Sunday, December 17, 2006
Ah....
I'm not the only one who likes taking pictures of food. Did I mention UDS rocked? :)
Insomnia causes nostalgia for '80s hair metal. And Marty Robbins.
Insomnia causes nostalgia for '80s hair metal. And Marty Robbins.
Saturday, December 16, 2006
Some reasons today rocks...
Congratulations to the DiBona family!
My team launched file downloads and wiki integration for project hosting on Google Code. (Okay, so that was yesterday.)
Finished holiday shopping and will be making most of my own gifts. :)
Exciting things happening with the OSS Developers @ Google Speaker Series this week. Keep your eye on the Google Code Blog for news.
Life is good.
My team launched file downloads and wiki integration for project hosting on Google Code. (Okay, so that was yesterday.)
Finished holiday shopping and will be making most of my own gifts. :)
Exciting things happening with the OSS Developers @ Google Speaker Series this week. Keep your eye on the Google Code Blog for news.
Life is good.
Friday, December 15, 2006
When the Good Times Roll....
I have insomnia. I've had it since I came back from Holland. It happens. The trip was well worth the disruption of my circadian rhythms.
The plan was to head to Dublin from 3 - 6 December, then pop over to Holland to give a talk on Google and Open Source in Den Bosch at Dutch Joomla!Days. Unfortunately, a bout of food poisoning meant that I didn't get to enjoy much of Dublin - well any of it, really - and I missed the GSoC student lunch in the office on the 5th. Well, at least I got to see one of you. I met Ernest once before at GUADEC; he arrived a few minutes early for lunch, early enough to watch me turn ever greener on the lobby sofa of Google Dublin before hurrying off to get medical treatment. Thanks to Dublin engineering for taking care of our visitors for me.
I now have a new and permanent addition to my travel case. I have never been to the emergency room alone before and do not highly recommend it. I spent an extra day in Dublin recovering, then headed to Amsterdam on Thursday the 7th.
Wilco Jansen, Joomla!'s organization administrator and a mentor for GSoC 2006, was kind enough to pick me up at the airport. We were joined in the hour plus drive to the Golden Tulip Hotel, the conference venue, by Alex Kempkens, another Joomla! core developer and a GSoC mentor. I enjoyed listening to the two of them catch up and hearing about their students and their successes in Google Summer of Code. It was also awesome watching the two of them make a series of rapid fire calls - I think I heard Dutch, German and French in the space of about twenty minutes - while I just got to sit back in the car and enjoy the ride. Truly, just lovely.
The hotel was very nicely appointed and had a lovely bar area, where we had a beer or two, followed by dinner and a few more beers. I got to meet Hannes and Laurens, which was terrific. They are both very smart, passionate and witty. They also are great at explaining technical things to the uninitiated - ah, the joys of geeking out.
I gave my first public presentation for Google the next day. When the video is published I'll update this post. I have to admit I was pretty nervous, but I think it went very well. Many people asked me great questions afterwards about Google and open source, as well as our API offerings. The rest of the program for the day was in Dutch, so I wandered about with Hannes, who also was not Dutch enabled. Den Bosch is a beautiful city, but my camera chose to misbehave, so no photos to share. I have some lovely post cards which I would be happy to show you, but for now feast your eyes onWikipedia or Hagengraf's Photos.
At dinner that evening, Antoine introduced us to his lovely wife Linda. Congratulations to them on their nuptials - they've been married for four weeks now IIRC. She did great at her first geek fest. The meal was delicious and the salad just fantastic - covered in raw sunflower seeds. Mmmmm. We finished off the evening with dancing, and a lot of it, at a little club that seemed off the beaten path. I had the name of it written on a coaster, but can't seem to find it for now. I'll list the name later; the place is well worth checking out if you find yourself in this wonderful town.
I couldn't sleep when I got back to the hotel. It may have had something to do with the the constant fevered sleep each day in Dublin, which meant I never adjusted to European time. I think I was just excited. Besides, the temptation of Cuban Rum and Coke Light is too much to resist, so I braved the late night caffeine demons.
So I didn't sleep. Instead, I stayed up and subscribed to Ubuntu mailing lists and stared out my window, watching the lights flicker. A single truck roll quietly in, the well in the center on the square swallowed minutes later by a brilliant display of fruits and vegetables. The sensuous smell of meat lurked in through the window, nudged aside occasionally by diesel fumes. Then the truck noises began in earnest, and all hope for sleep was lost. I later found out what I was smelling down in the market square was roasted nuts.
