Yearly Archives: 2004

Conclusion of glass blowing…


I wanted to finish up the overview of my glass blowing experience before going on and teaching myself the Star Spangled Banner guitar version… I’m really itching to go play around, so this might be somewhat rushed… anyway, on with it:


I decided that Saturday night would be a good night to go out to an Irish pub and down some tasty brew.  I think the downfall was the bit of whiskey that I had before going out… There was a pretty good Irish band that played at the bar that I went to.  Anyway, after a bunch of Resurrection beers, I woke up the following day with a handy headache.  I had to be at the studio around 9am, so I popped some aspirin, drank a glass of water and rushed out of the door.  I made it to the studio right at 9 and Ragan and Gayla went over their shpeal on adding color to the glass.  The cool part is that I was able to drink out of one of the tumblers that I made the previous day.  Back to the color; basically they have 3 types of color type material that they use.  The first is the powdery colored glass that we used on our paperweights.  Another option was strips/strings of colored glass.  The final type was a solid glass bar (about 2 inches thick) that they shave pieces off (using a diamond saw)… they use those shaved pieces to create solid color for plates, etc.  I then asked Ragan how Heineken (not really sure why beer was on my mind) colored their bottles green, and she basically reaffirmed my initial thought that they just add dye/color to the vat of molten glass.


So, I started the day by making a bowl… I was hungry and thought that I’d like a cereal bowl that was big and deep.  So I did 3 gathers for the bowl and decided that I should make it a blue/white type bowl.  I was still feeling pretty hung-over and thought that it was harder to make this thing, than the day before.  But once again Ragan was an excellent help and guided me through the process. 


After that, Ragan did a demo on how to make a dish with curvy edges on it.  I remember that my Mom had a similar type dish that she used to house a candle and some beads.  Anyway, it was really cool.  Basically they make a bowl, but instead of finishing the bowl with straight sides, they put it back in the glory hole and spun it.  When the bowl was put in the glory hole, they heated it up until the sides of the bowl started flopping (yep… that’s the term).  At that point, they spun the rod so that the centripetal force would spread the bowls edges outward.  At this point, it looked like it was taking on the shape of a plate.  Ragan took the piece out of the glory hole and made the pipe vertical with the glass object on the bottom… she continued to spin the piece while letting it stop and rest occasionally.  Each time that she stopped, the walls of the object would curl back down towards the floor.  After it got to the desired circumference, it had pretty much cooled enough where she didn’t need to spin it anymore.  She was then able to sit down on the bench and complete it.  It was really an amazing process to see done.


After seeing that, I chose to do a dish like that.  I figure that I can store some candy in it or something.  Again, the process was much harder to do in person than just watching, but it was quite an amazing experience.  While I did the bowl and candy dish, Michael, one of the other students (took the class with his Wife Natalie) decided to create two carafes.  The first carafe that he created was pretty tiny and will probably only hold a half bottle of wine at most.  He decided to make it clear, maybe to see the wine?  The second one, though, was spectacular.  He added some colors to it and made it quite a bit bigger.  His process was instead of creating the initial jack line, he pulled the glass to create the stem of his carafe.  It took about 3 firings in the glory hole to make the steam as long as he needed.  They then created a jack line and put the object back in the glory hole to warm it up to do the base.  For the base, Ragan and Gayla decided that it would work out better if he stood on top of the bench and used gravity.  So Michael climbed up on the bench and used a wooden paddle, on the floor, to make the base more flat and wide. After that, they stuck the punt (small piece of glass) on the base and transferred the object to the punty.  At that point, they used the jacks to widen the mouth/stem of his object.  All in all, it turned out really well.


For my final piece, I had a choice of pretty much anything.  I’m not sure why I didn’t go with a carafe, but maybe I’ll do one next time.  I could have done paperweights and Christmas ornaments if I wanted, but I chose to go with another bowl.  I figured that if one broke, I’d still have another to eat out of 🙂  Anyway, I went with red, black and white as my colors for this bowl and it turned out looking quite good, if I do say so myself. 


