Categories
General

Very hot day, night at the Goose

The past couple days in Portland have been very hot. 100 degrees or so. Either way it’s been about 20 degrees above my comfort level. And again, as usual, I’m kicking myself for not having bought some kind of air conditioning unit for my house. Granted, these super hot days don’t last long, and there aren’t that many of them in a given summer, but as always it means I’m not sleeping well, and just feel generally exhausted. Bleh.

At around 5pm Kelly and I went to the Goose Hollow Inn for dinner with friends. They have air conditioning. Combine that with their delicious sandwiches and it was bound to be a good night out. Now I’m full, tired, AND warm. Hooray!

In other news, spent most of my day inside (fan pointed my direction) working. Finally getting caught up on stuff I didn’t seem to have time for all week. Hope NOT to work tomorrow, but who knows, I’m feeling a bit inspired (finally).

Categories
General

Relatives in town

Today I spent the day doing a lot of yard work and house cleaning. My sister-in-law is staying with us (from the Olympia area), and my father-in-law is also in town (from Florida), so while they were out and about Portland for the day, I pulled weeds, trimmed plants and shrubs, and then cleaned the kitchen and the garage. I’m now feeling a little exhausted while Kelly and her sister watch the Olympics, and nearing sleepy time. However, glad to spend a full day at home cleaning up after being gone for a few days. The furthest from home I’ve been since getting back from Aspen is the local grocery store… for foodstuffs and beer. ๐Ÿ™‚

Categories
Travel Work

A short trip to Aspen

I was sent to Aspen for a couple days for an Enterprise UI Summit that SuperSweetCo held. I flew in on Wednesday afternoon, got into the swanky hotel, and went out to dinner with my coworkers and all of the attendees, which included folks from Adobe, Google, SAP, and RIM, among others. It was a pretty crazy thing, but fun.

Thursday was the first full day of the event, and was very interesting. I learned a lot about what the various companies are doing and how they’re integrating social software inside their various businesses. That night the group went out again for dinner and drinks at a tapas restaurant (you know, a bunch of little plates and little food pellets). I stayed up a bit later than I’d hoped that night, drinking beer and chatting with the attendees, so I only got about 4 hours of sleep before the second day of the event (which was focused on critiquing the application I work on) I was feeling a bit out of it yesterday. ๐Ÿ™‚

After the wrap of the event at noon, a group of us took a gondola ride up the mountain, which was amazing. The view was incredible. Got back down the mountain just in time to catch our car to the airport, and then spent the next several hours traveling back home. Got home last night around 8:30pm. Quite the whirlwind trip!

Took a bunch of photos, check ’em out.

Categories
General News

Cities, social networks, and other random thoughts

I was reading an article from by Alan Ehrenhalt at The New Repulic titled Trading Places, about how over the past decade+ more affluent and wealthy folks have been moving into cities, and more poor folks have been moving away (or are being pushed away) to the suburbs. The article is fairly well researched, and mirrors some of what I’d learned in a “History of American Cities” course I took while in college… there is an ebb and flow to urban living in the US, due to a number of factors (economy, livability, quality of life, jobs, etc). My instructor during the class described a cycle and how it’s a pattern that can often be predicted by looking at the factors I mentioned, but that it’s happened before (urbanization, de-urbanization, and re-urbanization).

This re-urbanization pattern is something I am currently a part of. My family history is distinctly rural, in a time when cities (Portland included) were less desirable, and not particularly safe places to be. I grew up in a time when even Portland was rough (compared to how it is now); crime, dereliction, and an overall sense of decay. However, I was convinced at an early age that the rural life wasn’t for me. I became one of those who moved inward and shunned the rural existence. The idea of something to do and somewhere to go at all hours was too enticing to my relatively sheltered existence to resist. So I moved downtown, and later to the dreaded East side (when Kelly and I bought our house). It’s been fantastic, and I wouldn’t trade it for anything. I think back to my life in my hometown, 100% reliant on a car to go anywhere for anything, my sense of isolation, being disconnected from the activities of ‘everyone else’, and it seems somewhat foreign to me now. As much as I like (need?) to get away from it all for a while (read my post about the camping trip last weekend), I still value being in a place where I can, if I choose, to walk to a bar, or a grocery store, or a Thai restaurant.

However, reading the article mentioned above, I couldn’t help but get the feeling that all of the buzz around social networking sites (MySpace, Facebook, etc) wasn’t just an extension of the same phenomena… that modern life (with all it’s hectic buzz) has further seperated people from one another, and like the desire to “go urban” … connections in a virtual realm are a symptom of the same problem… modern life. Unlike a few decades ago, when things moved a bit slower and a real sense of community might have existed in smaller towns, people are being stretched thinner (to use a Tolkien quote “like butter, scraped over too much bread”), and people are eager for a sense of community, the kind that existed in a smaller more intimate scale before, but is rare to come by for most of us in this modern age. Perhaps we’re all meant to live a bit more close-knit and simple than we do, and the ‘social web’ is a direct result of how isolated we still feel, even those of us who live ‘in the midst of it all’, and are constantly surrounded by people. That is an isolation of it’s own kind, and maybe worse than living in the woods somewhere miles away from civilization.

Anyway, enough of this deep thoughts stuff, I’m enjoying a delicious beer in my yard. Heck with anything else. ๐Ÿ™‚

Categories
Entertainment Movies

Perfume, and Dark Knight

After the camping trip, I took Monday off, and spent the day doing a lot of yard work, and feeling a bit of a sore throat coming on (something I was ignoring while camping). Still feeling questionable.

Tuesday night Kelly and I watched Perfume: The Story of a Murderer, based on a the novel by Patrick Sรผskind which I’d read about a decade ago. I liked the movie quite a bit, and while it had been a long time since I’d read the book and had forgotten a lot of it, some of it came back to me immediately, and was done in a way that was pretty much exactly how I’d pictured it while reading the book. It was both beautiful, disturbing, and sad, but well done.

And finally, last night Kelly and I went to see The Dark Knight, which was excellent, and as everyone has been saying Heath Ledger really stole the show and was absolutely fantastic. I really enjoyed the premise that society is so fragile that it doesn’t take much for people to throw out all their civilized ways and become the animals we are all capable of being. Just a great story, and really really well done. Go see it if you haven’t.