February 28, 2005
An attempt to capture a budding flower
I'm learning for the first time how to use the macro setting on my digital camera. Still struggling.
Posted by rdhyee at
10:59 PM
February 22, 2005
Milosz poetry books at Cody's
There really aren't that many copies of Milosz's poetic work at Cody's. Given that I'm really into his poetry right now, I expect the rest of the world to be in the same state of active engagement. A quick glance at the bookshelf at a local bookstore reveals otherwise.
Update: Lloyd wrote the following to me: "There might be more Milosz volumes at Black Oak Books, actually, in either/both the new and used sections. The folks at Black Oak always had a soft and warm spot for Milosz, who after all was practically the neighborhood poet laureate, living as he did just up the hill on Grizzly Peak Blvd (near my friend Jane's house, where I used to live; I'd occasionally see him when he'd be out walking). "
Posted by rdhyee at
10:49 AM
February 15, 2005
Belated Happy Valentine's Day
I hope that yesterday was a happy day for you whether or not you are paired off with someone special. For me, this is the first year in a very, very long time in which I have a sweetie to mark V Day.
Posted by rdhyee at
10:28 AM
February 13, 2005
An armadillo at the BoneRoom
I thought that the red ribbon was for the Chinese New Year and then concluded that it was for Valentine's Day.
Posted by rdhyee at
11:50 PM
February 12, 2005
My narcissus one week later
The picture is a bit blurry, my narcissus is doing ok (so far).
Posted by rdhyee at
03:03 PM
Narcissi on sale
I bought two, one for Laura and one for me. I hope that I have enough of a green thumb to enable mine to flourish. If I don't, is my new year bound to be problematic? I hope not!
Posted by rdhyee at
02:50 PM
February 08, 2005
A poppy about to happen
Congratulations to Laura!! Her striking picture of a poppy was
Flickr Blog yesterday, bringing her picture to the attention of the energetic Flickr community.
Posted by rdhyee at
11:21 AM
February 07, 2005
Do French women have the secrets to fat freedom
I had heard in passing talk about
French Women Don't Get Fat ansd wondered whether there would be any "secrets" to eight loss in the book. (I guess the marketing campaign for the book worked enough to get me to ponder what the book had to ffer.) Hence I looked for the answer to my question in
The New York Times > Books > Sunday Book Review > 'French Women Don't Get Fat': Like Champagne for Chocolate, which states:
Guiliano recommends Dr. Miracle's plan as the French way, but it is not unlike the advice that American nutritionists on Web sites and at spas and clinics across the country dispense every day. It is exactly the advice I got last year at Dallas's Cooper Clinic during my annual physical: if you want a glass of wine with dinner, don't eat the bread or skip the baked potato. Do some aerobic exercise; if you're over 40, lift weights. Keep a food diary and cut out the processed junk. Slowly changing your eating habits is far more effective than any crash diet. You don't have to deprive yourself if you learn to make trade-offs. And on and on.
Just what I thought: there is no royal road to thindom.
Posted by rdhyee at
11:03 AM
February 04, 2005
Don't overdo the GTD
It was nice to be reminded by
The New York Times: To Do More. Or Less. Or Something, that in the end, I should not take any system, letting alone the very useful
Getting Things Done approach too seriously!)
Posted by rdhyee at
02:15 PM
Notelets for 2005.02.03
Fast Company | The 6 Myths Of Creativity is a good article for those interested in fostering creativity in organizations they manage.
For those of us who love the trees on the UcBerkeley campus, go read: 1.26.2004 - Going out on a limb for Berkeley’s venerable trees: "Take away the lecture halls, the brilliant students, the Nobel laureates, even take away the Campanile and the tie-dye, and there'd still be a unique feel to Berkeley. Where to find it? Try the trees."
Every so often, I keep hearing about the unexplained and disquieting electoral irregularities in Ohio. Salon.com News | Investigating Ohio seems to be still timely.