I attended Johan's keynote the next morning, bleary eyed. Precious coffee was served in abundance. Johan's talk was also in Dutch, so during the parts I absolutely couldn't follow, I zoned out noticing just how well orchestrated these two community days had been, and just how pleasant the entire experience was. If you're an old hand at shows you could tell that it was put extremely well put together on a modest budget.
I was really impressed by all the effort Wilco and Henk put forth to ensure everyone felt welcomed and educated. The tutorials and other community building sessions were well attended, though I spent the afternoon listening to Laurens' talk on his GSoC project, SITEman. He was kind enough to translate his slides and give his talk in English for my benefit. Very cool. The session was intimate and interactive; all of my questions were answered well and thoroughly.
And now, a word on RTFM....
So the problem with RTFM is that it works very poorly for auditory learners, like myself. Frankly, there's a whole class of learners for whom it is not well suited, though the developer mind seems to absorb written knowledge well. On the other hand, after sitting through Laurens' talk, I can now give you quite the schpiel on REST, XML-RPC and SOAP. Woot! I have to say that anyone who wants to attract more testers and passionate users, do a video demonstration of how to use your software. Or even upload video of a presentation you've given for others who may find it useful.
And now, back to our story...
The day wound down after some quick shopping. Thanks to Linda for helping me find a nice warm jacket. :) We had a beer or two at the close of the conference and Hannes explained his User and Access Management GSoC project to me, using a few empty Coke Light bottles, and one bottle that once contained Schwepes Lemon Something or Other. Hannes, I hope you can forgive me - I left Super Administrator on the table.
After dinner, everyone went their separate ways. I went back to the hotel but still couldn't sleep. I screwed around on teh interwebs until the morning, when I began the long cab ride back to Amsterdam. I could have taken the train, but I still felt very delicate after Dublin. I did stop in dowtown Amsterdam to pick up some Wynand Fockink, but they didn't open until the afternoon. I headed to Schiphol and managed to jam back to SFO, only missing my connection at IAH. It happens. While I was waiting for my ride, I met a gentleman working for a company in Amsterdam working on open sourcing some music stuff. Tres cool - check out the gratis and copyright free recordings of live concerts in Amsterdam.
Thanks to all of the core developers for the speaking invitation and the opportunity to spend quality time with such a healthy and vibrant community. I had a wonderful time meeting each of you and sharing your stories about the joys of coding content management systems, effective community building and the importance of youth education.
It's great to be back home with Ben though. Now all I have to do is get some sleep. And learn Dutch.
The plan was to head to Dublin from 3 - 6 December, then pop over to Holland to give a talk on Google and Open Source in Den Bosch at Dutch Joomla!Days. Unfortunately, a bout of food poisoning meant that I didn't get to enjoy much of Dublin - well any of it, really - and I missed the GSoC student lunch in the office on the 5th. Well, at least I got to see one of you. I met Ernest once before at GUADEC; he arrived a few minutes early for lunch, early enough to watch me turn ever greener on the lobby sofa of Google Dublin before hurrying off to get medical treatment. Thanks to Dublin engineering for taking care of our visitors for me.
I now have a new and permanent addition to my travel case. I have never been to the emergency room alone before and do not highly recommend it. I spent an extra day in Dublin recovering, then headed to Amsterdam on Thursday the 7th.
Wilco Jansen, Joomla!'s organization administrator and a mentor for GSoC 2006, was kind enough to pick me up at the airport. We were joined in the hour plus drive to the Golden Tulip Hotel, the conference venue, by Alex Kempkens, another Joomla! core developer and a GSoC mentor. I enjoyed listening to the two of them catch up and hearing about their students and their successes in Google Summer of Code. It was also awesome watching the two of them make a series of rapid fire calls - I think I heard Dutch, German and French in the space of about twenty minutes - while I just got to sit back in the car and enjoy the ride. Truly, just lovely.
The hotel was very nicely appointed and had a lovely bar area, where we had a beer or two, followed by dinner and a few more beers. I got to meet Hannes and Laurens, which was terrific. They are both very smart, passionate and witty. They also are great at explaining technical things to the uninitiated - ah, the joys of geeking out.
