Categories
Historical

San Francisco

While it’s a little late, it’s finally time for a brief rundown of my weekend in San Francisco. Unfortunately, the Sunday early A.M. return always leaves me exhausted, and when combined with post-trip tasks such as sorting through laundry, mail, and e-mail, the thought of processing thoughts on the trip fall to the wayside.

Actually arriving in San Fransisco, and to my hotel in particular, was the most challening component to the trip. A brief detour in the neighborhoods around Cesar Chavez Street off the 101 led me around a less-than-savory area of town, before I gave up and headed on what I believe was Route 80. Thankfully, a turn-off led me to an exit for the neighborhood I was looking for, albeit with some twists, turns, and good old California-style U-turns along the way.

Knowing I had a few office tasks to attend to upon arrival, I booted up my laptop and took out the remote access card…only to find out that the remote access card was dead. Effectively blocking me from accessing the work network only guaranteed frustration and a trip in to the office on Sunday afternoon, much to my dismay. Though, as I later found out, there is a procedure available in these instances. Not that that helped on Thursday and Friday.

Friday, I (finally!) was able to visit the Asian Art Museum. While the exhibits were quite impressive (IMO, the jade collections were arranged wonderfully and I personally love the tapestries from China and Korea), the remodeled building and the presentation style of the exhibits were the real highlight. The external yet enclosed escalator was a nice touch, and the airy and open-spaced first floor provided a sense of enlightment. The heavy emphasis on Buddhism both provided a common theme to connect the multitide of cultures, yet came at the expense of other ideas that could have been communicated through the exhibits.

The evening was filled with exhausted wanderings around San Francisco, both down to the Wharf and back again. I have to be honest, while many tourists to San Francisco seem to enjoy the wharf, I would limit its redeeming qualities to three things: the In ‘n’ Out burger, the Bay Tours, including Alcatraz, and the Musee Mechanqiue, now located down on Pier 43, though I may be wrong about the exact number. Otherwise, the Wharf could disappear and I wouldn’t shed any tears.

Saturday was the day of the Nihonmachi Street Fair, which contained a variety of performances and street vendors along Post Street outside Japantown. Several drum groups performed, much to my delight, and there were martial arts displays as well. I actually caught the end of one where a guy did a flying kick over half-a-dozen children in to several boards held up by members of his group. Amazing was an understatement. While in the neighborhood, I dropped by my two favorite stores to check if there were any new and wortwhile JPop CDs and Anime DVDs out. Sadly, though, nothing looked particularly compelling, which was a disappointment. Perhaps I’ll be able to find a copy of Love Psychedellico’s single that was released earlier this year. Or maybe they’ll issue a new album soon. I can only hope!

With several hours to kill before my flight, I decided to head down to the Shakespeare in the Park showing in Cuppertino. I was a bit unprepared for the style, which featured a strong cast of actors and actresses performing Love’s Labour’s Lost, but in a more modern styling. The costumes featured had more of a 60’s style to them and were combined with what was an impressive set, given this was occurring in the middle of a park. Sadly, I bolted after the first act to ensure I had sufficient time to make it to the airport.

What was a busy, tiring yet fun weekend was concluded on a note similar to my arrival: I left San Francisco without finding a single Krispy Kreme outlet. No globs of deep-fried sugary death for me…

Categories
Historical

Please don’t be back…

Please tell me that this man (Schwarzenegger) will not win. I’m not sure I can handle hearing lines like these…

“Do your job for the people, and do it well; otherwise you are hasta la vista baby,” Schwarzenegger told Leno. “Say hasta la vista to Gray Davis. … When I go to Sacramento, I am going to pump it up.” Winding up a press conference with reporters after the NBC appearance, Schwarzenegger intoned, “I’ll be back.” (Thanks to Slate’s TP!)

At least he’s not running as a write-in candidate. I can’t imagine people would be able to actually spell his name.

Categories
Historical

Linux & SCO

And here we have, in a nutshell, why SCO has NO intention of making public the purported Linux IP violations. The key sentence is the following:

What is still unclear is the exact scope of SCO’s intellectual property violation claims. “Once we know what the problem is, the Linux community will rally and develop new software that gets around the problem,” says one Linux programmer.

It becomes quite difficult to convince any individual or company to pay licenses if, once making your allegations public, the developer community develops its way around your claims. No doubt SCO realizes this and has been playing up the FUD factor (Fear, Uncertainity and Doubt) while providing no factual information whatsoever. My only hope is that, should the IBM – SCO and SCO – Redhat lawsuits proceed to trial, SCO fails in what are likely to be attempts to restrict access to its evidence regarding the violations. No doubt they will argue that they will suffer “irreparable harm” if the evidence is made public.

A quick lowdown on the pricing strategy: A server with a single CPU would incur licence costs of $US699, a two-CPU server $US1149, a four-CPU server $US2499 and an eight-processor box $US4499. An additional single processor beyond this would cost $US749. Embedded devices cost $32 per device.

Categories
Historical

Wanted: Liberal Backbone

An editorial from the Washington Post just shows that liberals need to learn to sling mud better or be left behind in shaping public opinion.

The liberal papers criticized the Clinton administration 30 percent of the time, while the conservative papers slapped around the Bush administration just 7 percent of the time.

The liberal papers praised the Clintonites 36 percent of the time, while the conservative papers praised the Bushies 77 percent of the time.

One more set of numbers: The liberal papers criticized Bush 67 percent of the time; the conservative papers criticized Clinton 89 percent of the time

Categories
Historical

PTS

Driving to work the past few weeks has left me wondering if I might be suffering from a mild for of Post-Traumatic Stress from my accident in November. Whenever I change lanes, make left turns, or otherwise am involved in heavy traffic moving at high speeds (such as Route 22 around the 287 interchange at 8:30 each morning), I have flash visions of gruesome car wrecks. It’s not enough to get me agitated, but it makes for an unpleasant start to the morning.

Categories
Historical

Finally, It’s Open!

The Asian Art Museum of San Francisco is finally open. During my previous three trips, I’d made repeated attempts to visit the museum only to be rebuffed by the remodeling efforts. The first time, I’d read it in the Second Edition Lonely Planet (LP), when it was still in Golden Gate Park. Sadly, it was gone from there, as I found out the day Austin and I attempted to visit it. My second trip, I’d swung by to see if it was opened (August 2002). It was supposed to have celebrated its opening in January 2003, but I still wasn’t able to get in in February. Now, though, it looks like I’ll finally have my chance.