From d705a8eff107c284c4668b5a697d1da3a9b06f2f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: bnewbold Date: Mon, 20 Jun 2016 18:36:32 -0400 Subject: run dos2unix on pages/* --- pages/advancedenterpriseresearchoffice.md | 44 +- pages/aero.md | 14 +- pages/antarctica.md | 50 +-- pages/artifacts_links.md | 4 +- pages/crypto.md | 484 +++++++++++----------- pages/gradschool.md | 24 +- pages/hosting.md | 64 +-- pages/links.md | 14 +- pages/meet-links.md | 20 +- pages/metatodo.md | 18 +- pages/notes.md | 10 +- pages/nyc.md | 16 +- pages/oldindex.md | 4 +- pages/oldlinks.md | 214 +++++----- pages/people.md | 10 +- pages/resume.md | 4 +- pages/seattle.md | 24 +- pages/tiddly.md | 14 +- pages/towatch.md | 24 +- pages/travel/nz.md | 50 +-- pages/travel/russia.md | 96 ++--- pages/tumble.md | 2 +- pages/whatsup.md | 648 +++++++++++++++--------------- 23 files changed, 926 insertions(+), 926 deletions(-) diff --git a/pages/advancedenterpriseresearchoffice.md b/pages/advancedenterpriseresearchoffice.md index 10f93cd..0b82053 100644 --- a/pages/advancedenterpriseresearchoffice.md +++ b/pages/advancedenterpriseresearchoffice.md @@ -3,25 +3,25 @@ Url: /advancedenterpriseresearchoffice/ SaveAs: /advancedenterpriseresearchoffice/index.html -

-UPDATE: moved to aero.electronicwhisper.com -

-datamoshed quake3 visual blah blah by toby schachman and me for the 2010 global game jam kindly hosted by the nyu game center and itp at tisch. -

-
-

-we'll post all of our code and instructions (soon? email us at bnewbold at robocracy dot org or toby schachman at gmail dot come if you are interested), for now try these numbers: -

- -

- -

Advanced Enterprise Research Office from Sundialtone on Vimeo.

+

+UPDATE: moved to aero.electronicwhisper.com +

+datamoshed quake3 visual blah blah by toby schachman and me for the 2010 global game jam kindly hosted by the nyu game center and itp at tisch. +

+
+

+we'll post all of our code and instructions (soon? email us at bnewbold at robocracy dot org or toby schachman at gmail dot come if you are interested), for now try these numbers: +

+ +

+ +

Advanced Enterprise Research Office from Sundialtone on Vimeo.

diff --git a/pages/aero.md b/pages/aero.md index ff2d936..46b643e 100644 --- a/pages/aero.md +++ b/pages/aero.md @@ -3,10 +3,10 @@ Url: /aero/ SaveAs: /aero/index.html -Forwarding... - - +Forwarding... + + diff --git a/pages/antarctica.md b/pages/antarctica.md index c5bd6e2..8e01797 100644 --- a/pages/antarctica.md +++ b/pages/antarctica.md @@ -3,29 +3,29 @@ Url: /antarctica/ SaveAs: /antarctica/index.html -
-

From October 2007 through the middle of December 2007 I'll be deployed to Antarctica, based out of McMurdo station. After that i'll be on the road across Asia for a little over a month and almostly completely unreachable. I'll be back in Cambridge at MIT by the end of January. I've got some photos here, or for more info about Antarctica see:

- -

Email

-I can be reached at my usual email addresses. Raytheon tries to spy on every email read on the continent, so if you're trying to send me terrorist plans, anti-Military-Industrial-Complex propaganda, or porn, ask me for a public key. -

Mail

-

I can recieve certain kinds of mail and packages at the following APO address. It takes about a month to get there, but doesn't cost any more than sending mail to the Los Angeles, CA region. No agricultural products (including dried fruit), no packing peanuts, etc. For more info see the USAP participant guide. -

-
-Bryan Newbold
-McMurdo Station
-Project B 174 M
-PSC 469 Box 800
-APO AP 96599-1035
-
-

Telephone

-

Our project won't have a dedicated phone number, but we will be able to make occasional outgoing VoIP phone calls over satellite.

-

Time Zone

-

We will be operating on New Zealand time, which is +1300 UTC, +1200 UTC after daylight savings (9 hours behind east coast untill October 7th, then 7 hours behind).

-

Location

-

When I got to McMurdo station I tried to take a GPS reading but my handheld GPS froze and stopped working, so your guess is as good as mine. +
+

From October 2007 through the middle of December 2007 I'll be deployed to Antarctica, based out of McMurdo station. After that i'll be on the road across Asia for a little over a month and almostly completely unreachable. I'll be back in Cambridge at MIT by the end of January. I've got some photos here, or for more info about Antarctica see:

+ +

Email

+I can be reached at my usual email addresses. Raytheon tries to spy on every email read on the continent, so if you're trying to send me terrorist plans, anti-Military-Industrial-Complex propaganda, or porn, ask me for a public key. +

Mail

+

I can recieve certain kinds of mail and packages at the following APO address. It takes about a month to get there, but doesn't cost any more than sending mail to the Los Angeles, CA region. No agricultural products (including dried fruit), no packing peanuts, etc. For more info see the USAP participant guide. +

+
+Bryan Newbold
+McMurdo Station
+Project B 174 M
+PSC 469 Box 800
+APO AP 96599-1035
+
+

Telephone

+

Our project won't have a dedicated phone number, but we will be able to make occasional outgoing VoIP phone calls over satellite.

+

Time Zone

+

We will be operating on New Zealand time, which is +1300 UTC, +1200 UTC after daylight savings (9 hours behind east coast untill October 7th, then 7 hours behind).

+

Location

+

When I got to McMurdo station I tried to take a GPS reading but my handheld GPS froze and stopped working, so your guess is as good as mine.

\ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/artifacts_links.md b/pages/artifacts_links.md index ceff3c7..7c0cd0a 100644 --- a/pages/artifacts_links.md +++ b/pages/artifacts_links.md @@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ Save_As: artifacts/links/index.html
  • bacarobo: useless robotics competition
  • botjunkie blog: ROBOTS
  • pataphysics and pataphors:
  • -
  • FrammerD and DTypes: An old media lab project for building knowledge databases.
    +
  • FrammerD and DTypes: An old media lab project for building knowledge databases.
    See also framerd.org, beingmeta.com.
  • Simulation and it's Discontents: MIT Press Book
  • chairlift music video: evident utensil:
  • @@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ See also framerd.org, Functional Programing Course:
  • OCW: 16.01 Unified (2006):
  • OCW: 3.60 (2005): Symmetry, Structure, and Tensor Properties of Materials
  • -
  • OCW: 16.885J / ESD.35J Aircraft Systems Engineering +
  • OCW: 16.885J / ESD.35J Aircraft Systems Engineering : Space Shuttle! Video lectures
  • Git: remove file: How to remove a file from an entire git repository history
  • git for computer scientists: good explanation
  • diff --git a/pages/crypto.md b/pages/crypto.md index 4ceb637..9d8911f 100644 --- a/pages/crypto.md +++ b/pages/crypto.md @@ -3,246 +3,246 @@ Url: /crypto/ SaveAs: /crypto/index.html -
    -

