Avocado Wedding Cake

A friend of ours bakes a wedding cake and asks us to taste-test her trial run. Unbeknown to her, we’ve

My wife holds a social movie night every so often, and part of the tradition involves making dinner. This responsibility passes around the group, though we’ve found it more enjoyable when guests surprise us with desserts.

One such guest had spent about 12 hours on a trial run making a four layer wedding cake, and she was eager to have us try it. As she brought in one layer, we determined we might need a little more to address the slightly larger crowd. So, she ran out to the car to get the rest.

During her exit, I thought it might be amusing if we all pretended it was a little off, and by the same flavor.

Someone called out, “Avocado?”

“Yes, run with it. When she returns, we’ll all independently taste it and go ‘I didn’t want to say anything, but does this taste funny to you?’ ‘Yeah. It taste like a hint of… I can’t quite placed it…’ ‘Avocado?’ ‘Hmm, yes, that’s it exactly. Avocado. Is this an Avocado cake?'”

At that point, others in the group would start concurring and vocalizing commentaries on the unique flavor.

The cake, of course, was perfectly fine. But when a room full of strangers mysteriously home in on the same awkward point simultaneously, or at least it appears that way, you’ve got to wonder who’s going to break the straight face first.

What really brings this point home is that the guest is actually a fantastic cook and everyone looks forward to when she brings her treats for the group. She’s got quite an underground reputation of baking the best sweets. So, to have something uniformly off by consensus, especially when she’s already tried it, is be high in the amusement scale. Given she also has a great sense of humor, it passed the Will-Walt-Receive-Bodily-Harm test.

Unfortunately, I happened to be upstairs addressing a client issue and missed the actual performance. Although this morning, I did get an instant message that said “Avocado! You don’t mess with someone who’s been up late cooking like that!”

Christy, my apologies. I promise not to do that to you again, well, at least until next week.

Seven Girlfriends To The Perfect Spouse

What do walking sticks, card shuffling, and movie stars have to do with finding the perfect mate? They seem to support that you can find your spouse by seriously dating seven people.

When one goes to a technical conference on Java, perhaps the last thing you’d expect the a speakers’ lunch conversation turn to is mathematical selection of a mate.

I suppose it started simply because we had been talking about change. The topic started with source code change, changes at the office, and moved into changes in people. I offered up the classic observation that women get frustrated at their men because they don’t change, but that men get frustrated at their women because they do.

One gentleman was lamenting on his situation and admiring the subtle manipulation by his wife prior to his flight:
“Honey, ” he relates she began, “you should probably lose some weight, though I’d still love you if you were fat as a house.” And, after a momentary pause, she inquires, “Do you think I need to lose weight?”

Apparently his response of “I always love you, too” wasn’t quite what she was looking for.

Another speaker spoke up and added, “Well, I don’t have that problem at all. We’ve come to an agreement. I can be either fat or bald, but not both.”

Absolutely curious, I asked how that arrangement was sought. That just isn’t the kind of thing that normally just comes up as the finer points of marital negotiation.

He pondered and explained it started by as an ultimatum by her — unfortunately for her, she was engaging with one of the brighter logical minds…

“Honey, I’ve thought about it, and you can’t grow up to be fat and bald.”
“Really? Well, I have no control over being bald.”
“Oh. Well then you can grow up to be bald, but not fat.”
“Well, if I can be bald and not fat, then it’s only fair that I can also be fat and not bald.”
“makes sense, that sounds fair.”
“Then it’s settled, I can either be bald, or fat, but not both.”
“Agreed.”

And at that point, he took another bite of cake, stroking his head of hair with the other hand.

But this started a fantastic digression about how one knows when you have the right person in your life. We’d all just come out of meetings pertaining to measuring, quantifying, trend analysis, and metrics.

Based on rough calculations, to calibrate the scale and distribution of a sample size population, to do the best you could do, in a short period of time, it was concluded that you really needed to examine at least seven samples. At that point, you have a reasonable approximation for making a reasonable judgment call, and it was just a matter of how many standard deviations you were discriminating for.

A simple example is called for.

You’re walking in the woods and you’ve been given the task to pick up the best walking stick you can find. But the rule is, once you set it down, you can’t pick it up again.

So, you pick up the first stick you come to. However, you don’t know if this is the largest, or smallest. You have nothing to compare it to. With no basis for comparison, you set it down.

So, you pick up the next stick you come to. And you start to note more attributes, such as weight, shape, type of wood, etc. And again, you drop it.

