Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Recently, Colin has been giving me presents. He'd gotten a bunch of stuff from thinkgeek.com, and being the cute boy he is, he couldn't help but also order things not only geeky but cute to give me. The first one was what is supposed to be a grasshopper but I much prefer to think of it as a cricket. I made and uploaded a video of it in action, because words don't quite do it justice. You can find it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDLEKNTCIek

A few days later, he gave me something quite different. It consisted of a cup, dome-top, saucer bottom, weird dirt pod thing, and two lima beans. The cup was covered in pink and purple hearts and said "I love you." Then Colin pointed out that the beans have "I love you" stamped on themselves also. He wouldn't let me see the back of the instructions, so I suspected there was more to the surprise. It was really cool to watch the really hard dirt pod soak up the water and expand into mushy diggable dirt. Then we buried the beans, put the dome cover on top, and set it on the windowsill in the kitchen. A couple days ago we got some sprouts and it's been fun watching them grow. Here's what they look like now:

You're probably thinking, "Okay, great ... that's cute, I guess, in a third grade science experiment sort of way. Why are you blogging about it?" Well, behold the little surprise:

Both plants have "I love you" on the leaves. Told you I had a cute geek. :)

Monday, August 30, 2010

A bit of a general genealogical research guide slash update

This past weekend was a strange mixture of wearing out and recuperating. We went to Navy Pier on Saturday with a bunch of Colin's coworkers who are here on 3 month work visas from India. I thought it might be somewhat fun given that I've never actually gone there before. People gazing and limited boat watching was about all that I found fun. Oh, and sitting inside the convention center on the floor in some little corner or sitting in the greenhouse. The crowds were massive, it was hot, and everything was ridiculously expensive or not something I really wanted to do. End result: crankiness despite valiant efforts. The evening proved more enjoyable, as Shaheli cooked for us at her apartment. Earlier, the apartment had weird power outage issues but they were gone by dinnertime. Some of us had some wine and all of us had laughter. The train north only leaves every two hours on the weekends so we took one that should have gotten us home about midnight but some train problems caused an hour's delay. We spent it sitting on the train where it got increasingly over-air conditioned.

Yesterday it was too hot to do anything but Colin and I had a good day in relaxing. Got some reading and genealogical research done, and Colin did a lot of dreaming up mini-computer projects. Example: being able to access thermostat via internet. Example: being able to print without being physically connected to printer. There's a lot of ideas ... and the technical details are slightly out of my depth. I think it's a great idea but it needs more thinking and planning and a designated workspace. I do feel kind of bad that it seems like a lot of the house is more my space, even though that could be justified by two facts: 1) I am here a lot more. 2) Most of his stuff is storage boxes.

Today I've been playing with our new multi functional printer. I'm very happy with it. Both the scanning and printing abilities work well with my linux machine. It takes a couple extra steps to set them up than most Brother printers; most drivers are available immediately through the CUPS system but not for the DCP-7040 (ours), so they need to be downloaded and installed directly from the Brother website. I haven't printed much but I've been going all out with the scanner, creating pdfs of genealogical research paper stuff. It's soooo much easier to use a automatic feeder than a flatbed!

The past week or so I've been focusing on the family branch we have the least amount of information for: my mother's father's side. Well, it may not be the most paltry branch based on how far it goes back - that would be my father's father's side - but it has had the least amount of research time devoted to and/or successful results for it by me and the relatives I'm aware of. It's kind of deceptive; they all go back to mid-1800s in Michigan and then *poof* a wealth of conflicting leads - New York or Canada? Massachusetts or New York? Scotland or Ireland? Was it the person we know the name of that immigrated, or is it just that supposedly the family at sometime is said to have originated from wherever? It also doesn't help that the surnames are very common British ones.

I've decided to attempt a new way of organizing research findings. I'll obtain primary information, preferably a pdf of the original document. Then, I chose to use the lineage approach, in this case working from the earliest known ancestor of that branch downward - this helps eliminate guesswork where to put whose information while still keeping each group narrow enough for comprehension - also very conducive to extending family trees horizontally. For each lineage that I've been actively working on, I have a text document ordered by dates. For instance, let's say there's a birth registry showing that Ann Thorgun was born in Decatur, Iowa on November 23, 1834 (if there really was, it's pure coincide). I'll obtain the primary information as is in a separate text document (Thorguns in Iowa) or pdf (Ann Thorgun 1834 birth). Next, I'll type into the lineage document:

1834
Ann Thorgun is born 23 November 1834 in Decatur, Iowa.

This allows for extra information to be included (such as how her parents' names are spelled in the registry) and for any researcher notes. If there is any other events that occur for the Thorgun lineage in 1834, it will be found immediately under Ann's birth information. However, I don't follow timeline organization past year - I put information about the most direct relative before, say, their brother's.

