The little bits and pieces of my internal life.

From the Mosaic
Saturday, April 30, 2005
Pure Geek Bliss

I've spent the past three days at a conference for users of Mentor Graphics software, which does various geeky engineering tasks involving printed circuit boards and semiconductors and whatnot. Like most conferences, they had keynote speakers and whatnot, and it was the most engaging set I've ever seen.

Wednesday night, we got to meet the MythBusters. If you don't know who they are, they reenact urban legends and other such stories on the Discovery Channel using their special-effects expertise. Not surprisingly, this involves a lot of work with Buster, their crash test dummy, who was also at the conference, making his first public appearance. It also involves a lot of mayhem and explosions -- when (as usual) a story setup doesn't have the sensational effects attributed to it, the MythBusters take it upon themselves to see what it actually takes to bring the myth about. The show is done here in the San Francisco Bay Area, so they'd been out filming for next season earlier in the day. They also brought a blooper reel (not as entertaining as you'd think). But mostly, they brought themselves, answering interview and audience questions. The most interesting thing I learned is that it's gotten a lot easier to procure weird supplies now that the show is a big hit. Formerly, they'd call around for weird things (skunks, industrial fans, rocket motors) and no one would give them the time of day. Now, when they run out of ballistics gel, they can call around for it and people will *give* it to them because they're fans of the show. But mostly it was interesting to hear them talk about the show and the legends, and at the end they gave away promotional photos which they were willing to autograph. Cool!

Thursday I hauled myself out of bed to go hear Mike Sander, head of the Exploration Systems and Technology Office at JPL, talk about the history of unmanned space exploration. If there's anything geekier than empirically testing urban legends and blowing things up, it's unmanned space exploration. Hundreds of engineers listened raptly to Sander describing the analogy between the exploration of the American West and the exploration of space. First, apparently, scouts go out. Some of those make it back alive to report what they found. Then you start to see organized exploration, but that's still a dangerous exercise, and round trips are not guaranteed. The next step are a few permanent outposts -- this is the point at which life insurance becomes available for sale, though it's expensive. Finally, you have full routine commercial activity (amusingly punctuated by a photo of Las Vegas in the presentation).

Exploration of space, it turns out, has happened along the same lines. We're still doing a lot of initial scouting; we're just now sending our first probe to Pluto. On Mars, we're well into the organized expedition phase, and preparing to make the transition to not only human exploration down the road, but, more suggestively, plans are underway to create an exploration infrastructure there, such as a telecom satellite so that rovers and whatnot on the surface can relay to the satellite, which in turn will have the high-powered hardware necessary to link back to Earth. Cool!

Finally, Friday morning, even shorter on sleep but ready for one more round, I went to hear the keynote speech of Burt Rutan, the designer of SpaceShipOne, the experimental spacecraft that won the Ansari X Prize for non-government space flight. He was just amazing to listen to, full of something that rides the edge between crackpothood and genius, but at the same time a shrewd enough businessman to make it work. He's got definite ideas for the future, same as Sander from JPL, but whereas NASA is thinking about exploration, Rutan is trying to begin laying the groundwork for things normal (well, wealthy, but still fairly normal) schmos can experience someday like orbiting hotels. And he said that one of the important functions that he's trying to fill, with his defiantly private space program, is to inspire tomorrow's geniuses. The pioneers of the space program grew up during the explosion of flight and were inspired by it; who will inspire today's children to dream tomorrow's dreams? I'm a cynic, but one would have to be far more cynical than I am to be unmoved by such a dream.

I'm applying to business school, and of course that means, to a lot of people, that I've sold out on what's really important. But I can tell you, after listening to such stuff, that my inner geek is alive and well and still responds to the same thing it's always responded to -- the call to go out and scout and map the undiscovered country.
 
Saturday, April 09, 2005
An Obligatory Post to Demonstrate My Continuing Existence

No overdone analysis or even subtle reasoning today, friends; this is solely a post to show everyone that I'm still alive.

I was hoping that by now I'd have something resembling actual news about myself. I was, as I understood it, supposed to discover by March 15 whether I would be starting my MBA part-time at Berkeley this fall. As it turns out, there was a third option beyond "in" or "out" -- the waitlist. Joy. So I'm getting some more data together to send off in an effort to demonstrate that no, really, I'm a great candidate, see? Thanks to everyone who's given me support through all this; here's hoping it pays off so I don't have to come crawling back to y'all for more support next year. :-)

Work continues to exist. A curious thing, really; sometimes one really isn't aware of how much one is affecting one's environment. Apparently, all the walking around, sniffing out interdepartmental communication problems, and interrogations of random engineers as to what they find needlessly tedious and/or annoying about their jobs, as if I were some sort of truffle-hunting pig retrained to have an affinity for business process breakdowns, is causing changes to occur, and for the better. Yay!

It's April 9, which means my other half is at work, slaving away over more and more difficult tax returns. I could tell you about it, but this blog is not devoted to the fine points of disallowed like-kind exchanges under Code Section 1031 and such things. (I'm not even going to dignify that with a link. So there.)

I've updated the links on the right of the page. Another update will be happening very soon, since Kyle decided to give his blog an actual name. And there will be reviews, too, and explanations of what the links are doing on my page, and so forth.

And then, maybe, after that, honest-to-goodness content! Woo!
 
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    Pure Geek Bliss

    An Obligatory Post to Demonstrate My Continuing Existence

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