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My latest iTunes:
Tuesday, August 31, 2004
Beam Me Up, Scotty!
Mr. Spock was one of my favorite Sci-Fi characters growing up, but I've always held a special place
in my heart for Scotty on Star Trek.
He was highly technical, and Scottish to boot! I always liked the
episodes and scenes where he wears his kilt. ("Is There No Truth in
Beauty?", "The Savage Curtain"). I also liked his crossover to Star
Trek:The Next Generation in "Relics".
Today, James Doohan gets his star on the Hollywood Walk of Stars.
Doohan will receive his star in front of the Hollywood Entertainment
Museum at 7021 Hollywood Boulevard at 10:30 a.m. Congratulations, James!
Here are a few links featuring James "Scotty" Doohan:

See also: Sci-Fi
Labels: NASA, Sci-Fi, Scotland, Scottish, Space, startrek
Friday, August 27, 2004
Late again...
I've
known Cam since 3rd grade, and I swear I continue to miss his birthday
every year. Our birthdays are so close, and we have celebrated so many
together, that I don't know why I continue to mess up the date. His
birthday is on the 26th, but I always think it's on the 28th.
I would also have to echo my comments
from an earlier post: a friend is "someone who knows all about you and likes you just same."
Cam has been the generous host of the Annual Talisman Tournament, which is a favorite time of year for all of my friends and I.
We also did a student film in high school, called "Star Wreck",
which you can guess is a parody of Star Trek. I'll have to dig up some
pictures from that one for a future post...
Cam and his wife just found out they are expecting, too! Congratulations! (hope you wanted me to tell the whole world)
Happy Birthday, my friend!
See also: General
Labels: friends, Sci-Fi, startrek
Ewoks and Droids on DVD!
Finally, some new Sci-Fi news.
Starwars.com
is reporting that the very popular Ewoks and Droids animated series
will be coming to DVD in November! Just in time for Christmas, too...
I never really got into Ewoks that much, but I absolutely loved the
Droids series. I faithfully watched every Saturday. We need a return of
good Saturday 'toons.
I've been feeling much more nostalgic lately, because I've also been
playing Midway Classic Treasures on PS2, including my favorite arcade
games: Gauntlet, Road Blasters, Rampart, Rampage, Joust, and more. I
just need Xevious, Zaxxon, Space Invaders, and Pacman to complete my
favorite childhood gaming on PS2. I grew up on the Atari 2600, and
Space Invaders was by far my favorite -- even my dad would play with me
on that one.
The new Clone Wars animated shorts probably won't make it on DVD
until next spring or summer, because there will be a new installment
just prior to the release of Episode III. Then, they will all be
combined and released on DVD.
September looks to be busy for Star Wars fans, as the Original Trilogy Collection and Star Wars: Battlefront will both be released on the 21st!
See also: Sci-Fi
Labels: Sci-Fi, starwars
Thursday, August 26, 2004
Always Remember...
Metadata: harmful or helpful?
After reading Richard's blog, and the accompanying article, I was asked by a colleague my opinion on metadata. Is it harmful or helpful?
I think it depends on your point of view. If you are for sharing
information, making it easier to find information, and for freedom of
information, then metadata is your friend. If you need to protect
information, or are worried about legal entanglements, then exposing
metadata may be considered harmful.
As a CYA mechanism, metadata takes no position -- meaning it can
hurt you or help you depending on what you are trying to accomplish.
Take the example from the CNET story, where Prime Minister Blair's
documents contained metadata that contradicted the official position.
That metadata was harmful to his position, but helpful to those against
his position.
IMO, metadata is like truth.The truth will set you free. In the end,
the truth will come out. Enter the rhetorical question: Are you on the
side of the truth or not? If metadata exists, and you are doing what is
right, it will help defend your position. If you are doing wrong,
metadata will help expose you.
If we are ever going to achieve the lofty goals of the Semantic Web,
those intelligent systems will need to have metadata in order to
function, just as we humans need context around every situation to
understand and act properly. Without the context, then you will get
misinterpretation.
You should be able to determine what metadata you want to have
published along with your content/resource. Perhaps that is where some
of the tools fail, in that they blindly publish all of their metadata,
when they should provide a choice or configuration of what you want
exposed. Hopefully there is at least a common set that everyone would
use as a base, such as the Dublin Core.
