Documentation concerning the entry of an average collegiate into the world of real humans.

Humor and humility, joy and schadenfreude in one convenient place.



Verizon Sucks

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Yeah, that's right. I'm going to post for the first time in over a month, just to say how much Verizon sucks. Incidentally, this will be post one of three concerning my Thanksgiving trip to California. So.

Two weeks ago, I noticed that I was getting very little talk time on my cellphone. It started seeming like I always had only 2 bars (of 3) of battery life. A few days later, it was one bar. By Friday (the day I flew to California), I could only squeeze about 5 minutes of talk time out of my phone before it would die. So, after some extremely brief conversations and more than a little confusion, I arrived in California, was picked up by my former roommate Mikey (lately of Seattle), and dropped off at my Aunt and Uncle's house (who had gone to look for me due to a no-phone mixup.) I decided right then that I needed to find a Verizon store, and fast. First, however, was a night out at the Silver Peso (the only bar in Kentfield, CA), with my brother, Kirstie (my brother's friend from his undergrad college), and her roommate. Good times were had, and there was a very pleasant walk home the next morning (Saturday).

Saturday afternoon, I went to the Verizon store. I told them that I'd like to get a new phone, because my current one had only 5 minutes of talk time, and that I'd be happy to re-up my contract and just get a new one, and waive my $100 "New Every Two" credit. Cingular (my previous provider) would have had no problem with this. Verizon said "No." They diagnosed the phone, determined it was a faulty battery, I bought a new one for $40, and was on my way.

Saturday evening was my Uncle Michael's 50th birthday party, which was a smashing success - he rented a theater in Mill Valley (the Throckmorton, if you must know), stocked it with food, booze, and people, had a dinner that couldn't be beat, and then his band played for a few hours. They were great, the food was wonderful, the drinks were plentiful, and everyone had a good time. The highlight of the evening was the presentation of a Fender Telecaster to him, which all the guests later signed. I think it was the first genuine surprise I've ever seen him receive on his birthday (notable considering that the party itself was conceived as a surprise party, until it was decided that his band would play at it). Around midnight, we had to start packing it in, and went home.

Sunday, I realized that despite the new battery (which worked fine all the previous day, because it came fully charged), my phone still didn't work. So, I headed back to the Verizon store to tell them that whatever they did was wrong, and that *now* I want to just get a new phone and be done with it. They said "No." They told me I could replace my phone (a 2+ year old model) for $50, and I'd have to wait for them to ship it to me, meaning back in Seattle. I said "No." They said, "Fine, you can pick one up at the store on Market Street in San Francisco." Fortunately, my brother, my Mom, and I were headed that way to get some shopping done in the city, so I dropped into the Verizon store, bitched a little more, and paid $50 to replace my out-of-date phone. While we were down there, we did many shoppings, I got a few new things, and good times were had by all. Back to Marin.

I'll continue the San Francisco story later, and you'll hear about our 2-day excursion to wine country. I'll finish the Verizon story now, however.

So, cut to this week. I get back from San Francisco on Sunday (greeted by snow, of all things), unpack, do some laundry, go to sleep, go to work, whatever. On Monday, Verizon sends out an email to all their customers saying that now, if your phone is more than a year old, you can re-up for 2 years and get a new phone for the promotional price (thereby forfeiting your "New Every Two" $100 discount). This is *exactly* what I wanted to do with my phone in the first place. Now it makes no sense though, because I just spent $50 replacing my phone. I guess I'll stick with it until I get my discount. Stupid Verizon.

On another note, if Verizon is going to make you keep a phone for two years before getting credit towards a new one, they should only sell phones with 2-year warranties. Having to pay a $50 replacement fee on something that I'm effectively renting from them is bullshit. Oh well, at least I know that now, had I waited a week, I could have gotten a new phone. Thanks, guys.

That's it for me, back soon with a thrilling wine country adventure!