So, you pick up the next stick you come to. As the attributes that interest you start to prioritize, you find yourself become more aware of the quality. You start looking at things like balance, general utility, wear, and things that come along with the stick, such as moss or termites. Some things are alterable, others are not.

As your go from stick to stick, each time you’re refining your assessment abilities and have gained more knowledge about what you’re looking at, as well as determining what you want.

After your six stick, depending on the breadth of the distribution you’ve encountered, you’ve started to formulate an accurate picture of of what you can reasonably expect. At this point you simply decide what criteria must be met, and the next stick that meets that criteria, you take. Permanently.

Oh sure, there might be something else better out there, but the effort, cost, time, dangers, and availability will more than likely offset the value you’d currently have. Trading your walking stick for something new, only trades existing faults with new unforeseen ones.

The same mathematical application applies to the dating scene.

Young couples find themselves inexperienced for selecting long term candidates and determining personal discriminators: there are unforeseen personality clashes, other options suddenly look more attractive, and if one settles too prematurely, it usually means being treated like a doormat or being taken advantage of financially.

Who among us didn’t stumble upon infatuation and think it was true love at sixteen? Or, find an exciting girlfriend only to discover character flaws that were obvious to our friends, family, and even our own 20/20 hindsight? Or, have everything wonderful and stable only to have it all turned on its ear for not explicable reason just as she turned twenty.

Unfortunately, for many, desperation or loneliness causes some people to settle well before their calibration process is complete; these people usually learn the hard lesson that being trapped in a bad relationship is worse than being lonely.

Alternatively, there are those that spend too much time in the calibration phase, and totally miss out on the longer term joys that are more rewarding.

It’s also interesting to note that we see microcosms of discriminating selection occur around when context and locality are ignored and we forget the more global nature of the chase.

One example may be the cruise ship filled with old geezers, of which in that context, some middle-aged person who’d never catch your eye looks fairly darn attractive in light of the situation. Same goes for co-workers, people met in bars, or even at parties — the limited selection forces expectations to be lowered.

This is why online dating services that give the illusion of many candidates keeps people seeking for perfection, while speed dating narrows the options and forces a compromised choice or none at all.

Of course, one might also say that it’s the reasoning behind things being in the last place you look, for once you make the find, the search is over.

Seven, however, lets you home in on a very acceptable choice that you can be genuinely be happy with, rather than waiting forever. For you too have a shelf life, and by the time you find the ideal through an exhaustive search, you may be too old to do anything about it.

I ponder, though, if there’s something more special going on.

For example, we’ve all heard of six degrees to Kevin Bacon, at that point you’ve traversed enough paths to get where you want.

Additionally, and I think this was in a story by Wired Magazine, a number of years ago, there was a mathematician who was going on a long horseback cattle drive. To amuse himself, he brought along a deck of cards, and spent the time shuffling it. At the end of his trip, he had mathematically deduced that for a deck to be sufficiently randomized (that is any card could be assured to physically be in any position), it required the deck to be shuffled seven times.

In both cases, we see that seven got us a good sampling — and with a good sample, an intelligent choice can be made.

Google Image Labeler – Game or Tool

Here’s one I bet you didn’t know about: Google Image Labeler… it’s like a game, and it makes finding Google Images better.

Ever wonder how Google Images seems to zero in on images so well?

I just stumbled into the Google Image Labeler, and it’s addictive.

Google shows you a random image, and you enter in as many keywords as you can think of in real time. Meanwhile, a partner you’ve been paired up with does the same thing. When you match one of your terms, you progress to the next image.

You’re given a finite amount of time to do as may as you can, scoring points as you complete match after match. A score board is kept so you can see your ranking, as well as compete for the top titles.

So, while you’re playing this game with a mystery person on the net, you’re actually seeding Google with image tags, the ones where you both match are given validation that two independent people looking at the same image came up with the same tag.

Clever. And fun!

Steal the Check

How to pick up someone’s bill when they are too polite to let you.

This evening I went out to eat with a friend, but wanted to pick up his bill, and was pretty sure he wasn’t going to let me. So, I devised a clever way to get his bill out of his hands without lying — it just required deception.

I looked down at my own bill and got a confused look, then looked over at his.

“Uh, I think I have yours…” and started to hand him my unsigned bill.

Right as he went to hand his to me, I retracted my bill, took his, and handed both to the waitress. “Yup, I’ve got yours.” And with a nod, the waitress ran off.

DragonCon 2006

Visited DragonCon. I’ve decided I like FanGirls.