Choice is always good. If you choose not to expose metadata, then
Semantic Agents will not be able to reliably work with your content,
and maybe that's the choice you want to make. At least you have the
freedom to choose.
See also: XML
Labels: XML
Tuesday, August 24, 2004
My first chase vehicle
Here are a few pics of my first storm chase vehicle, and several important lessons learned:


I bought the '87 Chrysler Lebaron from my granddad when I graduated
from CSU. I used it for a few storm chases in El Paso County before Sun
moved me to Broomfield. It got me within 3 miles of a tornado at Ramah,
which is the closest I've been to a tornado so far.
The important lessons learned came on a storm chase a year or two after my move to the Denver area.
- Get familiar with the local roads, and have a really good state atlas
- Stop chasing when the Sun sets, no matter how close you THINK you are
- Take a chase partner, so one person can look at the skies while the driver looks at the road
- If you don't watch the road, you may run into flash flood waters. Going faster won't keep your car from flooding any less
- Your wife won't appreciate you calling at 10:30pm saying you need a ride, because you are stuck 90 miles from home
- Storm chasers always help other storm chasers! But don't push your luck...
So those are my lessons learned, and here's the story:
There was a pretty good storm forming over Brighton after dinner, so
I got clearance from my wife, and was off! I followed the storm right
up Hwy 76 to about Hudson. It was a pretty major road, so I was pretty
comfortable, but then I heard on the weather radio that it was getting
severe near Pleasant Valley. I just happened to see the sign, and took
the turn.
It was getting dark, but I was so close, I could taste it. It was
kind of cool to watch the lightning and look for tornadoes between the
lightning strikes. Unfortunately, the fields had taken all the water
they could hold, and started spilling over the roadway, and I didn't
notice until I plowed through it, just before entering the town of
Pleasant Valley.
The Lebaron plowed through OK, since it was only about 5 inches of
water, and I made it into town. I passed a Fire Engine that was
directing traffic because of a power outage, and then my car promptly
died at the side of the road.
This was a Very Good Thing, because if I had picked up the pace and
kept going, I would have wound up in another flooded roadway, this time
under 2 feet of water!
At this point, I called my wife with a Ham Radio/Phone patch, and
told her I was stranded. She said, "Well, you better find a way to get
here then, because the kids are in bed and I can't come get you."
Thankfully I found another storm chaser, who had stopped because of
the flooded roadway, and found out he lived in Boulder. He was willing
to drop me home, since it was on his way, and chat about chasing all
the way home! He had a snorkle on his Toyota, and the first flash flood
I had driven through had now turned into 3 feet of water. He plowed
through to my amazement, and we headed home.
His vehicle had been struck by lightning a few weeks earlier, and he
caught it on tape! Unfortunately, I haven't been able to find the link
to the video...
The next day, my wife took me out to pick up my car. It was the quietest 90 minutes of my life...
Following that adventure, I agreed to take a chase partner, never chase at night, and get a vehicle that could handle it.
Stay tuned for my next post about my new chase vehicle!
See also: Weather
Labels: Boulder, chasing, storm, Weather, WX
Monday, August 23, 2004
Star Trek Science: Transparent Aluminum
I
was fortunate to catch the Star Trek Science exhibit in 1994 at the
Denver Museum of Natural History. There were many great interactive
exhibits on sensors, tricorders, the ship computer, warp drive and
more! Unfortunately, I do not think the exhibit is travelling any more.
However, it looks like we've finally achieved another product of
Star Trek Science: Transparent Aluminum! Prominently featured in Star
Trek: The Voyage Home, transparent aluminum was widely used to make the
windows in the Starships in Kirk's era, and to make the holding tanks
to transport humpback whales to the 24th century!
The real science is pretty interesting. Check out the article here: http://physicsweb.org/article/news/8/8/9.
Here are some other interesting links about Star Trek Science:
See also: Sci-Fi
Labels: Sci-Fi, startrek
Wednesday, August 18, 2004
L10N, I18N and Editorial at it's finest
For those unfamiliar, L10N = Localization, I18N = Internationalization.