Wait, I should also mention (in case you've been living in a cave, only reading my blog for news of the outside world) that not only did the Cards not lose the NLCS, they didn't lose the World Series either, against the Detroit Tigers. Hooray, St. Louis! Also, Albert Pujols was robbed of the MVP in favor of Ryan Howard. Pujols later said that he thought only players from teams which made the postseason should be eligible. That's a gracious loser, right there.


News

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Cards win!

Now for the NLCS, where, unfortunately, we'll probably lose. But I still have hope! Go Cards!


You asked for it!

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Well, America, you asked for it - you demanded that I blog more, so here I am, ready to appease you.

Hey, I can address one person as "America" if I want - it's my right. Anyway, the blogging:

So, Dawn came in town Thursday, and that means stuff to do. Immediately after picking her up from the airport, we were both HUNGRY - so we headed downtown, to the Palace Kitchen. You may remember my previous entry about it, and I can say again that it was delicious. We had the plin again, it's still my favorite. Dawn had the cornstravaganza I mentioned before, but I decided to mix things up a little, and had the grilled sea scallops, served with corn/bacon/kidney bean succotash and escarole. The scallops were perfect, grilled to a crisp, delicious crust on the top and bottom, but tender and delicious inside - they were so good, I even got Dawn to try them, and agreed that they didn't kill her, even a little bit.

After dinner, we went home, went to sleep, and then the next day I got up and went to work. Not much to report there.

For dinner on Friday, we went to Eva, a restaurant/wine bar in Wallingford, just northwest of the University of Washington. The place was recommended to me by my coworker, who seems to know what's up - and it proved to be so. We appetized with a chorizo, potato, and onion "tortilla," which turned out to be more of a "quiche." It was extremely delicious, however. For dinner, I had a ribeye steak with grilled red potatoes and veggies, topped with Gorgonzola butter. It was as advertised, which is a good thing - cooked well, slathered in blue cheese butter, and just generally delicious. Dawn had grilled pork tenderloin in bacon cream sauce with kale, and it was awesome - a small mountain of pork loin, cooked to juicy perfection, floating in a thick sea of bacon cream sauce that made me want to make a doctor's appointment. In other words, it was everything it should have been. We topped all that off with a shared slice of chocolate-peanut butter cheesecake with candied rice krispies and a glass of Sauternes, both of which were delicious. I predict candied rice krispies becoming the dessert topping of the millenium. After dinner, we grocery shopped briefly, then went home.

Saturday, we got up early (10am!) and headed downtown, where we checked out some galleries in Pioneer Square before meeting Kori and Katie to do the Seattle Underground tour. If you've never done the tour, you should probably do it - but if you have an aversion to cobwebs or terribly corny humor, you'd probably do well to avoid it. Anyway, entertaining. Then we headed to the market, where we ate ridiculous amounts of everything (that reminds me, I think I still have half of a half-pound cookie in my jacket pocket. I should eat that.), and topped it off with a light lunch at Pike Place Chowder, my favorite chowder-only restaurant. Katie, an East Coast native, even signed off on their clam chowder as being "good." I had the market chowder, a market-fresh concoction of oysters, clams, chorizo, and mussels, and it was delicious. Really delicious. Then we wandered around the market some more until Dawn and I went back to my place for a quick nap and rest period before dinner.

