Sunday, January 31, 2010

Things that Work

My husband rigged a remote control on-off switch to the extension cord I use to plug the block heater in on my Jeep. I got an extension cord with a light so I could see if the extension cord was live or not.

Theoretically, the system should work. But it doesn't. In the daylight it's hard to see the light in the extension cord. Sometimes the remote works as promised. Sometimes you have to hold it at just the right angle from just right right corner of the window, then, well, maybe. I usually have to go out to the car to see if the light is on, and click the remote from there to get it to work properly.

My first computer was a PC running DOS 5.0. It was state of the art at the time. I had no idea about anything about computers. But I knew they would be a part of my future, so I was willing to learn. The book that came with the computer was over 300 pages long and nowhere in it was there any explanation about how to get started or what anything meant. Nowhere. It took me 3 days to figure out how to read the book. And I'm smart. If I hadn't seen a future for this computer thing and if I hadn't been enthralled by the idea of what could be possible as a result, I wouldn't have even tried.

But sometimes I just need things that work.

I don't use a digital calendar for my day to day stuff, because when I am at the dentist's, making my next appointment, I don't want to spend 3 geeky minutes inputting the information into a device that I will have to coordinate with the calendar at home, when it'll take me 10 seconds to write it with a pencil in my daybook. For any woman with a memory of trying to get a whining child home, and a schedule ahead that includes 7 more hours of work before she can go to bed, that 2 minutes and 50 seconds could be the difference between mild irritation and a nervous breakdown.

There are ways to sync digital calendars right now. Ways that work quickly and seamlessly. But they require costly equipment that runs on electricity, monthly internet fees over and above what I can get at home, and annual fees to make the sync easy. If it was easier and I could make more use of the equipment, the fees would be worth it. But not yet. A pencil lasts for ages and my little daybook doesn't need batteries.

We are getting so used to complexity and expense that we sometimes forget that technology is supposed to make our lives easier, not harder, supposed to be less expensive, not more.

So it's a pleasure to see that some new technology just works. I take the card out of my digital camera and shove it into the slot on the side of my iMac and automatically a program asks me if I want to put all those pictures on the computer. Yes. Thank you for working. Then when it's done, a quarter of a second later, I pull out the card and shove it back in the camera. Then I click, and voilĂ , my pictures!

I'm still geeky enough to love scripting macros to automate things and geeky enough to drool over new technology. Heck, when handheld electronic calculators first came out, I saved my money and ponied up almost $100 bucks to get one of the first models out by Texas Instruments.

I love the idea of a remote control that will turn on the block heater in my car if it means I don't have to run out there in sub-zero weather to do it by hand. But I'm not going to wait until Tom figures out why it doesn't work right. Today, if I need the block heater on, I need it on. I'll go out and plug it in manually, and be thankful for the technology that made cars, block heaters and electricity possible. They are things that work.

Friday, January 29, 2010

Taking Technology for Granted

For those of us who saw the Internet coming and rejoiced in what it would mean, we tend not to take it for granted. On BoingBoing, I saw a link to a YouTube video from PBS Frontline Digital Nation with Patrick Stewart talking about how it makes his life easier. After watching this video, I followed it with one featuring Jamie Lee Curtis. She talked about how the electricity went off one time for more than a day while her family was out in the wintry countryside and how that day without "juice" affected all their interactions. Perhaps it's my age that makes me relate.

Patrick Stewart video via BoingBoing
Jamie Lee Curtis video

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Critical Thinking

My Starry Night Ezine is due to come out in a couple of days. One of the topics I have been working on, possibly for this issue, has a lot to do with how many of our theories - even pet theories - eventually fail and how we run into trouble when we hold them without thinking it through. Critical Thinking is a video that ties into the story I'm working on.

