Hiking the Canyon Lake Gorge

A few months ago, David Barnard tipped me off to the existence of the Canyon Lake Gorge, a feature formed in 2002 by the torrential overflow from Canyon Lake during that year’s floods. We were both able to secure one of the scarce reservations for a hike through the gorge, and embarked on our little adventure yesterday.

The gorge is striking. It was stripped of life during the floods as the water carved into the limestone bedrock, but has slowly had plant life return as seeds fall in or are brought by animals. There are lots of springs where the water seeps up from the aquifer or escapes from the lake, as well as a ton of different sorts of fossils: algae, sea biscuits, snails, clams, and even dinosaur footprints.

It was great fun to get to see this area, to talk with the people who have watched it change in the 5 years since the flood, and to literally stumble across evidence of life from thousands of years ago.

Gorge, Lake, People

You can see more photos here, or download a KML (Google Earth) dump from my GPS showing where the hike went here.

Give One, Get One Starts Today

Just a reminder: The One Laptop Per Child initiative starts its Give One, Get One promotion today.

The deal again is this: you plunk down $400, which pays for two XO laptops. One goes to a child in a developing country, one goes to the child in your life (who might be you)!

This promotion only is available for two weeks, so if you have interest in helping and/or interest in the XO Laptop, donate now!

Thoughts While On An Evening Out With Maggie

  • The McDonalds cashier plopped an unsolicited application for employment onto my tray. Should I be worried?
  • Shouting “Shake that honeymaker!” while Maggie’s wind-up bee danced was probably a joke lost on a 7 year old. At least, I hope so.
  • The Happy Meal bag said “You can jump six times higher in space!” That must be why they’re not called Accurate Science Facts Meals.
  • Holy carp! That toy is called the “Pet Bakery”! How did that make it past the focus groups?

The Internet in My Pants

Since my job involves creating systems that underpin a bunch of websites, I’d ordered an iPod Touch for work as soon as they were announced. I’d been keen to get to spend more time with the version of Safari that ships on that device and on the iPhone, but wasn’t eager to tangle with AT&T and their usurious wireless plans. This provided a great chance to check out the sites we create and to let the team have some exposure to this new browser.

So let’s get it out of the way right off: Apple has exceeded my high expectations with the little device. I had read through the developer guidelines before receiving it, and didn’t expect our menus to work at all, since they rely on knowing when the mouse is over a menu header to pop it down. But even though the official docs said that sort of thing was unsupported, we were able to get through our site menus with a minimum of fuss.

More importantly, however, the iPod does remarkably well with nearly all existing websites. Though most mobile devices mangle pages in various ways to make them viewable, the version of Safari on the iPod displays them exactly the same as Safari on Mac or Windows would (which only makes sense since it’s built on the same rendering engine). I was able to visit all of my usual online haunts and navigate them with little difficulty.

Better yet, many of my most-used web tools, including GMail, Remember the Milk, Twitter, Facebook, and Google Reader have versions optimized for the iPhone, which means even less tapping and dragging than would otherwise be necessary. Unoptimized pages are quite usable, but these optimized ones are an active pleasure to work with.

Now, I’ll admit that $300 seems like a lot for a media player. However, because of the strength of the browser (as well as the included Address Book and Calendar applications), in many cases it makes a legitimate replacement for a laptop. It thus compares very favorably to the $1,000 units that are, in some ways, its competition.

A few instances I’ve found myself using it:

  • Reading personal and university email and catching up on news during a 4 hour long training session. (It’s also more discreet than a laptop in these situations.)
  • Updating Twitter wherever I happen to find wifi access (which is surprisingly easy to do these days).
  • Reading a PDF summarizing election issues as I walk to my polling place. (The browser has a capable PDF reader built in as well.)
  • Bringing it to meetings instead of a laptop.
  • Checking my reading list while I’m at the library or bookstore.
  • And of course listening to Podcasts while I walk and accessing my calendars and contacts whenever they’re needed.

