27 August 2008

Week in review - August 31st, 2008

Happy Labour Day Weekend.

For those "not across the pond", this is the American holiday, not the political party. We get to take the first Monday of September off so we can bbq (burn) food, sleep in late and for some, shop. Retail madness on any holiday has not appealed to me for a very long time so I shall not be partaking.

This week we had our CEO's new hire/anniversary lunch. Steve, Steve and Steve were in attendance so we used the opportunity to have Pam (thanks Pam) take a picture. The others think I should grow a beard. Claudia pointed out that they need to shave their heads. Middle ground...

The Three Steves

Fame at last...

Have you ever seen "The Jerk" with Steve Martin? Well in this goofball of a movie, Martin plays somewhat of a nobody who finally moves away from home and lives in a room at the garage he works at. He's thrilled when he gets a phone and shows up in the phone book proclaiming that he's somebody at last. Little does he know a killer has randomly selected a victim from the phone book - and he's it. Hopefully google.com doesn't work this way (or hopefully killers don't use google.com this way).

Cat Stuff
Curiosity and the fingers - she was out the other day and going crazy on the rocking chair. In order to tempt her to be a willing subject, I waggled my fingers and she took the hint.
Curiosity and the fingers

Let me in... She also is good at balancing on top of the chair to voice her concerns that I really am slacking in my duties as a doorman to the cats. I need to work out how to suppress the flash effect in glass - using a diffuser would be an option with an external unit.
Let me in

More sleeping... Tinto gets more practice. He's presently lying almost on top of the air conditioning vent. If my father-in-law were here, he's suggest that Tinto take that heavy fur coat off....
Tinto sleeping


Monday
Monday being a holiday,I'll be cooking. We have chicken which is currently taking a soak in ginger wasabi beer marinade and some nice New York Strip steaks. I managed to get some more decent charcoal (the real stuff) from Barbeques Galore yesterday so I'm happy. I used the crummy Kingsford briquettes the last time because I was out of the good stuff and although it did the job, I wasn't too happy with the flavour.

Technology
With our upcoming trip to Europe this December, one thing that became obvious is that the TomTom 910 needs an upgrade. It's got European maps (3 years old) and is bulky. I need something smaller with up to date maps and portable enough that when we're out in a city, we can walk around with it. Enter the now-discontinued Garmin nuvi 670 which retailed at the beginning of the year for around $800. Now $300, it's been replaced by the nuvi 700 series which frankly offer very little new. This one is small enough to slip in your pocket (try doing that with the TomTom).



Book Review
Still ploughing my way through the previously mentioned ones. Perhaps this week will be quiet and next week I'll have made some progress.
Tinto sticks his tongue out

21 August 2008

Week in review - August 24th, 2008

Happy Sunday.

Tomorrow is Monday of course and it'll be a good week for me - have a new team member starting tomorrow and I pass the (non-Olympic) baton of being the on-call DBA as well. A double reward, just for showing up :)

This week has been pleasant - life continues at its usual breakneck pace and although this week was quieter than last, it presented its own challenges. We're making great progress on some long term strategy items at work so I'm happy with the direction. Four weeks to San Francisco :)

Claudia
Claudia has had a busy week - she's back at Georgia State along with the Great Unwashed (undergraduates), some of whom she has the dubious pleasure of teaching (CIS 20102 - Introduction to Computer Based Information Systems). I'm surprised she doesn't come home with steam escaping her ears since one of the big topics here is Microsoft Access 2007 and as a former Oracle DBA (like myself, a fine profession), it's like having driven a BMW for the past few years and then being given a Vespa. Still, it probably gets better fuel economy figures :) Anyway, she seems to be doing well with it and it is one of the necessary evils for PhD students.
Not co-operating...

Frog
I was out on the deck with one of the cats the other day and saw this small frog under a mat so of course presented with that opportunity dug out the camera. I looked it up and apparently it's a Green Frog, native to these parts. And you thought all frogs were green (some of you may think that have a pig for a best friend but we ate her last weekend).
The Frog
On the subject of photos, I am still switching to Flikr.com for my photos - so far they seem to offer some decent functionality although I like the end-user friendliness of Picassa where albums are much more analogous to their paper-based cousins. Until I get bored, I'll likely upload to both but pictures for this site will now be linked to my Flikr pages.