I'm not sure if I'll do this for all of my family, but it works well for trying to determine what happened when and where, with  a focus for migrations. I can easily see when a date doesn't make sense, or when one generation moves to another place while the previous one remains behind.

On top of that, I'm finally adding info to geni.com, which is like facebook for genealogy, but much more secure. Hopefully this will allow relatives to enjoy what I've put together and for certain ones to add their own info.  I've already noticed how much it helps to gain a mental grasp on what I've got and what next research step would feel the most fulfilling.

As for what else I'll do today ... probably make myself take a break, water the plants again, and read some more "Pride and Prejudice." But mostly, I see no need to vary from genealogical research, since I have managed two loads of laundry as my housekeeping for the day ;)

Friday, August 27, 2010

The mischief I've been up to lately

I think it's about time for an actual "what's happening in my life" post.

This week I was sick with something vague; the only definitive symptom was a temperature. Low but persistent nonetheless. I'm not sure that this would be related to allergies flaring up - I sneezed four times within an hour of getting up this morning. This Wednesday was the first time I missed a church library volunteer session since I started participating earlier this summer. I should have called the church office to let them know I was still alive because I'm sure they were wondering about me, but as I am finding out in many ways - I need to be allowed to ask pardon for anything I did or didn't do this week. I mean, I've really been irrational. Colin seemed a bit worried this morning, but then he sent me this cute picture and told me not to worry.


Last weekend we went to Lansing to Brennan and Sarah's wedding. It was actually a good time, despite being stung by something on Sunday. Six times! On my knee! I was just standing there! It wasn't a wasp but since the baking soda trick made it sting worse, it wasn't a bee? Vinegar did help. Just so you understand my shock a bit better, I've only been stung once in my life. That happened when I sat on a wasp at camp when I was five years old. So my fear of buzzy things is not without a good reason, but I felt like I've been doing better lately. Stupid hornet or yellow jacket or whatever it was.

Oh! I also saw Craig S. at the wedding reception! Few, if any, of you would know him, but I grew up with him since sometime in elementary school, whenever he moved to town. It was a shock for both of us - we recognized each other simultaneously. Sure, we were in Michigan, but Lansing is at least four hours away from our hometown. It turned out his wife grew up with Sarah who I went to college with. Just to give some perspective: I don't often accidentally run into people I went to high school with - there were only 80-some odd people in my graduating class! The only other time I bumped into someone from high school was in Kalamazoo at a bar between K College's and Western's campuses. Lots of people went to Western so it wasn't a big surprise to run into someone I knew in a bar one of the few times I went to one.

Last week I did some more canning - this time I made salsa for the first time! I'd gotten a fair number of free jalapenos and wasn't sure how to use up so many of them so I thought I'd try my hand at making salsa. There's a grocery store nearby with a great variety of international foods, so I picked up a bunch of tomatillos  (which I've never played with before) and followed a USDA-approved recipe for green canning salsa. I like it - not too spicy but still good. The obligatory pictures:


What have I been doing otherwise? Well, my current passion is genealogy once again. I've also started playing the piano more regularly. You might notice that things look a bit cluttered in the photos above. It's funny how things look just fine before you take a picture! Just so you know, the biggest pot was being used to heat the cans so I had to start the salsa in two smaller pots before it cooked down enough to fit safely in one. I won't bore you with the details of my latest genealogical research adventures, not in this post anyway. I'm considering just creating a separate blog for genealogy. While in Lansing, I got my interest piqued because we had some time to kill and I suggested we hang out in the Library of Michigan where I've done research before. I ran around like mad, taking notes and snapping pictures of pages for a couple hours. We were actually a little late for the wedding itself ... whoops!

I'm itching to do some more right now, but I have to do some other things first otherwise they won't get done. There's not many people who need to hold off on doing research and use it as a reward for getting other things done. Luckily, I'm feeling well enough and eager to do some attack cleaning around the house. And I've let my tea get cold ... I never have been good at multi-tasking.