Dinner was at Elliott's, Seattle's well-known oyster and seafood house. I tried to get reservations here when my parents were in town, but it didn't work - no problem getting them with Dawn though, despite the fact that half the restaurant was apparently booked out to high-school types who were all glitzed up for something. The restaurant had declared October as "Crabstravaganza Month," and we took advantage of it. Starters were crab bisque en croute, which, according to whoever makes soup at Elliott's means "soup with a biscuit in it." Really, aside from the totally uncuttable biscuit floating in it, it was quite delicious soup. Had it actually been baked with a crust on top, it would have been a near-perfect cup of soup. I had peekytoe crab spring rolls, which were delicious - crispy, piping hot, full of crab, and served with delicious ponzu sauce. Mmm. For dinner, Dawn had crab linguine, which was so creamy I have no idea how Dawn got through the whole thing (but I probably would have found a way were it mine), and I had Homer Simpson's platonic ideal of expensive food - the finest food, stuffed with the second finest: Coho Salmon with crab crust. It was fantastic. Juicy, well-cooked, covered in creamy crab crust without being overpowering, all that stuff. Really really good. Unfortunately, after all of that, the dessert menu was underwhelming, so we polished off the remnants of our wine and went home for a long, lazy rest.

The wine, by the way, Dawn actually enjoyed, so it bears mention here: a 2005 Lucien Albrecht Pinot Blanc, from Alsace, France. Pale blonde, lightly floral and citrus-y, very good. Also, as I discovered after paying far more at the restaurant, it's available from the intarwebs for like $10. I may have to get some.

Today, we ventured to Tacoma. I know, woo-hoo. After driving all around what I assume was town in search of lunch, we decided on the Harmon Brewery and Restaurant, and it was pretty good. I had their Mt. Takhoma Blonde Ale, which was light, summery, and refreshing, a cup of delicious porter-infused chili, and a large bacon cheeseburger, which really hit the spot.

Then off to the Museum of Glass, which was not as exciting as lunch. After brief negotiations with the ticket guy (tickets are $10 apiece, cash only, and they have no ATM - too bad I only had $15 on me), we got in. First, we checked out the glass studio, which was awesome - inside a giant steel teepee-like structure is a working glass studio surrounded by a small amphitheater, in which you can watch glass artists doing their thing live. It's pretty cool. A co-worker of mine recently took a weekend-long course in glassworking, I might have to look into it. Next, on to the galleries, which were small and only moderately interesting - and there were only 2 glass exhibits in the place, the rest was mostly textile works and a few mixed-media sculptural pieces. Not exactly as advertised.

So now we're back home, and apparently tonight is Mexican food at Azteca with Kori and Katie.

Sometime, I should find a hobby aside from eating.


I almost forgot!

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Friday morning, before we went and picked my brother up from the airport, we went down to Pioneer Square and checked out some galleries - my Mom had mentioned maybe warming my new home with some fine art, and I'd been kinda keeping an eye out all week, but didn't find anything. We found something Friday morning!

It's this:
(Ms. Knowles, I hope you don't mind me using the image...)

It's by Amanda Knowles, a (now-) local artist in Seattle, represented by the Davidson Galleries. We looked at about 4 different galleries down there, but about 4 works by this artist really caught my eye, and I narrowed it down to this one. So, thanks to Ms. Knowles, thanks Mom, and as soon as I get it back, thanks to the framers. Finally, my walls won't seem so bare!


Suspense!

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I know it's been suspenseful, but I'm still here. My brother arrived Friday without incident, and we immediately started trekking towards Woodinville to get some lunch and check out wineries. After much direction-misreading (and useless conversations with winery employees), we arrived in Woodinville, and promptly checked out the Red Hook Brewery for lunch. The place is pretty ridiculous, a large complex of buildings whose rooflines are like coniferous minarets - an interesting design. In any case, they make a mean summer ale and a commendable bacon cheeseburger, after which we were out the door - for thirty seconds, to Chateau Ste. Michelle winery across the street.

We happened upon Cheateau Ste. Michelle just as a tour was leaving, so we gathered our tickets and checked it out. Winery tours are basically all the same, a very rough outline of the winemaking process, followed by looking at a lot of barrels, but Chateau Ste. Michelle has a bottling line, which was operating at the time, and very exciting. The tour was followed by a tasting of three wines conducted by our tour guide as though everyone tasting was about six years old. Plus, the wines were pretty mediocre. We considered checking out their reserve tasting, but decided our money would be better spent across the street (next to Red Hook) at Columbia Winery, and we were right.

