7/31/04

Wedding Day!

Thank you for coming and sharing in our celebration of Bryce and Elisa’s wedding.

My name is Sean and I am Bryce’s older brother. I’ve been asked offer a toast to the groom.

As Bryce’s brother I’m sure you are expecting a list of amusing childhood anecdotes that make Bryce sweat slightly but eventually end up being mildly humorous tales.

I’m going to pass on those.

However, given Bryce’s current career as a lawyer, for the record I’d like to state that the incident where my friends and I dropped Bryce on his head from a height onto our concrete front porch was completely unplanned and he appears to have suffered no ill effects.

Also, for the record, I always admired Bryce’s ability to demand a reasonable, rational explanation for the indignities that are a part of every small child’s life. My parents may have a different opinion.

So instead of speaking about how Bryce was a challenging child I thought I’d speak about the kind of man he has become.

This is the part where I started getting choked up writing the speech. If all else fails I plan to retreat to sporting metaphors.

The kind of man Bryce is…

He is an articulate, intelligent man with a keenly developed sense of right and wrong.

He has a great love for Elisa, for art, for music and for fine food. He has grasped his life and is living it well.

I’ll let Shelia address all of Elisa’s wonderful qualities but I’d certainly say we’re glad she’ll be part of our family.

Many of you know Bryce through work and school. I thought I’d take the time to offer two anecdotes about the summertime Bryce.

The first image I carry around of the summertime Bryce is his work as a youth camp leader. That summer I was working as a lifeguard in the pool at Pitt Meadows where both of us learned to swim. He was well tanned, in shorts and a tank top surrounded by kids at Pitt Meadows park. He always looked comfortable and in control and treated the children with respect and integrity. For the record, the governance structure on the field was a benevolent dictatorship but the kids were quite happy nonetheless.

The second image of summertime Bryce is of him and Elisa on the ultimate field. Bryce and Elisa have played ultimate for many years so I thought it was appropriate that we mention the sport. For the record again, Bryce says Elisa is the better player.

Several years back Bryce and Elisa and their team Ultrasuede were playing an ultimate game down at Jericho for the championship of their division. It was a beautiful summer evening with a light breeze and a perfect Vancouver moment with the oceans, beach and mountains as the backdrop.

The game began with a team cheer and baptism ritual where each team member held onto the disc with one hand and Bryce, as captain, made a short inspirational statement and then poured water over the disc. Then the highly competitive game began. There were layouts, blocked discs, amazing catches and out and out gut-churning running.

Ultrasuede was up by one and playing for the game point. The disc was thrown into the front corner of the end zone and I saw Bryce with his loping stride disappear into a group of bodies and a cloud of dust. Moments later he came rolling out with the disc in his hand and the game was over. They’d won. He’d done what the captain was supposed to do. A summer of hard work and a great team ended with a great result.

Many of you know of Bryce’s work ethic, his love of debate and his sharp intellect.

I want you also to remember that moment of Bryce and Elisa standing in the sun, covered in sweat and dust, celebrating.

To Bryce….


7/29/04


Picked up my tux today for the wedding on Saturday. No vest. Ivory shirt, shiny shoes.
Principles of Effective Research
This essay is intended as a letter to both myself and others, to hold up in the sharpest possible terms an ideal of research I believe is worth working toward. ... The philosophy underlying the essay is based on a famous quote attributed to Aristotle: "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit.'' Underlying all our habits are models (often unconscious) of how the world works. I'm writing this essay to develop an improved personal model of how to be an effective researcher, a model that can be used as the basis for concrete actions leading to the development of new habits.
EO Natural Hazards: Natural Hazards Main Page

Earth scientists around the world use NASA satellite imagery to better understand the causes and effects of natural hazards. The goal in sharing these images is to help people visualize where and when natural hazards occur, and to help mitigate their effects. All images in this section are freely available to the public for re-use or re-publication (please use credits as indicated for each image)

7/26/04


Made it to the gym tonight for a chest workout. Week 4 on the program. Slowly making progress. I've been working out downstairs in the Y which is much more an old school gym. Smith racks, free weights, chalk and lots or rubber mats to drop the weights on. I like it better than hydraulic weights and endless stairmasters. Reminds me of a gym in the maple ridge I worked out at one summer. One room, one partially broken exercise bike, on heavy bag and a whole lot of weight. The owner lived downstairs, you let yourself in, fired up the stereo and went to work.

