally, airfare from point A to B (and B to A for return) is used as the baseline reimbursement for most business travel. Alternate modes of transportation will be compared to the cost of a round trip flight and its associated costs (e.g. shuttle, airport parking). You will be reimbursed the lesser of the two costs. 
          • Details:
            • Using Connexxus or another internet booking tool, print an estimate of a round trip coach flight to your business location using the business travel dates. Include cost of transportation to and from the airport--from your home or headquarters, whichever is closer
            • Attach the printed estimate to your Travel Advance Request, or Post Travel Expense form
            • In the form you submit, record the lesser of the two costs and include a comment that you elected to take an alternate mode of transportation that was more expensive
          • Basics:
            • Direct Travel Route to the Business Destination
            • Actual Travel Route to the Business Destination
      • Before Booking: 
      • Review the travel package with the appropriate travel expense approver or departmental/divisional office to determine which costs will be reimbursed.
      • Confirm with the package vendor that the receipt for the package will contain an itemized breakdown of component costs, including airfare, car rental, hotel, meals, etc.
    • Travel Processhttps://financial.ucsc.edu/Pages/Travel_Process.aspx
    • Travel "Keys"https://financial.ucsc.edu/Pages/Travel_Keys.aspx
    • Travel Formshttps://financial.ucsc.edu/Pages/Travel_Forms.aspx
    • Travel Training
    • FAST/AP Team Member
      • For assistance, locate your team from the listings below. If your unit / division is not listed, contact any FAST/AP Team Supervisor or call the FAST Help line at 459-4488.
      • Ostermeier, Karen - CE (Computer Engineering)
      • kloster@ucsc.edu
      • 459-1094
    • Travel Guide (that is, all the details):
      •  https://financial.ucsc.edu/Pages/travel_guide.aspx
      • Before you start:
        • before receiving a UCSC non-payroll payment.
      • Allowable expenses:
        • Baggage, checking and storage fees
        • Business office expenses:
          • Equipment rentals
          • Purchase of materials and supplies
          • Laundering, cleaning, or pressing of clothing if a trip is longer than six days
        • Meals and incidentals:
        • Travel is less than 30 days in one location: Reimbursement is based on US Department of State Federal Maximum Travel Per Diem Allowance for Foreign Areas
          • Direct links:
            • Above links to Taejon, an alias for Daejeon
            • Per Diem Rates, effective 2016-09-01:
              • Maximum Lodging Rate: $USD 124
              • M & IE Rate: $USD 82
              • Maximum Per Diem Rate: $USD 206
            • Breakdown of Meals/Incidentals Meal & Incidental Expenses (M&IE):
              • Get Per Diem rate, via above link
              • Calculate M&IE breakdown, by table
              • M & IE rate of 82 = 
                • Breakfast: $USD 12
                • Lunch: $USD 21
                • Dinner: $USD 33
                • Incidentals: $USD 16
        • Rail or bus travel: Rail or bus transportation may be used when required by the destination or by business necessity.
        • Special fees for foreign travel: passport photographs
        • Obtaining a passport, visa, tourist card, and necessary photographs
          • Certificates of birth, health, identity, and related affidavits
          • Currency conversion and check cashing fees
          • Traveler’s checks
          • Hiring guides, translators, and local labor
        • Telephone calls
          • Local and long distance telephone business calls are reimbursable
          • In addition, one reasonably brief, non-emergency, personal call home per day is reimbursable
      • Ways to Process
        • Overview
          • International travel:
            • International trip booking is available through Connexxus providers BCD or UC Travel Center, accessible through Connexxus' Premier Gateway website
            • Option 1: Search for the best deal and reserve the itinerary for 24 hours. Call BCD or UC Travel Center for an agent to book the reserved itinerary.
            • Option 2: Have an agent search for the best deal. Search fee: $0 (BCD & UC Travel) Agent calls BCD or UC Travel Center Agency booking fees are contingent on the airline and complexity of the itinerary
          • Travel insurance:
            • Connexxus users: Travelers are automatically signed up for UC Risk Insurance for intra U.S. travel and International travel through BCD and UC Travel
            • Non-Connexxus users: If you are traveling to an out-of-state or foreign destination, it is required that you register for UC-provided travel insurance through the UC Risk Services website to ensure coverage protection