I gave my first public presentation for Google the next day. When the video is published I'll update this post. I have to admit I was pretty nervous, but I think it went very well. Many people asked me great questions afterwards about Google and open source, as well as our API offerings. The rest of the program for the day was in Dutch, so I wandered about with Hannes, who also was not Dutch enabled. Den Bosch is a beautiful city, but my camera chose to misbehave, so no photos to share. I have some lovely post cards which I would be happy to show you, but for now feast your eyes on
At dinner that evening, Antoine introduced us to his lovely wife Linda. Congratulations to them on their nuptials - they've been married for four weeks now IIRC. She did great at her first geek fest. The meal was delicious and the salad just fantastic - covered in raw sunflower seeds. Mmmmm. We finished off the evening with dancing, and a lot of it, at a little club that seemed off the beaten path. I had the name of it written on a coaster, but can't seem to find it for now. I'll list the name later; the place is well worth checking out if you find yourself in this wonderful town.
I couldn't sleep when I got back to the hotel. It may have had something to do with the the constant fevered sleep each day in Dublin, which meant I never adjusted to European time. I think I was just excited. Besides, the temptation of Cuban Rum and Coke Light is too much to resist, so I braved the late night caffeine demons.
So I didn't sleep. Instead, I stayed up and subscribed to Ubuntu mailing lists and stared out my window, watching the lights flicker. A single truck roll quietly in, the well in the center on the square swallowed minutes later by a brilliant display of fruits and vegetables. The sensuous smell of meat lurked in through the window, nudged aside occasionally by diesel fumes. Then the truck noises began in earnest, and all hope for sleep was lost. I later found out what I was smelling down in the market square was roasted nuts.
I attended Johan's keynote the next morning, bleary eyed. Precious coffee was served in abundance. Johan's talk was also in Dutch, so during the parts I absolutely couldn't follow, I zoned out noticing just how well orchestrated these two community days had been, and just how pleasant the entire experience was. If you're an old hand at shows you could tell that it was put extremely well put together on a modest budget.
I was really impressed by all the effort Wilco and Henk put forth to ensure everyone felt welcomed and educated. The tutorials and other community building sessions were well attended, though I spent the afternoon listening to Laurens' talk on his GSoC project, SITEman. He was kind enough to translate his slides and give his talk in English for my benefit. Very cool. The session was intimate and interactive; all of my questions were answered well and thoroughly.
And now, a word on RTFM....
So the problem with RTFM is that it works very poorly for auditory learners, like myself. Frankly, there's a whole class of learners for whom it is not well suited, though the developer mind seems to absorb written knowledge well. On the other hand, after sitting through Laurens' talk, I can now give you quite the schpiel on REST, XML-RPC and SOAP. Woot! I have to say that anyone who wants to attract more testers and passionate users, do a video demonstration of how to use your software. Or even upload video of a presentation you've given for others who may find it useful.
And now, back to our story...
The day wound down after some quick shopping. Thanks to Linda for helping me find a nice warm jacket. :) We had a beer or two at the close of the conference and Hannes explained his User and Access Management GSoC project to me, using a few empty Coke Light bottles, and one bottle that once contained Schwepes Lemon Something or Other. Hannes, I hope you can forgive me - I left Super Administrator on the table.
After dinner, everyone went their separate ways. I went back to the hotel but still couldn't sleep. I screwed around on teh interwebs until the morning, when I began the long cab ride back to Amsterdam. I could have taken the train, but I still felt very delicate after Dublin. I did stop in dowtown Amsterdam to pick up some Wynand Fockink, but they didn't open until the afternoon. I headed to Schiphol and managed to jam back to SFO, only missing my connection at IAH. It happens. While I was waiting for my ride, I met a gentleman working for a company in Amsterdam working on open sourcing some music stuff. Tres cool - check out the gratis and copyright free recordings of live concerts in Amsterdam.
Thanks to all of the core developers for the speaking invitation and the opportunity to spend quality time with such a healthy and vibrant community. I had a wonderful time meeting each of you and sharing your stories about the joys of coding content management systems, effective community building and the importance of youth education.
It's great to be back home with Ben though. Now all I have to do is get some sleep. And learn Dutch.
Monday, December 04, 2006
Let the novel begin!!
