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    5/29/2009

    Anyone for a quickie?

    Okay, I stole that title from Witchy. It (the use of quickie in a blog title) just made me laugh but is apropos here me thinks.  ;o)

    Yesterday Microsoft rolled out Bing, our new search engine internally. Next week y’all get to see it. But if you go to Bing.com you can view a short video. Now the naming pundits are coming out in force, second guessing the naming strategy. Sigh…

    bing

    Having played with bing for a while now, I have come to luv many of the new features. If you believe in Bill Gate’s observation that “The future of search is verbs.” you will be very pleased with the new capabilities of this search platform.

    See Ballmer and WSJ’s Walt Mossberg talk about bing and the future of search engines. Are we having fun yet?  :o)

    5/28/2009

    Damnation steampunk PC could be yours for a song

    This computer (cover, art, wtf?) could be yours. Read more…

    damnationPC-thumb-530x488-18433

    Picture from http://dvice.com. So sexy, I soooo want.  :o)

    5/27/2009

    Joke du Jour: Classifieds

    bannerdog4
    These classifieds actually ran in a Minneapolis newspaper - a smile for your day...

    FREE YORKSHIRE TERRIER: 8-years old. Hateful little bastard. Bites!

    FREE PUPPIES: 1/2 Cocker Spaniel, 1/2 sneaky neighbor's dog.

    FREE PUPPIES:
    Mother, AKC German Shepherd...
    Father, Super Dog..able to leap tall fences in a single bound.

    FOUND DIRTY WHITE DOG:
    Looks like a rat. Been out a while. 
    Better be a big reward.

    NORDIC TRACK:
    $300 Hardly used, call Chubby.

    JOINING NUDIST COLONY!
    Must sell washer and dryer $300.

    WEDDING DRESS FOR SALE :
    Worn once by mistake. Call Stephanie.

    And the best one?:

    FOR SALE BY OWNER:
    Complete set of Encyclopedia Britannica, 45 volumes.
    Excellent condition. $1,000 or best offer.
    No longer needed,Got married last month. Wife knows everything.

    A tip of the hat to sister Deb for the email.

    5/23/2009

    Reply to In Flanders Field

    I have posted ‘In Flanders Field’ by LTC John McCrae so many times that I thought this year I would provide a pointer to the many replies in poetry form to this poem honoring the soldiers who give their lives for this country and our way of life.

    flag

    by John Mitchell

    Oh! sleep in peace where poppies grow;
    The torch your falling hands let go
    Was caught by us, again held high,
    A beacon light in Flanders sky
    That dims the stars to those below.
    You are our dead, you held the foe,
    And ere the poppies cease to blow,
    We'll prove our faith in you who lie
    In Flanders Fields.

    Oh! rest in peace, we quickly go
    To you who bravely died, and know
    In other fields was heard the cry,
    For freedom's cause, of you who lie,
    So still asleep where poppies grow,
    In Flanders Fields.

    As in rumbling sound, to and fro,
    The lightning flashes, sky aglow,
    The mighty hosts appear, and high
    Above the din of battle cry,
    Scarce heard amidst the guns below,
    Are fearless hearts who fight the foe,
    And guard the place where poppies grow.
    Oh! sleep in peace, all you who lie
    In Flanders Fields.

    And still the poppies gently blow,
    Between the crosses, row on row.
    The larks, still bravely soaring high,
    Are singing now their lullaby
    To you who sleep where poppies grow
    In Flanders Fields.

    Happy Memorial Day (was Decoration Day).

    5/19/2009

    WCB Spring Concert

    Suzy and I really enjoyed the Woodinville Community Band Spring 2009 Concert this weekend. Suzy played all eefer (Eb sopranino clarinet) parts and I was on alto sax. My sax peeps really came through for us, playing exceedingly well. We also performed for the first time at the Redmond High School Performance Center which turned out to be a very nice venue with a stellar staff.

    We played with tongue in cheek arrangement, a musical joke called Perpetuum Mobile by Johan Strauss, Jr. and arranged by Alfred Reed.

     

    We also played a special version of Fiddler on the Roof that most people have not heard. It was arranged by Michael P. Buckley. My solo starts at minute marker 5:25.

     

    This was the last concert of the 2009 WCB Concert season.

    5/17/2009

    Smashing Pumpkins and a Spring Concert

    Smashing_Pumpkins Reading from Eolake’s NSFW blog and he sez:

    What If That Guy From Smashing Pumpkins Lost His Car Keys?, parody.

    Admittedly the most I know about SP is a line from one of my favorite movies: LA Story. Steve Martin's character goes out with a much younger woman, and she asks him: "do you like Smashing Pumpkins?" And he says "I love doing that!"

    The picture is from Harp Magazine. I knew about bands like SP and Nine Inch Nails (NIN) because my son listened to them when he was in high school. I remember walking through the parking lot at work and seeing SP and NIN bumper stickers. I then realized with some shock that kids my son’s age were working in the same company where I worked. Man, did I feel old.