        • Types of Travel
          • Mixed Business and Personal Travel
            • should be approved in advance
          • Spouse / Domestic Partner of Traveler: not allowable, as I'm not contributing significantly to the business events
        • Direct Billing Process and Direct Billable Vendors
          • Using Connexxus to direct bill your department for airfare can be completed by selecting "Book Now" located next to BCD Travel
          • Airport shuttles
        • Group travel: ???
        • Air travel
          • Connexxus is the preferred choice when booking air travel
          • “bundled” airfare and lodging packages obtained through an Internet travel agency will only be reimbursed if the agency provides a detailed receipt or invoice that separately identifies the costs of airfare, hotel, and incidentals
          • book coach or economy class airfare
          • Airport parking: For travel exceeding 24 hours, lower-cost, longer-term parking options should be used
        • Airport Shuttle Service
          • Discounted prices are only available to UCSC employee business travelers
          • See Group Travel
        • Receipt and Documentation Requirements
          • Note: Photocopies of receipts are not an acceptable substitute for original receipts.
          • Electronic receipts are acceptable as long as the detail provided is sufficient to substantiate the expense
      • Ways to Pay
        • Overview
          • Paying expenses for another traveler is not allowed unless it is for a shared hotel room
          • Airfare Op​​tions
            • ​​​Direct Billing - Select BCD in Connexxus: No
            • ​​Pay out of pocket: Yes
            • Pay With UC Travel Card Via Connexxus: No
          • Conference Registration
            • ​​​Pay Directly By UCSC:  Yes
            • ​​Pay out of pocket: Yes
            • Pay With UC Travel Card​​: No
          • ​​​Shuttle Service Options
            • ​​Direct Bill UCSC Via Specific Providers: Yes
            • ​Pay Out of Pocket: Yes
            • Pay With UC Travel Card​​: No
          • Hotel Options
            • Book Via Connexxus - Out of Pocket: No
            • Book Via Connexxus - Use UC Travel Card: No
            • Cash Advance for Hotel Costs​​: Yes
            • ​Pay Out of Pocket: Yes
          • Rental Car Options
            • ​Book Via Connexxus - Out of Pocket: No
            • Book Via Connexxus - Use UC Travel Card​​: No
            • Cash Advance for Rental Car Costs: No
            • Fleet Services Reservations: No
            • ​Pay Out of Pocket​: Yes
          • Non-employees
            • Post Travel Expense: Obtain reimbursement after travel concludes by completing and submitting a Post_Travel_Expense form within 45 days of trip completion.
            • Travel Advance Request: For incoming travelers, payment may be made directly for lodging by submitting a Travel Advance Request form.
        • Authorization​​ and Approvals
          • UC Travel Center Booking: Obtain a trip number by completing a Travel Advance Request prior to purchasing airfare from UC Travel Center
          • Travel Advance Request: Submit a Travel Advance Request if requesting a travel cash advance or prepayment of an expense
          • Post Travel Requirements: Report expenses after travel concludes using the Post_Travel_Expense within 45 days of trip completion.
        • Post Travel Expense Report Form
          • Original itemized receipts for each of the following types of expenses must accompany the Post_Travel_Expense to substantiate each expense’s necessity, appropriateness, and reasonableness
          • Divisional Funding Authorizer
            • responsible for reviewing and approving the report
            • supervisor, department chair, or senior campus official, who has been officially delegated authority to approve the funding for the payment of your travel expenses
          • Avoid these common Post Travel Expense oversights
            • Not including a written business purpose for travel
            • Forgetting to submit original, itemized receipts supporting each travel expense requiring substantiation
            • Forgetting to forward the Post_Travel_Expense to the Divisional Funding Authorizer for review and approval
            • Forgetting to reference trip number, if applicable.
            • Forgetting to provide departmental account code (FOAPAL) information
            • A non-resident alien forgetting to submit visa documentation, including a copy of the traveler’s visa, a Form I-94 Arrival Departure Record, or a Certification of Academic Activity Form.
            • Forgetting to sign the forms
            • First-time traveler forgetting to submit a Payee_Setup_204
  • Other:
travel.state.gov > Passports & International Travel > Country Information > Korea, South
https://travel.state.gov/content/passports/en/country/korea-south.html