So yes, I have had a massive case of writer's block for the past several months. I have also been massively busy since GUADEC, fortunately doing some very cool things.
I spent July on the usual work stuff, then spent the last week of the month attending OSCON 2006. Opening night festivities were incredibly memorable; after the Google-O'Reilly Open Source Awards, I watched my first State of the Onion and then The Da Vinci Codebase. I still can't decide what was more fun, Nat's declaration that Perl is - *ahem* - getting romantic or the final conclusion to Dr. Conway's mystery. I'd seen Kathy Sierra speak once before, and she was as inspirational as ever.
The conference was quite eventful for our team. Ben and Fitz, two-thirds of our stalwart Chicago engineering team (and pictured here along with Trow, the other third), gave their Poisonous People talk. Greg and Jason launched the project hosting feature on code.google.com, which had hundreds of projects registered within hours. Chris gave the community a mid-term update on the Google Summer of Code program and I hosted a GSoC BoF for several students and two mentors, followed by beer, further discussion and a fine repast at the truly awesome Old Town Pizza. Thanks to Catfish Man for suggesting the dinner location! Alas, I missed Karl's talk on copyright, but I did get a chance to see it later as a Google tech talk. (If you want to check out the material, and you know you do, the Q&A session following Karl's presentation at Stanford is particuarly good.) It was wonderful to hang out with old friends and make new ones. Portland is always a great place to visit, but alas there was no time to swing by Powell's before departing.
Due to the continuing vagaries of international finance, I spent the first two weeks of August stuffing checks in envelopes. I took a few days off in beautiful Northern California for the annual Girl's Road Trip to Reggae on the River, then headed home to prepare for Science Foo Camp. SciFoo was totally amazing - Timo Hannay with Nature Magazine, one of our co-conference conspirators, wrote up several posts on the unconference and I even got to meet one of my heroes, Dr. Richard Jefferson. Many thanks to Sara, Marcie and the rest of the team at O'Reilly for all their help with SciFoo and for everything I learned from them about what makes a great conference. Nature, O'Reilly and Google will be hosting SciFoo at Google HQ again next year.
I had a chance to put my new conference hosting skills to work the next weekend at The Ubucon. We had about 80 attendees at the conference, and we were fortunate enough to have several of the folks from Canonical join us, as well. The next week I helped host the bi-coastal Python Sprint. GSoC final evaluations began at the end of the month and continued into September, followed by more envelope stuffing. The level of expertise I have achieved at stuffing envelopes may be second to none.
In October, more GSoC goodness followed when we hosted 100ish mentors at Google for a one day brainstorming session on how to improve the program. It was wonderful to meet everyone in person, at last. There's a great group picture of us here, along with a link to the slides from Ben and Fitz's Poisonous People talk, which they kindly reprised at the summit. I got to meet a bunch of the SVN devs at the Subversion Summit the next week. Most of the rest of the month was all about figuring out why everyone who requested a medium GSoC shirt was sent an extra large, and vice-versa, and why FedEx couldn't find tracking numbers for everyone. Sigh. I think next year we'll repurpose Google's pigeon squad for t-shirt delivery.
The last weekend in October, we hosted the FLOSS Usability Sprint III. It was my first time actually volunteering my time to an open source project, and it was incredibly fulfilling. Look out for a report on Drupal Usability coming from the Sprint, and there's more on the rest of the sprint's accomplishments and a link to a photo of all of us here.
November is my favorite month, but this past one was absolutely the best on record. I spent a week hanging out with the Ubuntu gang at the Ubuntu Developer Summit - what an amazing group of people! Mark Shuttleworth also gave a presentation to a bunch of Google folks on Ubuntu, which is available on Google Video. At the end of the summit, the group voted me an Ubuntu community member, which brought tears to my eyes. Now I need to stop being such a slacker and get the signed Code of Conduct in and actually start contributing to the project. So much to do, so little time.
The next day, I headed back to Google for the second day of MySQL Camp. I'd only been able to pop in and out the first day since UDS was wrapping up, and I was really looking forward to hanging out with all of the MySQL developers and aficionados. Fate conspired against me, unfortunately, and I ended up with twenty stitches after a mishap involving that noblest of causes, delivering free beer. Mikal and Kynan took care of everyone fabulously - huge thanks to them, especially Mikal for taking me to the hospital. Since I spent most of the weekend on the really good painkillers, I don't have much to say about the conference, but Kynan and Mikal did a great wrap-up post.