As my old DIVX player started giving up the ghost, and Blu-Ray is
not yet available, I needed a low-cost option to keep my movie habits
going.
I found a great deal on a Daewoo DVD player at Target. It's cheap,
but has optical audio and component video outputs, so my Denon amp and
my ears are happy!
While reading the owner's manual (hey, I started out as a tech
writer, and SOMEBODY has to read their work. Kind of a brotherhood
thing...), I found the following troubleshooting tip for the DVD player:
SCREAMING
- Keep the phone far away from the speaker
- Turn down the volumne
- Turn down the volume of phone and echo
Hopefully, this isn't related to my new DVD player or their tech support experience! :-)
Perhaps this belongs in one of their phone manuals, though SCREAMING still doesn't seem appropriate.
Maybe these folks should take a look at the XLIFF project and improve their translation markup.
I'm sure other companies have this same problem, but this one was pretty funny. I also enjoy watching Headlines every week on Jay Leno (I used to be a technical editor, too).
For more fun with translations, be sure to check out Babelfish. Though I wouldn't recommend it for publishing your technical manuals...
Anyone have any good Sun translation snafus?
See also: General
Tuesday, August 10, 2004
Storm Chase report!
Today's hazardous outlook held true. As I left work, and got clearance from home, I began my 3rd chase of the summer.
The winds were very strong in Broomfield, and it was quite dark out
East. I joined the Northern Colorado weather net on 145.115 and headed
out towards Denver International Airport.
I stopped at 104th and Tower, which has a great vantage point. I
reported heavy rain and scud, but no organized formations. Since it
looked like nothing more than the rain, I decided to head north.
There were reports of heavy storms in Ft. Collins and Greeley, so I
headed up Hwy 85. There was more heavy rain around Lasalle and Evans,
but only light rain when I got to Greeley.
I decided to hit Hwy 34 to I-25 and then head home. There was a
promising storm forming near Lyons, moving toward Longmont, which would
work well for me on my way home. Heavy rains brought traffic near a
standstill when I got to the Dacono exit, and I called in a report.
With no tornadoes, I should have stayed home. Especially since my wife and kids experienced this at the house!


See also: Weather
Labels: chasing, Colorado, storm, Weather, WX
Lots of interesting weather this week
Yesterday
was a great day for severe storms in Colorado. Unfortunately, I wasn't
able to go chasing any of it (okay, I confess, I was watching the
Broncos lose).
Nine tornadoes touched down Monday night including a multiple-vortex tornado (with four funnels!) 10 miles north of Simla.
Hail stones up to 4.5 inches in diameter were reported west of Agate
in Elbert County. In eastern El Paso county, they had a tornado (near
Truckton) and baseball sized hail.
9News has some
pictures and the story. I haven't checked Stormtracker.com yet.
Today's hazardous outlook:
ANOTHER ROUND OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IS POSSIBLE ACROSS NORTHEAST
COLORADO THIS AFTERNOON AND EVENING.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF SEVERE WEATHER IS LARGELY DEPENDENT ON
TEMPERATURES THIS AFTERNOON. AT THIS TIME...ENOUGH SUNSHINE IS
EXPECTED TO WARM TEMPERATURES INTO THE MID AND UPPER 70S ACROSS THE
PLAINS BY MID TO LATE AFTERNOON. THIS SHOULD BE JUST WARM ENOUGH TO
SPARK STORM ACTIVITY. ONCE STORMS DEVELOP...THEY WILL QUICKLY
BECOME SEVERE. ABUNDANT INSTABILITY AND STRONG WIND SHEAR IN THE
ATMOSPHERE WILL PROMOTE THE DEVELOPMENT OF SUPERCELL THUNDERSTORMS
WHICH WILL BE CAPABLE OF PRODUCING VERY LARGE AND DESTRUCTIVE
HAIL...HIGH WINDS...AND TORNADOES.
THE GREATEST RISK OF SEVERE WEATHER WILL BE FROM THE FRONT RANGE
METRO AREAS AND I-25 CORRIDOR EASTWARD TO FORT MORGAN AND AKRON.
Zooming out, it looks like twin trouble with Tropical Storm Bonnie and Tropical Storm Charlie working their way toward the U.S.!