Cat face
Here's Tinto showing off his better side (his other side is virtually indistinguishable).
Tinto - a portrait

Book Review
Well, the Battle for Spain continues. As I mentioned last week, I am still reading the sequel in the Will Thomas series which I have now finished.

To Kingdom Come
(the above title is a link to the Amazon.com page). This sequel to "Some Danger Involved", a true British understatement, gets off to a decent enough start. This time the agency is embroiled in a terrorist attack against Scotland Yard and the investigation to find the perpetrators. I finally finished it and have to say it was most enjoyable and a good read, especially as a stress relief valve. Will Thomas has a quaint writing style in this series and does well keeping to it. I may investigate the next in this series...

The Limehouse Text by Will Thomas
Next in the series...

Movie Review
Muriel's Wedding
(the above title is a link to the Netflix.com page). Another rather offbeat Australian comedy from the mid-1990s tells the tale of Muriel, a rather bizarre figure and her even stranger family. She's bought into that whole idea that her wedding will be the most important day of her life (kinda sad that anyone says that), but when it finally comes, it's not quite what she bargains for. She finally realizes what is important though (it has zip to do with weddings) and the movie ends on a positive note (so no need for the razor blades).

And now for something completely different.
Here's one you won't see in the movies...

16 August 2008

Week in review - August 17th, 2008

Claudia's back!
Hooray! She got back into Atlanta this afternoon after a week in sunny Toronto. Pictures will be posted once we get them uploaded. She picked a great week to be away since it's been busy for me at work and I've been burning the midnight oil on a couple of projects. Her flight was slightly delayed initially thanks to a computer system glitch with Customs & Immigration in Toronto (apparently you clear US customs there) so that was interesting. Along with Netflix and Google who both had issues this week, the US Government was also not exempt.

Cats
Since I've been busy, not a lot to add this weekend. Took plenty of pictures of the cats (of course) and fiddled with my camera in the quieter hours (there was one in there somewhere).

dreaded leaf tormentor To: LL Bean Returns Department

With some stuff from LL Bean arriving, both cats decided the box would be a good home temporarily. Neither of them would consent to an appearance together. My experiment with different camera settings resulted in my getting many pictures of dust on the floor which was perfectly in focus (in spite of having vacuumed). Must mop the floor and work out the focus kinks :)

It's mine.  Get your own! Reminds me to dust and wash that dang bag.. Fountain drinker

I did manage to make some lunches for next week - I mention this only because my solution to a logistics problem of putting potatoes on a fish pie was at first, ingenious. Using a Ziploc bag, I piped the potato on top hower as you can see, it really resembles something else. Gives me something amusing to smile at next week at lunch.

Any idea what this is?

Reviews of the week...
Don't make me laugh - I haven't had time to open a book or apply alternating electrical current to the tube this week. However if it all pans out (and it will), next week I'll finish off the detective novel and recommence the Spanish Civil War (I mean read the book, not incite a re-run of the unpleasantries).

Next week...
Next week, I should be back to normal, schedule-wise so will try to write something more interesting. I may even get out more and take pictures of non-cat things.

A last word...
Seems we should be rich - our cat has a cola line...

12 August 2008

Toronto Bound, Blood and the High Resolution Cat

The Great North
Claudia is in Toronto now, having left earlier this week. I'm sure she'll have a great time there as there's much to do and see (assuming she can escape from the conference). She does need to bring back a maple leaf for Tinto since he likes to collect them so much.


IMG_0070
Originally uploaded by spbutterworth


Early Riser...
Today (Thursday), he brought me a leaf at 4am. Bear in mind I didn't get to bed until 11.30pm and was tired having started Wednesday at 3am. So this morning's 4am call was "useful" since I had to be on a conference call at 4.45am. It gave me extra preparation time. Evidently he was exhausted after this effort.

Olympic Snoozing
Originally uploaded by spbutterworth


Blood
So today I got the results of my quarterly blood tests. My endocrinologist tracks my glucose levels closely and until July, I was treating a fairly serious type 1 diabetes with pills and inexact insulin. Having taken on an insulin pump that provides insulin all day, every day, my glucose control is much better. To show this, the A1c test that shows the long term (60-90 days) trend was 9.8 three months ago and had been climbing for the past couple of years (non-diabetics have a level less than 5.9 apparently).