  • Vaccinations: None
  • Passport pages: one page per entry stamp
  • Tourist visa: None required for stays under 90 days or less

Embasssy of the United States > Seoul, Korea > U.S. Citizen Services >
Travel Announcements and Security
http://seoul.usembassy.gov/acs_american_citizen_services.html

Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP)
https://step.state.gov/step/

Prescription drugs:

Pet boarding:
  • Bed & Biscuits Cat Boarding: http://www.bedandbiscuits.com/cat-boarding/
  • Peace of Mind Pet Sitting: http://peaceofmindpet.com/PetSittingservices.html
    • Includes mail pick-up, water plants, etc.
    • Rates for Vacation Visits for homes with Cats, Birds, or Pocket Pets *Only*: 
      • 20 Minute Visit - $20.00 & up per visit
      • 30 Minute Visit - $25.00 & up per visit
    • Keys:
      • We do collect 2 keys at the Free Consultation, one for sitter use and one for back-up. 
      • We do not allow keys to be left under mats, in mail boxes or anywhere else unsecured. We want your home and pets safe
      • Key Pick up - $10 If you need us to pick up your key for scheduled services and not at the Free Consultation. We will schedule a sitter to meet you at your convenience. 
      • Key Drop off - $10 If you would like your key back, we will schedule a sitter to meet you at your convenience. We do not mail keys as keys have gotten lost that way. 
      • Lock box - $20 This is a lock box that is secured to your front door and is yours to keep, you can leave your key in there and will never leave your property. We can give this to you at the Free Consultation or Deliver one at a time good for you.
    • Contact
      • Phone: 831.392.8020
      •  Other: ???
Passports:
  • 2016-07-11 Passport applications submitted: 
    • Kevin in person, at the Santa Cruz County Clerk's Office (more than 15 years since last issuance)
    • Dawn mailed, via USPS (less than 15 years since last issuance)
  • ???
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE TRAVEL CHECKLIST

  • Carry-on:
    • Eye-mask
    • Travel-sized toiletries:
      • Hair brush
      • Toothbrush
      • Toothpaste
      • Mini deodorant
      • Dry shampoo (recommended: Oscar Blandi)
    • Linen face blotters
    • Refreshing face spray
    • Electronics:
      • Laptop
      • Laptop Charger
      • International power adapters
      • Mini power strip
      • Cell phone
      • Cell phone charger
      • Flashdrive
      • Dongles which use regularly
      • Any adapters needed to connect your computer to a projector
      • Extra:
        • Kindle
        • Noise-canceling headphones
  • Traveling
    • Printouts 
      • Condense to one page; keep in wallet/passport bag:
        • Flight information
        • Hotel reservation (with address)
        • Maps
        • Location of the conference center
      • Travel reason proof, for border crossing:
        • Conference registration
        • Talk/poster acceptance letter
    • Water bottle
    • Guides
      • TripAdvisor
      • US Department of State
    • Identification
      • Passport bag around neck
        • Passport
        • Printed copy of passport
        • Boarding passes
  • Conference essentials
    • Business cards
    • Color copies of poster (if presenting one)
    • Note-taking:
      • Writing utensils
      • Notebook (for example, Moleskin)
    • Water bottle
    • Reusable travel mug
    • Umbrella
    • Small purse or bag (note: so don't have to lug laptop bag to dinner)
    • Snacks (granola bars, fruit, nuts)
    • Travel baby wipes, hand sanitizer (note: when bathroom essentials lacking)
    • List of people to introduce yourself to (note: search the program online in advance, workshop, lunch, or field trip)
  • Packing
    • Outfits for each day, plus backup (in case of wardrobe malfunction)
      • Underwear
      • Socks
      • Accessories: belts/leggings, jewelry
    • Outdoor wear
      • Coat
      • Jacket
      • Raincoat
      • Umbrella
      • Hat
      • Mittens
    • Shoes: comfortable, weather appropriate
    • Toiletries:
      • Toothbrush
      • Toothpaste
      • Deodorant
      • Soap
      • Shampoo/conditioner
      • Hair products/hair dryer
      • Nail clippers
      • Shaving needs
      • contact lenses/solution
      • feminine hygiene products
      • bite splints/retainers
      • makeup
      • medication
    • ID:
      • Passport
      • Travel visa (if needed)
      • Wallet
      • Debit/credit cards
    • Talk:
      • Backup (!)
      • Poster (with print-outs, in a poster tube with your contact info)
    • Good to have:
      • Mini sewing kit (for lost buttons, etc.)
      • Travel laundry bag (these are great)
      • Books, papers, or files you need to work while you travel (or finish your talk)
    • Location of lodging, conference center, flight information, transportation itineraries, etc.
  • Before you leave:
    • Notify credit card companies of where and when will travel

  • Resources:
    • https://contemplativemammoth.com/2011/07/21/inqua-2011-part-1-packing-for-a-conference/
    • http://thewirecutter.com/reviews/travel-guide/
    • http://www.onebag.com/



Resources

Saturday, July 09, 2016

Have you ever seen the rain?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Have_You_Ever_Seen_the_Rain%3F

Heard this Creedence Clearwater Revival song, from from 1970 album "Pendulum", on the Fantasy label, in two different formats, simultaneously, last weekend:

  1. Album version, playing over speakers, at Marini’s Westside, 332 Ingalls St., Santa Cruz
  2. Acoustic guitarist, playing an amplified cover version, on the outdoor patio of MJA Vineyards Westside Tasting Room & Cellar, 328-A Ingalls Street Santa Cruz
Coincidence : ) Different tempo, key, and so forth.