As much as I like science fiction, fantasy, and games, it may be hard to fathom that I’ve never been to a “Con” before. I’d visited, briefly, a Star Trek convention, but it was more vendors selling stuff that anything exciting.

Oh sure, I’ve been to training classes, seminars, computer conferences, security conferences, hacker conferences, but nothing quite like this.

DragonCon is about one MegaMeter (1000km) from my home. Meaning, it was approximately a 13hr ride in the car. And, going down with friends, especially the kind that attend “cons” all the time, you can only imagine what the conversations were like, especially during pitstops.

Wendy’s in Woodstock, VA was slower than I’d ever seen it. It took literally 35 minutes to process 4 people. While we were standing in line, an indecisive member of the group asked “What are you getting?” After a momentary pause of looking at the cashier, “At this rate, dinner.”

Instead of butter for the baked potato, they serve something that’s “buttery like.” Makes you want to enjoy your “meaty-like” burger. You know the one — it has protein in all the colors of the rainbow.

Even a decent sit-down meal had its quirks.

For instance, I’ve made the observation that women don’t just drink coffee… they have a relationship with it. They warm their hands, snuggle up to it, press their face to the cup, slowly inhale the scents. I’m throughly convinced that if coffee vibrated, they’d have no need for men.

I suspect all this will get ruined in the future, when in the age of instant we’ll hear old people say things like “Back in my day, we used to ingest coffee with our mouths. Have another Espresso Patch?” and then slap a rectangle adhesive filled with caffine on their arm.

For breakfast we hit Cracker Barrel. The place is themed with all kinds of old kitchenware and appliances, the kind you might have seen in the 1920s. That made me wonders, when I’m a zillion years old, will I be sitting in places that have Pampered Chef products glued to the walls with an old Intel Pentium processor sitting under glass? And instead of LP records, DVDs will be hung on the wall as obsolete memorials to media long since forgotten?

It certainly can’t be the food that brings people in the doors. I know. I’ve tried it. The older crowd must be brought in by nostalgia. Either that, or this is evidence that taste buds fail in later years as well.

Now when the con starts, it’s something like 8am. And that means if you are staying in a hotel across town, you need to get up early. I’m not a morning person. Oh sure, I may be perky in the morning, but that right there is a sign I’m still asleep. At that point I still need basic instructions like “Step 1: Put syrup on pancake. Step 2: Put pancake in head.”

Evenings were just as exciting. While the group went to Kroger’s, I decided to hang out in the car and get some rest for a minute while the others shopped. Of course, when one of them returned and opened the door, the car alarm was set off — and not having the key, there was nothing I could do about it. The owner of the car came running out of the store screaming, “Oh my god! Someone’s trying to steal Walt!!!”

I’m not sure what’s up with Atlanta, Georgia either. I mean the place looks like the Bible belt — if a Bible belt had strip joints, pole dancers, and adult book stores. And when you’re not quite awake, you read signs incorrectly. A double-take had to convince me that I did not see “Secretions: Frictional Lapdances” hanging on a big purple sign. It was the kind of advertising that strikes you — “We’ve turned undressing into creative loafing.”

Another sign I misread was “Self Sewage” instead of self storage. It’s weird when the eyes and brain don’t fully communicate.

DragonCon was also somewhere that it was dangerous to pickup up other people’s conversations in the middle. I kid you not, some guy walks by me as he explains to his buddy, “My foreskin… gone!” — it’s the kind of short phrase that leaves very strange imagery in your mind for long periods afterward.

Another case was when a girl was relaying her half of a conversation to her friends: “Ah ha! …you’re old enough to be my daddy.” Which, given the age of the person stating it, made you think twice about Gandolf in retrospect.

And another case someone a young lady walked by really confused announcing to her friends, “I’ve lost my pants.” I can’t even imagine how that’d happen in a crowed room.

While waiting at a conference table, some guy dressed as a cop and drinking a beer was going down the escalator. Someone passing by on the other direction asked “Nice costume, did you make it yourself?” The reply went as such, “Yeah.” (pause) “Actually, no.” (pause) “I found a cop and kicked his ass.”

I can see where that might save a buck going to a costume store, but I wouldn’t recommend the approach for the general public.

One thing that I did happily discover at DragonCon was FanGirls — proof that the female gender actually groks scifi and will even dress up as their favorite character. For the curious, the G-Rated pages on Wikipedia or even a mother nursing in public shows more intimate, revealing, and interesting places on the female form than were exposed at the con… just not as in an of interesting way. It’s like when you realize that the waitresses at Hooters are wearing more clothing with a looser fit than the general public at the local swimming hole.