UPDATE: Turns out I have already done a pretty good story about this, so I may write about something else in Starry Night this time.
You can find the earlier story here.

link from VideoSift
watch on YouTube

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

National Wildlife Photo Contest



When I saw the winning photo, I thought it looked more like a Robert Bateman painting than a photo. Follow the link to see all the winning photos. They're beautiful and amazing.

link to National Wildlife Photo Contest
image (part of): Eagles at Brackendale by Robert Bateman

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Hummingbirds


I don't see this sort of thing until after May. What a treat to see a hummer nesting in real time on this "nest-cam".

link

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Bugs Bunny and Maria Callas


On Boing Boing this morning I was delighted to discover a whole series of musical pieces from the past that were presented by Stephen Worth, the Director of the ASIFA-Hollywood Animation Archive, a museum, library and digital archive devoted to the use of professional artists and students:

Chopin by Sviatoslav Richter, Shirley Temple and Buddy Ebsen at The Codfish Ball, Maria Callas, Louis Armstong, Dave Brubeck and more.

I was raised on quality music and quality cartoons. Mom was a pianist and organist who taught us to love interesting chord progressions. Dad loved swing and jazz. We used to go to classical concerts at the Toronto Symphony in inexpensive school outings. My Latin teacher in high school taught us a bit about opera. I watched the quality of cartooning deteriorate on tv. Bugs Bunny, when I was a kid, was animated by hand, the backgrounds were not replayed constantly and the music was scored from classics that related to the story. The less expensive cartoons followed, and they were mediocre at best.

Creativity can be about the next new thing, but when it is combined with quality it's amazing.

It hasn't vanished. Movies often have incredible talent that we rarely even notice. James Horner's score for the movie "A Beautiful Mind" and Thomas Newman's score for "The Road to Perdition" had some amazing and brilliant chord progressions. The male chorus in "The Hunt For Red October" gives a richness and depth to the movie that adds emotion and poignancy.

Quality hasn't vanished. We just have to look for it in different places.

link to Adventures in Music
link to the Animation Archive
link to YouTube video of Maria Callas singing Puccini

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Kitchen


We spent the day yesterday getting a new floor and cupboard inserts for the new kitchen. It was fun to hear the little voice of my little granddaughter calling "Janet" from a distance in the vast building supply store. And fun calling back to her and hearing her laugh. My neighbour Burt is building all the cabinets for me and I am so pleased with the results. There are already more built, just waiting to be put up. More to come. It's all very exciting. I've been waiting for this new kitchen since 1978.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Cat on a Cat


The picture says it all. link -- via Neatorama

Monday, January 18, 2010

Movie Stars


I was feeling a bit blue this morning, but as soon as I saw pictures of the movie stars arriving at the Golden Globes, I cheered up. Penelope Cruz, Sandra Bullock.  I love watching the fashions, even though I have no interest in fashion for myself. I love seeing what fashions I like and what ones I do not. I enjoy seeing how the colours I like move into and out of fashion each year. I like looking at the pictures and trying to imagine what the people are thinking at the time and seeing if I can tell who is a kind person and who is mean. On a gloomy winter morning, when so many things are happening that are so sad in the world, I am thankful that these people go out of their way to dress up and make nice for us.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Two Week Challenge


A client of mine set herself a challenge. Every two weeks for a year, she challenged herself to do something different. She made a list of things she thought she might like to do, everything from getting a psychic reading to skydiving.

And she did them.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Cabin in the Garden


This tree trunk cabin was designed for a musician in the Netherlands to use as a workroom. In the original designs, it was also designed on wheels to be moveable. Follow the link and see how beautifully it works inside as well as out.

NLD, The Netherlands, Hilversum, log house as study for music-entertainer Hans Liberg, design by Piet Hein Eek.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

TrackPad and Inklet


If I hadn't just made the move from the MacBook to an iMac, I'd probably want to play with this. It's a little program that turns the trackpad into a tablet input on the MacBook.

link via Cult of Mac

When does life stop?