My only complaints:

  • Google Maps is unusable without mouse dragging, and Apple for mysterious reasons did not include the Map application on the iPod that comes with the iPhone. Hopefully they’ll remedy that (and add the Mail app, while they’re at it) soon.
  • The wireless reception is a bit weak, though better than I would have expected.
  • No support for Flash. This isn’t a big deal for sites that are designed for the iPhone, as you can do most anything you’d want with DHTML, but it does make its support for the web at large a bit weaker.
  • No camera. It would have been nice to have left that in when they took out the phone part.
  • No GPS. While this would be a bit more useful on the iPhone, it still seems shortsighted not to be able to do navigation when all the other hardware is there already. Perhaps they’ll add this for version 2.

In spite of these niggles, it’s fantastic to have something so small and lightweight that provides access to the web wherever one happens to be, and which does so with a good deal of panache. I call this one a home run for Apple.

Ron-A-Thon 2007

The head of our department organized a Halloween Hamburger social for this afternoon. One of my friends, Kevin Huffaker — artist, mischief maker, and all around really nice guy — decided that this should be the year of the first annual Ron-A-Thon. The idea behind the Ron-A-Thon is to get as many people as possible to dress like Ron Akin, a venerable and much-loved figure within our department. Ron is tall, affable, and sports a long white ponytail and a self-imposed uniform of a long-sleeve white button-down shirt, dark blue jeans and open-toed sandals, and is thus ripe for imitation.

The Ron-A-Thon was a glorious success, with about a dozen people taking part, most with extravagant wigs, and all with the requisite combination of clothing. The trophy that Kevin had crafted — essentially a Ron action figure — was deemed too wonderful to award to a single individual, so Ron decreed that it should go to a public place for the enjoyment of all.

Photos from the event are here. Enjoy!

Ron-A-Thon 2007

Catalog Choice

Just a quick post to point out Catalog Choice, a service to allow you to opt-out of receiving paper catalogs in the mail that don’t interest you. You get less junk mail, the catalog companies don’t spend money sending catalogs that just end up in the trash, and trees get a stay of execution. Win-win, baby!

While you’re there, be sure to check out the Environmental Facts section of their site. The statistics are staggering: 8 million tons of trees per year go to catalog printing alone.

Weekend To-Do: Postmortem

  • Reaffirm my lack of skill at Scrabble.
  • Take long nap on couch in sunbeam. Endure withering stares from cat, whose spot and habit I usurped.
  • Watch a truly staggering amount of invertebrate sex.
  • Attend child’s birthday party with bouncy castle. Bounce. Rip pants.
  • For second year running, win “lamest halloween costume” award, this time with sketch of ghost magic markered on top of bald head.
  • Forget to remove costume before church.

Sound and Fury Redux

First off, a great big “Thank You!” to the 16 people who chipped in with data for the little experiment I proposed in Chaos and Form, Noise and Music: A Mini-Research Project! It was great fun to see all of your experiences and discussion rolling in, and to root for the data to go one way or the other. I really appreciate your participation!

Here is a graph of all the data I eventually received:

Graph

Based on this plot, I’m guessing that my theory doesn’t hold water. If it were true that a low tolerance for noise were the result of the pattern recognizing parts of your brain going into an overactive frenzy, I would have expected to see the trend to start low in the bottom left corner of the graph and to steadily rise toward the right side of the graph — obviously not what actually happens in reality.

But wait! This may just be a product of the small sample set. Look what happens if I remove a single outlying data point (Barry Brake, I’m looking at you):

Graph With Outlier Removed

Suddenly, the curve becomes almost exactly what I would have predicted. So, I’m left with two possibilities:

  1. My theory is dead wrong.
  2. I need more people to answer my little quiz to get valid results.

Any of you statisticians out there care to weigh in? My theory may have life in it yet, but until I get more data, I guess I’ll have to consider this theory:

Busted

Hovercraft Building

The inimitable Jason Young and I took this past Sunday to build a hardware store hovercraft out of wood, plastic sheeting, a leaf blower, and peanut butter. (Note: one of those things is a lie.) We then set my children (read: “lab rats”) floating down the street on it like passengers on a giant air hockey puck. We had a super time constructing and running the thing, and highly recommend it as a weekend project for anyone inclined toward similar sorts of potentially dangerous madness.

Please enjoy the video, won’t you? Thank you. [Note for Facebook friends: the video quality on Facebook is much better than that on Google Video.]

A 7 Year Old Magpie

Our own Margaret turns 7 years old today. Happy birthday, sweetheart!

Hard to believe that our youngest is now that far along in life. I guess this parenting adventure won’t last forever after all!