    -My GPG key, valid for my email address at the robocracy.org domain from 2014 onwards, is: -

    -
    - -
    -pub   4096R/0x0C9337BCEC3932B9 2014-03-27 [expires: 2022-03-25]
    -      Key fingerprint = 3F46 8108 EE58 663C B95A  E9DC 0C93 37BC EC39 32B9
    -uid                 [ultimate] bryan newbold <bnewbold@robocracy.org>
    -uid                 [ultimate] bryan newbold <bnewbold@alum.mit.edu>
    -sub   4096R/0xC32BD9CE46B152D7 2014-03-27 [expires: 2022-03-25]
    -      Key fingerprint = 894E D8EA 476D 9BEE 5E28  6D4D C32B D9CE 46B1 52D7
    -sub   4096R/0x084425E080357D53 2014-03-27 [expires: 2022-03-25]
    -      Key fingerprint = 0C8E 4A0D A8E9 9908 7295  2B3B 0844 25E0 8035 7D53
    -
    - -
    -My old keys, as well as the full public key for the above, are in HTML comments of this document. - - +
    +

    +My GPG key, valid for my email address at the robocracy.org domain from 2014 onwards, is: +

    +
    + +
    +pub   4096R/0x0C9337BCEC3932B9 2014-03-27 [expires: 2022-03-25]
    +      Key fingerprint = 3F46 8108 EE58 663C B95A  E9DC 0C93 37BC EC39 32B9
    +uid                 [ultimate] bryan newbold <bnewbold@robocracy.org>
    +uid                 [ultimate] bryan newbold <bnewbold@alum.mit.edu>
    +sub   4096R/0xC32BD9CE46B152D7 2014-03-27 [expires: 2022-03-25]
    +      Key fingerprint = 894E D8EA 476D 9BEE 5E28  6D4D C32B D9CE 46B1 52D7
    +sub   4096R/0x084425E080357D53 2014-03-27 [expires: 2022-03-25]
    +      Key fingerprint = 0C8E 4A0D A8E9 9908 7295  2B3B 0844 25E0 8035 7D53
    +
    + +
    +My old keys, as well as the full public key for the above, are in HTML comments of this document. + + \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/gradschool.md b/pages/gradschool.md index d1067f8..54969c5 100644 --- a/pages/gradschool.md +++ b/pages/gradschool.md @@ -3,16 +3,16 @@ Url: /gradschool/ SaveAs: /gradschool/index.html -
    - -

    By Location

    - - +
    + +

    By Location

    + +

    By Program

    \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/hosting.md b/pages/hosting.md index da14b54..1a10d0a 100644 --- a/pages/hosting.md +++ b/pages/hosting.md @@ -3,36 +3,36 @@ Url: /hosting/ SaveAs: /hosting/index.html -Right now I use/need about 3-7gigs of data storage (10 preferable) and up to a gig/month bandwidth for my personal and project websites. I like using dedicated operating systems with full root, either virtual or dedicated hardware; operating system must be open source unix, BSD preferred, openBSD best. I would like to support a coop or more community run service but reliability and trust are big issues. I increasingly would like to have everything physically hosted in an open and trustworthy society (netherlands, switzerland, etc), and looking forward having resources to run cryptographically secure filesystems and email service will be important. -

    -Currently running with quantact with the 128 meg openVZ at $10/month with a 12% discount for 1 year contracts. Doubling storage and ram doubles the cost, additional ip's are $2. Right now running a bit unstable, probably due to overloading ssl certificates (my fault); apache is also a bit tight on the 128 megs, could switch to lighttpd? quantact provides very good support, good VM control, free DNS hosting, community wiki, and some other nice features; they have gone down once or twice over the year i've been with them, less than 12 hours total. Biggest problem is it's all linux, I run debian. Xen plans also available. Hosting is in california. -

    -[Update Dec 2009] Shifting to rootbsd.net. Also found memset.com which looks good; generally things have gotten a lot cheaper/more powerful since writing the above and below. -

    -tech.coop offers xen hosting for about $20/month, not much bandwidth; plans scale up. seems like a cool company, hosting is in canada. -

    -hcoop is a really cool cooperative, they charge on a sliding scale by bandwidth and resource use, around $5/month minimum. very active community, they develop hosting and systems software and release it open source. linux, probably not enough resources (2 servers for many accounts) -

    -compartment.se seems to offer $55/month high performance dedicated servers with openbsd in sweden. -

    -gplhost has offshore cheap xen hosting; netbsd is an option. -

    -NOTE: http://www.red-pill.eu/freeunix.shtml lists free unix shell accounts. -

    "meh" hosts

    -There are tons of USA based xen/openvz linux VPS providers now (way more than a year ago), i'm not going to list any more. -

    -linode has maybe the best USA simple linux vps hosting ("best" as in most resources/dollar) -

    -hostcube has nice linux xen vps' -

    -verio has EXPENSIVE freeBSD virtual servers -

    -openhosting.com offers centOS openVPS linux servers pretty cheap with a lot of side features. sliding prices, USA -

    -bodhost.com offers virtuozzo linux hosting, $20/month min, meh. USA -

    -aplus has powerful servers, but $100/month. USA -

    -grockthis seems hip, xen (linux) and dedicated, sort of expensive -

    +Right now I use/need about 3-7gigs of data storage (10 preferable) and up to a gig/month bandwidth for my personal and project websites. I like using dedicated operating systems with full root, either virtual or dedicated hardware; operating system must be open source unix, BSD preferred, openBSD best. I would like to support a coop or more community run service but reliability and trust are big issues. I increasingly would like to have everything physically hosted in an open and trustworthy society (netherlands, switzerland, etc), and looking forward having resources to run cryptographically secure filesystems and email service will be important. +

    +Currently running with quantact with the 128 meg openVZ at $10/month with a 12% discount for 1 year contracts. Doubling storage and ram doubles the cost, additional ip's are $2. Right now running a bit unstable, probably due to overloading ssl certificates (my fault); apache is also a bit tight on the 128 megs, could switch to lighttpd? quantact provides very good support, good VM control, free DNS hosting, community wiki, and some other nice features; they have gone down once or twice over the year i've been with them, less than 12 hours total. Biggest problem is it's all linux, I run debian. Xen plans also available. Hosting is in california. +

    +[Update Dec 2009] Shifting to rootbsd.net. Also found memset.com which looks good; generally things have gotten a lot cheaper/more powerful since writing the above and below. +

    +tech.coop offers xen hosting for about $20/month, not much bandwidth; plans scale up. seems like a cool company, hosting is in canada. +