We had a few small logs, cut for firewood that I stood on end and have been using as coffee cup holder beside the chair I have in the woods. Every now and again, depending on the weather, sap would rise in these long dead pieces of wood and settle and harden on the surface.

I guess one could say it's no longer a tree, so the life of the tree "as a tree" has ended, but the cellular or chemical or whatever properties can continue their expression for a while until that energy-tendency dies as well.

When a friend died in hospital, her body was kept alive long enough for her to donate organs. While she was on life-support, I warmed her cold feet with my hands, and her toes curled in pleasure. She was gone, but some memory in her body seemed to remain.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Conditioning



When I walk, my body starts to walk itself after I have gone a certain distance. For the first ten minutes or so, I can feel the effort in the movement, but then, it just opens up and the effort is gone. My body seems to think, "Oh, THIS is what you want to do !" and does it for me. The body itself seems to develop a memory.

Complaint becomes easy when we surround ourselves with complainers. Meditation becomes a joy when we practice every day. Drawing becomes effortless when we commit ourselves to it.

The trick is to make all this work for us rather than against us.

Think not lightly of good, saying,
"It will not come to me."
Drop by drop is the water pot filled.
Likewise, the wise man,
gathering it little by little,
fills himself with good.
 -- Dhammapada 122 --

Monday, January 11, 2010

Stuff



"Globalization is funny when you’re here and there regularly. 
Stuff becomes less important, and experiences matter more." 
-- Sacha Chua


link

Sunday, January 10, 2010

He's in The Cookie Aisle


Sometimes when my husband has wandered off into the vast reaches of the supermarket and I need to find him, I use a sort of mental radar to seek him out. I stand still, close my eyes, mentally ask him to show me where he is, and then I imagine that I am in the centre of a radar screen and that a sensor is extending out from me sweeping the store. Then I wait until I see/feel a blip. Ah there he is. The cookie aisle.

Friday, January 8, 2010

More Family

A while back I dug out a tribute to my Mom and posted it here. This one is for my Dad. The photo was taken in about the mid 1950s.



Clift Edward Bellamy
September 25, 1922 - October 17, 2005

I wish I could pick up the phone and ask you what you know about doppler effects, or tidal bores or ask you what you think about the latest best seller.


I loved being with you. I remember sitting beside you late at night, long after bedtime, watching a horror movie when I was sick. The movie gave me nightmares but the thrill of being allowed to watch tv with you in the wee hours of the night more than made up for it. I remember staying awake to keep you company in the car when everyone else was sleeping. I remember fighting my way through a fog of cigar smoke in the den to ask you a question; you always dropped whatever you were reading so you could give me a thoughtful, measured response. Even when we saw each other only now and then, I loved sitting on the chesterfield reading, while you read in your well worn chair in the corner. When we had something to ask or to say, we'd each put down our books and talk, then pick them back up when the talking was done.

You taught me how to take a calm, organized approach to life. You taught me how to drive, how to whistle, how to be curious about things. You taught me how vital honesty was, how valuable my word, and how important to try to do the right thing. And your quick humour kept me on my toes - it made every conversation a delight.

Thank you, Daddy.


Wednesday, January 6, 2010

A Nice Cubicle


I work in a beautiful spot, but this is brilliant. This office, designed by Iwan Baan and built for Selgas Cano Architects, located in the woods in Spain, gives the employees a beautiful environment while all the windows and light reduces electric bills.

image credit: Iwan Baan
link

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Turkeys


I was just at the kitchen sink starting a new pot of coffee and saw a dozen wild turkeys in the yard. Last year they came close enough to graze from the seeds dropped at the bird feeders. This year, we'll see.

Art That Inspires


Now here's a guy who has inspired kids of all ages. Mort Drucker is an artist I recognized from the MAD magazine drawings he did. Here's a YouTube video.