The next two weeks I went on holiday. Yay, holiday! The week before Thanksgiving, Ben's Mum visited us from Auckland, along with his Aunt and Cousin, in from Darwin. We went to Alcatraz - yes, like all other Bay Area natives, I had never been before - and my favorite nursery in Half Moon Bay, along with other general puttering around before they left for their road trip across the U.S.A. It was a lovely visit, though far too short. I know I've said this many times before, but let me just say it again - I am so fortunate to have such a wonderful future mother-in-law and extended family!!
The Friday after the family departed, Ben and a few of our friends celebrated my birthday, a bit late, at a truly awesome house party hosted by San and MikeW. (Thanks for the invitation to the festivites, gentlemen!) I'm still not entirely sure how we got to our hotel, but we did. No, I don't remember checking in. I do remember checking out, as the surliness of the gal at the counter was matched only by the size of my headache. Saturday morning, Ben and I hopped on a plane to Chicago. We had dinner with Ben & Fitz, and Case and Karl, who were also in town; I'm glad I got a chance to see Karl before he headed out on his world tour. We also met Adrian at dinner, which was super cool since we got to learn more about how he developed chicagocrime.org. We hung out with Trow for a bit, as well, though sadly I didn't get a chance to play with Gnoetry during this visit. Coolest piece of software, ever.
On the sight-seeing side of things, we went to the King Tut Exhibition at the Field Museum in Chicago. I've long been fascinated by all things of Ancient Egypt, so I was happy to be able to catch this traveling exhibition while we were in town. Better still, Ben had never seen Egyptian artifacts before, so seeing this particular collection as an introduction was pretty amazing for him. We headed up to the observation deck of the Sears Tower, too, but I wish we'd have gone up in the evening instead so we could have seen all the city lights; the view was still spectacular. We wandered down the Magnificent Mile one night, which was a beautiful - and chilly - walk. We didn't do any other tourist type stuff, except for eating real Chicago pizza, but we had a gorgeous view of Lake Michigan from our room at the The Drake Hotel.
We left Chicago two days before Thanksgiving and headed for Washington, D.C. Ben spent the afternoon napping, while I went to go check out the Google D.C. office. Ben and I had dinner with DannyB and his lovely wife Melissa downtown, then they were gracious enough to let us come to their place so we could meet their bunnies and do our laundry. Ben now has independent confirmation that bunnies just naturally chew on power cords, though I think his overall opinion of the species has improved, which is a plus.
The weather report asserted that Thanksgiving and the following days would bring dudgeon gouts of rain, so we planned our visit to the National Mall and surrounding environs the next day. Despite the conversation we had with DannyB the night before about the greatly improved accuracy of weather forecasting, the rain arrived a day early, but we braved the rain and made our first stop the Jefferson Memorial. As always, visiting this place was very moving for me, as Jefferson's writings, politics and philosophies have always been a great source of delight and debate for me.
Ben and I trekked through the rain to all of the other sites along the National Mall, though we didn't end up going inside the Washington Monument. My cynicism about my fellow Americans got a sound trouncing from seeing the number of families gathered there, also soaked and shivering, parents reiterating stories I'd heard long ago about the aspirations for liberty and justice upon which America was based. I'll spare everyone the long rant about how far I think the nation has strayed from this idealized foundation.
When we visited the Vietnam Memorial, I found someone had left a framed list of all the New Zealanders who had died in the war, along with some poppies for Remembrance Day. I checked the database of WWII veterans for my grandfather's name, but didn't find it in the registry, so I'll be adding an entry for him. I bought one of those Passport to Your National Parks books at the Lincoln Memorial, then Ben and I wandered to all of the sites in the area so we could then go to the Ranger Station and collect the cancellations showing we visited all the monuments. I'm looking forward to filling the book up and passing it to our children, along with all the wonderful memories of our journeys around the States. We got back to the hotel and spent the rest of the night trying to recover feeling in our extremities.
We spent Thanksgiving at the Smithsonian Natural History Museum, which was surprisingly crowded. As usual, the Hall of Minerals held my attention for a good two hours. We spent some time checking out the Air and Space Museum before trying to figure out what to do about dinner. We ended up driving around in nearby Maryland, settling finally on the one place we could find open. Mmmm, traditional Japanese Thanksgiving dinner.