For $5, we got the reserve tasting menu, which was a Chardonnay, a Merlot, two Cabernets, and a Syrah. Both of the Cabernets were good, as was the Syrah - but we noticed that the regular, free menu had some bonuses: A Washington Sangiovese (a varietal popular in Italy, notably made into Brunello di Montalcino), and a reserve Syrah which appeared to be even better than the one on the reserve tasting menu. So they were. The Sangiovese was very good - not quite Italian in taste, but among the best American Sangiovese I've had, and the best (and only) from Washington. The Syrah was also excellent, easily beating his elder brother who I had to pay $5 to taste. As a bonus, we persuaded the clerk that even if my Dad and I both bought a half-case and he had to process them entirely differently and ship one to him, it was still worthy of the case discount - so we did that. If you're in the Seattle area and carrying around a hunk of cheese or a steak, drop by, and I think we can make arrangements.

After that, we headed back to the city for dinner at Wild Ginger, the Thai place everyone talks about - badly. It gets rave reviews from many reviewers, but it seems like every Seattleite I've spoken to about it bitches about the price and quality. Well, I dunno what they're on about - sure, it's pricey, but the food was delicious. Maybe not strictly Thai, but very very good. We had many many pieces of meat en brochette from the Satay bar, all of which were delicious, followed by a refreshing soup - the Wandering Sage soup. It's a simple consomme with pork dumplings, and it was fairly good - until the waiter recommended that we add a little bit of chile puree, and then it was *awesome*. Highly recommended.

Afterwards, my brother and I ventured up to Fremont to hang out with a couple people he went to college with and one of his friends since elementary school from St. Louis - we went to the Triangle Lounge, which was a fine time, and then the George and Dragon Pub, where everything starts to get a little hazy. Fine times were had by all.

Saturday morning started slowly, and indeed progressed that way. Ben went to watch the Oregon vs. Oklahoma game with friends (check out ESPN for the news about that one), and I played Scrabble at my house with my Mom. We walked down Broadway at about 4 and happened upon a charity hot-dog sales event, so we contributed to society a little and walked back. I still don't know what the charity was, but they make a decent dog. As long as you don't let them put cream cheese on it, which is apparently the custom here.

More Scrabble, then dinner at Salty's on Alki - a restaurant reviewed primarily for its views of downtown Seattle from the West Seattle peninsula, which is awesome, and secondarily for its food, which is competent, but certainly not rave-worthy. Actually, they do have a very good seafood chowder, which I'd recommend. I had seared tuna on sticky rice with a balsamic reduction, and it was good, but no need to gush. After dinner (which, after being reserved at an already late-ish 7:30, actually commenced closer to 8:30), I dropped my brother off at his friends' house and went home and went to bed.

Today, up at 9, breakfast at the Corner Cafe again (same meal, this time with Italian sausage rather than bacon), and then dropping the family off at the airport. Now, I'm just relaxing. It's very nice.

On a side note, I'm listening to John Mayer's new album, Continuum - it's pretty good. I don't like it quite as much as Try!, but then, it's a more subdued, poppy studio album. It's still got some good stuff on it.

Man, that's the most eventful weekend I've had in a while. Now you can go about your business.


Blogstravaganza!

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More updates:

This morning, up bright and early for breakfast at the Corner Cafe, at Madison and Terry. It's a little place, maybe 10 tables around, but they serve a full breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and have a full-fledged Tully's inside - all the whole-bean coffees, espresso drinks, etc. The breakfast (2 eggs, bacon, sourdough toast, and griddled red potatoes) was very competent, and everyone else seemed pleased. A pancake whose size was described as "the size of my face" by our waitress captured everyone's imagination until it arrived - in reality, it was much bigger than her face.

