Monday, October 31, 2011

Poem: Partial Prime Design

“Partial Prime Design” 2011.10.29 (11, 7, 5, 3, 2 and 53, 41, 23, 7, 7)

Beneath the bright banner
Of sierra skies
The milky way stretches without resolve
And into our world
Flecks of the universe dissolve
Over head and under covers
We try to make sense
Of all the innumerable bodies
That strike us
Why some tilt our axis
And the others accumulate only as dust

From the dusty trail we depart
To wrap ourselves around a mountain
And to swim in a cold blue alpine body
Upon whose shores
We are wrapped in late summer’s heat
And swim beneath your shawl in the humid warmth of each other’s breath
While Goethe calls from peak to peak

In the meadows far below
Prime petals punctuate
The serene green of life
Where a river of glass
Cuts the land in two

Cloud fire
Leads back
To our Origin

Next to Goethe
We watch stars fall

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Occupy Oakland Protest, October 25th 2011, Downtown Oakland, California

Photos from Occupy Oakland tonight.

Protest was peaceful in Snow Park. The police did not chase the crowd to Snow Park, but remained in downtown around city hall. I don't know why the crowed decided to go back to city hall in order to confront the police, because by that time a lot of the shit-starters had showed up and began lighting trashcans etc on fire and that triggered the tear gas.


Occupy Oakland Protesters in front of Kaiser Building, Snow Park, Oakland, California

Occupy Oakland at Snow Park, October 25th 2011, Oakland, California

Tear gas deployment at Occupy Oakland Protest, downtown, Oakland, California

Occupy Oakland Protest in front of Fox Theatre, Oakland, California

Protesters in front of 1502 Alice Street, Occupy Oakland, California
I am thankfull that the protesters that came in front of my building (1502 Alice St shown here) did not cause vandalism like the Oscar Grant riots.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Book Review: Outliers

Outliers: The Story of SuccessOutliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Outliers is very much in the same vein or at least style as Malcom Gladwell's preceeding titles. Quirky bits of information that when rallied around the same arguement come up with something interesting. I feel that with this book Gladwell actually takes on a larger arguement than his other books, its ultimately the Nature vs Nurture arguement but using extremely successful people as the case studies. Gladwell argues for nurture being the largest component of success and uses everything from the Canadian Hockey Team to Bill Gates to why Asian kids are good at math to form his arguement.



Some nick-nack info highlights



Canadian Hockey Team - Most players are born in January, February and March. Their birth month line them up to be the biggest kids in their early teams. 10-12 month differences when you are 5 and 6 can mean you are dramatically bigger. The bigger and better players get special attention, more training, and ultimately more hours of practice, so by the time they are in their late teens they are significantly better.



10,000 hour rule - People with 10,000 hours of practice at one thing tend to be experts and if you get this 10,000 hours in before say the age of 20, you have a much greater chance to go really far.



Bill Gates - had access to one of the first computers at a super young age and would spend hours upon hours on it, so by the time everyone else is starting to hear about personal computers, Gates has already logged in 10,000+ hours of programming time. Similar stories for Bill Joy and Steve Jobs.



Math - kids that can focus do good in math. Your ability to focus on one subject for a period of time has a direct correlation to your math abilities. Asian kids do better in math because they come from a culture of extreme focus that grew out of needing to tend to rice paddies. Western societies grew wheat and other less intensively cultivated crops, so their focus ability is culturaly less. This part of the book gets a bit dodgy, but the chinese proverbs vs western proverbs are good:



"If a man works hard, the land will not be lazy" - Chinese



"If God does not bring it, the earth will not give it" - Russian



You can change your nurture -

1) as seen by Korea Airlines turning its horrible air record around, by changing the nurture/culture of its pilots and co-pilots to be not Korean.

2) As seen in the KIPP school in the Bronx, where kids are sort of reconditioned to be in a different culture than that which is around them and the students do amazingly well.



The basic underlying statement is that nurture plays a huge role in success. You have to be in the right environment at the right time to be wildly successful, but you can choose to change your environment and to some degree your nurture. I think the real question that is dodged all the way through is what is success?



