About...

In a few quick words as an autobiographical blurb, I'm a Connecticut Yankee in the San Francisco Bay Area (Note: Please don't take "Yankee" any further than the Mark Twain reference; I've always been a Red Sox fan). Having grown up in Connecticut with my parents' best attempt at the stereotypical nuclear family with 2 kids (pretty successful attempt too - complete with a small menagerie of pets, but absent the white picket fence), I proceeded with a little New England tour by going to boarding school in Massachusetts and college in Maine. I moved out to the Bay Area in early 1997 for my first "real" job from Maine, where I was working a little bit for my alma mater. I worked for Be, Inc. for about 2 years, then went on to ReplayTV. The tech-bubble bursting in late 2000/early 2001 hit me pretty hard and I've been doing what I can ever since. Despite the seemingly endless number of bizarre stories that come from my experiences at my current employers, I do not post about my work-life.

When not working either of my two jobs or looking to get my career back on track, I've been keeping myself busy in outdoor pursuits - dayhikes to backcountry-camping, rock climbing, running (trained for a marathon, and will resume doing so when I get some time again) and even a little bit of mountaineering. Reading, watching films, and miscellaneous geek pursuits also fit into the mix as free-time allows.

Expectations

What you can expect to find on this blog are: general observations on life and the world at large, raves about what I like, rants about what I don't, and views on the geek world with special attention paid to the Macintosh. If you don't know me, I've got a streak of sass and a bit o' sarcasm in me - so don't be easily offended or necessarily take what I've written at face value.

A special note about the "P" word

It should come as no surprise that given my background and where I've chosen as my new home, I lean pretty strong on the liberal, progressive side. Politics having turned into what it is, it has become an even-more sensative and inflammatory subject. While I will (and have already done so) post on political issues, I'm trying to do it with ones I find particularly important and/or noteworthy. What I'm trying to say is that this is not a political blog. Deep down, I truly believe that the majority of people ultimately want the same thing - it's just a question as to if (and where-from) they choose to become informed. There's been a lot of disinformation being thrown out there, and if I choose to post on a politically-contentious subject, please understand that I'm doing it because I wish to inform. As with any subject, I encourage and look forward to discussion (but pedantic, adolescent, abusive and/or otherwise unconstructive comments will get the same treatment as spam).

Welcome

All that said, I enjoy the opportunity to meet new friends and reconnect with old ones. I welcome any suggestions or any feedback of any kind. I don't bite - I promise.

Brian

Recent Comments
  • Jim: Well, you know my opinion of it. Haven't gotten around to 83-96 yet myself. I'd love to have a better sounding copy of...
  • Brian: Hey Chris! It's no fiddlehead, but yeah - it looks like it would give lettuce a good run for its money.
  • Chris: But is it better than lettuce?
  • Brian: Yeah, I still need to make the first BMW purchase - they're sweet cars, but I just don't know when it's going to...
  • Jim: Nice! There was a time, so many many moons ago, that I would have sworn you'd never own anything but a BMW. Volkswagen...
Random Bits
  • Just recently found out about this short film done by Dove (hat tip: Tim O’Reilly). First word out of my mouth: “Wow”. The application of massive amounts of makeup for a photo shoot and post photo-retouching are things we all know about and they certainly should come as no surprise, but how interesting that Dove should choose to tackle it head-on. Because really, how complicit have they been in its practice over the years - never mind still are (you still need to apply massive amounts of makeup for whatever kind of ad your doing).

    I applaud Dove’s attempts to try to set things right with The Dove Self-Esteem Fund, but it’s a fine line they walk because they’re right in the middle of the problems they highlight. I look forward to see how this progresses.

    Caught another short film on YouTube, and on the fund’s website. Check them out!

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  • Got a bit of bad news today - Arthur C. Clarke has died. I was never much of a fan of Isaac Asimov, but Clarke really spoke to me as a young, geeky kid. He had a terrific imagination and a gift for storytelling. He’s also the source of one of my all-time favorite quotes on technology (one of his Three Laws):
    “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”
    Thanks, Sir Arthur, and rest in peace. (0)
  • As previously mentioned, I had trouble getting my head around the concept of Twitter. While I’m still of the same general opinion (Do I really need to know you’re craving anchovies?), I’ve since come around a bit.

    While I don’t contribute much (although I suppose I’ve been ramping up as of late), I find it extremely interesting to follow what others send out into the ether. There’s certainly a fair share of boring stuff to sift through, but the gems tend to be quite interesting (for instance, watching John Gruber collecting info before posting to Daring Fireball). It appears as though I can count on one hand the number of people I actually know on Twitter (most of whom don’t seem to be using it as of late), so there’s a vaguely voyeuristic feeling of following the people I don’t personally know. Curiously, of those, the most prolific are in the web design and Mac development crowds.

    On a side note, it seems as though there’s a bit of a waning of interest in online personas among the people I personally know (exception: LinkedIn). Methinks it might be just another effect of getting older. All the social networking sites that promised so much ~4 years ago (Friendster, Orkut, etc.) haven’t delivered a compelling reason to stay active on them - from my demographic’s point of view, I suppose, as Brazil seemingly has taken over Orkut. (Disclosure: I’ve deleted my Orkut account out of frustration from getting friend requests in Portuguese and I’m not sure why I haven’t done the same with Friendster, other than “out of sight, out of mind”.) The second wave, MySpace and Facebook, don’t offer much of a compelling argument to join for me - they’re overcrowded with the generation after my own and still don’t deliver a compelling selling point. I remain perplexed when people older than me by at least a decade have official representation on MySpace (1970’s-era rockstars who probably exist in a void of ignorance on behalf of the general membership).

    Personal blogs have been withering on the vine as well (yes - I freely point out my own). I know my own reasoning had everything to do with shrinking free time, not out of disinterest. I’ve since purchased a new domain and have ideas for facelifting this blog before moving it to the new domain. I’ve started the 365 project (despite it being on hiatus currently) and continue to come across things that I’d like to share.

    I guess where I’m meandering off to with this post is that I do want to follow through on my original plans, but I think I’ll probably augment it with Twitter - I haven’t raided the WordPress plug-ins lately, but I would certainly guess there’s one that will pipe your “tweets” straight to your blog (this will kill the “Random Bits” category of this blog due to the redundancy). I’ve got some free time on my hands now, so I’m hoping to press forward with these changes soon. Stay tuned!

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  • OK, so Peggle might not be enough for you? Try Iconfactory’s Frenzic. A very fast-paced puzzle game with pieces reminiscent of Trivial Pursuit wedges.

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Curious since 1974. Chronicling it here since 2004.