Hollow Eve

Oct. 31st, 2024 09:54 pm
l33tminion: (Default)
Well, I got in a few days of regular writing before I dipped beneath the waves again.

Today is Halloween, and it's not even the scariest day in the next week. I really do want the madness to end. 2017-2020 was objectively nuts, and that was before the realignment within the Republican Party had really completed and Trump was still being arm-twisted into hiring people to important questions who resisted his dumbest ideas (a major restraint for someone so bad at in-person confrontation). Stuff like this is going to be hilarious if he loses (Four Seasons all over again), but for now I just can't deal with the fact that it's so close.

Took Erica trick-or-treating and she had a good time time, except for encountering someone in one of those stilt ghost costumes that she found completely terrifying. The weather was warm today, high of almost 80, so the evening was summery.

Work is very busy, and once again one of my more senior colleagues is changing teams. Too much churn this year.
l33tminion: (Default)
I've been on the tail end of a chain of colds for some time now. I feel pretty well today, but the last bit of residual congestion is still really annoying.

Thanksgiving break went well. The travel was pleasant, and it was great to see my parents and siblings. My nephew, Simon, is two now and talking quite a bit and seemed excited to see us. We all went to the children's museum and he had a blast.

I've been so, so busy at work and on the home-front, both with condo logistics (hassling people about getting snow removal figured out as winter disaster impends) and with the usual cleaning / organizing / planning for the household.

I know I had more to write but I'm too tired to recall.

I did get a post written on my essay blog ([syndicated profile] complexmeme_feed) the other week, about Effective Altruism. Maybe I'll get around to updating that more than once a year, or maybe not.
l33tminion: (Default)
I celebrated Hanukkah at home for the first time in my adult life this week, since Erica (ever interested in any holiday she can get her hands on) was real insistent.

Heading off to visit the in-laws for Christmas break this weekend. Erica had a half-day yesterday, so I got a little time to myself. Wrote a post on ChatGPT and AI safety for my essay blog. (I also got the syndicated feed for that ([syndicated profile] complexmeme_feed) updated so that's working again, it had been broken by the site migration.)

Last evening, went out with Julie to see a production of Life of Pi at ART. First time I've been to a play for quite a number of years. Was a great adaptation, the staging was amazing, really great acting and in-plain-sight puppetry and several dramatic uses of practical effects that were really emotionally striking. Magical.

Julie is looking after Erica today, so I'll try to get a jump on tidying and packing. I also got a long-overdue haircut.

Also, still following the Elon Musk / Twitter / Tesla saga, which continues to be absolutely insane. Tesla stock is down 30% in that last month, 65% in the last year. With plenty of room to go: its P/E still runs way ahead of other companies in its industry, whether you construe that as automotive or tech. Using something so optimistically priced as collateral on a leveraged buyout has its hazards, and acting like a maniac immediately after seems unwise. This thread (via [personal profile] solarbird) describing an investor call is absolutely insane.

Looking forward to break. Hopefully travel will not be too impacted by the crazy weather.
l33tminion: (Default)
It's been a tiring week. Julie's been so busy. But she did take Eris out this morning to get a gift for a school-friend's upcoming birthday. I went to the farmers market this morning and got a variety of nice things.

I've been meaning to return to my essay blog, and I wrote a brief piece this morning about the topic of imagination in children's television.

Current events are very sad. Apropos of potentially lots of things (news, the upcoming Memorial Day holiday, increased general awareness of history), kid has developed a strong interest in past calamity, asking e.g. what's the worst disaster to ever happen in Boston, or who was the worst person to exist during my lifetime, or what would happen to someone if deprived of necessities (sleep, water, food, etc.). It's not like she can escape awareness that people die, that evil people exist, that no one is invincible or invulnerable to misfortune and tragedy. I don't want to be unwilling to talk about hard topics, but I also don't want to dwell on bad things, or to frighten with gruesome and unlikely possibilities. I want to share my overall sense of optimism. People are resilient, life is good even in the face of tragedy (though it's right and natural to want more), "look for the helpers".
l33tminion: (Default)
Current answer to "how bad will this second wave of COVID Omicron be here" seems to be "maybe not too bad???" Cases are starting to turn down in our area at a fraction of the previous peak, hopefully the end of the school break won't turn that around much.

Anyways, the rest of our vacation turned out all right. Got in a visit to the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo (pretty amazing, saw a very cute baby gorilla), the Shaker Heights Nature Center (much changed since I was last there), and Brandywine Falls (short hike there was pleasant though muddy). I did have time for some of the media I wanted to get around to. I finished Man in the High Castle (a reasonably good adaptation of the source material, I thought, stuck the landing well enough), started season 5 of Better Call Saul (still great), started playing 13 Sentinels (don't know if I'll be able to finish it), started reading Dreyer's English (a memoir / writing style advice book that's pretty funny if you're into that sort of thing, certainly relevant to my interests). The trip back was at least calm, and I definitely appreciated the tighter transit connection to the airport.

On Saturday, Julie took kid out to play Pikmin all morning, and I took her to meet up at the park with her friend Sol in the afternoon. On Sunday, I took her out for lunch at James Hook + Co. (Erica amusingly read the sign as "James Hook and dot com"), then to Martin's Park, where yellow daffodils still lined the path from the recent occasion of the marathon, and the Children's Museum. PAX East is this weekend, and we randomly ran into Matt C. (an Olin classmate) on the T on our way to the museum. I'd forgotten all about PAX this year, would've been fun to do some of the Magic events there this year especially with the weekend coinciding with the new set's prerelease.