On our last day in D.C., we headed to Arlington National Cemetery so I could show Ben the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. My cynicism about my fellow Americans rapidly returned after listening to some - uh - young "lady" in gigantic designer sunglasses complain in a twangy drawl that everyone standing at commencement of the Changing of the Guard was blocking her view. I suppose I will forgive the - uh - poor "uninformed" soul who left her/his mobile on, as there was only a request to remain silent and standing at the beginning of the ceremony, and that clearly must have excluded phones. Grrr. I griped all the way to the Eternal Flame. I hope you both heard me, too - shame on you! (And, I suppose, shame on me for not holding in my vitriol until we got to the car.)
We left Arlington and wandered out to NoVA to see Mike and his girlfriend, Amo, who were gracious enough to offer us a ride to the airport at 06.30 the next morning. It was wonderful to catch up with Mike and even nicer to meet Amo. Usually, when I'm told that I'll just love someone's significant other, it means I'll spend our first and last meeting discussing the weather and everybody's health, wondering if there's a couch I can hide beneath and desperately trying to pretend that I actually give a crep about her extensive collection of $700 shoes. Nope - this gal actually has decorated their guest bathroom as an undersea paradise, complete with sea turtle photo. Amo, you rock!!
After a delightful shopping binge while the boys returned our rental car, we settled in for a delicious dinner at a pub that had some 40 varieties of chicken wings. Mmmmm, wings. Just before we sat down for dinner, Amo disappeared, reappearing about fifteen minutes later with a bottle of whiskey for me, as they didn't have any at their house. Did I mention that Amo rocks? We caroused for the rest of the night, though Mike's cats didn't sleep on us despite his warnings that they would. Ben and I did our best not to feel cheated. Amo took us to the airport in the morning on her way in to work in D.C. My illusions that everyone on the East Coast works 09.00 - 17.00 are forever shattered.
The next few weeks are going to be pretty exciting, too, so I'm sure my writer's block will be kept at bay. Hope you've enjoyed the whirlwind tour of the last five months.
(BTW, I think everyone has actually gotten paid for GSoC now. If you haven't, you know what to do!)
I spent July on the usual work stuff, then spent the last week of the month attending OSCON 2006. Opening night festivities were incredibly memorable; after the Google-O'Reilly Open Source Awards, I watched my first State of the Onion and then The Da Vinci Codebase. I still can't decide what was more fun, Nat's declaration that Perl is - *ahem* - getting romantic or the final conclusion to Dr. Conway's mystery. I'd seen Kathy Sierra speak once before, and she was as inspirational as ever.
The conference was quite eventful for our team. Ben and Fitz, two-thirds of our stalwart Chicago engineering team (and pictured here along with Trow, the other third), gave their Poisonous People talk. Greg and Jason launched the project hosting feature on code.google.com, which had hundreds of projects registered within hours. Chris gave the community a mid-term update on the Google Summer of Code program and I hosted a GSoC BoF for several students and two mentors, followed by beer, further discussion and a fine repast at the truly awesome Old Town Pizza. Thanks to Catfish Man for suggesting the dinner location! Alas, I missed Karl's talk on copyright, but I did get a chance to see it later as a Google tech talk. (If you want to check out the material, and you know you do, the Q&A session following Karl's presentation at Stanford is particuarly good.) It was wonderful to hang out with old friends and make new ones. Portland is always a great place to visit, but alas there was no time to swing by Powell's before departing.
Due to the continuing vagaries of international finance, I spent the first two weeks of August stuffing checks in envelopes. I took a few days off in beautiful Northern California for the annual Girl's Road Trip to Reggae on the River, then headed home to prepare for Science Foo Camp. SciFoo was totally amazing - Timo Hannay with Nature Magazine, one of our co-conference conspirators, wrote up several posts on the unconference and I even got to meet one of my heroes, Dr. Richard Jefferson. Many thanks to Sara, Marcie and the rest of the team at O'Reilly for all their help with SciFoo and for everything I learned from them about what makes a great conference. Nature, O'Reilly and Google will be hosting SciFoo at Google HQ again next year.