    +hcoop is a really cool cooperative, they charge on a sliding scale by bandwidth and resource use, around $5/month minimum. very active community, they develop hosting and systems software and release it open source. linux, probably not enough resources (2 servers for many accounts) +

    +compartment.se seems to offer $55/month high performance dedicated servers with openbsd in sweden. +

    +gplhost has offshore cheap xen hosting; netbsd is an option. +

    +NOTE: http://www.red-pill.eu/freeunix.shtml lists free unix shell accounts. +

    "meh" hosts

    +There are tons of USA based xen/openvz linux VPS providers now (way more than a year ago), i'm not going to list any more. +

    +linode has maybe the best USA simple linux vps hosting ("best" as in most resources/dollar) +

    +hostcube has nice linux xen vps' +

    +verio has EXPENSIVE freeBSD virtual servers +

    +openhosting.com offers centOS openVPS linux servers pretty cheap with a lot of side features. sliding prices, USA +

    +bodhost.com offers virtuozzo linux hosting, $20/month min, meh. USA +

    +aplus has powerful servers, but $100/month. USA +

    +grockthis seems hip, xen (linux) and dedicated, sort of expensive +

    serverpronto offers a very powerful dedicated server for $30/month + $70 setup with additional IPs $10 onetime fee? 256megs ram, 40gigs storage. Has options for openBSD, freeBSD, many linicies. Hosting is in USA. Lots of negative feedback online re: billing and support. \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/links.md b/pages/links.md index 0fe4bf0..ea49bf8 100644 --- a/pages/links.md +++ b/pages/links.md @@ -3,10 +3,10 @@ Url: /links/ SaveAs: /links/index.html -Forwarding... - - +Forwarding... + + diff --git a/pages/meet-links.md b/pages/meet-links.md index c5f6de5..dcf0bd4 100644 --- a/pages/meet-links.md +++ b/pages/meet-links.md @@ -3,14 +3,14 @@ Url: /meet-links/ SaveAs: /meet-links/index.html -
    -
      -
    • bnewbold photos, picasa photos -
    • harpreet picassa -
    • woody blog -
    • sally blog, picasa -
    • amanda flickr -
    • froy blog -
    • ana videos -
    • dave flickr +
      + \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/metatodo.md b/pages/metatodo.md index 714c933..cefd48b 100644 --- a/pages/metatodo.md +++ b/pages/metatodo.md @@ -3,13 +3,13 @@ Url: /metatodo/ SaveAs: /metatodo/index.html -
      -This list should get merged in with a TODO list somewhere in the development tree... -
        -
      • fix photo gallery pages to include trailing /'s, so there aren't so many redirects -
      • /submit/ page for publicly submitting urls, code snips, etc -
      • push through journal/artifact -
      • RSS -
      • tagging -
      • openid commenting, submit, and authenticated viewing? +
        +This list should get merged in with a TODO list somewhere in the development tree... +
          +
        • fix photo gallery pages to include trailing /'s, so there aren't so many redirects +
        • /submit/ page for publicly submitting urls, code snips, etc +
        • push through journal/artifact +
        • RSS +
        • tagging +
        • openid commenting, submit, and authenticated viewing?
        \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/notes.md b/pages/notes.md index 2a607f2..9914a1a 100644 --- a/pages/notes.md +++ b/pages/notes.md @@ -3,9 +3,9 @@ Url: /notes/ SaveAs: /notes/index.html -
        -This will probably get turned into a real app at somepoint.
        -
        -
          -
        • Bruno Latour's We Have Never Been Modern +
          +This will probably get turned into a real app at somepoint.
          +
          +
            +
          • Bruno Latour's We Have Never Been Modern
          \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/nyc.md b/pages/nyc.md index 73ae0f7..4ca4e0d 100644 --- a/pages/nyc.md +++ b/pages/nyc.md @@ -3,12 +3,12 @@ Url: /nyc/ SaveAs: /nyc/index.html -
          - -Films! -
            -
          • Film Forum -
          • MoMA -
          • Angelika theaters -
          • BAM +
            + +Films! + \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/oldindex.md b/pages/oldindex.md index bf7222f..baebc03 100644 --- a/pages/oldindex.md +++ b/pages/oldindex.md @@ -3,6 +3,6 @@ Url: /oldindex/ SaveAs: /oldindex/index.html -There will be mondo content here eventually! -
            YAY! +There will be mondo content here eventually! +
            YAY!
            \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/oldlinks.md b/pages/oldlinks.md index 5fa635c..b2f9e0b 100644 --- a/pages/oldlinks.md +++ b/pages/oldlinks.md @@ -3,110 +3,110 @@ Url: /oldlinks/ SaveAs: /oldlinks/index.html -
            -Now see /links/ -

            Personal

            - - -The best of these are aggregated at feeds.bnewbold.net: - - - - -

            fun

            - - -

            random

            -
              -
            • http://www.cryptoanarchy.net/cyphernomicon/cyphernomicon.html -
            • http://www.ligo.caltech.edu/~weekly/ -
            • http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/basis1/basis1.html -
            • http://www.coroflot.com/public/individual_details.asp?individual_id=179104 -
            • http://papercuts.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/03/13/why-dont-we-invent-it-tomorrow/ -
            • http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0752922/ -
            • http://devpit.org/wiki/Main_Page -
            • http://www.flylogic.net/blog/ -
            • http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0752922/ -
            • http://njsas.org/projects/atoms/cloud_chamber/cache/cloud.html -
            • http://www.preservedwords.com/charts.htm -
            • http://www.flatlandthemovie.com/ -
            • http://fhapgood.fastmail.fm/ -
            • http://www.metacafe.com/watch/526663/g_spot/ -
            • http://cv.antix.co.uk/Profile/CurriculumVitaeStyleViewer.aspx?../Example dhtml selectable color -
            • http://origami.oschene.com/archives/2007/06/03/stellated-curved-tetrahedron-redux/ -
            • http://www.scottaaronson.com/blog/ -
            • http://www.sonypictures.com/homevideo/tekkonkinkreet/index.html -
            • http://www.salon.com/ent/movies/review/2007/07/12/btm/index2.html -
            • http://www.salon.com/ent/movies/review/2007/07/05/btm/index.html -
            • http://web.mit.edu/terrascope-radio/Sprouts-08-22-07.mp3 -
            • http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=6476 -
            • http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=1360 -
            • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Zereshk -
            • http://www.fimoculous.com/ -
            • http://ideonomy.mit.edu/ -
            • www.aquariusrecords.org -
            • http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0443693/ (The Wild Blue Yonder) -
            • http://scilib.ucsd.edu/sio/nsf/fguide/index.html -
            • http://damieng.com/blog/2007/11/14/droid-sans-mono-great-coding-font -
            • http://web.mac.com/charnets -
            • http://pole.uchicago.edu/blog/kathryn -
            • http://www.megasociety.org/ -
            • http://www.cyriak.co.uk/ -
            • http://www.divinebanquet.com/ -
            • http://web.mit.edu/kclancy/www/1.html -
            • http://the-programmers-stone.com/about/ -
            • http://www.reanimationlibrary.org/ -
            • http://overstated.net/2008/01/30/patrick-winston-how-to-speak -
            • http://www.bookfactory.com/ -
            • http://flowingdata.com/2008/02/25/ebb-and-flow-of-box-office-receipts-over-past-20-years/ -
            • http://edge.org/3rd_culture/dysong08/dysong08_index.html -
            • http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200807/google -
            • http://www.fixedgeargallery.com/articles/scottlarkin1.htm - -
            -