I was surprised by the fact that normal attendees looked astonishingly good in their costumes, many quite professional. While at the same time, those that entered the Dawn look-a-like contest were far more “chunky” than the character they were trying to emulate. Not everyone can pull off spandex or short skirts. And a lot of people seemed to be out to prove this point.

The registration desk seemed to be struck by its own problems. People were fussing about this and that, and registration was saying they’d done everything to make it possible to pre-register so these folks wouldn’t have to stand in line. My thought? Invent a CrankyCon, and send all the whiners there.

At one point I was suffering from a headache brought on by lack of food. While rubbing my temples I almost fell asleep at the table, as I was trying to go to my happy place. I woke up shouting “there are Kingons in my happy place!” The laughs at the table made me wonder if they put them there.

I got them back, however, by folding my black napkin into a Darth Bunny. Darth Bunny can always make liquid shoot of out of people’s noses if he appears at just the right time.

DragonCon wasn’t without it’s quota of toilet tales either.

On the way down I-81, we stopped at a rest stop that had renovations going on. The bathrooms were closed, but they had a dozen porta-potties. Now I can say the following without prejuice or exageration: it was actually the cleanest porta-potty I’d ever been in. Locking door, no grafitti, no order, well stocked, no splatter. I’d eat off it — it was that clean.

Contrast this to the large obscure bathroom I found hiding in the hotel that had as many empty stalls as the matrix had gun racks. I pick one down at the far end, hoping no one will spend the time to come down this far. I was wrong. Some guy must have gotten lonely and wanted a neighbor. He wanders down, takes the stall right next to mine, and starts letting out this old-man poo smell. I would have rather had breathing lessons in an outhouse. gak!

Another time, I walk in, and a dad marches his little girl in. Not his baby, not his toddler, but his little girl. She stands with her back to the urinal, crosses her arms, and starts doing a line inspection. No friggin’ way I’m going there. Forget performance anxiety, I’m more concerned about a lawsuit.

Maybe, like grade school, kids need their own bathrooms. I’m listening to another conversation happening next door, “Just sit down and use the potty… Don’t bend over! …Look, you just put your badge in the potty.” “I know, it reeks,” came back tiny voice. “Leave it alone, don’t touch it.” “But it’s mine…”

I’ve got to say though, DragonCon certainly didn’t have the number of ‘incidents’ I expected it to. People there were kind, friendly, and unquestionably helpful. Once I needed a bag to carry some sodas, and some stranger took out some object he bought at a vendor table downstairs and handed me the bag, other people were kind enough to share food and drinks, people shared their place in line concentrating on keeping things moving instead of being territorial. It just convinces me that geeks are more polite than other social groups.

I was surprised, however, at how there is a wide diversity of the way actors treat cons, fans, and speaking. I got to talk with some actors, and it’s fairly clear, the majority of them don’t understand the larger picture of the series they play in, they don’t like watching themselves on television or in movies, and many of them loath their jobs. So when fans admire them for their work, their character, or what they represent — they take it with as much excitement as your dentist drilling a tooth. It’s sad. Autograph signing in profitable, but they really don’t seem to want to be there. I suspect they get over saturated with the same questions and it gets old.

While the rest of my group was playing games, I decided to walk the con and take photographs. I snagged about 3000 in all. (I hope to get them online this week.) A number will require photoshopping — which makes me think, Photoshop is like Digital Alcohol… a kind of Beer Goggle filter.

The ride back home was just as fun. We passed a large guy on a motorcycle who’s earlobes were flapping in the wind the same way that Jar Jar’s ears would.

I drunk way too much soda and iced-tea, and requested a non-emergency rest stop. However with bumps in the road, it was more like “Don’t try to be a hero, there’s a McDonald’s at the next exit.” (Take it! Take it!)

With McDonald’s sometimes you think the freshest thing they serve are the buns. Sometimes it’s the service. And that just makes you want to take a shower and crawl in a fetal position.

So, what happened at DragonCon. Re registered by going through long lines made from barriers of PVC piping. We went to the game room and some of us registered for time slots. Later in the week we checked out a game from the library and played it for a while. Most of the group spent their time playing Dungeons and Dragons. I spent the majority of my time going to panels, costume contests, shopping, and taking photos.