A quick drive up to the University of Washington campus, then downtown to the ferry terminal to find out that the ferry to Vashon Island from Seattle is passenger only, then a crazy back-roads guessfest over to West Seattle to the Fauntleroy ferry terminal to go to Vashon ensued. Quite a scenic route, I must say. We got to Vashon, drove to Vashon city, and wandered - a small number of little shops and things in their downtown, and then we had lunch at the Rock Island Pizza & Pub, a little joint on the edge of town (one building over would have been the center), but they had a very good pizza, and according to the sign outside, the best subs on Vashon Island. My Dad said it was good, but then, the best on the island probably isn't idle boasting - the only other place I saw was a Subway.

After that we ferried back to West Seattle, then took the far less-scenic route across the middle of the peninsula back to my apartment in Seattle, where we lazed and talked about dinner options for some time. We ended up wandering down Broadway to Julia's, a festive establishment on the fashionable end of Broadway, where I had a spinach, mushroom, and parmesan-stuffed chicken breast wrapped in prosciutto atop pesto mashed potatoes, which was just as good as it sounds. My Dad had the jambalaya, which I've had there once before (it's very good), and my mom a steak of some kind, which she says was good - I'll never know, I gave the leftovers to a hungry guy on the way home.

We almost were going to have dessert at Julia's, but I said no, we should go to B&O Espresso, I'd heard good things. Man, was I pleased we decided to. After a brief and enjoyable walk (it's nice to get a little walk in between dinner and dessert) we arrived, and started ogling the huge and well-stocked dessert case. We sat down, ordered, and about 5 minutes later had our desserts. I had the B&O Espresso Torte, which was a moist chocolate cake soaked in espresso and filled with chocolate mousse, with a sort of fudgy crust, which was delicious. My Dad had a chocolate cheesecake covered in raspberries (also extremely delicious), and my Mom had a piece of German chocolate cake, the best I've ever tasted. It was just so completely delicious, I get a little weak in the knees just recalling it - and I only had one bite. The place also has a full breakfast, lunch, and dinner menu, some of the best espresso in the city, a full bar, and free wifi - I think I found a new home. Now if they'd just get some wider doors so I can continue to come and go after a few more desserts there...

After that, a quick walk home, dropping off the folks at their hotel, and I'm back. What'll I do now!?

My brother gets in town tomorrow, then the fun starts - Wild Ginger tomorrow night, and there's talk of El Gaucho on Saturday. I should probably make reservations.


Hi Everybody!

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(Hi Dr. Nick!)

Anyway, hey. I just thought I'd write because, well, I get pressured into writing. Also because I don't have anything else to do. So here's the rundown:

My parents are in town. I picked them up from the airport last night, brought them to their very fine hotel (the Sorrento, in case you're interested), and sat around and had a few drinks and little appetizers in the hotel bar, because it was there. Good times were had by all. The hotel itself is just chock full of old-world charm, and the bar is a very traditional dark wood, brass fixtures type place, with one beer on tap: Stella Artois. That's really all you need. So, about 12am, I bid them adieu and came home and slept.

This morning, I went back over to their hotel for a nice breakfast (a malted Belgian waffle with honey whipped cream and fresh berries, mmm....), and then we went out on the town. We drove through downtown, I pointed out some of the more interesting sights (my favorite being the Lusty Lady peepshow sandwiched directly between the Harbor Steps apartments (a very desirable address) and the future Four Seasons. I'll bet the owners of both those places are just thrilled.

So, we drove around for a few looking for parking, found a place on the near-downtown and of Belltown, and began wandering. We wandered through the market (for quite a while), wandered past (and maybe into) Pike Place Chowder and grabbed a couple cups of soup for lunch (while being serenaded by a great a capella group singing mostly gospel and blues-type music), and then wandered some more. After that, we took a brief tour of Belltown, stopping in a few galleries and knick-knack type places, and seeing what was perhaps the highlight of the day - a black, high-backed leather settee, which was very comfortable, retailing for the low bargain price of $13,875.