My level as of a week ago was 6.6. That's a huge drop in a short time thanks to the technology. Well worth the $6,000 my insurance company paid for it :)



High Resolution Cat
So I can now take higher resolution pictures with the XSi - 12.2MP up from 7MP. Hopefully there will be an equally decent leap in composition and quality as a result. I'm sure I'll be hearing from some....

High Resolution Cat
Originally uploaded by spbutterworth

07 August 2008

Week in review - August 10th, 2008

Another fun week.

From 2008-07-26

Not work
So I've ordered the camera :) Canon XSi with a couple of lenses (17mm-55mm IS and 55mm-250mm IS) so that will set me up nicely for the trip to San Francisco in late September and of course for our European trip in December.

Since we're doing this trip and I want to make sure I don't take 3,000 crappy pictures, I decided to take a refresher photography class - my first since 1986. This one is about photographic composition and perspective and is a six week course starting early September. By then I should at least be familiar with the device. No doubt I'll be posting my results online :)

From 2008-07-26

From 2008-07-26

This coming week, Claudia is in Toronto for a conference (Tuesday - Sunday) so it will be just me and the cats. I hope they like chili since I'm making a huge pot of it for the freezer.

Work
I'll keep this one brief :)

So the end is in sight. I successfully was able to hire a new DBA to join our team and he starts towards the end of August. That will add a third to our Oracle group and mean we'll have more coverage (i.e. less time on call). Very exciting news for us.




Book Review
I'm still working through my current books (previously mentioned), so nothing new there. I did get the Paris one but that's at least a couple of weeks away from being cracked open.

Movie Review

I have to say I haven't watched anything this week....

03 August 2008

Week in review - August 3rd, 2008

Happy Sunday to you!

From 2008-07-26


For those with short attention spans, the funny pictures are at the bottom :)

I've done little today except sleep or so it seems. This morning I made an excellent pot of chili so that will provide lunch for a week or so (what did we do before freezers?). Whilst I was doing that, Tinto brought in his latest acquisition, a cluster of leaves on something of a twig and by far the most impressive contribution yet. Secretly I think he's seeing what he can bring through the portal and he obviously has his eye on something large and furry. I suspect a squirrel will be next although I haven't seen hm actively hunt one yet. Since Curiosity has no claws, his best strategy would be to use her as bait...

Somewhat of a bland week although there were two useful events. The first, an advanced users class I attended for the insulin pump in which I was glad to know I knew pretty much everything and got to use the session to ask/answer a bunch of questions and validate some of my own findings.

The second event, an interview! No, not for me as such, but we are actively hiring for a member of my team and we might have found a candidate. This one has the added advantage of also being a Steve so there will be three Steve's in my group and one Stephanie. I should explain that our dear Stephanie is presently Cathy but I had a photo ID badge printed for her this week with Stephanie as her name and presented it to her just before the interview. Yes, I found it quite amusing and she took it well (the badge, not necessarily the name change).

Getting a third person in to work on our oncall rotation will be good for all concerned. It gives a decent break between being on the hook for potentially getting up in the night and doing those wonderful adhoc deployments. We (being the two currently doing it) discussed switching from a one week rotation to a two week one. The primary advantage of this is that the off-call rotation then becomes two glorious weeks (now) or four (when we have three people in the rotation). It's definitely worth more investigation and we are piloting it now because it makes sense and fits nicely into the scheduling.

Future Stuff
Well, nothing I haven't already published. Claudia leaves for Toronto in just over a week so it will be me and the cats for a while. The Oracle conference in San Francisco for me is still late September and I have mixed feelings about that. The conference should be a lot of fun and as a first time attendee, I am excited to go and just absorb all things Oracle. Sure, sounds enthusiastic, right? Well it is a good opportunity and I plan to pillage all vendors in the exhibit halls for some useful trinkets. I can't believe that I've been doing Oracle since 1992 and have never been...

I did discover some "fun facts" about the conference dating back to 2005:
  • 2,850 network connections
  • At peak demand, the Oracle OpenWorld network handled 45 Mbps
  • 3,423 caffeinated and 816 decaf gallons consumed.
  • 30,000 cookies and 17,000 brownies consumed.
  • 37,000 cans of soda consumed
  • 3,500 Krispy Kreme donuts consumed
That's an amount of coffee I hope to add to this year. It should be noted however that these are US,not Imperial gallons. Anyway, I digress. San Francisco is a great city however because we waited a few days, our hotel is actually out by the airport so we'll be using the shuttle to get to the city. Mind you, it is the Hyatt Regency at the airport so it's a really nice hotel that I've stayed in many times from my Oracle days.

