Rc says: you know how when we were talking about my fear problems, you said you almost offered to dispel them for me? Tia says: ....yes... Rc says: well, I almost offered to try and break that record with you
Month: May 2004
The bookbinding project page is up and running on my website!
http://www.flubu.com/projects.html
Go have a look :D
6 times, 7 days a week
A few pictures to brighten the day
I finally got new batteries for the digital cam I'd borrowed from my sister, so I was able to download the pictures on the memory card, and take a few new ones as well. Click on a thumbnail to see a larger pic (and yes moonlightjoy, they open another window :P)
I was talking to emjayne yesterday about my chronic lack of bookshelf space. Now consider that I have two other bookshelves that are in a similar state | |
This is a picture of my parents' dog, waiting for my dad to come back from wherever he went when that picture was taken. | |
This is what the old breakfast nook in my kitchen looks like now. I ripped out the old, ugly benches that were nailed to the walls. eniran came over last night to give me a hand with the plaster, though I suspect she was there only for the dinner I told her I'd cook :P |
I'm currently working on a webpage for my bookbinding projects. It should be up sometime today.
Reading is my weakness. Moo!
Edit: giving this a try: talisker. Yay, I'm a blue :P
Ain't technology great? NOT!
raspberrysalmon is currently enjoying herself at a concert by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, led by guest conductor Bobby McFerrin. We'd made plans for me to call her on her cell phone to listen in to part of the concert while I was at the office.
So I buy a calling card, but I couldn't connect to her mobile phone with it. I can get her house line, but I not her cell. I tried calling her directly with my cell phone, but the nice people of Telus do not enable overseas direct dialing by default (and you need a credit check to get it – sometimes even a 1000$ safety deposit, if their credit department thinks you're a credit risk). Finally, I asked my boss if I could call her on the office phone, to inform her that the plans had fallen through, and I was finally able to connect to… something. I got an automated phone message that spewed a bunch of stuff in rapid-fire german I didn't understand.
I don't know if that was her voicemail or something, but I got a call from her shortly after. The sound was completely horrendous though, but it was a quirky moment nonetheless; to be listening to a live concert 6000km away :)
I'm giggling at the office, and my coworkers are giving me strange looks :)
Edit: I just received another phone call from her, so I could listen to parts of Ravel's Bolero. Unfortunately, travelling through 2 cell phones didn't do it justice, as it sounded like it was being played on a badly tuned harmonica :D
Edit #2: I changed the picture that was being displayed by one Tia sent me this morning, showing where she was. The original picture is still here
Gaah!
I hate wasting my time like this…
I've been writing a lot of code on my laptop, which works perfectly. I must now merge this code on our dev server. Of course, the dev environment doesn't match the environment in which I've been slamming away. I know the environment on my laptop is sane, stable and well configured. I can't say the same for the dev env.
I've just spent the last 2 days trying to find out why the code I know works on my laptop explodes quite dramatically on the dev machine. So what do I do? I install the dev env on my laptop (basically, the Java Web Services development platform), which runs on Tomcat 5. Through hours of tedious testing, I fix bug after bug and setup everything properly.
I've just found out why the last thing wasn't working. The TLD parser of the input taglib was throwing a fit on initialization. In a nutshell, input1.0 – which works fine in Tomcat 4 – doesn't parse under Tomcat 5. Input-1.1 works hunky-dory.
Too bad it only took me the better part of a day to figure that one out.
Sheeeeeet.
Ladies and gentlemen, place your bets
I had sushi with moonlightjoy last thursday, and I ordered waaay too much. When I got to the office, I told the guys I had leftovers and left them in the fridge. 5 days later, i.e. today, they're still there and somebody just started eating them.
Now I'd be leery as hell to eat 5-day old sushi, but he's not. So ladies and gents, place your bets as to what will happen. So far, I'm betting he's going to hurl before the end of the day, and a coworker believes he's going to have nuclear diarrhea. What do you all think?
oh. shush. you.
Some of my better typos, according to raspberrysalmon:
1. I'll go jump in the snower (for shower)
2. I'll go hump in the shower (read above)
3. snartass (a perennial favourite)
4. good lick on your exam
5. don't exaferate
I'm sure there are more, but those are the only ones I remember now.
Edit on 27/05/2004:
– ooh, I love it when you walk dirty to me (talking to straysparrow)
– bookbinging (instead of bookbinding)
May I eat your flute?
The sound of 40 kg of finely tuned cucumbers, leeks, potatoes, radishes, peppers, aubergines and marrows entertained a German audience at a weekend concert by the Viennese Vegetable Orchestra.
The nine-piece orchestra plays a range of original compositions on instruments constructed from vegetables – including a flute made from a carrot, a saxophone carved out of a cucumber and a pumpkin converted into a double bass.
“I would never have thought you could get sound out of a cucumber,” a young woman at the concert said.
Others commented on the raw vegetable aroma accompanying the melodies.
The Austrian ensemble, three women and six men, say their instruments are freshly sliced and put together only an hour before each performance to enhance the sound. Size, texture and water content are vital to achieving the correct sound.
“Ordinary vegetables work better together than organic vegetables,” Matthias Meinharter, who plays a violin fashioned from leeks, said.
The musicians must also work against the clock. To protect their instruments from drying out during the performance, they place damp cloths around the vegetables when they are not in use.
At the end of the performance, the instruments were turned into vegetable soup.
–Reuters