            HR

            -
              -
            • http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/07/world/africa/07congo.html -
            • http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/congo.htm -
            • http://www.pulitzer.org/year/2006/commentary/works/kristof08.html -
            -

            'tube

            -
              -
            • nageese@youtube -
            • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nhizo7KrZrw (japanese mcdonalds) -
            • http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2726904509434151616 (role of programming) -
            - -

            nice personal sites

            - +
            +Now see /links/ +

            Personal

            + + +The best of these are aggregated at feeds.bnewbold.net: + + + + +

            fun

            + + +

            random

            +
              +
            • http://www.cryptoanarchy.net/cyphernomicon/cyphernomicon.html +
            • http://www.ligo.caltech.edu/~weekly/ +
            • http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/basis1/basis1.html +
            • http://www.coroflot.com/public/individual_details.asp?individual_id=179104 +
            • http://papercuts.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/03/13/why-dont-we-invent-it-tomorrow/ +
            • http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0752922/ +
            • http://devpit.org/wiki/Main_Page +
            • http://www.flylogic.net/blog/ +
            • http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0752922/ +
            • http://njsas.org/projects/atoms/cloud_chamber/cache/cloud.html +
            • http://www.preservedwords.com/charts.htm +
            • http://www.flatlandthemovie.com/ +
            • http://fhapgood.fastmail.fm/ +
            • http://www.metacafe.com/watch/526663/g_spot/ +
            • http://cv.antix.co.uk/Profile/CurriculumVitaeStyleViewer.aspx?../Example dhtml selectable color +
            • http://origami.oschene.com/archives/2007/06/03/stellated-curved-tetrahedron-redux/ +
            • http://www.scottaaronson.com/blog/ +
            • http://www.sonypictures.com/homevideo/tekkonkinkreet/index.html +
            • http://www.salon.com/ent/movies/review/2007/07/12/btm/index2.html +
            • http://www.salon.com/ent/movies/review/2007/07/05/btm/index.html +
            • http://web.mit.edu/terrascope-radio/Sprouts-08-22-07.mp3 +
            • http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=6476 +
            • http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=1360 +
            • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Zereshk +
            • http://www.fimoculous.com/ +
            • http://ideonomy.mit.edu/ +
            • www.aquariusrecords.org +
            • http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0443693/ (The Wild Blue Yonder) +
            • http://scilib.ucsd.edu/sio/nsf/fguide/index.html +
            • http://damieng.com/blog/2007/11/14/droid-sans-mono-great-coding-font +
            • http://web.mac.com/charnets +
            • http://pole.uchicago.edu/blog/kathryn +
            • http://www.megasociety.org/ +
            • http://www.cyriak.co.uk/ +
            • http://www.divinebanquet.com/ +
            • http://web.mit.edu/kclancy/www/1.html +
            • http://the-programmers-stone.com/about/ +
            • http://www.reanimationlibrary.org/ +
            • http://overstated.net/2008/01/30/patrick-winston-how-to-speak +
            • http://www.bookfactory.com/ +
            • http://flowingdata.com/2008/02/25/ebb-and-flow-of-box-office-receipts-over-past-20-years/ +
            • http://edge.org/3rd_culture/dysong08/dysong08_index.html +
            • http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200807/google +
            • http://www.fixedgeargallery.com/articles/scottlarkin1.htm + +
            +

            HR

            +
              +
            • http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/07/world/africa/07congo.html +
            • http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/congo.htm +
            • http://www.pulitzer.org/year/2006/commentary/works/kristof08.html +
            +

            'tube

            +
              +
            • nageese@youtube +
            • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nhizo7KrZrw (japanese mcdonalds) +
            • http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-2726904509434151616 (role of programming) +
            + +

            nice personal sites

            + diff --git a/pages/people.md b/pages/people.md index 983ac34..96e4815 100644 --- a/pages/people.md +++ b/pages/people.md @@ -3,9 +3,9 @@ Url: /people/ SaveAs: /people/index.html -shephi@livejournal
            -the guys
            -mussie shore
            - -

            +shephi@livejournal
            +the guys
            +mussie shore
            + +

            XFN Friendly \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/resume.md b/pages/resume.md index 6e817c1..b99fbbc 100644 --- a/pages/resume.md +++ b/pages/resume.md @@ -3,6 +3,6 @@ Url: /resume/ SaveAs: /resume/index.html -
            - +
            + My most recent resume is available as a .pdf here. \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/seattle.md b/pages/seattle.md index ebb39d0..64f32ee 100644 --- a/pages/seattle.md +++ b/pages/seattle.md @@ -3,16 +3,16 @@ Url: /seattle/ SaveAs: /seattle/index.html -
            - -Films! -
            Fandango 98105 -
              -
            • Grand Illusion -
            • SIFF (Egyptian, etc) -
            • Landmark (UD Varsity, Wallingford, UD 7 Gables, etc) -
            • Magestic Bay (ballard) -
            • Sundance (UD) - - +
              + +Films! +
              Fandango 98105 + \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/tiddly.md b/pages/tiddly.md index 4802d75..5192841 100644 --- a/pages/tiddly.md +++ b/pages/tiddly.md @@ -3,10 +3,10 @@ Url: /tiddly/ SaveAs: /tiddly/index.html -Forwarding... - - +Forwarding... + + diff --git a/pages/towatch.md b/pages/towatch.md index 0d2f8fd..00d7ef3 100644 --- a/pages/towatch.md +++ b/pages/towatch.md @@ -3,16 +3,16 @@ Url: /towatch/ SaveAs: /towatch/index.html -
              - -
                -
              • Children of Paradise -
              • Brain Candy -
              • One, Two, Three -
              • The White Ribbon (by Haneke) -
              • Gomorrah -
              • Tulpan -
              • Ponyo -
              • Fantastic Mr. Fox -
              • The Sun (2009) +
                + +
                  +
                • Children of Paradise +
                • Brain Candy +
                • One, Two, Three +
                • The White Ribbon (by Haneke) +
                • Gomorrah +
                • Tulpan +
                • Ponyo +
                • Fantastic Mr. Fox +
                • The Sun (2009)
                \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/travel/nz.md b/pages/travel/nz.md index fe311f9..cc6a928 100644 --- a/pages/travel/nz.md +++ b/pages/travel/nz.md @@ -3,29 +3,29 @@ Url: /travel/nz/ Save_as: travel/nz/index.html -
                - - -

                Trains

                -See tranz-scenic for tickets. -
                  -
                • tranzcoastal goes from Christchurch to Picton (top of the north island); one way from $64-73nzd, just over 5 hours leaving 0700. A joint tranzcoastal/interislander ticket is $119nzd
                • -
                • overlander
                • goes from Wellington to Auckland; one way is about 12 hours, departs 0725 and costs $100nzd -
                - -

                Ferry

                -The Picton-Wellington ferry costs about $72 per adult one way for a flexible ticket: cheaper inflexible web tickets are $52; see http://www.interislander.co.nz. - -

                Says a friend...