Technology battle
So with the San Francisco trip coming up as well as the expedition to Europe at the end of the year, I've been going round and round in a cycle of indecision over the camera to take. Current winner is the Canon XSi (12.2MP) which beat out the Nikon D80 although only just. I've looked at many offerings including the less well used ones (Olympus, Sony, Pentax) and I think the Canon offers a good mix of performance, size and price. It's also new so in the next month or so, may drop in price. The issue really though is the lens. I hate the idea of switching lenses on this kind of trip because frankly, it's a hassle. If I had my druthers, I'd take:
  • 12mm-28mm - something very wide angle for excellent landscapes
  • 28mm - 85mm - good mid-range lens
  • 85mm - 200mm - great for picking detail off buildings, etc
So of course I don't want to buy three lenses and am left with getting a compromise one. I'm thinking something in the 18mm-135mm or 28mm-200mm range that will provide a decent range with reasonable speed. Of course having narrowed that down, I am torn between a couple of good candidates (Canon and Sigma) that will do the job. Reading more and more online reviews of each, both have flaws. At the ends of the zoom ranges, the edges of the photo on either of these lenses loses detail rapidly but it's not like I intend selling these. I'm leaning towards the Canon because it's good optically and is guaranteed to work with the body. Several people have reported issues with the Sigma IS (image stabilization) when mounted on the Canon and the last thing I want is to be stuck in Spain with a $2,000 piece of inoperative plastic.

So Canon it is (28mm - 135mm) and I will have to get over sacrificing what it is I am sacrificing. Again, the point is one lens. I used to do the three lens thing and it was a pain when walking around a city - you'd see something you wanted and you'd have to unzip the bag, change the lens and take the shot, assuming it didn't move by now. Thankfully in the digital age, you get instant feedback on your pictures and can decide whether to re-take the shot.

Then there's the battle of the pixel. A camera such as this will be shooting RAW and JPEG formats at the same time. I'm not a sports photographer so the 3.5fps speed isn't essential. Each image is about 25Mb RAW and 3Mb JPEG so every shot will be about 28Mb in size. Today I use a 2Gb card in a Canon SD550 compact digital camera. That's good for hundreds of pictures per card. With the new Canon, I'd get (approximately):
  • 1Gb - 36 photos
  • 2Gb - 73 photos
  • 4Gb - 146 photos
  • 8Gb - 292 photos
  • 16Gb - 1,170 photos
So for those of you who are now in a daze, this is almost over :) Anyway, my point is that on a previous trip to Europe, I took 1500 photos and developed every one (I could have sent two people to Europe by air for the price of developing those). Given that we'll be taking at least one laptop with us, putting the day's JPEG images on a website will save some time and card space. However I'll still have probably 2,000 images to process when I get back. So this tells me I probably need to take at least two or three 8Gb cards just to be safe, and also that I will need to have a plan should there be a storage crisis. Again, these are digital. I am not sure how many I will delete before publication but these days I will publish probably 60% of what I take. That's still 1,200 photos...

Perhaps this will go well and I can quit the day job! (lololololol).

Book Review
Well, the Battle for Spain continues. As I mentioned last week, I am now reading the sequel in the Will Thomas series.

To Kingdom Come
(the above title is a link to the Amazon.com page). This sequel to "Some Danger Involved", a true British understatement, gets off to a decent enough start. This time the agency is embroiled in a terrorist attack against Scotland Yard and the investigation to find the perpetrators. I am sure it will lead down many a blind alley however just like a constipated mathematician with a pencil, it will all come out fine in the end.

Movie Review
Cosi
(the above title is a link to the Netflix.com page). This rather offbeat Australian comedy is charming enough and certainly has its moments. Not sure it's in my top 100 movies though :)

The funnies
Ok, so my friend Bill who also shares the same fate of being an Oracle DBA sent me these. I have many more, believe me, but not all are publishable here...

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I dedicate this one (Lazy) to my dad who spent many years in work study for the Army and probably saw a lot of this sort of stuff.







Have a wonderful week.