Monday, July 04, 2016

Dawn dress colors

We purchased this candle:
Pacifica Tibetan Mountain Temple Soy Candle

The packaging has these colors, which Dawn would like in a dress:

Orange:
#fc7600
RGB: 250, 117, 0
Hue/Saturation/Lightness: 28, 100, 98

Light blue:
#bce0e0
RGB: 186, 222, 222
HSL: 180, 16, 87

Blue-grey:
#dce3e1
RGB: 220, 227, 225
HSL: 163, 3, 89

Yellow:
#fae370
RGB: 250, 227, 112
HSL: 50, 55, 98

Pink:
#fcab9d
RGB: 250, 170, 157
HSL: 8, 37, 98

Red:
#b8311f
RGB: 184, 49, 31
HSL: 7, 83, 72

Gold:
#a17822
RGB: 161, 119, 35
HSL: 40, 78, 63



Saturday, July 02, 2016

San Francisco Opera: Opera at the Ballpark: Bizet’s "Carmen":

San Francisco Opera: Opera at the Ballpark presents Bizet’s "Carmen":
Where: AT&T Park, 24 Willie Mays Plaza,
              San Francisco, CA 94107 
When: Saturday, July 2 at 7:30pm
Details:
http://sfopera.com/discover-opera/free-events/san-francisco-opera-at-att-park/

Parking spot:
Spothero, 120 Hawthorne St. - Lot

What we consumed:
  • Colossal Dog with sauerkraut
  • Root beer
  • Bavarian Jumbo Pretzel, salted
  • Blue Moon beer
  • Regular fries
  • Guinness beer
We purchased a SF Opera fleece blanket. It helped, but we ended up leaving during the intermission, due to cool weather and wind.

Thoughts, for next time:
  • Windy, so bundle up even more so
  • Blanket
  • Food
We last saw Verdi's "Rigoletto", on Saturday, September 15, 2012. At that time, we had brats and beer, sitting in the bleachers. We parked and walked to the event, but took the shuttle back, I think. After the performance, we walked around the infield a bit.


Thursday, June 30, 2016

Stanford University's R. Buckminster Fuller Digital Collection:

Stanford University Library's R. Buckminster Fuller Digital Collection:
https://collections.stanford.edu/bucky/bin/page?forward=home
The R. Buckminster Fuller Digital Collection consists of audio and video materials culled and digitally reformatted from the R. Buckminster Fuller Collection at Stanford. This project is supported in part by a grant from the federal Save America's Treasures Program, a joint program of the National Parks Service and the National Trust for Historic Preservation, administered by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Free registration required.

Monday, June 27, 2016

KDFC Coming to Monterey Bay

Excited--KDFC coming to the Monterey Bay:

Predicted Coverage Area for 103.9 FM, Seaside, CA
https://radioinsight.com/blog/headlines/106846/mount-wilson-divests-two-monterey-signals-to-usc/
http://universityofsoutherncalifornia.cmail19.com/t/ViewEmail/j/6F2BE3A1CE91F93F/4FD4882CCFD369A6A10BC276F201ED4B

USC Radio Group, which operates KDFC, gets the 95.9FM and 103.9FM frequency spectrum, which they will get new call numbers for.

Saul Levine represents the current owner of the two stations, via Mt. Wilson Broadcasters, Inc., of Los Angeles. It seems he supports classical music and this may represent his way of passing the torch. Saul will retain the existing call numbers and convert them to non-commercial status.
Predicted Coverage Area for KMZT 95.9 FM, Big Sur, CA
We occasionally listen to KMZT 95.9FM, at our Santa Cruz apartment, which comes through, but a bit fuzzily. This may give us a clearer signal. : )

Sunday, June 26, 2016

Pogonip hike

http://www.gmap-pedometer.com/?r=6894506

Sights:
The San Lorenzo River Trail Run - 50 Km Marathon 30 Km Half Marathon 10 Km
Mass of One stickers...seems like their web site no longer exists (?) for example
GetAround.com - car sharing...the car we saw drove away with a drink on the top, which promptly fell off : (



Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Wear Navy

I disagree:
"Why you should wear black"
http://om.co/2016/06/15/why-you-should-wear-black/
My pale skin looks like a ghost, in black, but, for different people, it looks amazing. On the other hand, navy works, for me.

Also, too: the dress is blue and gold.

