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Steady Denial

Three days from now I’ll be flying over the western half of the continental United States. I’ll be moving up to the Inland Empire, where I don’t know anyone, and where I’ll be starting some really awesome work. In five days, I’m going to be working at the Spokesman-Review, starting my work in an awesome full-scale Django project they’re cooking up — possibly the largest and most fulfilling project I’ll have worked on yet. If anything, it seems as if adulthood and age are starting to catch up with me here.

“Are you nervous?” friends have often asked me. It’s a natural thing to ask, with such a big summer in store for me. But it’s practically the only thing they ask.

“No,” I said once. “I’m keeping it off my mind.” My voice carries the tone of a graduating high schooler — a naïve calm and the underestimation of significant changes ahead.

I’ve kept up a steady and blank state of denial for the past month or so, keeping my emotions down and taking care of business — such as signing my apartment — with an almost mechanical stoicism. I’m not thinking about it. I’m just doing it.

“Do you need anything else from us? Is there anything else we can help you with?” ask the folks at the Spokesman-Review — the newspaper that I’ll soon call my job.

“Nope,” I say. “I think I’ve gotten most things on my end figured out. I’ll just wing everything else when I get there.” Again, I was simply putting it off my mind.

I’m starting to pack my things, trying to figure out what’s necessary and what’s not — I need to survive three months on my own two feet and I need to choose carefully here. I can’t ignore it now.

“Now that I think about it, I’m not that nervous,” I told one friend. “Actually, I’m looking forward to it more than anything.”

Wired’s aggregated coverage of the San Francisco Olympic torch relay is awesome. I’m enthralled by the event simply because of the up-to-the-minute, user-submitted material which includes a live video feed from a user’s phone, a Flickr link for recent “olympic” tagged photos, and CNN’s iReports. The everyman has turned into the most up-to-date and most comprehensive event journalist. This stuff is awesome.

I’m reading into Qik right now, which is what the phone-based video feed is using. This looks like an excellent idea; I’m probably getting a new phone in the next couple months and might have to plan around using this.

Summer storms

I love thunderstorms, probably to levels that shouldn’t be considered safe by normal standards. When I lived in the dorms a couple years ago and they forced us to the basement during a tornado warning? I was the guy that snuck out the back and stood on top of the parking garage to take photos like this one:
Lightning over Mizzou

I drove through today’s storm, accidentally, because I didn’t have the time to check my usual radar page. Oops. If I’d checked it, I would’ve seen something like this:
A crop of the radar image. Click to see a full, animated copy.

Continue reading ‘Summer storms’

(April) Fooling around

Update: Site’s back to the “normal” theme.

It’s no joke, I have an obsession with nostalgia. Most notoriously, there’s my love of baseball and the rich history of the game and it’s traditions. But there are plenty of other examples of nostalgic indulgences, like typewriters, black and white film photography, and (most recently) fountain pens.

But I’m also prone to actual nostalgia — not just the faux nostalgia of surrounding myself with the old school.

Every time I revise my résumé and realize I’ve been on the Web for a decade and realize I’ve been messing around with HTML and Web design/development for almost as long… Well, I can’t help but feel a little nostalgic about those humble roots. And with good reason — while most of the things I’ve worked on since 1998 have disappeared (account inactivity, group disbanding, hosting change, site redevelopment…), my first site, somehow is still live (albeit in a limited capability).

Today, I’ve invoked that feeling from that first website of mine and recreated that very plain, styleless HTML into a Wordpress template. In a sick and twisted way, I actually enjoyed writing the tag soup of <font> tags and pointless <hr> and <br> tags… You know, the same way you’d enjoy hearing an old Backstreet Boys song you haven’t heard in years — that is, before you realize what it is you’re actually listening to.

(I also get the strangest feeling I’m going to regret linking to that ol’ site…)

I recently read an article (I can’t seem to remember where) about the increase in faux-90’s retro Web design, like the one used on Radiohead’s site. I smiled to myself because I remember making plenty of pages and sites that looked like that in my day. When I was like, 15. Retro-trendiness is a sad, sad thing.

So cheers to April Fool’s Day and cheers to good ol’ nineties Web nostalgia.

The long road’s end

March 27: Dunellen, NJ

We decided to take a minor road trip down south to visit Eight on the Break, which is definitely one of the coolest arcades I’ve been to.

All the driving games I like? Got it. All the music-based games for Glenn? Got it. And plenty of fighting games, which Chris definitely enjoyed. It’s also the host for the New Jersey Pinball League, lol.

We try to make it down to The Break every time we’re in Jersey, of course for the games, but also for the cheap lunch — $4 buys you a cheese steak sandwich with fries and a drink.

Good times.

March 27: New Brunswick, NJ

We stopped by Dave and Erin’s again, without calling ahead. Wasted a few hours, got another fat sandwich dinner at the grease trucks… We figured it was the best way to spend the last day of the trip.

March 28: Back on the road

We woke up early and got breakfast with Chris at the Original Pancake House on Route 10 near Livingston. I drove all the way to Indianapolis by 9pm… Hell, I probably could’ve made it all the way to St. Louis if we didn’t have to stop over…

Met Marcie and my dad in Indy for the Indiana State Yoyo Contest and we stayed overnight in a hotel.

March 29: Indianapolis, IN

Took photos of that Indiana Yoyo Contest. A lot of photos, for free, because there was a ton of interest last time I took photos of an event like this.

2008 Indiana State Yoyo Contest 2008 Indiana State Yoyo Contest

Spent the afternoon driving the last four hours back to St. Louis… And with that, the trip basically ended. (There’s still the last leg to Columbia, but that’s a no-brainer at this point.) My odometer reads 2340 miles since I’ve left Columbia over a week ago. I can’t believe I did it and I drove it all.

It’s been fun, but on the flip side I realized I’ve got a ton of work to get done over the next couple weeks. Eh, I shouldn’t fare too poorly.

I have a lot of photos from the New Jersey/New York trip, but I think I left the negatives in Jersey. The scanner over there also wasn’t that great, so I decided to wait to print before scanning/uploading. Eh, I’ll keep you posted; it’ll be done whenever I get around to it.