Answers.com: hapa:
The word "hapa" is now used in the mainland United States to describe a person of partial Asian ethnicity. However, some Hawaiians dispute this usage, claiming that the word should only be used to describe people of partial Hawaiian ancestry.
Timmins Web Cam:
The City of Timmins presents you with Timmins Web-Cam; there are two (2) cameras taking live pictures from City Hall and from the Mattagami Region Conservation (MRCA) Building at Gillies Lake.
The New York Times > Technology > Circuits > When the Sous-Chef Is an Inkjet:
But the sushi made by Mr. Cantu, the 28-year-old executive chef at Moto in Chicago, often contains no fish. It is prepared on a Canon i560 inkjet printer rather than a cutting board. He prints images of maki on pieces of edible paper made of soybeans and cornstarch, using organic, food-based inks of his own concoction. He then flavors the back of the paper, which is ordinarily used to put images onto birthday cakes, with powdered soy and seaweed seasonings.
Posted by rdhyee at
02:09 PM
Scary surveillance
Yesterday, I listenined to
NPR : O'Harrow's 'No Place to Hide' from Surveillance:
Robert O'Harrow, Jr. is a reporter for The Washington Post and an associate of the Center for Investigative Reporting. His new book is about how the government is creating a national intelligence infrastructure with the help of private companies as part of homeland security. Huge data-mining operations are contracted by the government to gather information on our daily lives. Information technology has enabled retailers, marketers, and financial institutions to gather and store data about us. O'Harrow's new book about this security-industrial complex is No Place to Hide: Behind the Scenes of Our Emerging Surveillance Society.
In response to the scary stuff I heard, I'd like to learn more about David Brin and his book The Transparent Society: Will Technology Force Us to Choose Between Privacy and Freedom?. He wrote Salon.com Technology | Three cheers for the Surveillance Society!. See also Wired 4.12: The Transparent Society.
Posted by rdhyee at
12:12 PM
February 03, 2005
Getting back to GTD and the desire to be visibly productive all the time
In spite of the many, many, many things happening in my life, I feel that I've still managed to be productive and mostly focused. That's not to say that I don't feel a teensy bit off-balance. OK, sometimes way off balance.
Last year, I found the Getting Things Done system very helpful in getting me on track. I will focus some hours on getting my GTD system back on track. Since I'm often using how much of sustance I can write publicly as a measure of productivity, I'm loathe to work too much on activities whose outcomes are invisible or should be made invisible to the public. That's so funny, since so many good things in life are private. At any rate, I might not be producing much stuff here today. Trust me, though: I'll be busy and productive.
Posted by rdhyee at
12:03 PM
Returning Milosz to Jim
My co-worker Jim Harris was very thoughtful and generous to lend me his copy of Czeslaw Milosz's New and Collected Poems: 1931-2001. I'm now ready to return it because Laura bought me my very own copy of the collected poems as well as Second Space, the first collection of poetry since New and Collected Poems: 1931-2001.
Before I return the book, I made sure that I took down the poems I had bookmarked:
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"A Poor Christian Looks at the Ghetto" p. 63
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"Ars Poetica?" p. 240
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"Oeconomia Divina" p. 263
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"Temptation" p. 342
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"Capri" p. 585
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"Report", p. 589
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"My Secrets" p. 792
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"If" p. 703
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"An Alcoholic Enters the Gates of Heaven" p. 734
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"Prayer" p. 742
Thanks, Jim!
Posted by rdhyee at
11:38 AM
February 01, 2005
Good luck life: May it be good reading!
While browsing at Eastwind Books of Berkeley at lunch, I came across Good Life Luck: The Essential Guide to Chinese American Celebrations and Culture (See also goodlucklife.com, the accompanying website.) I'm very excited about reading it since many, many of the Chinese customs I've experienced as a child (and even as an adult) have been mystifying to me. Perhaps the book will clarify these matters.
Posted by rdhyee at
11:07 PM
Happy New Year!
Banners painted by the kids in our house.
Posted by rdhyee at
10:56 PM