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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Poem: Today

Today

Copper caressed skies propped up
The sunset, floating Mt Tam
Against the edge of another day

And across it- beyond it
In that same sky
Across and beyond the ocean

You wander over copper colored landscapes
Yet no matter how far you wander
Colors never change

Some items in life distill beyond context
And when we ask what is next?
We already know in our hearts the eternal concepts.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Poem: Bar 355 July 24-ish

In the night is sight,
When downtown Oakland has changed,
When I can walk unastranged into a local
wateringhole
where the music doesn't stop,
The bottom doesn't drop,
out of the place because I'm young and white
buth this is also the what bothers me about tonight
where are the people that lived here when I was here at the start?
they now live at the afar extensions of the BART
SYStem
The music is the same but the relation has changed.
MJ is not the same to the displaced as he is to those that replaced.
A song - a world is read differently by
every-fraction-of-people-in-time(s)
And what does this tell us of the world?
Should we read in frame, out of frame, which games - is everything
THE SAME?
or ultimately different?
Depeche mode draws the line
in this bar of contemporary time.

Door of Bar 355, Oakland, California

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Desert SolitaireDesert Solitaire by Edward Abbey

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


There is a lot in the this book that resonates with someone that has spent enough time in the outdoors in one place with themselves to make grand conclusions about one's own insignificance.


Some of my favorite quotes from the book:
Language makes a mighty loose net with which to go fishing for simple facts, when facts are infinite.

The beauty of Delicate Arch explains nothing, for each thing in its way, when true to its own character, is equally beautiful (p45).

A weird, lovely, fantastic object out of nature like Delicate Arch has the curious ability to remind us- like rock and sunlight and wind and wilderness- that out there is a different world, older and greater and deeper by far than ours, a world which surrounds and sustains the little world of men as sea and sky surround and sustain a ship (p45).

Industrial Tourism is a threat to the national parks. But the chief victims of the system are the motorized tourists. They are being robbed and robbing themselves. So long as they are unwilling to crawl out of their cars they will not discover the treasures of the national parks and will never escape the stress and turmoil of the urban-suburban complexes which they had hoped, presumably, to leave behind for a while (p64).

We have agreed not to drive our automobiles into cathedrals, concert halls, art museums, legislative assemblies, private bedrooms and other sanctums of our culture; we should treat our national parks with the same deference, for they, too, are holy places (p65).

A ventursome minority will always be eager to set off on their own, and no obstacles should be placed in their path; let them take risks, for godsake, let them get lost, sunburnt, stranded, drowned, eaten by bears, buried alive under avalanches - that is the right and privilege of any free American (p69)

A man could be a lover and defender of the wilderness without ever in the his lifetime leaving the boundaries of asphalt, powerlines, and right-angled surfaces. We need wilderness whether not we ever set foot in it (p162).

Grand Canyon, Big Bend, Yellowstone and the High Sierras may be required to function as bases for guerrilla warfare against tyranny (p163).

In any case, when a man must be afraid to drink freely from his country's rivers and streams that country is no longer fit to live in (p202).

But the love of wilderness is more than a hunger for what is always beyond reach; it is also an expression of loyalty to the earth, the earth which bore us and sustains us, the only home we shall ever know, the only paradise we ever need - if only we had the eyes to see (p208).

No, wilderness is not a luxury but a necessity of the human spirit, and as vital to our lives as water and good bread. A civilization which destroys what little remains of the wild, the spare, the original, is cutting itself off from its origins and betraying the principle of civilizations itself (p211).

Henry Mountains, Utah

Its a great country; you can say whatever you like so long as its strictly true- nobody will ever take you seriously (p293).

And thus through language create a whole world, corresponding to the other world out there. Or we trust that it corresponds. Or perhaps like a German poet, we cease to care, becoming more concerned with the naming then with the things named; the former becomes more real than the later (p322).





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Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Philippines and Taiwan Photos (2010.01)