                -
                -You should go to milford sound and take one of the small boat cruises if you can. The waterfalls are over a mile high in most places -- they're more like vertical rivers than waterfalls... the pancake rocks in Greymouth are really worth seeing too. I really liked the city of Nelson a lot, it's very chill. I also liked Queenstown, but my brother (who's been living here for 9 months) didn't care for it. I only spent a few hours there though. My brother also didn't like Christchurch much. - -oh, and go to the craters of the moon near the caldera south of rotorua, they were pretty intense. boiling mud and steam shooting everywhere, I thought it was very cool. =) +
                + + +

                Trains

                +See tranz-scenic for tickets. +
                  +
                • tranzcoastal goes from Christchurch to Picton (top of the north island); one way from $64-73nzd, just over 5 hours leaving 0700. A joint tranzcoastal/interislander ticket is $119nzd
                • +
                • overlander
                • goes from Wellington to Auckland; one way is about 12 hours, departs 0725 and costs $100nzd +
                + +

                Ferry

                +The Picton-Wellington ferry costs about $72 per adult one way for a flexible ticket: cheaper inflexible web tickets are $52; see http://www.interislander.co.nz. + +

                Says a friend...

                +
                +You should go to milford sound and take one of the small boat cruises if you can. The waterfalls are over a mile high in most places -- they're more like vertical rivers than waterfalls... the pancake rocks in Greymouth are really worth seeing too. I really liked the city of Nelson a lot, it's very chill. I also liked Queenstown, but my brother (who's been living here for 9 months) didn't care for it. I only spent a few hours there though. My brother also didn't like Christchurch much. + +oh, and go to the craters of the moon near the caldera south of rotorua, they were pretty intense. boiling mud and steam shooting everywhere, I thought it was very cool. =)
                diff --git a/pages/travel/russia.md b/pages/travel/russia.md index 17af96b..616bac1 100644 --- a/pages/travel/russia.md +++ b/pages/travel/russia.md @@ -3,52 +3,52 @@ Url: /travel/russia/ Save_as: travel/russia/index.html -
                - -

                Ferry to/from Japan

                - -

                Trains...

                -http://www.eng.rzd.ru/, http://www.poezda.net/en/index -
                  -
                • trans-siberian express: moscow to vladviostok
                • -
                • trans-mongolian express: moscow to beijing, through mongolia
                • -
                • moscow to st petersburg: 5 hours, ~50 USD?
                • -
                • International: waytorussia -
                - -

                NZ Consulate

                -Russian Consulate in New Zealand; forms, visa info, map -
                -c/o Karori Post Shop
                -Wellington
                -57 Messines Road, Karori, Wellington
                -tel. (04) 476 6113
                -fax (04) 476 3843
                -email info@rus.co.nz
                -Consular section
                -tel. (04) 476 6742
                -tel. (04) 476 9548 (visa issues)
                -Monday-Friday 9.30 a.m. - 1.00 p.m.
                -email wltvisa@xtra.co.nz (visa issues)
                -email consul@rus.co.nz (consular issues)
                -
                - -

                Vladivostok

                -wikitravel - - -

                Hostels etc

                -
                  -
                • http://www.hostel.ru/moskhostel.php3 -
                • http://www.hostelling.ru/index.php4?patchs=piter -
                • http://www.hostelling-russia.ru/hostels.htm +
                  + +

                  Ferry to/from Japan

                  + +

                  Trains...

                  +http://www.eng.rzd.ru/, http://www.poezda.net/en/index +
                    +
                  • trans-siberian express: moscow to vladviostok
                  • +
                  • trans-mongolian express: moscow to beijing, through mongolia
                  • +
                  • moscow to st petersburg: 5 hours, ~50 USD?
                  • +
                  • International: waytorussia +
                  + +

                  NZ Consulate

                  +Russian Consulate in New Zealand; forms, visa info, map +
                  +c/o Karori Post Shop
                  +Wellington
                  +57 Messines Road, Karori, Wellington
                  +tel. (04) 476 6113
                  +fax (04) 476 3843
                  +email info@rus.co.nz
                  +Consular section
                  +tel. (04) 476 6742
                  +tel. (04) 476 9548 (visa issues)
                  +Monday-Friday 9.30 a.m. - 1.00 p.m.
                  +email wltvisa@xtra.co.nz (visa issues)
                  +email consul@rus.co.nz (consular issues)
                  +
                  + +

                  Vladivostok

                  +wikitravel + + +

                  Hostels etc

                  + diff --git a/pages/tumble.md b/pages/tumble.md index 5ea297c..c6eb41d 100644 --- a/pages/tumble.md +++ b/pages/tumble.md @@ -3,5 +3,5 @@ Url: /tumble/ SaveAs: /tumble/index.html -
                  +
                  \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/pages/whatsup.md b/pages/whatsup.md index ec04493..9ff9bbb 100644 --- a/pages/whatsup.md +++ b/pages/whatsup.md @@ -2,327 +2,327 @@ Title: What Have I Done? Url: /whatsup/ SaveAs: /whatsup/index.html - - -

                  4/15: It's... Spring!

                  - -Continued to work remotely for Twinleaf, building skills in PCB layout and more complex systems. Worked from home in our apartment in the University District. Hiked around Washington, seeing lots of Alpine Lakes and fungus. Traveled to CCC for New Years, and stopped briefly in Iceland for some repairs, and in London to see old friends. Went SCUBA diving in Thailand, then traveled to Japan with Lucy over spring break. Got to see beautiful cherry blossoms both in Tokyuo Ueno Park and then back in Seattle at the University. - - - -
                  -

                  9/14: It's... Fall!

                  - -A busy summer! Started working directly for Twinleaf; left Camrbridge and lived in Princeton (NJ) for several months. In August Lucy and I traveled to Hawai'i and WWOOFed with the excellent Mariana Rainbow on the big island. We backpacked around Kaua'i and the Volcanoes, visited the top of Mauna Kea, and ended in Honolulu with Lucy's extended family. We traveled back to NYC opposite routes around the world (I stopped by Portland for a free software conference, Lucy went through China) and then packed everything into a tiny car to move west to Seattle. We took I-90 all the way across with great stops in Wyoming and South Dakota. - - - - -
                  -

                  4/14: It's... Spring!