    Suzy and I have a Spring concert this afternoon at the Redmond High School Performance Center. She is on the eefer (Eb sopranino clarinet) and I am on alto sax. The music is very challenging and nice to listen too. I let y’all know how it goes.

    5/14/2009

    NYT: Online Age Quiz Is a Window for Drug Makers

    realage From the New York Times article Online Age Quiz Is a Window for Drug Makers we learn that takers of the popular online RealAge test are handing out valuable data to drug companies.

    “According to RealAge, more than 27 million people have taken the test, which asks 150 or so questions about lifestyle and family history to assign a “biological age,” how young or old your habits make you. Then, RealAge makes recommendations on how to get “younger,” like taking multivitamins, eating breakfast and flossing your teeth. Nine million of those people have signed up to become RealAge members.

    But while RealAge promotes better living through nonmedical solutions, the site makes its money by selling better living through drugs.”

    I guess this was predictable to some. Supposedly the info provided is not connected to your name, but still I wonder when less scrupulous web data vendors will provide that info too.

    Mr. Mikulak said that RealAge protected privacy: it does not give personally identifiable information to the drug companies and the advertisements in e-mail messages are clearly labeled as such. RealAge is “providing value in return for the information,” he said.

    That is a fair trade-off, some members said. Leslie Swan, 31, a stay-at-home mother and former pharmaceuticals saleswoman in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., took RealAge after a Dr. Oz appearance on Oprah. She had not been aware that drug companies had access to her answers, but, she said, she was not bothered by that.

    “So many patients are so clueless and they count on their doctor to know everything and be right 100 percent of the time and don’t always inform themselves, and I think that’s a huge mistake,” Ms. Swan said. “As a patient and a person, you have to take your health into your own hands.”

    Read more…
    5/11/2009

    Twitter Dating – what next?

    Taken from http://amnesiablog.wordpress.com/

    “With all the jokes about people finding dates on twitter Radaroo has created a prototype template. Users sign up by sending a tweet to @radaroo, specifying their gender, the gender(s) they’re interested in, and which activities they’d like to participate in on a first date.” <paraphrased>

          TwitterDates

                              Picture from amnesiablog.wordpress.com

    It reminds me of the speed dating phenomenon where studies showed that most people made their choices within the first three seconds of meeting. Another study on split-second decision making, chronicled in Blink, found that what people said they wanted in an ideal mate did not match their subconscious preferences.

    barcamp_second_life

                           Picture of SL from laughingsquid.com

    I dunno, with the advent of Second Life where you can make money, marry people, have kids and live your lives without out ever really meeting them, I’m thinking we are getting much closer to the Matrix world Neo discovered when he took the red pill. Where’s the blue pill?

    5/9/2009

    Why Goodreads.com

    "And what gift of America to the rest of the world is actually most appreciated by the rest of the world? It is African American jazz and its offshoots. What is my definition of jazz? "Safe sex of the highest order."" — Kurt Vonnegut (Armageddon in Retrospect)

    Last we whilst (okay I stole whilst from a British blogger :o) peeking at my Dad’s reading list I took the opportunity to invite a heck of a lot of people from my Hotmail address book to Goodreads.com. I thought that almost all if not everyone would ignore it. Wow was I wrong. So many people joined up that I have been busy catching up on what my friends and family have been reading.

    goodread

    My Dad turned me on to this addictive little site, but then he has pretty much stopped using it. Maybe this post will get him started again. The quote is from the site to. There is a ‘fav quote’ part to your profile page and this turned up when I searched on ‘jazz’. I’m still waiting to see one of my fav bloggers, Graham, build his list. Maybe I can get Witchy on there too.

    5/6/2009

    PCBB, don’t make me go here…

    Here are some high school kids dishing up some solid Glenn Miller soup. But seven trumpets?  ;o)

     
    YouTube - In The Mood / BFJO Takasago (Glenn Miller)

    Gary notes the trumpets are playing some of their lines down an octave. The first lady trumpet soloist has a nice growl in her solo. The dynamics are tasty too.

    5/3/2009

    On a Sunday Afternoon…

    My granddaughter and Amelia the puppy talk.

    AmberAmelia09

    5/1/2009

    For Sale: Buescher Bass Sax

    For your consideration is a '21 (estimated) Buescher TruTone bass sax. It comes with a new Mason Pro hard case, the original and a silver Gloger neck, two mouthpieces (Conn Eagle pickle barrel and a Paul Coats tweaked Bari sax mouthpiece that works great on this instrument).

    The instrument is original silver plated with a gold bell wash treatment. Two modifications have been made. The original neck was shortened about a half inch to give me more room to adjust pitch. And an Amati spit valve was added because this instrument didn't get one from the factory.