Had a second proposal meeting with this company today with the CEO and the marketing manager to pitch a web site redevelopment. I think the meeting went reasonably well. There are two other quotations, one below my price point and one above. I should find out by next wednesday.

7/25/04


Brother and sister-in-law in on the red eye from new york for their wedding. I picked them up at the airport this morning, mcdonalds for breakfast, a little tour de france, a lot of baby time. Second breakfasts at D'alle Acqua and followed by throwing the disc in the sunshine at Kits beach.

We went out to visit a portugese water dog breeder in Mission on Saturday. She had 5 puppies for us to play with. I'm hoping to get a dog for next March. It was a hot summer day and we spent the rest of it on a friends farm by the lake in Hatzic.

7/22/04

http://www.jibjab.com/
A parody of Woody Guthrie's 'this land is your land' with john kerry and george bush.


From this weeks GreenTide, for the full article please go to:
http://www.tidepool.org/original_content.cfm?articleid=123336

Homebuilders across the country commonly host "Street of Dreams"
showcases that display the latest trends in home construction and
design. The events are often tours of jaw-dropping model homes that are
spacious and luxurious, boasting all the modern amenities today's
American typical family lusts after. The huge homes, sporting floorplans
often more than 4,000 square feet, can top out at over the $1 million
mark, making them gaudy examples of suburban excess that few of us will
likely ever attain. Lately, a new version of the Street of Dreams idea
has sprouted -- tours that highlight new environmentally conscious
"green" features that some architects and builders are incorporating
into new homes. While many of the key elements of green design are
present -- energy-efficient appliances and lighting, water conservation
measures, recycled materials and the like -- but the gaudiness and size
of the homes hasn't gone anywhere.

7/21/04

Now that's climbing

Been intently watching the tour de france each morning. Individual time trial was today where lance armstrong dominated yet again. An amazing athletic feat. See the stage profile for an understanding of what he climbed in 39 minutes and change - beating everyone else (with the exception of ulrich) by two and a half minutes or more.

An 'orca' on the other side of the library. There are installations of these orcas all over the city. A nice addition to the urban landscape.

Public art in Vancouver. This is a sculpture outside the main branch ov the public library.

Sometimes you have those serendiptous stretches of time where everything is right with the world. In vancouver today is sunny with a steady breeze. The ocean view is marvelous and I spent the last hour listening to the latest Dianna Krall CD and dancing with my daughter. :-)
Another good ultimate day yesterday. We won two well contested games. This makes us 6 and 1 in the last 4 weeks and likely seeds us first going into the playoffs for our division. Our zone is strong, lots of disk movement with dumps and swing passes. We went to a 2-3-2 approach when being zoned ourselves and that seemed to open up some more space and provide simple structure. I played deep in the zone a couple times last night. It gets awfully lonely back there when you got the disc coming and you're outnumbered. :-) Overall a great night and a really good month for our team.

7/20/04

Mailinator(tm) FAQ: "In our internet world, you often need an email address NOW. Signing up for an email service takes time - that's probably ok for most emailing, but every now and then you need a quick email address for just a single email. After that you don't care what happens to it. Given that such disposable email is ready at your disposal, you can avoid giving out your real email address when you are afraid of getting spammed. Instead, make up any address @mailinator.com on the spot and go check it later."

7/15/04

Closed a contract today to set up a mail script to promote a conference by these folks. Society for Heart Valve Disease. A bit of walking around money.