Looking back, this experience was great.  I would definitely recommend learning to blow glass to anyone.  If you’re in the Baltimore area, look up Corradetti Studio and have some fun.  Ragan and Gayla were excellent tutors and I wish them all the luck with their own endeavors.  Also, I was told that most of the hobbyist glass blowers use Pyrex as their glass of choice, since you can use a torch to shape it and it is very resilient to temperature changes.  I don’t think it requires an annealing oven (used to cool the glass slowly) either.  I’ll post pictures of my pieces when I pick them up (they needed to cool in the annealing oven overnight).


If you’re interested in seeing what Ragan is capable of, she has a studio at:


3500 Parkdale Avenue
Suite 24
Baltimore, MD 21211
410.554.6020

Blew glass today

I had my first of two days at Corradetti Studio’s glass blowing workshop.  I researched glass blowing before, and chose to go with a weekend course offered by Corradetti.  There are 4 total students (including me) in the class and we have two instructors.  The two instructors are apprentices, I think, for Anthony.  Reagan was the name of one instructor, and I forget the name of the other… Apparently Reagan has about 10 years of experience blowing glass, and she has been a lot of fun to work with so far.  The other instructor has about 3 years of experience and still considers herself as a beginner.  She is just as great and both seem to work really well together. 

The day started out with the girls going through safety procedures.  Basically, they wanted to drill into our heads that the metal rods and molten glass are very hot.  They then went around the studio pointing out various pieces of equipment and described the uses for each.  After that, Reagan gave a demonstration for how to make a glass (similar to a pint glass).  I have to say that blowing glass looks MUCH easier than it is in person 🙂

After Reagan was done with the initial demonstration, it was then time to split up in groups of two and start working.  We split up so that there would be an instructor working with one person at a time.  So while two people were working, the other two watched and helped out when needed.  In total, we made 3 objects today.  I made two glasses and a paper weight.  Doing the paperweight was easier and a little more fun than the glasses.  We were able to embed colors into the piece, and as a bonus, I finally got to see how the bubbles are put in glass paperweights, etc.  I do have to admit that making the glasses really gave me an appreciation for custom glass work.  Now I can understand how artists can charge the ridiculous prices for pieces.

Tomorrow, it looks like I’ll be making myself a new cereal bowl among other things… we’ll also be able to use color in all of the pieces, I believe.  Anyway, I’ll write about how it was after it’s a memory.

Overview of this weekend’s events…

This weekend was busy with fun.  Before the weekend, though, I decided that the best course of action was to work 4 10-hour days last week.  This enabled me to take Friday off without loss of wages/time devoted towards work projects.  So what to do on my day off, you ask… well, I naturally went to a costume store and picked up three costumes (a gorilla, penguin, and rooster).  I then proceeded to BWI to pickup a good friend and his girlfriend.  They had flown in from Milwaukee, for this specific weekend.  I do admit that I was about 15-20 minutes behind schedule at this point, but some things are out of my hands… I got out of my bed as soon as the coast was clear. 

So… Josh, Berry, and I continued the expedition as we drove to Washington DC.  Apparently, I decided that Mapquest directions would be sufficient and decided not to bring another map of any kind.  Note, I only printed the written directions, not the little maps.  We drove from BWI around DC, via 295, and continued into Virginia.  At the point of driving over a drawbridge, we were able to look across a lake/river and see the Washington monument (expected destination) in the distance.  Being quite the navigator, I figured that we would be better off taking the city streets rather than turning around and catching the correct exit from 295.  We hopped on a street and drove in the direction of the monument.  At one of the intersections, we got directions from a VERY nice man driving a flower truck.  If I remembered the company name, I would make note, but that has long left my memory.  Anyway, the guy said that we were going in the right direction and only needed to find the 14th street bridge to cross back over the river and get towards the capital, etc.  After missing that bridge and finding another, we eventually made it to the hotel to drop off all of our stuff.  By the time we got into costumes and started walking towards the capital, it was around 1:30-2:00.  Josh and I decided that it was best to just wear the costumes as we walked from 14th & M to the capital building.  Along the way, we stopped at a local flower shop to pickup a dozen roses.  By the time we got about 2 blocks away from the capital, we put on the large heads so that we were in full costume.  I have to admit that the majority of locals seemed to take the sight of a penguin and gorilla walking down the sidewalk as an everyday occurrence.  A few people laughed and pointed, but the majority just continued on like it was normal.