                  - -Over the winter traveled to Iceland to install a communal server. Later I rode Amtrak to Miami to catch some sun. The first revision of the neurobiology hardware was completed, and I primarily started working timing and controls contracts for a magnetometry company in Princeton. - - - - -
                  -

                  10/13: It's... Fall!

                  - -LeafLabs and I get entangled in an increasingly complex modular smartphone project, involving Industry Lab friends, Silicon Valley giants, and lots of suspended disbelief. Lots and lots of bus, train, and plane travel down to Baltimore to visit Lucy. - - - -
                  -

                  5/13: It's... Spring!

                  - -I moved back to Cambridge, MA, and live in a purple resident-owned co-op house. I rejoin LeafLabs, which has moved into a new space in Inman Square (a continuation of the earlier "Technology City" in Central). We work a number of contract projects; I primarily write FPGA firmware and glue code for a large-scale neurobiology readout system in collaboration with a group at the Media Lab. - - - -
                  -

                  1/13: It's... Winter!

                  - -In the fall, traveled to Iceland with Lucy! It was lovely. Lived in Berlin for a few months, continuing work on rooter. I gave a talk in Ljubljana and traveled through the Balkans to Istanbul. In the New Year I reunited with Lucy in Berlin and we traveled to Morocco, Turkey, and China; I stopped through Shenzhen, Hong Kong, and Singapore briefly. - - - -
                  -

                  08/12: It's... Summer!

                  - -After a year at Octopart i'm taking time off to volunteer on projects -preserving the internet as a strong public commons. I helped with Free Network -Foundation deployments in New York and Kansas City, started an open source -wireless router project called rooter, spent a couple weeks reading in Maine, -then traveled to the west coast to crash with Star at The Sprouts and drive -north to Toorcamp at the tip of the Washington state peninsula. - - - - -
                  -

                  01/12: It's... Winter!

                  - -Time flies! Visited friends and hiked on the west coast in August and gave a -talk about electronics pricing at the Open Hardware Summit back here in NYC. -Traveled to Berlin for the 28th chaos communication congress, then through -Zurich and Copenhagen. - - - - -
                  -

                  05/11: It's... Spring!

                  - -After joining a motley crew of salad eaters in Reykjavik for a week of bracing -winds and bit twiddling I moved to lower Manhattan with my girlfriend Amanda. -Wrapped logistics for the Keck group at Harvard, read up on Prolog and ML, -built psyche.cc with friends Toby and Scotty, and will soon start a job at -Octopart (a search engine for electronic components). - - - -
                  -

                  12/10: It's... Fall!

                  -Worked up a storm at LeafLabs, including helping start a new tech startup space -in Central Square (Cambridge, MA) and took a Complex Analysis course at -Sprouts. Took a contract job at Harvard to make ends meet, I now spend most of -my time there working on the controls and data acquisition systems for the Keck -Array South Pole CMB telescope. - - - -
                  -

                  04/10: It's... Spring!

                  -Ventured to Newfoundland and Labrador for snow camping with Tom, and then bounced around Toronto with Christine. Spent two lovely months in NYC building video games and robotic furniture, then took a job at LeafLabs in Cambridge. - - -
                  -

                  12/09: It's... Winter!

                  -Worked at a microbial fuel cell (bio-energy) startup for a few months, then got hired as the South Pole Telescope winterover and spent time at Berkeley and UChicago, but then that fell through and I came back to Boston. - - -
                  -

                  07/09: It's... Summer!

                  -Graduated from MIT as Course 8b (Physics, sadly sans thesis), biked a lot, and taught Java to high school students in Jerusalem as part of the MEET program. Then traveled through Egypt and beautiful Jordan in deliciously dry heat, paradise! - - -
                  -

                  04/09: It's... Spring!

                  -Finishing up my undergraduate degree, working on an amazing thesis project, hacking scheme, staying warm. Visited Mexico City in January with my family. - - -
                  -

                  10/08: It's... Fall!

                  -Made peace with quantum mechanics, programmed FPGAs, la la. - - -

                  07/08: It's... Summer!

                  -Working at LIGO again for the summer, living with friends in Central -Square. Investigating wire hysteresis in the Advanced LIGO quadruple pendulum -prototypes. -
                  Took two quick trips to Maine and visited NYC a few times but otherwise -pretty quiet. - - -

                  04/08: It's... Spring!

                  -Crunching through a productive semester at MIT, loving analysis and -experimental physics. -
                  - -

                  01/08: It's... Winter!

                  -Much travel! Fresh off the ice I spent a couple weeks in New Zealand -smelling, touching, eating, and making travel arrangements. Then flew off to -Tokyo, Kyoto, and Hiroshima in Japan to visit my friend Chris. I took -bullet trains and high speed ferries across to South Korea to visit my -friend Seo and her family, then hoped on a used car ferry to Vladivostok, -Russia. A solid week on the trans-Siberian express with soldiers and alcoholics -got me to Muskov and St Petersburg, where amazing couchsurfing hosts took me -in and shared their lives. Then quickly (to avoid visa issues) off by train -through eastern Europe to visit Virgil and Claudio in Bucharest, Romania, -then a few days in Vienna and a layover in Dublin brought me back here to -MIT just in time for the spring semester. More than 10k kilometers from -Tokyo to Vienna without flying! - - -

                  11/07: It's... Spring?

                  -At McMurdo station in Antarctica driving an ROV and soaking up the -midnight sun! It's a ten week deployment from October through mid-December. -The people are amazing, work rewarding, and more outlandishly beautiful than -I could have hoped for. - - -

                  08/07: It's... Summer!

                  -I have been spending the summer living in Moss Landing, CA working on an ROV project; in a few weeks I'll be leaving with the team to Antarctica for the fall. -
                  Before that I'll be hitting the Nevada salt flats for my first burning man. -
                  Moss Landing is a pretty slow town, I've really appreciated visitors and trips northto the bay area. It seems like there are more MIT students here than in Cambridge! - - -

                  04/07: It's... Spring!

                  -Spring in the northwest is beautiful! Maybe I just never got outside enough in Boston? Left Seattle in April to spend 3 weeks in south-east alaska, traveling in style on the Alaska Marine Highway system and sea planes. The closest city to the cabin I stayed in was Juneau, which is unaccessible to the outside world by road. The cabin belongs to my friend Helene's parents, who put me in contact with their gracious friends Doug and Jane in Juneau, whose help was invaluable in getting out there. -
                  Returned home to Boston briefly then drove west through the south with Tom to start work in California. -
                  I have a new website with photos, knowledge, and software projects! - - - -

                  02/07: It's... Winter!