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Radio Songs

Heard on 94.1 FM KPFA out of Berkeley, California:

Brazil-native Teresa Cristina's "Pranto de Poeta", from her 2016 album "Canta Cartola (Ao Vivo)", on the Uns Produções e Filmes label. Audio.

Maravilha!

Saturday, June 11, 2016

Myopia, Astigmatism - 2016

Results of my Saturday test, from the CostCo Santa Cruz Optomotrist:

Eyeglass Prescription
O.D. (Oculus Dexter, my right eye):

  • SPH: plano (no refractive error)
  • CYL: -1.00
  • AXIS: 070
  • PRISM/BASE: n/a
  • ADD: n/a
O.S. (Oculus Sinister, my left eye):
  • SPH: -1.00
  • CYL: -0.75
  • AXIS: 089
  • PRISM/BASE: n/a
  • ADD: n/a

RESULTS, TRENDS OVER EIGHT YEARS

First eye exam, in about five years--well overdue...surprised how fast time has gone by.

Overall, my new optometrist did not seem concerned. After obtaining my current prescription (by measuring my current eyeglasses), she noted my left eye had a small astigmatism increase, but remains low.

Nearsightedness seems flat, to me, since 2011. Each eye has changed astigmatism direction, by ten degrees, in opposite directions.
Refractive Power - Nearsightedness (Myopia), 2008-2016
Astigmatism - Amount, 2008-2016

Astigmatism - Direction, 2008-2016

BACKGROUND

All measurements represented in units of dioptres, a unit that represents focusing power. More dioptres mean more focusing power--so if the numbers get big, that means you need a "stronger" prescription to see clearly.

SPH means sphere--a positive number represents farsightedness and a negative number represents nearsightedness. Why? In a farsighted eye, the curve of the cornea is flatter than the curve of a normal cornea, so the correction involves "adding" to the farsighted eye to get it back to normal. In a nearsighted eye, the curve of the cornea extends farther than the curve of the normal cornea, so the correction involves "subtracting" from that curve to bring it back to a normal curvature. The point being to get the cornea back to focusing light on the retina like a normally curved cornea does. The larger the number (positive or negative) the larger the deviation from the normal curvature of the cornea, and the blurrier the vision.

CYL means cylinder, and represents the amount of power needed to correct a cornea with astigmatism (a cornea that's oval-shaped, which causes blurring (see the picture at the top), as opposed to a normal cornea that's symmetrically round like a basketball)--DS means no astigmatism.

AXIS, for astigmatic eyes, represents a line passing through the middle of the oval-shaped cornea--in my case through the longer side. In my right eye, I need minus-one dioptre of correction along the axis specified (see the Wikipedia article for an explanation of why it's not "078" like the prescription says). I believe reducing the focusing power of the longer part of the oval-shaped cornea helps the cornea focus in a more spherical manner.

20/20 vision means the ability to read a character 8.84 mm high at a distance of 20 feet.

Lanna's suggestions on glasses frame colors: navy, light blue, plum.

Pupillary Distance:
I don't think this changes, over time: In 2011, CostCo staff measured my PD for me: 32.5 for each eye, for a total of 65.

Previously:


Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Books

Yellowbill Cafe and Bakery, 1425 14th St, Sacramento, displays two books:

First, a paperback book, from 2007, titled, "7th Letters First", detailing mural artwork by The Seventh Letter collective. From the LA Weekly:
"The seventh letter is, of course, G, which in this case stands for “Gods of Graffiti” and represents what may be the most ambitious, racially diverse and prolific crew ever assembled. With more than 100 members operating under the Seventh Letter banner, names like Revok, Retna, Saber, Push, Rime and Zes are just a few to watch as they fast become L.A.’s modern muralists."
http://www.laweekly.com/arts/the-rise-of-the-seventh-letter-2149613
The book seems out of print, now, and may have represented a promotional tool for a film

More:
http://knowngallery.com/
http://store.theseventhletter.com/
https://www.royalelastics.com/
http://theseventhletter.com/blog/tsl-films/
http://gallery.theseventhletter.com/

Second, a book about coffee, "Hiroshi's Latte Art and Barista Style" (2012)
ISBN-13: 978-4862561091

Capitalism in the Web of Life

Heard this author on 94.1 KPFA FM, out of Berkeley, California:
http://www.jasonwmoore.com/Weboflife.html
Finance. Climate. Food. Work. How are the crises of the 21st century connected? In Capitalism in the Web of Life, Jason W. Moore argues that today’s global turbulence has a common source: capitalism as a way of organizing nature, including human nature. Drawing on environmentalist, feminist, and Marxist thought, Moore offers a groundbreaking new synthesis: capitalism as a “world-ecology” of wealth, power, and nature. Capitalism’s greatest strength – and the source of its crisis today – has been its capacity to create Cheap Natures: labor, food, energy, and raw materials. That capacity is now in question. Rethinking capitalism through the pulsing and renewing dialectic of humanity-in-nature, Moore takes readers on a journey from the rise of capitalism to the crisis today.  The limits to capitalism are real enough. But they cannot be reduced to “natural limits” or “economic crisis.”  They are both – and they are more than their social and environmental dimensions. Capitalism in the Web of Life shows how the critique of capitalism-in-nature – rather than capitalism and nature – is key to understanding the crisis today, and to pursuing the politics of liberation in the century ahead. 
Noting only for reference, later.