             P1010076

    All the work has been done by world famous musician and repair tech Paul Woltz of Kennelly Keys. He has fixed a couple of intonation issues so that I can play the full range of this instrument from top to bottom with no alternate fingering needed. This horn is ready to play now.

    The instrument will ship from Seattle and including the shipping in the lower 48 states at a cost to you is $7300. Just leave me a comment and I will contact you. If you live in the Seattle metropolitan area, you can come try the instrument out. I have had many offers on my many vintage instruments like the one Jay Easton gave me for the silver Selmer Paris Bb clarinet. After playing it he said, "If you ever want to sell this, let me know." I take very good care of my instruments and they are all players.

    P1000881 BassSaxStand BuescherBaby6

    Today’s School System – a conversation

    This is capturing a recent email conversation I had with the school my grandson attends. I found out they were having students read from any book they chose three times a week and during the school hours. Nicky is an at risk student so I assumed life skills training duties in February. Our goal is to go from all F’s to C’s & D’s this year. Right now we are at 2 C’s, 1 D, and 2 F’s. I bolded the text below as an indication of what I’m looking into next.

    Path

    From: me
    To: Teacher

    <teacher>, this is very frustrating to <us>. I didn’t realize the teachers were using student time to grade papers and such. We as a family talked about it last night in detail. We never did reading in school unless it was from a school text book and even then it was a group event with a student reading and questions being allowed.

    Seems like a major waste of students’ time compared to using the time for structured learning. How times have changed.

    From: Teacher, Copy: school official
    To: me

    You are misunderstanding the silent reading sessions a bit.  I’m sorry if I didn’t explain it very well.

    Silent Reading is a school-wide commitment to promoting reading.  Teachers and students alike read during this time; no make-up work, no grading papers, no e-mail, no phone calls, no trips to the restroom.  Just reading.  Everyone in contact with students reads at that time.  Even staff that does not have contact with students are encouraged to read.  No instructional time is lost; this is time that is homeroom, so for three days they read, and two days are time for club meetings, ASB, student organizational work, students getting help with homework, etc.

    I hope this clarifies the reading time a bit.  If you have any questions about it, please feel free to call either myself or <school official>.  Thanks.

            Picture by Allie Proff - 2009

    From: me
    To: School Official Copy: Teacher

    Thanks <teacher>.

    <school official>, back in the day the homeroom time was ten minutes and the club time was *after* school. Why do we take up dedicated school time with extended homeroom and club time? And then we use some of that time for reading by the student.

    Don’t get me wrong, I luv reading and think is valuable. But there is precious little time in a school day for all the things a student needs help with. Nicky can’t tell me the capital of Washington state, the vice president’s name, or what the word maintenance means. But he has time to read on his own wherein he selects books about fighting and wars which he is intensely interested in. With coaching he will listen to conversations outside his areas of interest like music, Germany, politics. But not on his own time.

    I would really like to understand this reading program.

    From: school official
    To: me

    <parent>

    Here is some information about that time that may help understand some of its value. 

    Not all clubs are allowed to meet during this time on Tuesday and Thursday.  The clubs that do meet do so only periodically and they must have a curricular connection or instructional value to them.  For example, the Environmental Club may meet because of its link to environmental sciences but the “Games” club may not meet during this time. 

    Tuesday and Thursday homeroom time also serves as an academic support time or advisory time for students.  Most schools have an advisory time in their schedules.  Not all students have supportive home environments that value education.  This time is critical for their success.  Students get help from teachers, make up tests, gather notes and also complete homework during this time.  This time is  a total of forty minutes a week.

    Our reading program encourages everyone to read during this time.  Research shows that if students are allowed to select their own reading material, their reading productivity rises dramatically over prescribed reading assignments.  Our goal is to promote the reading. 

    As students begin to identify their passion and fields of study for professional career options, they begin to sharpen their knowledge base and expertise through selecting their own reading.  In the busy day of today’s students many may not encounter reading for fun and casual “mental imaginary vacations” except during this reading time.  I firmly believe that most of our students do not read enough and that busy working parents often find themselves with a lack of energy to be the reading role model for our students.

    I do agree with you that every instructional minute should “count”.  It is critical that our teacher’s maximize their classroom time to truly teach each subject.  Many students read texts or material that is required for their other classes during this time.   I am always a bit surprised that student and parents do not utilize the before and afterschool time with teachers for assistance.  The thirty minutes before and afterschool could benefit many.

    Is this time perfectly supportive for all?  Perhaps not, but in short, I believe that no time spent reading is counted as a loss and the forty minutes a week to support academics and a few selected clubs is important for many.

    I appreciate the time you have taken to email us.  I like your passion about this!

    Respectfully,

    <school official>

    Sigh… does this make sense to anyone else? BTW, Nicky has observed that teachers routinely use this time to work on their grade books and grade papers.