Are you talking to me? Did you hear me boy! Are you talking to me? With apologies to bad mafia movies everywhere. :-)

Baby got her helmet this past Friday. Suitable pink, made of foam, plastic and laminate. She doesn't seem to mind it but we feel like we broke the baby. She works up to wearing the helmet 23 hours a day for 3 to 6 months.

7/13/04

Sustainable Development through Knowledge Integration: "The PathWays project addresses these questions. It bridges science and policy by working with decision-makers to incorporate earth science information in their decision processes via modeling methods and web based tools."

This is the project I work on, mostly on activities 2 and 3.

7/11/04

The Atomic Veterans History Project contains over 600 personal narratives about the military duties and memories of US Servicemen who witnessed these atomic and hydrogen weapons tests. Many veterans have sent photos, certificates and newspaper articles which we have added. There are over 500 photos from the recently declassified DOE atomic test films. Over 2500 files (stories, pictures and documents) are posted.

7/9/04


It's birthday season again in my family. Two people dear to me ticking off the years. Congragulations and good wishes to both.

7/7/04

Academy Award© nominated director Don Hertzfeldt's animated short films have collected 107 awards, four Grand Prizes, and a worldwide cult following. His films have been featured at the Cannes Film Festival, Sundance, MTV, IFC, Bravo, and several hundreds of film festivals in between.

http://www.bitterfilms.com/

7/5/04

ID cards: a guide for technically-challenged PMs

So how the blazes did this happen? Why is the UK sleepwalking into an ID scheme that has not been discussed, but that is nevertheless somehow moving ahead at full steam? And, for that matter, why is Europe doing so? The United States? The world?

[clip]

Given that the alleged free world is already barreling down this route with little or no sign that anybody has paused to think it through, we don't hold out a great deal of hope that they'll do so now, meaning they're all going to have to learn the hard and expensive way. But just in case there is the odd politician out there still prepared to consider the possibility that it does not stand to reason, we here propose a short, readily-understood Register explication of why it does not, and why, if we don't wake up very soon, we will end up spending several billion on proving to ourselves it does not.

7/4/04

Iraq: understanding the handover - OpenDemocracy.org

A New Pseudo-State

Finally, the week of "transition" has come. The rolling of drums (or is that the boom of mortars?), the handing over of what our President insists is "complete, full sovereignty" to an "Iraqi government," the moment for which this whole war was supposedly fought (once, at least, that every other conceivable reason fell away). Quite literally a year late and a dollar -- give or take a few billion -- short, Iraq reenters the world with its sovereignty weighed down and constrained by 97 L. Paul Bremer-inspired occupation administration "legal orders" that, for years to come, are meant to control practically all Iraqi acts from who can take part in elections to how you drive your car (two handed, no horns except in "emergency situations"). In a piece at TomDispatch, Adam Hochschild considers the ragged "pseudostate" we've just constructed in Iraq in the context of the history of pseudostates and the hubris that invariably lies behind their creation.

I just want to suggest that while the Bush administration, faced with unexpected resistance -- ever wider, ever deeper, ever more violent and horrific -- has spent the last year or more planning, bungling, and fumbling to bring its Iraqi pseudostate into existence, it has also given birth to another pseudocreation: a pseudo-opposition.

Numerous links to additional commentary.

updated headerbar

7/3/04


We walked down to Granville Island on Canada Day. There were lots of people wearing red and white and maple leafs everywhere. Tatoos, flags on the baby carriages and people wearing flags as capes. Free jazz performances in the square. The market was crammed and piled high with fresh fruit and vegetables. Picked up some strawberries, blueberries and okanagan cherries. Fresh fruit in the sunshine is always nice.

Preparing to go out for Canada Day party at Granville Island. It's all about the hat in the baby fashion shows this year. Floral is in, small prints are out.

7/2/04

When Mac users get attitude...

Penny Arcade
Movies they could have made...

Penny Arcade
How to deal with troublesome clients....

Penny Arcade
Expression By Proxy
Good writing, amazing use of flash for interaction. Also comes with music.