Once we reached the capital area, we were surrounded by people who wanted to take pictures of us in our suits.  I think we gave the Whitehouse some solid competition for photographs.  Anyway, at that point, we met up with Gwen & Ben (they live in California now, but we met originally in Milwaukee).  Gwen proceeded to put on the rooster costume and called Rachel.  While she was talking to Rachel, I called Rob and found out that they were sitting by the reflection pool near the Washington monument side.  The call from Gwen was a pre-planned call to distract Rachel from realizing that Rob was talking to me.  So, we all started walking in the direction of the reflection pool.  Along the way, we had a little boy (4-5 years old maybe) walk about 2 blocks with us, cause he thought we were really cool.  Josh was asked to jump on someone’s back, for a picture… and generally, we got a great response from people and found ourselves in many pictures.  Heh, I tried to give a flower to a little girl (maybe 3); and she saw a flap on the suit.  She said something like “That’s not a real penguin, there’s a person inside.”  At that point, I gave up on giving her the flower and just waved and walked away.  I did find a girl to give the flower to, but she was more my age and pretty to boot… anyway, that was to make it look like we weren’t heading straight for Rob & Rachel.

We did come to them, and Josh handed Rob a flower.  It was sort of a weird silence and then Gwen asked for $2 for the flower to sort of break the tension.  At that point, Rob started his speech and reached into his vest pocket.  He pulled out the ring and got down on his knee.  He then proceeded to ask Rachel to marry him, with a small crowd of people (walking along the reflection pool & path) and the three of us right by the blanket.  Berry and Ben were hiding behind a tree watching it all unfold.  Rachel started crying and accepted and at that point, Rob told us that it was a good time to take off the costume heads.  I think people at the capital could have heard Rachel scream in excitement when she realized that her best friend and other great friends were there to experience it all with her. 

After all of that, we hung out in DC for the night and the next day.  To sort of sum up how the night evolved, it involved drunk walking some of the streets by the hotel, after bar time, with Josh.  Heh… we were even approached by a girl (in her car) to see if we were looking for some $100 action.  She was very pretty, but that’s just not me… both of us really aren’t sure why we decided to walk around, but there were probably better things that we could have been doing at that point (like drinking water or sleeping!). The weather was beautiful both days (around 80+ degrees and sunny).  All in all, I don’t think that it could have worked out better.  We all came back and went out in Baltimore on Saturday night.  Josh and Berry then had (probably a very interesting/drunken flight) at 6:00am on Sunday morning.  I know that Josh stayed up till the cab came around 5:30, so that was probably an evil flight for him.  Ben and Gwen left today around 6:00pm.

This all made for quite a fun weekend and a definitely memorable experience.  I wish both of them the best and want to thank them for allowing me to be a part of it all.  There were some pictures of our own that were taken, and once I get those from Josh, I’ll post them on this site.  So, if you happen across Rob, wish him the best!

People and their surroundings

I was thinking about something that I heard last night.  It was something along the lines of smart business people surround themselves with people that always bring it up a notch.  Makes sense… if you’re around people who are lazy, you might have a tendency to be lazy also.


 


When I was growing up, I was once told that I shouldn’t hang out with someone because they would most likely not be going to secondary education… At the time (10 or 11 years old), I figured that the person who told me this was looking out for the best in me, probably so that I would continue along the path of wanting to go to college, etc.  Looking back on it now, I think that the advice was probably not well thought through, though.  As a side note, that person did go on to secondary education. 