I picked up some comics and got them signed by the author, I bought some drawing software, and I learned about the new Neverwinter Nights 2 that’s coming out. I got some stage makeup for this Halloween and got a personal lesson from the distributor. I got to see River and Wash from Firefly, he’s an exceptional speaker, she’s shy. Sulu was wandering around the convention floor. I got to see Walter (“chevron five locked”) and General Hammond from Stargate SG-1. I got to have a good sized private conversation with Delenn from Babylon 5. Someone was selling a new RPG game based on historically accurate data and story telling, his model was there signing her pictures in the book. Speaking of models, there was some adult model there who looked absolutely horrible in person, a tribute to Photoshop. I also met a model who was on the cover of a sketch book. Artist’s Alley looked booked with people making requests.

I watched two costume contests, neither all that good. People need to realize that if you don’t know how to stage fight properly, you look stupid. Very stupid. Often spastic.

Saw a Who’s Line is it Anyway clone, which was pretty good — although they seemed to think excessive volume was cool and overdrove their speakers.

There were quite a number of people dressed in Goth. And, even more surprisingly I found a Goth band I really liked. Me. Like Goth? I know. Weird. I’m on the edge of ordering their CD, though I don’t know how I’d ever explain why it was in my collection. Chatted with their keyboardist as well, she was very nice, personable, pretty, and pleasant — not what I had imagined Goth to be.

Heard a fantastic high-technical content zero-arrogance talk about how to film models to look like full size sets done by the guy who did the “Mac killed my inner child” clip. Had a long private conversation with him before we got kicked out of the room.

Anyhow, I know what you all want… not text… you wanna see photos of FanGirls.

UPDATE: A quick set of fangirls is on Picasa, and a lot more, about two and a half days worth, has been uploaded to my photo album.

Trends at “No Stuff, Just Fluff”

I had the wonderful opportunity this weekend to attend the Northern Virginia Software Symposium “No Fluff; Just Stuff” Java and OpenSource conference in Reston, VA – a high-content technical conference that doesn’t waste time with marketing glop.

I walked away noticing several trends.

1) In a conference that’s designed around Java, security, and OpenSource technologies, Ruby got a lot of air time! It seems that Ruby on Rails for 80% of web applications can be 5 to 10 times faster than developing in Java, not to mention far more fun!  Combine this with AJAX, the Prototype JavaScript framework, Scriptaculous, Rico, and Behaviour, and it’s possible to get some rich clients out of a web browser.

2) Apple laptops have arrived.  Anyone who’s anyone has them now.  The developers.  The speakers.  The audience.  Not seeing Microsoft machines in a technical conference (remember, these people make the software you use) was an eye opener.  A number of people had the new Macbook Pro, Apple’s Intel based processor, which, using Parallels, lets you run XP.  Slap the desktop Virtue over that, and you can use both operating systems on the same machine concurrently.

3) Internet Explorer is bad. Worse than I ever thought.  And not just from a security hole perspective.  Everything.  We’d learn something really cool and wonderful, and then we’d find out that IE didn’t do it, didn’t do it right, had a memory leak, or was non-standard.  The more you look at web advancements, the more you wonder why people still use IE.  It lacks features, it is problematic, and it renders web pages wrong.  As such, if you use IE, you may be seeing Explorer Destroyer appearing more agressively – it puts FireFox in front of the user.
4)  There seems to be a growing movement away from complexity.  Frameworks and protocols that carry too much intellectual baggage are being replaced with simplier, smaller, less featured alternatives.  I think we’re seeing abstractionism finally starting to collapse under it’s own weight.

5) Convention and consistency is winning out over configuration and flexablity.  Standing back, trends go in circles.  In BASIC, you need a dollar sign to tell the compiler a variable is  string: A$.  But, oh no, how awful, we have to use punctuation to hint to the compiler.  Nay, let me say  string A  instead, and just use the variable I want.  Now I can’t tell one type from the other, so I use prefixes:  strHouseNumber.  But what if my type changes?  I should change my variable names, because  int strHouseNumber is misleading.  Finally, I need all this error handling in the event I do something wrong as a developer.  Now I’ve got complex code and ugly variable names.  The trend is coming full circle: do lots of automated testing, cut back on error handling code, script languages are actually powerful and fast enough, and if I stick a punctuation on a variable, I can read the type easier:  A$

Party Aftermath: Red vs Blue

…well, if you recall, Ellen… you were shooting me in the face; I didn’t have time to get the camera… since I have a new graphics tablet, this will have to suffice for now…. [image]

When I worked at my last job, we had a number of people who had never seen Team America before. So, we got a small handful together, gathered at my place, snuggled up on the couch, and laughed ourselves silly. We had such a great time, I was asked when the next movie night would be. And, while not having a date in mind, I suggested we do Red vs Blue.