See also: Weather
Labels: chasing, Colorado, storm, Weather, WX
Friday, August 06, 2004
Should be iRobot's official movie soundtrack
I
saw the latest summer blockbuster, iRobot last night. I'm not well-read
enough in Asimov to determine how close it is to his book, but the
movie was entertaining. I have a feeling the disclaimer "Suggested by
the book by Isaac Asimov" means that the title is the same, and they
both had robots...
I wonder if the droids in Star Wars are 3 laws compliant? Certainly
not for IG-88 and 4-LOM (bounty hunter droids). What about Data and
Lore? Did Dr. Soongh implement the 3 laws?
As for iRobot, they should have used this album for the official movie soundtrack:
Kraftwerk - The Mix
| Track Title |
Artist |
Album |
Genre |
|
|
|
|
| The Robots |
Kraftwerk |
The Mix |
Electronica/Dance |
| Computerlove |
Kraftwerk |
The Mix |
Electronica/Dance |
| Pocket Calculator |
Kraftwerk |
The Mix |
Electronica/Dance |
| Dentaku |
Kraftwerk |
The Mix |
Electronica/Dance |
| Autobahn |
Kraftwerk |
The Mix |
Electronica/Dance |
| Radioactivity |
Kraftwerk |
The Mix |
Electronica/Dance |
| Trans Europe Express |
Kraftwerk |
The Mix |
Electronica/Dance |
| Abzug |
Kraftwerk |
The Mix |
Electronica/Dance |
| Metal On Metal |
Kraftwerk |
The Mix |
Electronica/Dance |
| Home Computer |
Kraftwerk |
The Mix |
Electronica/Dance |
| Musik Non Stop |
Kraftwerk |
The Mix |
Electronica/Dance |
The opening credits of the movie could have used "The Robots", the
big car chase scene "Autobahn", the love angst scenes with "Computer
Love", the home delivery of the new N-5's with "Home Computer", and the
revolution with "Radioactivity". Finally, the end credits could have
used "Musique Non-Stop".
Speaking of end credits, where was Will Smith's new catchy tune? Maybe he should have done a cover of The Robots by Kraftwerk...
See also: Music
Labels: music, Sci-Fi
Thursday, August 05, 2004
"Aonaibh ri cheile"
For those non-Gaelic readers out there (myself included), it means "Unite" and is the motto of Clan Cameron.

I actually have a few different Scottish Clans in my bloodline
(Robertson, Watchman, and Sinclair to name a few), but don Cameron, as
they were the most recent to come to America, and because my mom gave
it to me as my middle name.
I usually march with my Clan at the Longs Peak Scottish/Irish Highland Festival in Estes Park, and was married in my kilt!

I think "Unite" is appropriate for this entry, because that's also
what is desperately needed at Sun. We've had too many internal
conflicts, and too many confusing messages externally.
Of course, some of the other Clan Cameron mottos could work, but I don't think they are quite as appropriate:
"Mo righ's mo dhuchaich" (For King and Country)
"Chlanna nan con thigibh a so's gheib sibh feail" (Sons of the hounds come hither and get flesh)
See also: General, Scottish
Labels: Scotland, Scottish
Tuesday, August 03, 2004
Missing Extreme
I was fortunate enough to attend Extreme Markup in Montreal last year but the budget fates were unkind to me this year.
Sun management was unable/unwilling to send me to the conference,
and I couldn't work out the personal finances to send myself. Hopefully
circumstances will be different on both accounts for me to attend XML 2004 in Washington, D.C.
Norm Walsh is giving an excellent full-day tutorial on XPath 2.0 and XSLT 2.0,
as well as a presentation on Extreme DocBook, the RelaxNG version of
the wildly popular and widely used DocBook content model. Also, before
leaving for Montreal, Norm posted the “Eaux-de-vie” release of DocBookNG.
I'm also missing out on some great presentations on Topic Maps and
XSLT.Of course, if you're reading this, you are probably missing it
too. I'd highly advise attending Extreme Markup and the XML conferences from IDEAlliance.
Montreal is a really interesting city, as is the Extreme Markup
conference. You'll find an interesting blend of people and information
in both cases. Hope to see you both next year...
See also: DocBook
Labels: DocBook, RelaxNG, XML

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