Next weekend, I will (if all goes well) be going to PyCon in Salt Lake City. Things were looking a bit better COVID-wise when I made that plan (which seems to be the case always). I was really looking forward to PyCon 2020, which was going to be the first PyCon after the pretty-much-for-real demise of Python 2, and I was sad that neither of the planned PyCons in Pittsburgh happened in anywhere in particular.

I kind of want to revive my essay blog, which I recently migrated from Squarespace to Wordpress, but have not actually updated since 2019. Haven't had the energy. But at least I'm able to write this. Eris had an exciting day, and was asleep at 8:30. I'm doing a bit of cooking, pulled pork in the Instant Pot, advance prep for dinner tomorrow.

ComplexMove

Feb. 5th, 2022 04:07 pm
l33tminion: (Default)
In other blogging news, I've migrated my long-on-hiatus essay blog ComplexMeme to Wordpress from Squarespace, after I thought about writing something, logged in, and was instantly reminded that Squarespace 5 (the version I was using since it was the latest at the time and they never provided an easy migration to the new thing) was increasingly broken. Hilariously, migrating Squarespace to Wordpress was easier than migrating Squarespace 5 to the latest version of Squarespace. And when I gave the new Squarespace UI a try, it wasn't as easy to use as the previous version. Plus Wordpress is much cheaper.

I thought that would probably break links to old posts, but it seems it somehow didn't.

Hard LJexit

Feb. 2nd, 2022 03:28 pm
l33tminion: (Default)
Crossposting to LiveJournal has stopped working reliably, and I've decided now is as good a time as any to stop that entirely.
l33tminion: This is too much (Overwork)
Fitness: Workouts continue apace. Trying to watch my diet a bit more, despite all the opportunities for delicious brunch.

In related news, props to Newton Running for their innovative shoe design. I bought a pair of the Sir Isaac (Neutral Guidance Trainers), in hopes of strengthening my foot for more minimal shoes (as opposed to my previous "ludicrous amounts of arch support" design). Very interesting shoe; odd but actually quite a bit more comfortable on the ankles and knees when running, but more tiring across the sole of the foot in general. Forces a better form while running, has me adjusting my form on balance exercises and lunges in a good way (less leaning on my shoe). May have my feet a little more tired at the end of the day than previous, but overall seems good so far.

ComplexMeme: Trying to post more things at my other blog. A little bit about the movie The Interrupters, and some thoughts on the Netflix split (unpleasant for customers in the short run, and maybe the long, but certainly an interesting business case-study).

Politics: The remaining two of the Americans arrested in Iran while trying to hike in Iraq were released this week after the nation of Oman paid $1M in bail. What a bizarre story. Iran essentially kidnaps American hikers in an entirely different country after luring them over an unmarked border, overtly based on accusations of espionage but covertly (evidently) just an old fashioned kidnap-for-ransom scheme (which makes me wonder just where that "bail" is going?). One is released on "bail" pre-trial, her failure to show up for the trial is undoubtedly used to help convict the other two. The others are actually sentenced to eight years in jail, but then allowed to be "released on bail" as a "humanitarian gesture". The US, meanwhile, saves face by refusing to pay, but convinces Oman to pay somehow as a "humanitarian gesture" of their own. Don't know what the US government did to get the government of Oman to pony up the money, but that is undoubtedly coming soon to a WikiLeaks near you.

Don't Ask Don't Tell (a.k.a. the "let's fire Arabic translators for no good reason during a counter-insurgency effort in the middle east" policy) has finally been repealed for good. DADT was an embarrassing and dumb compromise that allegedly improved a worse embarrassing and dumb policy. But hey, I guess that compromise worked, in a sense. Good riddance.

Troy Anthony Davis was executed yesterday after final appeals failed. I have little to say about the case that hasn't already been said. If I was required to put money on it, I'd say the guy was innocent, but I cannot claim to have a sufficient understanding of the evidence of the case. However, I will say that while I understand why the criminal appeals standard is higher than the criminal trial standard, it would be nice if "beyond a shadow of a doubt" (at the very least) was applied to the approval of executions.

Games: Finished two video games recently.

The first, Deus Ex: Human Revolution is a worthy prequel to the original. It's fun, and it captures the setting very well. It has somewhat less depth than the original, but far more polish. The stealth/cover system leads to interesting and suspenseful scenes, and there really are multiple valid solutions to most of the game's challenges. The difficulty curve is great, if you remember you're not playing a "standard" modern shooter, your character seems powerful but not invincible. Get the jump on a guard (or a group of guards, with careful planning) and they're doomed, run out into the middle of a room of foes with guns and they will swiftly turn you into cyborg swiss cheese. The choices of which mechanics to change relative to the original were smartly made (replacing a complex per-body-part health system and medkits with one total and regeneration was good overall in my view, inventory management is a bit easier, and replacing a "plug it in and wait" hacking mechanic with a rather clever mini-game). A few aspects are off: Boss battles are either way too hard or way too easy depending on weapons/tactics, the ending is a little clumsy, and the balancing/regeneration for limited-use special abilities are not quite right. Still, if you liked the original (or if you like shooter/RPGs or cyberpunk scifi) in general, you'll probably like this one.

The second, Bastion is a fun action/RPG game, with beautiful and surreal aesthetics, amazing music, fun, challenging, and suspenseful gameplay, good balance, and an interesting, well written, and well-programmed narration style. It's an excellent example of a game that tells a story in a way that's predominantly storytelling through gameplay (as opposed to "accompanied by"). If you want a great (and great as a game) example of "games as high art" that is not (and does not have the typical flaws of) "an art game", this is it. Seriously, this is not only one of the best games of this year (if not the best), but goes on my list of "best games of all time". If you like adventure/RPGs, you should play it. If you are interested in games, art, or storytelling in general, you should at least watch someone play it for a while. The soundtrack also stands on its own, this has been running through my head all week.
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