My co-workers hadn’t heard of it, so I explained it to them. Basically, these guys with an X-Box console recorded various scenes from Halo, and using a video editor, produced a short series of episodes. This became wildly popular, and the series has become harder and harder to find online, now that you can purchase DVDs of the episodes.

I’m a proud owner of the hi-res DVD set, but, believe it or not, don’t like them as much as I do the lo-res downloadable version. How come…? The reason is that the DVD strings all the content together sequentially as if it were one big movie. But the charm of the series is actually the fade-in song, the strange situations, followed by a fade out to credits while the audio continues the absurdity in some new direction. It is a better punchline and makes it seem like more time has passed. This is totally lost with the DVD sets, not to mention some really good jokes fall on the cutting room floor.

Well, I managed to scrape together the first season off the web, and since we didn’t want to crowd around the computer, burned a temporary copy to DVD, so we could watch on the big screen. Let’s just say that I learned more than I ever wanted to know about codecs and DVD production before I got it right. To set the pacing, I placed a number of AdultSwim-like fillers poking fun at direct individuals that would be sitting in my living room.

Anyhow, the number of people interested started to climb, and it hit that magic threshold where it was more appropriate to do a party. And, since we hadn’t done an Ashburn party of any massive scale, we thought we’d introduce this group to something big.

The house was decorated with red and blue streamers, red and blue balloons, red and blue banners, red and blue floor coverings, red and blue table settings, and so forth. My wife got a pile of snackage, while I made popcorn in different flavors and in mass quantity. Additionally, we had made a run to Toys’R’Us and the party store, and obtained everything from Pop Rocks, indoor fireworks, to tons of office toys that flew, drew, or shot things.

During our pause for food, we gave out door prizes, and instead of drawing a name, one of the slips said “there’s silly string hidden under the chairs, start the war!” And, within moments, my living room was trashed, my walls were covered, and we had piles (about 24 cans worth) of silly string all over the place. We were grinding it into the carpet, tracking it all over the house. Good stuff!!

Tonight I get an email from Ellen: “Where are the pictures?”

Well, if you recall, Ellen, you guys were shooting me in the face; I didn’t have time to get the camera, and the one guy who did have a camera, only managed to squeeze off four shots, mostly from across the room. He’s promised I can get the pictures, which I assume means sometime tomorrow — at which point I’ll post them.

In the meanwhile, since I now have a new graphics tablet the size of Wyoming, this will have to suffice for now:

Red vs Blue Cartoon Party

UPDATE (12-Mar-2006): Danny apparently was holding a camera before he grabbed cans of silly string, and managed to capture these brief party photos before things really went down.

Bonfire V: Global Warming

Tired of winter, we decided to do something about it. Bonfire!

Tired of Old Man Winter putting a damper on the warm weather, we decided to do something about it: have a bonfire.

This time the theme was Global Warming, and our intent was to create a huge ball of heat so that we could stand in the middle of it and enjoy running around without coats in the middle of winter. We had the recipe from the science books: we needed methane gas, ozone depleting substances, and large amounts of heated carbon dioxide.

So, we had large helpings of chilli, we used hairspray in the potato guns, and lit a pile of wood on fire. Just to be sure, we strangled the ground hog that saw his shadow with our bare hands.

Here are some pictures of the bonfire.

Things didn’t quite go as planned. There was a lot of wind, and that caused the fire to burn unevenly. We used this as the perfect excuse to play with the fire with some amazing results.

Afterward, we went inside and played Werewolf, a social game that involves pointlessly slaughtering your friends and then deceiving them to their faces.

Las Vegas: Pictures

Trying out some new software that produces photo albums; published a number of pictures of things from Las Vegas CES convention.

Trying out a new photo album generator called JAlbum with my recent Las Vegas photos. It’s very close to delivering the kind of photo album I’d like. And, yes, there are booth babes, in addition to animals, the CES event itself, technology shown there, StarTrek, Las Vegas, Tamara, and myself.

Target Practice

More target practice, and got to play with a laser sight this time.

Went out with Mike H. tonight to go target shooting. Tamara normally joins us, but she decided to stay behind and prepare the house for guests and the forthcoming bonfire party.

Used a Glock with a laser sight, though I think the laser wasn’t calibrated. Using the gun’s sights alone let me hit where I was intending.