I had a chance to put my new conference hosting skills to work the next weekend at The Ubucon. We had about 80 attendees at the conference, and we were fortunate enough to have several of the folks from Canonical join us, as well. The next week I helped host the bi-coastal Python Sprint. GSoC final evaluations began at the end of the month and continued into September, followed by more envelope stuffing. The level of expertise I have achieved at stuffing envelopes may be second to none.
In October, more GSoC goodness followed when we hosted 100ish mentors at Google for a one day brainstorming session on how to improve the program. It was wonderful to meet everyone in person, at last. There's a great group picture of us here, along with a link to the slides from Ben and Fitz's Poisonous People talk, which they kindly reprised at the summit. I got to meet a bunch of the SVN devs at the Subversion Summit the next week. Most of the rest of the month was all about figuring out why everyone who requested a medium GSoC shirt was sent an extra large, and vice-versa, and why FedEx couldn't find tracking numbers for everyone. Sigh. I think next year we'll repurpose Google's pigeon squad for t-shirt delivery.
The last weekend in October, we hosted the FLOSS Usability Sprint III. It was my first time actually volunteering my time to an open source project, and it was incredibly fulfilling. Look out for a report on Drupal Usability coming from the Sprint, and there's more on the rest of the sprint's accomplishments and a link to a photo of all of us here.
November is my favorite month, but this past one was absolutely the best on record. I spent a week hanging out with the Ubuntu gang at the Ubuntu Developer Summit - what an amazing group of people! Mark Shuttleworth also gave a presentation to a bunch of Google folks on Ubuntu, which is available on Google Video. At the end of the summit, the group voted me an Ubuntu community member, which brought tears to my eyes. Now I need to stop being such a slacker and get the signed Code of Conduct in and actually start contributing to the project. So much to do, so little time.
The next day, I headed back to Google for the second day of MySQL Camp. I'd only been able to pop in and out the first day since UDS was wrapping up, and I was really looking forward to hanging out with all of the MySQL developers and aficionados. Fate conspired against me, unfortunately, and I ended up with twenty stitches after a mishap involving that noblest of causes, delivering free beer. Mikal and Kynan took care of everyone fabulously - huge thanks to them, especially Mikal for taking me to the hospital. Since I spent most of the weekend on the really good painkillers, I don't have much to say about the conference, but Kynan and Mikal did a great wrap-up post.
The next two weeks I went on holiday. Yay, holiday! The week before Thanksgiving, Ben's Mum visited us from Auckland, along with his Aunt and Cousin, in from Darwin. We went to Alcatraz - yes, like all other Bay Area natives, I had never been before - and my favorite nursery in Half Moon Bay, along with other general puttering around before they left for their road trip across the U.S.A. It was a lovely visit, though far too short. I know I've said this many times before, but let me just say it again - I am so fortunate to have such a wonderful future mother-in-law and extended family!!
The Friday after the family departed, Ben and a few of our friends celebrated my birthday, a bit late, at a truly awesome house party hosted by San and MikeW. (Thanks for the invitation to the festivites, gentlemen!) I'm still not entirely sure how we got to our hotel, but we did. No, I don't remember checking in. I do remember checking out, as the surliness of the gal at the counter was matched only by the size of my headache. Saturday morning, Ben and I hopped on a plane to Chicago. We had dinner with Ben & Fitz, and Case and Karl, who were also in town; I'm glad I got a chance to see Karl before he headed out on his world tour. We also met Adrian at dinner, which was super cool since we got to learn more about how he developed chicagocrime.org. We hung out with Trow for a bit, as well, though sadly I didn't get a chance to play with Gnoetry during this visit. Coolest piece of software, ever.
On the sight-seeing side of things, we went to the King Tut Exhibition at the Field Museum in Chicago. I've long been fascinated by all things of Ancient Egypt, so I was happy to be able to catch this traveling exhibition while we were in town. Better still, Ben had never seen Egyptian artifacts before, so seeing this particular collection as an introduction was pretty amazing for him. We headed up to the observation deck of the Sears Tower, too, but I wish we'd have gone up in the evening instead so we could have seen all the city lights; the view was still spectacular. We wandered down the Magnificent Mile one night, which was a beautiful - and chilly - walk. We didn't do any other tourist type stuff, except for eating real Chicago pizza, but we had a gorgeous view of Lake Michigan from our room at the The Drake Hotel.