Radio Songs

Heard on 94.1 KPFA FM, out of Berkeley, California:

Oakland, California-based Los Rakas' "Abrazame", featuring Faviola (link?), produced by Uproot Andy, a 2011 single. Lyrics. Video; Making of the video. [Note: This seems to represent a cover of Jamaican-native Gyptian's "Hold You", from his 2010 album "Hold You", on the VP and Columbia labels. Video.]

Sacramento <> Ocean City, Maryland Highway Signs

Motorists traveling on 50 East in Sacramento may be familiar with this perfectly normal-looking mileage sign — on first glance, it’s like every other mileage sign along California highways listing the cities you’ll be passing with the number of miles to go.

But on second glance, this sign gives pause — Placerville is about an hour away, and South Lake Tahoe double that, depending on traffic. But why does far-off Ocean City, Maryland merit a mention?

The simple fact is that US 50 paves 3,000-plus miles from Ocean City, Maryland to Sacramento, California, but there’s more to the story.

In the 1980s John R. Cropper, Jr. worked as the head of statewide highway maintenance for Caltrans. Cropper, now 92, was the man who instigated the sign listing Ocean City, MD as 3073 down the road.

“Years ago, I was back in Ocean City, and they had a sign that said, ‘Sacramento California so many thousand miles’ so I thought, ‘well, that’s a pretty good idea, we should reciprocate,’ so we did," Cropper says.

And that was that. Cropper says he didn’t have to get approval from anyone; he had the clout to make it happen, but he was met with some resistance.

“I can remember I got a lot of static from Caltrans people because I had been conducting a campaign to get rid of unnecessary signs — and this really was an unnecessary sign,” says Cropper with a wink. “It didn’t mean anything to anybody except people who had some connection — anyway, it’s still there as far as I know.”

The original sign Caltrans put up indicating the terminus of Highway 50. Wikimedia / Creative Commons
Cropper knew that sign maintenance was expensive. This sign ended up costing the state quite a bit of money because it kept getting stolen.

According to a 2002 article in the Sacramento Bee, the sign was stolen twice, once in 1999 and then again two years later. Caltrans redesigned the sign to include the distances to Placerville and South Lake Tahoe, making it bigger and harder to throw in the back of a truck. But when the new sign went up there was a problem with the mileage. Instead of 3,073 miles to Ocean City, the sign incorrectly read 3,037. Caltrans noticed the error and placed a cover over the last two numbers correcting the mistake.

The Bee article reported that it would have taken two to three months and more than $1,000 to replace the whole sign; the patch solution cost $10.

But let’s go back to Cropper’s original motivation for sign on US 50. Where did the “Sacramento, California” sign in Ocean City, Maryland come from?

On the other side of the continent, we found David Buck, a spokesperson for the Maryland State Highway Administration. Buck’s father, Ed Buck, was a Maryland highway engineer in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s. It was his idea to mark the eastern end of Highway 50 in Ocean City.

The terminus of Highway 50 in Ocean City Maryland. Wikimedia / Creative Commons
“Highway signs obviously are very regulated, in terms of what you can put up there. So when you put something up that’s a little different, or a little unusual like this, people take notice,” says the younger Buck.

One of the people who took notice turned out to be the right person who could approve a reciprocal sign in Sacramento. David says Maryland officials did reach out to Sacramento about doing a sign of their own, but it never went anywhere — until Cropper saw the Sacramento sign himself.

“I think it’s neat that my father was part of something that lasted that long," Buck says. "It’s interesting and unique — it’s not standard.”

Link:
http://www.capradio.org/articles/2016/05/06/two-coasts,-two-cities,-two-signs-the-story-behind-the-ocean-city-md-3073-sign/

Rainy Saturday

Balcony, rain, cats, post-coffee Saturday; if I crane my neck I can see the Pacific Ocean. This is all right.

Banner-towing fixed-wing airplane sign:
HUGE SALE AT ARROW SURF SHOP NOW ! !
http://www.arrowsurfshop.com/

We passed this surf shop earlier, as we went to Jamba Juice, to buy a small Pomegranate Paradise, to soothe Dawn's throat.