From BoingBoing and from Schoolism.Com

Twittering


I have been feeling like Twitter might be a good thing to become involved with, but I haven't understood why. Who wants to know what I had for breakfast? But the other day I realized it might be an easy way to give people contact information if I'm out of town. And even better, I found an article that puts into words why it may be as useful a resource as email - not sure about that, but certainly could be useful. "Why Twitter Will Endure" is written by David Carr. It can be found here.

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Creative Inspiration

I never used to think of myself as creative, but that's the energy that drives me at the start of each new season. I can feel it in the air.

I always look for new projects and ideas in January after the holiday season and while snow and cold keep me close to home. Years ago, I'd have a new plan or project lined up to pick right up - I learned to quilt - I made some very nice quilts, too - I learned to knit, to crochet. I tried woodworking one year - I made a couple of very nice cabinets out of scrap wood until Tom kicked me out of his garage. We have one hung in the bathroom for all the odds and ends that need a place there. I write, draw, cook, organize and even make new scripts for the computer.

By having a project or idea or plan lined up beforehand, I can dive right in as soon as the really awful weather hits. If I wait too long and winter is already dragging down my spirits, it's hard to find that enthusiasm. This year I feel eager to start something new but I feel a bit stumped. I have a couple of writing projects on the go, but I am looking for something more - well - hands-on and something that will take weeks or months - something I can give a bit of time to every day.


So I have been scouring the net for ideas and inspiration. In the Creative Every Day blog, the author, Leah Piken Kolidas, has used a theme for each month last year to keep the juices running. For example, in her theme for last September "Inspiration" she made a number of suggestions:


  • Keep a notebook with you at all times to record everything that inspires you throughout the day.
  • Explore the ways you find inspiration when you've lost your creative mojo.
  • Find inspiration in unusual places (that wildly shaped tree, the colors in a puddle, the junk mail) and incorporate them into a piece of art or writing.
  • Incorporate an inspiring quote into your art.
  • Make a piece of art inspired by an artist you admire.
  • Leave inspiration in unexpected places. For example you could leave a piece of art in a coffee shop with a note that says "free art" or you could leave a favorite quote tucked in a library book.
I may sign up to participate in her 2010 Creative Every Day Challenge.

Other inspiration has come from James Gurney's blog. He's the guy who illustrated the Dinotopia books. Also from draw-a-tree.com and naturesketchers, Making a Mark - well there are too many more to count.

In any event, I have a doctor's appointment in the morning. So I think rather than taking a book to read, I'll take a small sketchbook and pencil and see if doodling gets the creative juices running.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Smart Animals


Anyone who has spent enough time with animals knows they are way smarter than current scientific wisdom would have us believe. But evidence is mounting. I can watch how the Blue Jays stash their peanuts and then go back later when no one seems to be watching to stash them in another place. I can see how they orient themselves to the trees so that they can go back much later and find just what they'd hidden  long ago. The BBC website has several examples of animals who are proving smarter than we thought. Rooks, eagles, chimps, spiders and more.

Link to BBC article

image credit BBC

Friday, January 1, 2010

Hobbit House


Simon Dale has built a low impact woodland house that looks very much like something you'd see in Hobbiton in Middle Earth. And he's currently working on another.

image credit: Simon Dale

Link

Shropshire and Cadfael


I love the Cadfael series of books by Ellis Peters, so it was a real treat to see some pictures of the countryside she speaks about in the books.

This picture by Mark Hanley is of the Needle's Eye on the Wrekin.

Link to Shropshire Gallery at the BBC website

Feasting


I didn't make any new years resolutions. But I do know that too much wheat and sugar and corn syrup make me feel lousy. So maybe this is a good day to say 'enough' to the sweets and potatoes and breads and make an effort to eat foods I find make me feel better. Tonight, I plan to barbeque (yes, even in the freezing weather) sea scallops wrapped in bacon. Along with some nice veggies, I'll feel like I've feasted. And I'll feel less like a piggie-in-a-blanket.