We left Chicago two days before Thanksgiving and headed for Washington, D.C. Ben spent the afternoon napping, while I went to go check out the Google D.C. office. Ben and I had dinner with DannyB and his lovely wife Melissa downtown, then they were gracious enough to let us come to their place so we could meet their bunnies and do our laundry. Ben now has independent confirmation that bunnies just naturally chew on power cords, though I think his overall opinion of the species has improved, which is a plus.
The weather report asserted that Thanksgiving and the following days would bring dudgeon gouts of rain, so we planned our visit to the National Mall and surrounding environs the next day. Despite the conversation we had with DannyB the night before about the greatly improved accuracy of weather forecasting, the rain arrived a day early, but we braved the rain and made our first stop the Jefferson Memorial. As always, visiting this place was very moving for me, as Jefferson's writings, politics and philosophies have always been a great source of delight and debate for me.
Ben and I trekked through the rain to all of the other sites along the National Mall, though we didn't end up going inside the Washington Monument. My cynicism about my fellow Americans got a sound trouncing from seeing the number of families gathered there, also soaked and shivering, parents reiterating stories I'd heard long ago about the aspirations for liberty and justice upon which America was based. I'll spare everyone the long rant about how far I think the nation has strayed from this idealized foundation.
When we visited the Vietnam Memorial, I found someone had left a framed list of all the New Zealanders who had died in the war, along with some poppies for Remembrance Day. I checked the database of WWII veterans for my grandfather's name, but didn't find it in the registry, so I'll be adding an entry for him. I bought one of those Passport to Your National Parks books at the Lincoln Memorial, then Ben and I wandered to all of the sites in the area so we could then go to the Ranger Station and collect the cancellations showing we visited all the monuments. I'm looking forward to filling the book up and passing it to our children, along with all the wonderful memories of our journeys around the States. We got back to the hotel and spent the rest of the night trying to recover feeling in our extremities.
We spent Thanksgiving at the Smithsonian Natural History Museum, which was surprisingly crowded. As usual, the Hall of Minerals held my attention for a good two hours. We spent some time checking out the Air and Space Museum before trying to figure out what to do about dinner. We ended up driving around in nearby Maryland, settling finally on the one place we could find open. Mmmm, traditional Japanese Thanksgiving dinner.
On our last day in D.C., we headed to Arlington National Cemetery so I could show Ben the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. My cynicism about my fellow Americans rapidly returned after listening to some - uh - young "lady" in gigantic designer sunglasses complain in a twangy drawl that everyone standing at commencement of the Changing of the Guard was blocking her view. I suppose I will forgive the - uh - poor "uninformed" soul who left her/his mobile on, as there was only a request to remain silent and standing at the beginning of the ceremony, and that clearly must have excluded phones. Grrr. I griped all the way to the Eternal Flame. I hope you both heard me, too - shame on you! (And, I suppose, shame on me for not holding in my vitriol until we got to the car.)
We left Arlington and wandered out to NoVA to see Mike and his girlfriend, Amo, who were gracious enough to offer us a ride to the airport at 06.30 the next morning. It was wonderful to catch up with Mike and even nicer to meet Amo. Usually, when I'm told that I'll just love someone's significant other, it means I'll spend our first and last meeting discussing the weather and everybody's health, wondering if there's a couch I can hide beneath and desperately trying to pretend that I actually give a crep about her extensive collection of $700 shoes. Nope - this gal actually has decorated their guest bathroom as an undersea paradise, complete with sea turtle photo. Amo, you rock!!
After a delightful shopping binge while the boys returned our rental car, we settled in for a delicious dinner at a pub that had some 40 varieties of chicken wings. Mmmmm, wings. Just before we sat down for dinner, Amo disappeared, reappearing about fifteen minutes later with a bottle of whiskey for me, as they didn't have any at their house. Did I mention that Amo rocks? We caroused for the rest of the night, though Mike's cats didn't sleep on us despite his warnings that they would. Ben and I did our best not to feel cheated. Amo took us to the airport in the morning on her way in to work in D.C. My illusions that everyone on the East Coast works 09.00 - 17.00 are forever shattered.
The next few weeks are going to be pretty exciting, too, so I'm sure my writer's block will be kept at bay. Hope you've enjoyed the whirlwind tour of the last five months.
(BTW, I think everyone has actually gotten paid for GSoC now. If you haven't, you know what to do!)