Tuesday, May 03, 2016

Grateful Dead - Notes of a first-time listener of the live shows

Listening to Grateful Dead, live, for the first time, really, via the amazing Archive.org resource.

Today, 1989 concerts, from Rich Stadium and Greek Amphitheater.

Live at Rich Stadium on 1989-07-04
https://archive.org/details/gd89-07-04.aud.wiley.9045.sbeok.shnf
"No our love will not fade away" -- a chant to bring the band back, for an encore.

1989-08-19: Greek Theatre, U. Of California
https://archive.org/details/gd89-08-19.sbd.5213.sbeok.shnf

Can't say I'm a big fan, but am finding the rambling live music infectious. Will try to record thoughts as they seem noteworthy.

Sunday, May 01, 2016

Sundown

Second floor, University of California, Santa Cruz McHenry Library, watching the sun set, streaming through redwood tree branches and through multi-story library windows, listening to Grateful Dead, Live at Winterland Arena, on 1977-06-09.

65 F, 29.91 in pressure, clear sky, dew point 49 F, humidity 55%, wind from NNW at 4.2mph, sunset at 7:57 p.m. PDT.

Shoe Shopping, Sockshop and Shoe Company, Santa Cruz:

Shoes seen, at the Sockshop and Shoe Company, Santa Cruz:

Bernie Birdie

A friend placed this Bernie Birdie sticker, in their window.

Noh Masks, at California State University, Sacramento University Library Gallery

The California State University, Sacramento University Library Gallery currently features an exhibit, "Traditions Transfigured Noh Masks of Bidou Yamaguchi", February 11, 2016 - May 21, 2016.

http://www.al.csus.edu/sota/ulg/

"The human face and its expressive potential have inspired artists around the world for millennia. Arguably, Japan’s Noh theater provides an unparalleled domain for exploring emotion and representing the human countenance. Today, Noh continues to inspire a dynamic dialogue between artists from Asia and the west. Expanding on this rich vein, Traditions Transfigured features contemporary works by Bidou Yamaguchi (b. 1970, Fukuoka, Japan). These masks apply the forms, techniques, transformative spirit, and mysterious elegance of Noh masks to iconic female portraits from the European art historical canon, and to Kabuki actor prints by Sharaku, Japan’s enigmatic 18th century portrait master. 
Like a human face, the work of Bidou Yamaguchi opens itself to many angles of interpretation. The product of a Noh mask carver who also creates modern sculpture in the form of masks, Bidou’s art speaks to issues such as cultural identity, gender, portraiture, performance, representation, and appropriation, as well as the roles of beauty and craft in contemporary art. 
Our fundamental premise is that Bidou’s art is informed by the world of Noh, and, in turn, offers insight into this diversely creative realm of theater and image making. We stress the productive links between Bidou’s roles as a “traditional” artisan who works to reproduce old masks and a contemporary artist who makes new objects. We treat these fresh creations as “masks,” although they were not commissioned for use in Noh plays. In fact, the oblique orientation of the eyes in most of these portraits differentiates them from Noh masks. Despite these differences, our approach imagines these works as potential characters in future dramas. 
In the world of Noh, Bidou’s work challenges the conventions of Noh masks and, by extension, might stimulate new types of Noh plays. More expansively, Bidou’s art suggests ways of deploying the aesthetic strategies and ontological assumptions of Noh. This is not simply another strategy for “modernizing within tradition” in Japan, or a new manifestation of Japanese cultural uniqueness with universal application. Bidou’s work is not aimed at any totalizing theory about contemporary art practice, and certainly the artist has produced no manifesto to such an end. 
Instead, his art seems focused on a particular task. Bidou’s masks are a kind of intercession on behalf of half-human, half-artistic spirits. His works are transfigurations that bring about reincarnations into a transformed body (keshin) that is the true body (hontai) for figures like Lisa Gherardini who have become so well known as images (the Mona Lisa) that they all but cease to exist as humans. This act is analogous to the procedure of intercession or recuperation in the texts of Noh plays. However, unlike Noh plays, where this literary rebirth recuperates the socially unacceptable acts and desires of women and other marginalized figures, Bidou gives a new body—literally, a face with the potential of speaking—to persons who have been turned into “ghosts” by mechanical reproduction, popular appropriation, and, perhaps, a deeper unwillingness to comprehend the humanity of people removed from us in time and place. 
Bidou’s art constructs a three-dimensional face for these rhetorical ghosts, and thus brings about an altered understanding of these persons who have become so familiar as images they are almost invisible as the vestiges of souls. Although his art is rooted in a Buddhist worldview, it resonates with the Christian idea of transfiguration as a change in form or appearance that parallels a spiritual change, and it signals the exultant moment when the human meets the divine so that the temporal becomes the eternal. 
By transfiguring both European and Japanese artistic traditions, Bidou Yamaguchi’s work merges past and present. More importantly, it allows contemporary audiences to uncover deeper dimensions of their own humanity. By imagining ourselves wearing different faces, we can forge deeper spiritual connections with each other. 
Kendall H. Brown, PhD
Guest Curator