                  -I have taken a leave of absence from MIT and hit the road... took greyhound cross country, visited NYC, Chicago, Berkley, and Vancouver, and have settled in Seattle for now. Will be working for a fine little company pumping out barcodes for the next few months. Craigslist has been my shelter, transportation, and job supply. - - -

                  10/06: It's... Fall!

                  -It's been a busy fall... junior lab takes up a lot of time and the rest I pour into my super cool UROP at the LIGO project. Gravitational waves are mmm-mmm fresh! - - -

                  8/06: It's... Summer!

                  -Heat! I'm working at zingku (mobile social networking startup), coding up web apps, taking a linear algebra course at BU, and working as the RA and a desk worker for senior house.
                  -I did a one week stint as a fruititarian (only eating raw fruits, vegetables, and nuts) as an experiment; it worked out pretty well, "cooked" all my own food, ate cheap, controlled hunger very easily, high energy, etc. I've been biking around a lot on an old piece of crap.
                  -Time slips by! - - -

                  11/05: It's... Spring!

                  -Yum-a-licious! Over IAP I participated in maslab with my friends Christine and Gene. We were not competitive on the playing field, but we had a sweet laser cut bot and some really nice (overly ambitious and complicated and threaded?) code. -
                  I've been getting very into computers again, python in particular. Django is a great python web app framework that I've been playing with and will probably finish off some projects with that this summer. -
                  I've joined the SailBot team at MIT, which will compete this june in an autonomous sailing race up in Canada. -
                  I've been cranking out videos as part of my 4.366 class, some of which will be put up here on the website. - - -

                  11/05: It's... Fall.

                  -I spent the rest of the summer working at Oculus, but got mononucleosis for the last several weeks and ended up living at home for a couple weeks. -
                  This fall is much less of an exclamation mark semester. I have a UROP with professor Hosler where I am advising on a future raft voyage off the pacific coast of south/central america. Kind of like Kon-Tiki. - - -

                  6/05: It's... Early Summer!

                  -Just got back from Europe the other day. Don't have any pictures really, but I might steal some from other people soon. Had a great time sailing, went to Paris, Amsterdam, Berlin, Venice, Geneva, Florence, Rome, and lots of little place along the way. Sweet! -
                  I'm having my wisdom teeth pulled next week, and have a messed up ankle from rugby. I am bumming around at east campus for the summer, hopefully working for Oculus Technologies. - - -

                  4/05: It's... Spring!

                  -I'm tired! I'm playing rugby and IM ultimate; moving around outdoors makes me realize how little sleep I get and how much I miss sailing and soccer. -
                  This summer it looks like i'll be sailing in France May 18-26, bumming around Europe till June 13th, then working on and off for the rest of the summer, hopefully doing conservation work. I really wanted to be sailing offshore for most of the summer. I don't really know how I got off that track. - - -

                  1/05: It's... IAP!

                  -I'm taking a film workshop and undergoing intensive EMT training. - - -

                  11/04: It's... Thanksgiving!

                  - \ No newline at end of file + + +

                  4/15: It's... Spring!

                  + +Continued to work remotely for Twinleaf, building skills in PCB layout and more complex systems. Worked from home in our apartment in the University District. Hiked around Washington, seeing lots of Alpine Lakes and fungus. Traveled to CCC for New Years, and stopped briefly in Iceland for some repairs, and in London to see old friends. Went SCUBA diving in Thailand, then traveled to Japan with Lucy over spring break. Got to see beautiful cherry blossoms both in Tokyuo Ueno Park and then back in Seattle at the University. + + + +
                  +

                  9/14: It's... Fall!

                  + +A busy summer! Started working directly for Twinleaf; left Camrbridge and lived in Princeton (NJ) for several months. In August Lucy and I traveled to Hawai'i and WWOOFed with the excellent Mariana Rainbow on the big island. We backpacked around Kaua'i and the Volcanoes, visited the top of Mauna Kea, and ended in Honolulu with Lucy's extended family. We traveled back to NYC opposite routes around the world (I stopped by Portland for a free software conference, Lucy went through China) and then packed everything into a tiny car to move west to Seattle. We took I-90 all the way across with great stops in Wyoming and South Dakota. + + + + +
                  +

                  4/14: It's... Spring!

                  + +Over the winter traveled to Iceland to install a communal server. Later I rode Amtrak to Miami to catch some sun. The first revision of the neurobiology hardware was completed, and I primarily started working timing and controls contracts for a magnetometry company in Princeton. + + + + +
                  +

                  10/13: It's... Fall!

                  + +LeafLabs and I get entangled in an increasingly complex modular smartphone project, involving Industry Lab friends, Silicon Valley giants, and lots of suspended disbelief. Lots and lots of bus, train, and plane travel down to Baltimore to visit Lucy. + + + +
                  +

                  5/13: It's... Spring!

                  + +I moved back to Cambridge, MA, and live in a purple resident-owned co-op house. I rejoin LeafLabs, which has moved into a new space in Inman Square (a continuation of the earlier "Technology City" in Central). We work a number of contract projects; I primarily write FPGA firmware and glue code for a large-scale neurobiology readout system in collaboration with a group at the Media Lab. + + + +
                  +

                  1/13: It's... Winter!

                  + +In the fall, traveled to Iceland with Lucy! It was lovely. Lived in Berlin for a few months, continuing work on rooter. I gave a talk in Ljubljana and traveled through the Balkans to Istanbul. In the New Year I reunited with Lucy in Berlin and we traveled to Morocco, Turkey, and China; I stopped through Shenzhen, Hong Kong, and Singapore briefly. + + + +
                  +

                  08/12: It's... Summer!

                  + +After a year at Octopart i'm taking time off to volunteer on projects +preserving the internet as a strong public commons. I helped with Free Network +Foundation deployments in New York and Kansas City, started an open source +wireless router project called rooter, spent a couple weeks reading in Maine, +then traveled to the west coast to crash with Star at The Sprouts and drive +north to Toorcamp at the tip of the Washington state peninsula. + + + + +
                  +

                  01/12: It's... Winter!

                  + +Time flies! Visited friends and hiked on the west coast in August and gave a +talk about electronics pricing at the Open Hardware Summit back here in NYC. +Traveled to Berlin for the 28th chaos communication congress, then through +Zurich and Copenhagen. + + + + +
                  +

                  05/11: It's... Spring!

                  + +After joining a motley crew of salad eaters in Reykjavik for a week of bracing +winds and bit twiddling I moved to lower Manhattan with my girlfriend Amanda. +Wrapped logistics for the Keck group at Harvard, read up on Prolog and ML, +built psyche.cc with friends Toby and Scotty, and will soon start a job at +Octopart (a search engine for electronic components). + + + +
                  +

                  12/10: It's... Fall!