 


I think that people are generally shaped by their environment (people/places) around them.  Had I grown up in Madagascar, I probably would have worked in a mine at a very young age and possibly promoted myself to be a buyer/seller of gems.  Happily I did not… Thus, I could see the initial logic in keeping me around those that would continue on and strive to be more knowledgeable.  The fault in the logic is that there is a social benefit not seen.  The person who advised me not to spend time with the other child was looking only at one side of the picture.  They didn’t see that I might have benefited socially or otherwise by hanging out with the other person.  In any case, I stayed friends with the person (just not best friends) and life goes on…


 


Now, I’m not salty about the whole thing.  I see where the advisor was coming from and I was able to make my own choice.  I just think that if you focus on one thing too much, thinking that it’s the *right* way to do things, you might miss a whole lot more… In any event, I have grown a little wiser due to the whole deal.


 

Bit of windows… bit of thought…

Apparently I have thought that it’s cool to include some tech gripes with a random thought that doesn’t have to do with technology.  Sort of forces people who like one or the other, to read both… suckers 😛

I was bored at some point today, so I tried to define how people perceive confidence.  This is what I came up with… Confidence is having the sense of direction or a future movement beyond that of those around you.  So in order to give off an aura of confidence, people demonstrate or act as though they have somewhere to go (which is beyond that of the people around them) and they’re gong there with or without those around you.  It is at that point that people “latch on” or desire to go where you are going… This might be faulty logic or considered a description of some other trait, but hey.. I was bored and that’s what I came up with.  If you have a better description, I’m all ears.  Btw, Encarta defines it as: “A belief or self-assurance in your ability to succeed.”  I think that they fail in the fact that part of confidence has to do with responses/reactions from others…

Now, for the computer side of things… I was reading an SDK earlier today (yeah, a real joy, I know…) and I couldn’t help but think that the user interface for Microsoft Help (version 5) just sucked.  It makes you think that you’re in a browser, but lacks some features that I have grown used to.  For one, I would like to have the option to use tabs for different help topics.  This would be similar to the tabbed browser windows that Mozilla/Firefox provides.  Or even the tabbed view the VS.Net provides.  The other major thing that irritated me was the lack of history with the back & forward buttons.  Yeah, I can scan through the previous topics that I visited by just clicking the left arrow a bunch of times, but I want to be able to right click on the left arrow and see a list of the last 10 or so topics that I have visited.  Again, this would operate almost exactly like the back/forward buttons in a typical browser.  there… rant over.

Also, in office 2003, if you Alt+Click on a word, it’ll open up the “Look up…” window for that word.

Camera recommendation


I want to publicly thank John Lam for going the extra mile and helping me out.  I sent him an email a couple days ago, asking him for some advice on buying a new camera.  I told him that I was looking to spend around $1000 and wanted to go digital.  I also mentioned that I have no real camera experience (my knowledge of disposables just doesn’t help me :).  So, if you haven’t seen his pictures yet, go have a look.  I think the detail and quality are superb…


The advice that he gave was excellent.  He basically covered all bases for where I want to go.  To start, he said that I should take a local one-day “how to use your camera” class.  He said that those types of classes are offered by a local professional and they teach you basic things like aperture, depth of field, basics of composition and how to correct light meter readings using my own eye or the histogram (feature of the camera).


Now for camera recommendations, he said that he absolutely loves his Nikon D70.  He said that it is around $999 for just the camera or $1299 for a package camera & lens.  He also mentioned that the Canon A80 is available for around $300.  He said that it basically just sacrifices “performance” features like fast auto-focus and low-light performance.  John went into a little more depth on why (mainly due to my inexperience) it doesn’t really make sense to pay more for a camera than what the D70 costs… It just seemed that I should be a professional photographer if I wanted something “higher” end…


Finally, he pointed out some places to go online to do some more research.  He pointed me to dpreview.com for reviews, etc. and to usefilm.com to see some of the results that some people get with inexpensive equipment. 


 

Musings from a porcelain chair…

So, I had a couple thoughts come to me while I was sitting in one of my offices, today.