Donaldson Torit, at University of California, Santa Cruz

Saw a Donaldson Torit product, at University of California, Santa Cruz, near the E2 building, of the School of Engineering.

Looked like a collector, of some sort.

Monday, April 25, 2016

Integrated Control Corp. Kitchen Minder Series Quality Grade Display

Saw an Integrated Control Corp. "Kitchen Minder Series" Quality Grade display, at the CSUS Burger King:

At the time, it read, "D+". Curious about what that reflects...service response time (?)
http://www.goicc.com/kmhelp.html

Radio Songs

Listened to KPFA 94.1 FM, out of Berkeley, California, who featured University of Wisconsin, Madison professor Ramzi Fawaz:

"How has the figure of the comic book superhero played into left-wing political projects and aspirations? In his new book, Ramzi Fawaz argues that the reinvention of the American superhero was a response to, and a factor in, the rise of radical political sensibilities and movements in the 1960s and beyond."
Link: https://kpfa.org/episode/against-the-grain-april-25-2016/

Listened to the first part while driving through the Bay Area, then switched to online streaming, for the remainder.

Sunday, April 24, 2016

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

UC Santa Cruz McHenry Library - 2nd Floor Touch Screen Display

The UC Santa Cruz McHenry Library has a large touch display on the 2nd floor, near the main entrance.

It appears they partnered with vendor Four Winds Interactive, to provide the display hardware and software:
http://www.fourwindsinteractive.com/

Staff write:
"The FourWinds system was installed in the spring of 2012. The screens are 46" NEC / Canvys V462's w/3M Dispersive Signal Technology (DST) Touch Screen overlays. Screen content is driven by Medius FWP61-BSW microcomputers running Windows 7. The interface is proprietary software owned by FourWinds."
Links:



Monday, April 18, 2016

Superfeet Copper

Replacing stock insoles with size E, of the following:

https://www.superfeet.com/en-us/copper

Tried on just about every style, at REI. They all felt similar, but these have a memory foam top layer, so giving it a try.

Robert L. Canson - First African-American Police Officer, City of Sacramento

Sign reads:

In Memory Of
Robert L. Canson
1918 - 2001

Beloved Peace Officer and Friend
First African-American Police Officer
City of Sacramento

Sunday, April 17, 2016

Radio Songs - Instrumental Surf Music

Kevin has identified Surf Music, specifically, instrumental surf. So good!

Heard on KDVS 90.3 FM out of Davis, CA on Friday, April 15:

  • Show Sub Zero, "Exploring classic and modern instrumental surf music and other styles. The music is so cool it's sub zero."
Note: this answers a question, for me, about what style of music this represents, first recognized while watching The Red Elvises, which Wikipedia repots as performing, "funk rock, surf, rockabilly, reggae, folk rock, disco and traditional Russian styles of music...Their music filled the soundtrack of Lance Mungia's independent film released in 1998, Six-String Samurai, a film in which they also had small roles and screen credits."

Can't wait to learn more/listen more.

FasTrak First Use: Antioch Bridge

Used it first during a north-bound crossing of Antioch Bridge, on Monday, April 4, at noon. Worked great.

Note: had planned to use it while crossing the Benicia–Martinez Bridge, but missed my turn and ended up crossing at the Antioch Bridge.

Cliff Swallows Have Returned To Santa Cruz

Note: not sure if this represents the species we see here, in Santa Cruz, or not 
Wikipedia:
"Petrochelidon is a genus of birds known as cliff-nesting swallows. The genus includes all of the five species of birds commonly called cliff swallow...."
Noticed them this weekend, for the first time this year. They speedily swoop by, circle, dive, ascend. Maybe 12-24 in sight, at any one time? They seem to individually fly, not flock. One web site describes their song: "guttural grating sounds and squeaks" which sounds unpleasant, but seems just fine, to me. Our cats seem to find it all very entertaining.

The birds return annually to nest, then return to South America, to over-winter.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrochelidon
http://www.nativeanimalrescue.org/the-amazing-swallow/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_birds_of_Santa_Cruz_County,_California