Monday, August 16, 2010

News Roundup 3

I agree with this in so many ways:
"As a twentysomething, I can say with confidence that when it comes to church, we don't want cool as much as we want real."
But at the same time, I have mixed feelings about church in general. Something nice and basic, not fire and brimstone or hyper cool, with the ability to actually participate in what church should be all about - instead of politics, e.g.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704111704575355311122648100.html

This is definitely a guy to keep an eye on:

"The fragmented details of Jang Song Taek's career have led North Korea analysts to construct two conflicting narratives: Either Jang can be trusted or he cannot. ...

"no one else has been given more trust: put in a position in which he could serve as a mentor to Kim Jong Eun or attempt to seize power for himself once Kim Jong Il passes from the scene, at a time when North Korea's starving population increasingly doubts whether the Kim way is the best way. ...

"Jang is one of only three North Koreans (including the leader's youngest son and his sister) who can talk to Kim Jong Il directly."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/08/15/AR2010081503356_2.html?sid=ST2010081503399

Too bad I can't read Korean. Still, translated summaries prove interesting:

"The first message was posted to the account on Aug. 12 and declared (in Korean) "The Web site 'Our Nation' is on Twitter."
"It was followed by three messages pointing to important documents: a 1997 essay written by defacto leader Kim Jong Il on reunification, the North-South Joint Declaration of June 15, 2000, and the declaration issued after the North-South summit of Oct. 4, 2007. Subsequent updates have pointed to recent news articles."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100815/tc_afp/nkoreapoliticsinternettwitteryoutube

Asus tablet with Android? Awesome idea! However, high prices and open source doesn't really compute in my head ... we've already got the Mac version of a tablet, let's move on to something a little more disruptive, such as lower prices.
http://mobile.venturebeat.com/2010/08/13/asus-plans-for-android-tablet-in-march-announces-eee-pad-tablet-pricing/

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

News Roundup 2



"Is Italy Too Italian?" 
There are supermercados and a few other chains, but Italians stick with non-chain pizza places and cafes. They have different priorities and views. Much like Spaniards, they are clannish and their loyalties are on the regional level instead of the national level.

"While its finances are not as precarious as those of Greece, Portugal or Ireland, because it is far larger — the Italian economy is the seventh largest in the world — its troubles are more frightening." "'Italy’s problem isn’t that we have a lot of debt. It’s that we don’t grow.'”

"Until recently, there weren’t any rules about what “Made in Italy” actually meant, but that will change when a new law goes into effect in October. It states that if at least two stages of production — there are four stages altogether — occur in Italy, a garment is made in Italy."

"Economists said that Mr. Barbera had a point, but they also said that worrying about this issue was like fretting about the head cold of a patient with Stage 3 cancer."

"It is defined, to a large degree, by deep-seated mistrust — not just of the government, but of anyone who isn’t part of the immediate family — as well as a widespread aversion to risk and to growth that to American eyes looks almost quaint."

"Italians, notes Professor Altomonte, are among the world’s heaviest consumers of bottled water. 'Do you know why? Because the water in the tap comes from the government.'"



Health issues abound in recent news:
http://www.businessweek.com/lifestyle/content/healthday/641751.html - comparison of Italian and African kids' diets and their gut bugs.
"The problem is we eat too much cheap, convenient food because it's our lifestyle and that can contribute to allergies," added Marianne Grant, a registered dietitian and health educator at Texas A&M Health Science Center Coastal Bend Health Education Center in Corpus Christi.

With the introduction of antibiotics and vaccines we might have also got asthma and allergies. Whoppee doo.

At least this one makes sense - bad food leads to bad cholesterol. What I don't like is that this focus could neglect to realize there are some people with bad cholesterol who lead healthy lives. Many times it is controllable yet sometimes it is not.


Mosque at Ground Zero? 

"The Muslims are not responsible for 9/11. There have been extremists in all religions. Denying them the ability to build a mosque… would be like London denying the Roman Catholic Church the opportunity to build a church during the years of the IRA bombings."
Unfortunately the issue isn't that simple; the physical presence will not erase feelings. If someone fears them, they will most likely fear them more. If someone understands the difference, they will continue to understand the difference. There probably would be some who take the initiative to research or who will listen to those who try to explain the difference, but unfortunately, I think this is the wrong step to take towards creating more awareness.
A very good idea to learn at least the basics on how to swim. Or how to rescue others even if no one knows how to swim. Sticks or rope, anyone?
I like how this tropical storm has just managed to achieve its status by going 1 mph over tropical depression. Also, its name is Colin. :)
Along with the news that iPhones are much easier to jailbreak, I think Android is doing quite well, don't you?