The first is about software… I think that the term “open source” is misinterpreted by some people. What a lot of people don’t understand is that many times, open source software is open because the author(s) just really like what they do. Granted, this is not valid for all programs or code that is open, but I think that it applies to most. To make the code open just shows that they are really proud of their creation.


I heard something today that made me lean towards that methodology (open source, joyous code) a little more. I heard that because a convenience wasn’t documented as a feature, it had no business being put in the software being developed. Now, I can see that deadlines must be met, but I also see that sometimes you need to impress the customer. After all, what good are deadlines if you have no customers… Also, I would think that if you can spend an extra hour or two implementing a feature that makes the software MUCH easier to use for the end user and will probably save them many hours of time, that feature should be implemented… This is probably just due to my ignorance in managerial roles and having the experience of freely developing my own software, purely out of joy/curiosity.


The other thought has to do with asteroids and other celestial objects… why don’t we attach DNA, information, possibly a solar map, etc to every asteroid/comet that comes somewhat near us. Apparently, they are moving way too fast for us to keep up with them for extended periods of time, and they definitely get further into space than we have been. So why not attach some information to the object, in hopes that it gets intercepted along its path. I would think that a civilization capable of getting near/examining a comet or asteroid, would also be able to view the information that we “stash” on it. Or at least realize that the objects that we stash on it are not typical of asteroids/comets. Then, that same civilization would hopefully be able to use mathematics to sort of plot a course to where we dumped the information onto it. That is where the solar map would come into play… say it’s just a 3d holographic type display that shows our solar system in the center of or more highlighted than near by solar systems… Anyway, this is just a thought of how we could sort of get the word out that we exist…

Puff the Magic Dragon revealed…

I’m sitting at my computer right now, sort of recovering from an interesting night of drinking.  So many things went on last night including, but not limited to a water fight, dancing around an overturned jeep (probably thinking I was helping), head butting a girl (not on purpose), attending a random 30th birthday party, and sliding down a grass hill.  Oh and somewhere in there, I made it to four or five bars…

Anyway, somehow I began thinking of Puff the Magic Dragon and decided to Google for it.  I came across this newsgroup entry that sort of clears up the urban legend of Puff the Magic Dragon.  I was always brought up to believe that it was about smoking pot, but it’s somewhat interesting to find out that it wasn’t originally intended to be taken that way.

Quality starts with proper management…

I’ve just finished reading through The C# Design Process: A conversation with Anders Hejlsberg.  I must say that it is an interesting read and well worth checking out, if you have the time.  Anders compares and contrasts features of Java with those of C#, as well as diving into other c# topics. 


 


Also, one other thing worth mentioning is that I really enjoy and marvel how all program managers at Microsoft know intimate details of the product(s) that they are responsible for.  Even some of the marketing people know detailed information about the products that they advertise.  I have seen many companies where program managers only know a high level overview of products, thus reducing the effectiveness of that product.  I think that it should be a requirement of a program manager (and even the marketer) to know their products inside and out.  They should treat their product(s) as their own children.  I think that also is a major factor in the quality produced by certain companies…

Possible evolutionary twist…

Evolution is taking/going to take an interesting twist, I think… This specific twist concerns cosmetic surgery with human beings.  So, you take current American societal beliefs, people striving to be accepted or valued as beautiful.  Now, the way I see things is that the people getting cosmetic surgery, to alter their original genetic appearance, are probably going to procreate more with people further up in society’s status ranks.  I think that this has a tendency to “dilute” the public/popular gene pool from the desired result, though.  While one person thinks that they are procreating with an attractive counterpart, it is rather an unattractive person wearing camouflage.  Both the male and female can take one or both roles.  Thus, most times the need for “camouflage” (surgery to make more attractive) remains and unattractive offspring results… Now there are most likely exceptions to this, but I still think that it is a strong possibility…


 


Perhaps I should go patent the idea of changing someone’s gene makeup so that their offspring retains the traits/features currently displayed.