May 31, 2008

leashes for everyone

Hunde sind an der Leine zu führen = Dogs have to be held on a leash

There are some harnesses and leashes for children, as used this sample video: Phillip the Hyper Hypo. It's obvious that the city employee in charge of finding a spot to hang these signs had a ball when he spotted this perfect opportunity.

I haven't seen kids on leashes in Munich. Could it mean that parents are breaking the law?

N.-

May 28, 2008

"we already knew that..." said the experts

I was just updating my little list of AV and IT-Security sites I should keep an eye on and stumbled on the Sunbelt BLOG post and this fun list:
  • spywarequarantine.com
  • xpprotectionsoftware.com
  • xpdownloadcenter.com
  • antivirus2008pro.info
What is this? Just port of a bigger list of rogue anti-malware sites where you can download the software for free.

Boys and girls, don't trust everything nor everyone...


n.-

PS: you probably shouldn't trust me either.

Today's lifesaver in Firefox

In Firefox 3 RC1 (blazing fast and quite stable)
... in the address bar, type: about:config
... search for: browser.backspace_action
... set value to: 2

Now, hitting the backspace key will NOT go BACK in history (happened to me all the time).


n.-

appearances are just that, appearances

Under those black&white tones, hides a natural and skilled poi spinner, Chris.
I now never evaluate anybody's agility by their main activity.

I wonder if those natural coordination skills are hereditary.

I compared a guitar player and a drummer. The drummer was the one I would expect to be really good with it, but in the end, the guitar player was the natural one.
Chris is just a regular guy and was the most promising padawan so far.

I learned the old lesson again, not to make judgments without first seeing things done.

n.-

PS: another cool and cheap shop: www.poi-store.de

May 25, 2008

the latin secret agents

Portugal and Italy representants ready for action on a sunny morning.
Rossella, a (really, really!!!!) brilliant CSer.
Her Bologna ragout is just sublime!

n.-

May 22, 2008

A park, beer, music and friendship

Augustiner Helles, the (almost) perfect companion to an early afternoon gettogether in the english garden.

The artist is Pierre, a fabulous guitar player. Pascal, the other Canadian, unfortunately couldn't fit his drums in his backpack:(

The instrument is a backpacker guitar, can be carried onboard a plane. I'm getting one of those the day I have some $$$, reckon I can play some guitar and start backpacking again.

n.-

May 21, 2008

Leover, Bernadette, Sandra and Number Five

Number Five, just like Elvis, is still alive.
He and his brother are still on the lookout on top of the Old Peter's church.

In an odd order and with a mix of different origins, Sydney, Philippines, Poland, Germany and England are represented here.

Great guests, except for N.5 who us quite a useless fellow unless you slide some coins in.

n.-

May 20, 2008

kitsch or just odd taste

The direct translation is "lion's den". Two words to keep in mind here, Dirndl, the bavarian festive outfit, and cleavage. Easy to acknowledge that both go hand in hand.

n.-

PS: That Munich beer is just the 2nd worst in town, the worst "still" being Spaten.

May 10, 2008

Hold me closer tiny dancer...

Blue jean baby, L.A. lady, seamstress for the band
Pretty eyed, pirate smile, you'll marry a music man
Ballerina, you must have seen her dancing in the sand
And now she's in me, always with me, tiny dancer in my hand

Jesus freaks out in the street
Handing tickets out for God
Turning back she just laughs
The boulevard is not that bad

Piano man he makes his stand
In the auditorium
Looking on she sings the songs
The words she knows, the tune she hums

But oh how it feels so real
Lying here with no one near
Only you and you can't hear me
When I say softly, slowly

Hold me closer tiny dancer
Count the headlights on the highway
Lay me down in sheets of linen
you had a busy day today

Blue jean baby, L.A. lady, seamstress for the band
Pretty eyed, pirate smile, you'll marry a music man
Ballerina, you must have seen her dancing in the sand
And now she's in me, always with me, tiny dancer in my hand

May 9, 2008

the fun in poi

Poi...
here's a word that still causes a set of different reactions from people...
- poi?
- coi?
- is that from thailand?
- yeah, I saw some people spin some fire stuff...

Conclusion, many never heard of it but it proved to be a great social tool and a word not to forget.

I've been teaching it and I usually find three types of padawan... hum... people:
  1. the ones that give up really fast (normally because it's not their cup of tea)
  2. the ones that like it a lot but do acknowledge it is not easy and keep on making an effort
  3. the ones that do it naturally and learn to do things that took me two weeks, in 10 minutes (I remember Chris, a guest of mine... he would be able to do great things with one in a matter of weeks/months)

I fit into the second type. I focus on the technique because I am not "instinctive" or natural about the moves. The downside of this is that it takes me longer to learn and even longer to actually feel how I do what I do do as I rely a lot on muscle memory and it's very hard for me to correct mistakes that I carry for a while (thanks to the same muscle memory). The upside, I am a very good example for people that are not confident about their skills but would like to overcome the initial difficulties.

Meet Ina, a natural. We are each other's opposite, her moves are all emotions and heart while mine are technique and brain. This means we have heaps to teach each other.