It was quite comfortable.

We then proceeded back to my house, where my Mom and I played the longest, most painful game of Scrabble I've ever played (and that's saying something), and debated dinner.

We eventually decided on the Palace Kitchen, one of famous Seattle chef Tom Douglas' restaurants, and it's a good thing we did - everything was delicious. We started with marinated, apple wood grilled chicken wings (perfectly spicy and tender, mmm!), and what they call "Plins" - little tiny ravioli full of pork sausage and Swiss chard. They're a little bit like a tiny potsticker, but in a creamy sauce. A little sour, a little savory, a little bit of porky heaven. They were good.

For dinner, I decided to talk a walk on the wild side and have Tom's homage to corn - a sweet corn custard served atop a pan-fried white corn cake, atop a bed of sweet corn kernels, heirloom tomatoes, and arugula. I know, lots of corn - but it was delicious! An amazing variety of textures and tastes considering it was all corn - a sweet corn custard is actually a pretty delicious thing, and quite a neat trick.

My Mom had an entire grilled trout with new potatoes and some kind of bean, all of which was delicious, and my Dad had their burger - very well done, traditionally topped, served with a small mountain of the best french fries in recent memory. A rousing success.

Then back to my house, to watch House (I don't buy that diagnosis for a second - I'm watching you, House. The next completely off-the-wall diagnosis and I'm just going to write the *most* scathing letter. The MOST.) and sit around. Looks like tomorrow we'll ferry over to either Vashon Island or Bainbridge island - we've yet to decide.

Any suggestions? You've got almost 12 hours to let me know!


Another boring weekend.

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Well, here I am at the end of another boring weekend. Nothing new to report from the previous two days, but I did have a bit of excitement today.

I finally got so bored that I had to leave the house, so I started looking for reasons - I was thinking about going kayaking, but couldn't find anyone interested and didn't feel like going myself, so I abandoned that. About 6, however, I started to get a little hungry and decided that it was as good a time as any to go down to the harbor and have some fish and chips at Ivar's. If you're ever there, I'll attest that the cajun fish and chips and a Coke really hits the spot, though I think $9.50 is a bit excessive considering what you get. I guess you have to pay for the location, though.

So, while I was sitting on the pier eating my fish and watching the world go by, a ferry pulled into Colman dock, just the next pier down from me. I didn't have anything better to do, so I figured I'd ferry on over to Bainbridge Island (about a 35-minute trip), check out what's there, and ferry back. I really wanted to get out of the house, you see. So, I purchased my ticket, whiled away 20 minutes in the ferry terminal reading "The Innocents Abroad," Mark Twain's European travelogue, and trying to ignore the various odors emitted by the ferry terminal and its passengers, and eventually boarded the ferry. I spend the next 35 minutes admiring various views of the sunset over the mountains, the moon over the city, and various other things that, were I not alone, would have caused me to "Oooh" or "Ahhh" audibly to the person next to me.

I arrived at Bainbridge Island a little chilly, but happy about the journey, and walked into Bainbridge Island city center. Well, I don't know if they move the city on weekends or if I didn't find the city center proper, but for 9PM on a Monday, the place was utterly deserted. I had hoped to find a cup of coffee or a cookie or something and read some more before getting back on the ferry. Alas. So, I went back to the ferry terminal, and read there on the gangplank until the next ferry arrived, and then ferried back to the city. Lots more oohs and ahhs would have been muttered, and a cup of cocoa from the hot drinks vending machine on the ferry actually proved to hit the spot quite nicely, exceeding expectations.

Once back in the city, I was faced with a nearly insurmountable 2-block incline to get back to a bus stop, so I took the obvious alternative, a ten-block detour that, while five times as long, was only slightly inclined the whole way. Plus, the detour had the side effect of allowing me to see what the crazies were up to this fine Monday, which I always like.

