Vastness of space.

Barack Obama speaks on the need for supporting the troops, especially after they return home, and of the war’s cost to our economy: http://youtube.com/watch?v=6ztgD1d4fL8

UNICEF tries to tackle water: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3OmN4B7yyS8

After a wonderful little thing called Envy, Ubuntu 7.10 now works -with- my laptop’s video card instead of against it.

I wonder if anybody else looks at popcorn kernels and sees spaceship designs.

I wonder if anybody else sees a person that’s significantly older than them, and wonders if that’s a Future You come back in time.

I remember that Tai Chi, when I was introduced to it in Japanese class in high school, made me feel good.

I wonder what happened to landing people on Mars.

Life doesn’t divide neatly into compartments.

Obama outlines his goals in regard to foreign policy:
Barack Obama: On Iraq and National Security

Given that a primary complaint has been that he doesn’t lay down specifics, I’d have to say that he lays down more here than he ever has before. He’s creating serious momentum after his speech on race yesterday.

, your old Dell now has 1 GB of RAM. Which, according to Dell, is its max. It will have mighty Ubuntu muscle, as Dell lied to me about shipping me the restore CD. Or they’re just incompetent. Whichever. Also, it’s going to be interesting getting that wireless card working. Fun, but interesting. :)

My car insurance is going -up- when it renews. No accidents, no tickets. Time to shop around.

It’s pretty warm in this office. I think I’m going to go outside and have a breather.

My old boss from MSU SNS passed this along to me. Check it out if you’re interested.

Wes Mininger worked for me when I managed SNS and the Computing Service Centers. Please share the message below with any IT person that you know may be interested in a job in Abu Dhabi.
Read on – his contact info is below.

Thanks /Linda

Subject: Job opportunity for IT staff – Please pass this on!
Date: Wed, 19 Mar 2008 04:04:15 -0400

Hi Linda, I hope you are doing well. I am currently working in Abu Dhabi (the richest city in the world!) at a new english newspaper that is starting up. The city is flush with money, and the United Arab Emirates in general is seeking to become a world class destination. By this point, most people have heard all about Dubai and the Palm Islands they are constructing as well as many other things of great beauty, expense and grandeur. Abu Dhabi is about an hour away from Dubai, but has even more money available, and it looks like a grand rivalry has begun with each city trying to out engineer and beautify the other. This is a great time to be living here, and both I and my wife (I just got married a few months ago!) love it here. The pay is great and the cost of living is very low, giving anyone who comes here the chance to live a really great life and save a lot of money at the same time. Because Abu Dhabi is seeking to become a major player in the worlds of finance, tourism and the like, they know they have to provide the sort of lifestyle that appeals to visitors from many countries, and one of these requirements is a world class english newspaper. They have hired many different people from around the world to come here and start one up. My wife was one of the first people to be chosen for this project because of her background in design, and she is responsible for the layout, design and art direction for the weekly entertainment/arts and life section. After she got the job I found that they needed people who are good IT staff to support the new paper. The IT staff for the Arabic paper that is also produced here, Al Ittihad, are very good at their jobs and good English speakers, but it is helpful that I am a native English speaker in working with all the expats.
I am writing you because I suspect that you can point this towards someone who might be qualified to be an additional IT support engineer. I am currently the first of two who will be supporting the newsroom staff. The requirements are such that the job is not very difficult, and I could support the newsroom by myself excepting the hours of work here are 10am to about 10pm, six days a week. We need to find one more person so that we can work a split shift where one of us covers the morning from 10am and the other covers until the paper closes all the pages around 10pm. The pay is very good compared to the same type of job in the US, I am now making about 5000USD a month with a yearly bonus equivalent to one month salary, a once a year round trip ticket back to the US, and a once a year ‘furnishing allowance’ to buy stuff for our apartment, along with a generous 30days vacation each year. This is a lot better than most people will get in the US, and ends up being a pretty good incentive to move here considering how easy it is to ‘live the good life’ for cheap and put extra savings in the bank. The Dirham, the UAE’s currency is pegged to the US dollar, so there is no chance of fluctuations in the value of the salary here, and if they do depeg the currency, it is widely known that the Dirham is currently considered to be undervalued by estimates of 10-20%, and would increase our earnings by that additional amount relative to the USD if the depegging happens soon as is widely expected. This has given me a great chance to pay down my student loans quickly and still save money.
If you know anyone who would be interested in this opportunity, which is open right away, the sooner they could start the better, please pass on my contact info!
Anyone who has experience doing IT work is good at being helpful, friendly, a good problem solver and can handle support for about 170 people along with me would be great for this job.

My contact info is: wes.mininger@admedia.ae They are going to change the emails to reflect the name of the paper when the print launch happens in about 2-3 months, but currently the name is top secret and all emails are for the company Abu Dhabi Media Company. I would be happy to answer any questions from anyone interested in the job, no Arabic is required to get around or live in the city, although it might be helpful to learn (which I will start as soon as things calm down here)
The contacts to whom any applicants would need to send a CV (or resume would do if accompanied by as much detail about past work are the 2 following addresses:
laura.koot@admedia.ae
magdi.hanna@admedia.ae

This email ended up being a lot longer than I expected and I am being called away to assist some people with a problem, but I hope you are doing well at MSU still, it will be nice to come back and visit the campus this summer as one of our friends is getting married at the Wharton center! The summers there will be beautiful in comparison with the high heat here at least!
-Wes

Apparently, I can’t stop clicking on the Post button.