                  +Worked up a storm at LeafLabs, including helping start a new tech startup space +in Central Square (Cambridge, MA) and took a Complex Analysis course at +Sprouts. Took a contract job at Harvard to make ends meet, I now spend most of +my time there working on the controls and data acquisition systems for the Keck +Array South Pole CMB telescope. + + + +
                  +

                  04/10: It's... Spring!

                  +Ventured to Newfoundland and Labrador for snow camping with Tom, and then bounced around Toronto with Christine. Spent two lovely months in NYC building video games and robotic furniture, then took a job at LeafLabs in Cambridge. + + +
                  +

                  12/09: It's... Winter!

                  +Worked at a microbial fuel cell (bio-energy) startup for a few months, then got hired as the South Pole Telescope winterover and spent time at Berkeley and UChicago, but then that fell through and I came back to Boston. + + +
                  +

                  07/09: It's... Summer!

                  +Graduated from MIT as Course 8b (Physics, sadly sans thesis), biked a lot, and taught Java to high school students in Jerusalem as part of the MEET program. Then traveled through Egypt and beautiful Jordan in deliciously dry heat, paradise! + + +
                  +

                  04/09: It's... Spring!

                  +Finishing up my undergraduate degree, working on an amazing thesis project, hacking scheme, staying warm. Visited Mexico City in January with my family. + + +
                  +

                  10/08: It's... Fall!

                  +Made peace with quantum mechanics, programmed FPGAs, la la. + + +

                  07/08: It's... Summer!

                  +Working at LIGO again for the summer, living with friends in Central +Square. Investigating wire hysteresis in the Advanced LIGO quadruple pendulum +prototypes. +
                  Took two quick trips to Maine and visited NYC a few times but otherwise +pretty quiet. + + +

                  04/08: It's... Spring!

                  +Crunching through a productive semester at MIT, loving analysis and +experimental physics. +
                  + +

                  01/08: It's... Winter!

                  +Much travel! Fresh off the ice I spent a couple weeks in New Zealand +smelling, touching, eating, and making travel arrangements. Then flew off to +Tokyo, Kyoto, and Hiroshima in Japan to visit my friend Chris. I took +bullet trains and high speed ferries across to South Korea to visit my +friend Seo and her family, then hoped on a used car ferry to Vladivostok, +Russia. A solid week on the trans-Siberian express with soldiers and alcoholics +got me to Muskov and St Petersburg, where amazing couchsurfing hosts took me +in and shared their lives. Then quickly (to avoid visa issues) off by train +through eastern Europe to visit Virgil and Claudio in Bucharest, Romania, +then a few days in Vienna and a layover in Dublin brought me back here to +MIT just in time for the spring semester. More than 10k kilometers from +Tokyo to Vienna without flying! + + +

                  11/07: It's... Spring?

                  +At McMurdo station in Antarctica driving an ROV and soaking up the +midnight sun! It's a ten week deployment from October through mid-December. +The people are amazing, work rewarding, and more outlandishly beautiful than +I could have hoped for. + + +

                  08/07: It's... Summer!

                  +I have been spending the summer living in Moss Landing, CA working on an ROV project; in a few weeks I'll be leaving with the team to Antarctica for the fall. +
                  Before that I'll be hitting the Nevada salt flats for my first burning man. +
                  Moss Landing is a pretty slow town, I've really appreciated visitors and trips northto the bay area. It seems like there are more MIT students here than in Cambridge! + + +

                  04/07: It's... Spring!

                  +Spring in the northwest is beautiful! Maybe I just never got outside enough in Boston? Left Seattle in April to spend 3 weeks in south-east alaska, traveling in style on the Alaska Marine Highway system and sea planes. The closest city to the cabin I stayed in was Juneau, which is unaccessible to the outside world by road. The cabin belongs to my friend Helene's parents, who put me in contact with their gracious friends Doug and Jane in Juneau, whose help was invaluable in getting out there. +
                  Returned home to Boston briefly then drove west through the south with Tom to start work in California. +
                  I have a new website with photos, knowledge, and software projects! + + + +

                  02/07: It's... Winter!

                  +I have taken a leave of absence from MIT and hit the road... took greyhound cross country, visited NYC, Chicago, Berkley, and Vancouver, and have settled in Seattle for now. Will be working for a fine little company pumping out barcodes for the next few months. Craigslist has been my shelter, transportation, and job supply. + + +

                  10/06: It's... Fall!

                  +It's been a busy fall... junior lab takes up a lot of time and the rest I pour into my super cool UROP at the LIGO project. Gravitational waves are mmm-mmm fresh! + + +

                  8/06: It's... Summer!

                  +Heat! I'm working at zingku (mobile social networking startup), coding up web apps, taking a linear algebra course at BU, and working as the RA and a desk worker for senior house.
                  +I did a one week stint as a fruititarian (only eating raw fruits, vegetables, and nuts) as an experiment; it worked out pretty well, "cooked" all my own food, ate cheap, controlled hunger very easily, high energy, etc. I've been biking around a lot on an old piece of crap.
                  +Time slips by! + + +

                  11/05: It's... Spring!

                  +Yum-a-licious! Over IAP I participated in maslab with my friends Christine and Gene. We were not competitive on the playing field, but we had a sweet laser cut bot and some really nice (overly ambitious and complicated and threaded?) code. +
                  I've been getting very into computers again, python in particular. Django is a great python web app framework that I've been playing with and will probably finish off some projects with that this summer. +
                  I've joined the SailBot team at MIT, which will compete this june in an autonomous sailing race up in Canada. +
                  I've been cranking out videos as part of my 4.366 class, some of which will be put up here on the website. + + +

                  11/05: It's... Fall.

                  +I spent the rest of the summer working at Oculus, but got mononucleosis for the last several weeks and ended up living at home for a couple weeks. +
                  This fall is much less of an exclamation mark semester. I have a UROP with professor Hosler where I am advising on a future raft voyage off the pacific coast of south/central america. Kind of like Kon-Tiki. + + +

                  6/05: It's... Early Summer!

                  +Just got back from Europe the other day. Don't have any pictures really, but I might steal some from other people soon. Had a great time sailing, went to Paris, Amsterdam, Berlin, Venice, Geneva, Florence, Rome, and lots of little place along the way. Sweet! +
                  I'm having my wisdom teeth pulled next week, and have a messed up ankle from rugby. I am bumming around at east campus for the summer, hopefully working for Oculus Technologies. + + +

                  4/05: It's... Spring!

                  +I'm tired! I'm playing rugby and IM ultimate; moving around outdoors makes me realize how little sleep I get and how much I miss sailing and soccer. +
                  This summer it looks like i'll be sailing in France May 18-26, bumming around Europe till June 13th, then working on and off for the rest of the summer, hopefully doing conservation work. I really wanted to be sailing offshore for most of the summer. I don't really know how I got off that track. + + +

                  1/05: It's... IAP!

                  +I'm taking a film workshop and undergoing intensive EMT training. + + +

                  11/04: It's... Thanksgiving!

                  + -- cgit v1.2.3