My, but the crazies were out in full force. The first struck as I was walking up 1st Avenue, between Union and University streets. A homeless man, thick matted beard and all, approached a pay-phone booth and began to examine the various leavings on the top of it. There were at least 2 fountain soda cups, an empty 40oz, and a pint of milk. To my astonishment, the man instantly reached for the milk, examined it carefully (both tactually and olfactorily), and presumably judged it safe, because he then drank whatever remnants were in the carton. Now, I understand being in need, and thirsty, and crazy; however, if I come to a point in my life where drinking things left on phone kiosks is no longer out of play, I will still maintain a staunch stance on leftover dairy - no milk. Anyway, I gagged a little in empathy, and moved on down the street.

As I was walking to my bus stop at 3rd and Pine, I heard quite a commotion coming from somewhere just up the hill. As I arrived at the top, I saw, across the street, about 5 young gentleman outside the McDonald's across the street, exchanging heated discourse and occasionally punching each other in the teeth. As this progressed, jackets and hats were shed, and then the two groups proceeded to beat the shit out of each other for about five minutes. After this was done, the groups began to retreat, reclaiming their jackets and hats, but then the discussion started up again - more words exchanged, jackets and hats shed, once again, onto the sidewalk outside the McDonald's, but, surprisingly, as the combatants approached each other and seemed about to erupt again, they shook hands and walked away amicably, collecting jackets and hats as they went. The reconciliation might've been related to the fact that three police cars arrived about 10 seconds after it happened, but it might not've. In any case, I couldn't ask for any better entertainment while waiting for the bus.

Shortly thereafter the bus arrived, depositing me back home, where now I think I'll go to bed.

At least I got *something* done today.


Here you go

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Well, at the request of all my readers (both of you!), here's an update.

I finished* my first project at work last week, and finally got some sleep. Everything went relatively smoothly, aside from exposing the fact that when you have a strict deadline, you sometimes have to do things in advance. If you don't, launch day is longer and much more stressful. Now I'm moving on to my next project(s), which seem less overwhelming, and also don't have a do-or-die deadline. Finally, I can relax.

Outside of work...well, there really was no outside of work there for a couple weeks. I did get the opportunity to see my first 2 Mariners games, against the Red Sox and the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim Who Had, For A Short Time, Come To Seattle To Play A Series With The Seattle Mariners of South Downtown. Both were good games, although the Angels game was excellent - Felix Hernandez, the Mariners' up-and-coming starter, threw a complete game in 95 pitches, walking none, allowing 5 hits and no runs. Quite a game.

Then, work work work. Friday I got to see Jeff Bezos speak for the first time, presenting to the company his thoughts about the (recent) past and the future. I can't share specifics, of course, but when you're a CEO, you have to have a knack for making outlooks seem rosy. I also saw a video demo for the new Nintendo Wii, and I think I might have to get one. They've eschewed the "3 d-pads is better than 1" idea prevalent in most recent game consoles, and totally overhauled how you play games with the gyroscopic Wiimote. It looks like a lot of fun, and I'd rather have lots of fun and not get arthritis than pay $600 for graphics that are marginally better than some other box and gameplay that was clearly an afterthought.

Plus, the Wii's going to be much cheaper than the 360 or the PS3.

That's about all to report. Mikey and I are shifting the hell out of lots of paradigms, putting together a new application using Extreme Programming (in general, the practice of having a few people develop an application at the same console, in constant communication) despite the fact that we're 1000 miles apart. Maybe when we get a working copy of it, I'll tell you what it does and post a demo here.

Or maybe I'll just keep it nebulous and raise lots of venture capital with which I'll buy Ferraris and marble busts of myself which I'll admire for two weeks before declaring bankruptcy. I really haven't decided yet.

Thanks for listening.

*aside from stuff we're going to fix later.


About me

  • I'm Alex
  • From Seattle, Washington, United States
  • I'm just moving to Seattle, settling down, and beginning my career at Amazon.com.
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