Meet Chris (and Andrea). He's a CSer that I hosted and was so far the most gifted (fastest learning) padawan of all, 3rd kind of artist. I could swear he had done it before but he confirmed he never even as much touched a Poi before.

Andrea is like me, not as natural as we'd like to be.






It slowly becomes a regular event to meet on sunny Sundays in the English garden. People just show up with their own toys like juggling balls, devil sticks, slack line... and enjoy some practice at the sound of the close-by drumming group that jam all day long. It is in the base a regular CS meeting for people interested in practicing, catching some sun and chat with folks. It's also a way for me to avoid spending the day drinking beer in the beer gardens, not that I have anything against it of course:D

There's been an increase in the participation of people. We're quite easy to spot, just look for the dozen spinning balls, people walking on ropes, jugglers etc...

Poi without music is not as easy. A rhythm, a beat is needed to tempo the moves. I started by finding Portishead quite adequate, slow beat, sad voice, theatre and drama - all this just waiting to be choreographed. Now I turned to Fela Kuti's afrobeat (jazz/funk/afro) sound, it's not too slow neither too fast and allows lots of speed changes.

Tinita sent us a link about a monthly meeting in Munich for fire artists. Artists with fire, musicians and a crowd in a circle around the twirling, jumping flames. There I was with my trustworthy IXUS75 taking the best shots I could. I only regret that the camera has no manual focus (I wonder if the special firmware to update the factory one, CHDK firmware Allbest, has that feature). Even without it, I managed to make some quite good shots. Had I used a decent SLR, a flash at the second window would have frozen the artist in place.



Here's a slideshow (with a link to the gallery) with part of that night's show:

More to come next month.

Anecdote of the night. Andrea shows up with Virginie. Oddly, V knew me but I couldn't remember her (I always remember people, odd). Here's a slightly retouched transcript of the conversation:
N - Sorry, I can't remember you
V - We met in November at your place
N - Really? You joined a party as a friend of a friend?
V - No, you showed us your appartment and even showed us the poi.
N - riiight, you were looking for a flat when I wanted to sublet mine but thought mine was too expensive.
V - yes:)


There are LOTS of online resources to learn from:

This is not the first and surely not the last post about poi, no worries. Today, a little trip to the garden's sun allowed me to improve my Backwards Behind-The-Back 3beat weave and start something with the Forwards one. It was a particularly good day for practice and for a sunburn (I am convinced now, Munich's sun is NOT harmless).

Keep on spinning around the world because I will teach what I know everywhere I go!

n.-

a 38 year old riff (1970, bitch!)

Has he lost his mind?
Can he see or is he blind?
Can he walk at all,
Or if he moves will he fall?

Is he alive or dead?
Has he thoughts within his head?
Well just pass him there
Why should we even care?

He was turned to steel
In the great magnetic field
Where he traveled time
For the future of mankind

Nobody wants him
He just stares at the world
Planning his vengeance
That he will soon unfold

Now the time is here
For iron man to spread fear
Vengeance from the grave
Kills the people he once saved

Nobody wants him
They just turn their heads
Nobody helps him
Now he has his revenge

Heavy boots of lead
Fills his victims full of dread
Running as fast as they can
Iron man lives again!

May 8, 2008

I inbox, you inbox, we inbox (or box in?)

The beta version of xobni (zob-nee) was recenlty released and I had to give it a try.
All one needs is Outlook and a busy inbox (btw, xobni is inbox spelled backwards, a bit like bron and norb...).

When working in a very messaging-intensive company like MS, mailbox management is sadly one of the main daily tasks. I am truly convinced of the impossibility to reduce that amount of e-mails to a necessary/comfortable minimum while keeping the information level to a good/necessary amount, to the affected people, this means "just get used to it!"
While at home, my Outlook is connected to 3 mailboxes and even on a personal level, it can be hard to manage them and not miss some messages.
Outlook is basically the ONLY decent mail+calendar+contacts+tasks software available. Sure, there are Mozilla alternatives, but they don't even compare to the product a multi-billion dollar company can spit out with fairly good quality.
Years of product lifecycle passed and what happened? The opposite of what should have been. We humans adapted to a software and this is soooo wrong! Sure there were some additions and improvements, but it's still so far from perfect (not to mention the nasty bugs and the behemoth it just became as a program).

Then these little fellows, xobni, came along and produced a piece of software that might very well become a native inclusion in OL one day (just wait until MS buys the company).
After installation, the program indexes the mailbox (totally independent from the Windows Search indexing). When that is done, I click on a mail and it shows me: what time of the day I usually get mails from that source, his main contacts (the phone one has a direct link to skype), other addresses related to mails from that contact and so on... It's in its essence a statistical analysis of the inbox. With the amount of information going back and forth, it looks like the only way to improve mail and contact management. That's what it's all about in the end, manage contacts and (social/professional) networking.

On my neandertal-era laptop, I could not for performance's sake hold long enough to it as my OL's memory footprint just grew from 70 to 120megs. But I do invite whoever feels like testing the beta version and letting me know if my prediction might become true.


happy techying

n.-