Sat Sep 30 19:21:17 CST 2006
A photographic escape...
I forced myself to go picture-taking today. (Sometimes the muse is just not there - you know?) The foliage is looking pretty impressive right now and I figured I could probably find something down at Wascana Park. (This is a large park surrounding the Saskatchewan Legislature.) There were some trees that were pretty nice, but nothing that really grabbed me. So... off to the highway.
I love driving on the highway. (I have no idea why.) It's so relaxing... I don't enjoy urban driving anymore, but I just love to get on the highway.
So... I drove north on Highway 6 a bit and then turned west on a grid road that said it led to Craven. (Craven is northwest of Regina, and there is paved road more or less directly back.) Finally! I found a stand of perfect poplars. They were in absolutely peak colour. (I wouldn't be surprised if they were past peak as soon as tomorrow.) I shot a roll of 36 of Velvia 100F. (I was going to shoot some 4x5 but stupid Jim forgot his tripod again.)
I wouldn't call it my most efficient photo trip ever... but it was nice to get out of the city. And the car is happy now.
Fri Sep 29 15:50:00 CST 2006
Sometimes teaching rocks.
I teach. I teach a lot, even though it's not my day job. In the past twelve months I've taught two insurance courses and three university courses. I hear that that's a lot, although it doesn't feel as bad as it sounds.
One of my former students is moving to a nearby city. I've always had a good relationship with her - she's the teasing type that does it with a smile on her face so that you know it's good-natured. She's said some nice things about me to other people who know me, which is always appreciated, and I've always enjoyed dealing with her when our professional paths have crossed. Well, tomorrow she is moving, and she wanted to say goodbye.
She gave me this wonderful metal paperweight that's inscribed "Wisdom begins in wonder - Socrates" and a beautiful card. Wow. I was completely surprised. What a sweet and kind gesture.
The secret is that people like T. are exceptionally easy to teach. They are naturally curious and ask a lot of questions. They wonder why things are how they are and don't merely accept that they are that way. They have a sense of humour that complements their curiosity. Learning can be fun. For T., I'm convinced that it is - and because it's fun for me, too, we clicked.
These students are exceptionally rare. I've had some great students over the years that I've been teaching (seven, hard to imagine)... but a few really stick in one's head.
T., best of luck at your new job and in your new city. I'm only an email away.
Fri Sep 29 11:54:36 CST 2006
A kernel of patience...
I've been building custom kernels for most of my computers lately.
Yes... computers. Like many geeks, I have a few computers. Some of them are good, some of them not so good. They all do something.
canberra, my oldest so-called modern computer (and by modern I mean capable of running a *nix operating system), has been busy for two days now building a kernel. As I type this, it's rolling into hour 49 and it's still not done. The cool thing is that this modest computer (486sx25 with 32 MB of RAM and ISA slots only - no PCI or other such modernity!) is chugging along just fine. The metanetwork IRC network has a server on canberra, and it's still responding just fine without noticeable lag.
I almost threw canberra away once. As a Windows machine it wasn't much use anymore, so I dismantled it to scrap it. I never got around to finishing the project. When I discovered Linux and started getting curious about it, canberra was the only computer I had that was no risk to try Linux on, so I put it back together. I've upgraded it a little since then (added some RAM and a SCSI card, and more storage space) but it's essentially the same machine.
Not fast, but reliable. That's why it's still powered up. 201 days of uptime too! :)
Thu Sep 28 21:00:16 CST 2006
PhotoJim's Blog
I figured it was about time I had a blog... and since I had my own webserver, I figured it was time I hosted it there... on my own computer... in my own home... and I can blog from anywhere anyway, so... why not.
Not much to say today. I was at an industry function tonight. I'm in the insurance industry. One of our companies hosted a little fair today for its brokers. It was okay. Only one person from my office was there other than me, so there weren't too many people I knew all that well, but there were a few. I didn't get a chance to talk to too many people. Got fed and watered, however.
The leaves are in nearly peak fall colour here already. I like fall colour but I hate what it portents (i.e. winter), so it's always a bit of a bittersweet time.