This morning, I watched the speech that Barack Obama gave yesterday. I was having a bit of a hard time putting my reaction into words. It wasn’t fervent, or foaming-at-the-mouth-omgee-he’s-awesome. I couldn’t quite nail how I felt about this, and I think it was from lack of recent example. nailed it, though, with his look at Obama’s speech:

I watched Barack Obama’s speech today and was literally dumbfounded.  If you have the forty or so minutes it takes to watch it in full I suggest finding it online.  It struck me as something I might have watched on an episode of The West Wing; it was too perfect, his response to the events unfolding around his campaign more what a fictitious politician might do than anything I have seen a real politician do since I learned to tell the difference between Ronald Reagan and the pupet from the “Land of Confusion” video.

In the words of Jon Stuart from the Daily Show “at eleven in the morning on a Tuesday a major political figure spoke to the American people about race as though they were adults.”

This election has been a weird one to watch.  I was terrified by half of the old white guys running for the Republican nomination, but I liked McCain.  I can still say that I liked McCain, but now he’s starting to worry me.  I suppose that’s a good thing.  He worries me because I disagree with him about what America’s role in the middle east should be.  I worry that his “fix” for the economy will have more to do with his choice of advisors and cabinet positions than it will his actual functioning knowledge of the economy.  The encouraging thing about this is that I feel like McCain is genuinely putting himself out there.  Should he be the next president I won’t be blindsided by how he conducts himself, and I doubt he would be the kind of president to blindly ignore anyone who didn’t believe his every spoken word was the Word.  Hell, he corrected himself today when Joe Lieberman informed him Iran was training insurgents, not al queda as McCain had said just a moment before.  Seriously.

But as I was finishing my first cup of coffee this morning and I wanted another one but didn’t want to tear my eyes away from the tv, a new kind of thing was blossoming in my brain.  I was honestly starting to hope that I was watching the next President of the United States.  His ability to succinctly, accurately and brilliantly lay out what he sees as the defining problems of race relations in the country just floored me.  When he took that from the inception of the nation (where our founding fathers left the issue of slavery for the next generation) through issues today (where legitimate fears of white people discussing black neighborhoods are “taboo”) he pointed out that there was a long way yet to go, but the first step was admitting that we had a problem and having a leader identify what it was and start us working toward a solution.  

Contrasting Obama’s boldness with the news from the White House allowed me to put to words my views on the differences between the candidates.  George Bush was congratulating the fed chair on “working over the weekend to solve the economic crisis.”  Okay, but shouldn’t they have been working before this?  I mean, the news has been pointing out the economic plunge since before Thanksgiving, and your guys just now started to grind the overtime?  On top of that, he’s confident the American economy will recover, seeing as they bailed out an enormous investment bank to the tune of $30 billion in taxpayer’s money (and saved the seven-figure-earning CEO’s bacon), but the administration isn’t into helping people with housing, health care, or jobs.  I know I’m comforted by that.

The difference I see is that Obama understands the American condition.  He can articulate it in a way that we all end up on the same page.  He noted that his white grandmother (he’s bi-racial for those who didn’t know; I consider him the Tiger Woods of politics) loved him very much, but was afraid of black men and sometimes said things about racial or ethnic groups that appalled him.  Well, I had a grandma like that too, and she isn’t the only person in my family I’ve witnessed saying things I wouldn’t want to have to comment on while running for office.  He pointed out that some of the things said by people we decry as intolerant are based on viable and understandable grievance.  Let’s work on that.  Obama gets what people are going through and wants to put the mechanism of government to helping people solve their own problems.  I can get down with that.  

So Hillary says she’s “ready to lead on day one” while doing everything humanly possible to win.  I can understand it, but there comes a time when it is no longer okay.  The film “Little Giants” has a moment when a dad from the monolithic invincible team is telling his kid to injure a player from the plucky underdogs, and the coach balks.  “Don’t you want to win?” asks the dad.  “Not that way” is the uncommonly human reply.  I just don’t think the Clintons have that kind of humanity in them anymore (if they ever did in the first place).

John McCain has his personal view rooted in making America safe by basically acting like we’re the new Rome.  The problems I see are A) we aren’t dealing with Barbarians, B) the Romans were way, WAY more accepting of other cultures than America has been in the lifetime of anyone I’ve ever met, and C) it didn’t work out so well for the first Rome.

Our current “leader” is content to tell everyone that things are fine and try and solidify his “legacy”.  There is an honest to god burgeoning economic catastrophy and the guy is content to fiddle and ignore it.  Or blame the democrats.  He has also forgotten that great leaders urge people to transcend their fear and instead has relied on nothing but fear and fear-mongering to do whatever the hell he likes to us and the world for seven years.  

And then there is Obama.  The greatest criticism people have heaped upon him is that he is a phenominal public speaker, so that means he must be incapable of anything else.  Well, today I saw the integrity to stand by a friend he disagreed with, the courage to confront an issue that is a part of life everyday in this country but we’re all too afraid to do or say anything about it directly, and in this moment of [manufactured and over-analised by cable tv] “crisis” in his campaign he took that as an opportunity to show us what kind of President he would be.

The best kind.