Sunday, February 28, 2010

the ultimate gadget: 2-28-2010

I have in my head an idea of what the best and most perfect gadget would be like. Sometimes, it gets updated as I learn of new cool things that people are making and I'll want them incorporated into the Ultimate Gadget. The current list of features is:

- A big, clear, very well-lit touch screen, with that nifty multi-touch navigation
- The ability not only to write on the screen, but to convert that writing into text in a format compatible with Word or Open Office docs
- A webcam and a mic, and the ability to use them online and as a regular phone, maybe the way Skype works on both platforms
- The hugest harddrive I can get
- USB ports all over the place, and the ability to dock it to another computer, as well as adding dongles and flashdrives
- A gyro so the screen knows which way the thing is pointed, and the ability to play games that way
- Bluetooth, RF and WiFi; maybe also 3G, but that's not really necessary if it has full WiFi-- at a fast and reliable speed
- Natural-looking and working book and magazine reading
- A stand to prop it up when I don't want to hold it myself
- An on-screen keyboard that can be typed on like a regular one, or switched to the edges and split to be thumb-typed while held like a phone
- The usual helper-functions: clock, timer, schedule / calendar, calculator, address book, a weather widget, all those sorts of things, and all as simple and useful as possible
- Apps. All the apps.
- A really long battery, even when using the interwebs.
- Real word processing
- Maybe a decent camera, or at least a way to interface with a camera, like a plug or a card reader. (but, really, a DS can take pictures so why shouldn't this?)
- Really good video playback for watching movies, and an optical drive that will play them in the least amount of space possible
- On-the-go TV-- and I mean real TV, not the way Verizon only offers clips and interviews and trailers
- GPS, and the ability to find you when you're lost, as well as being able to tell you the closest restaurant and suchlike

Random things that would be nice:
- A barcode reader, or some other visual-recognition thing that lets you scan something and it brings up the data on it
- Voice activation
- A portable scanner, or camera resolution equivalent to it
- An assistant that actually helps
- Screencaps
- A recognized and well-respected OS

Thursday, February 25, 2010

garden: the great sunflower project

Last year, I signed up to be part of the Great Sunflower Project, where people all over the world plant the same kind of sunflowers at regionally similar times and then count the number of bees visiting them a few times a week to see how much pollination we're getting and how the bees are doing. I never did get around to collecting the data; my Lemon Queens died, and the ones that did grow grew much later in the year. But they've loosened and expanded the requirements, and I think I can do it this year!

Here's the letter I just got from them:

Welcome to 2010!

Thanks to your help 2009 was an epic year for The Great Sunflower Project. With over 50 thousand participants we are reaching our goal of documenting bee pollination in the US and developing strategies to protect and restore native bees where they are threatened. Building on the momentum from 2009, we are excited to get going this spring! We have made some changes that I want to share early in the year. I'll send out some results in our next newsletter.

First, we are simplifying our sampling protocol
There are now three steps:
1) count the number of flowers on your plant with pollen;
2) record all bees (not just the first 5) your sunflower for 15 minutes; and
3) enter the data online.

You do not need to write down temperatures or the number of other sunflowers in your garden.
We have very few people who see five bees in 15 minutes and the analysis of the data becomes much simpler if everyone samples for the same length of time. So, if you can, grab your favorite beverage and write down what time you started and a time for each bee that visits. We are in the process of modifying the data entry form on the website to reflect these changes. It isn’t quite finished though.

Order sunflower seeds here.

The second big change is that we are asking that people get their own Lemon Queen sunflower seeds. With 85,000 people signed up, it is becoming difficult to raise enough money to mail seeds. So, we are asking that you get seeds from a local store or from us for $3.00 Click here to get them from us. Three dollars covers our cost for shipping and packing. Many of you wrote to say you were receiving crushed seeds so, we changed to using padded mailers and we also increased the number of seeds in a packet. This more than tripled our cost of mailing.

If you do pick up Lemon Queen variety sunflowers at a local nursery, you candownload instructions and data sheets here and on the home page.

Renee Shepherd, our seed guru, says sunflower seeds shouldn't be planted until night temperatures stay above 55 degrees so, we'll start sending seeds out in March but will time it so you get them a bit before it is appropriate to plant.

Free seeds for children. We have set aside money to support kids programs and school groups participating. Contact me at sfbee@sfsu.edu and we’ll make arrangements to get you seeds for free.

We don’t want cost of seed to be a barrier to participating - yes we haven’t been able to raise money to sustain supporting free seeds for all, however, if you can’t find seeds locally or afford to get them from us, send us an addressed stamped envelope and we’ll send some seeds back to you.

I’ll be sending out some summaries of last year’s data in the next newsletter and some updates on what we are learning about bees.

Think Spring and Bee Well!

Gretchen
The Queen Bee


It's gone cold again here, but we're almost at Last Frost Date, and I'm already planning my tomatoes and such, and the community garden is close to up and running, so planing is on my mind. Dereck wants to plant the front garden, where we had the sunflowers before, so I think I might have to find somewhere else to go-- maybe in a big pot round back, or in a corner of the community box (if I keep getting herded out of my own yard by the boys' cleaning bent)-- 25$ will buy me my own box for half the year, and that, I think, is awesome. I might pop for it just so I can have so I can get me some space. Most of our yard is shaded by trees and houses, and has really crappy soil anyway; we talked about putting in a few planter boxes to fix this problem, but then we'd have to find a way to pay for the dirt-- the boxes themselves could be built from cinderblocks and would be moderately cheap and fine.

Friday, February 19, 2010

meme: swedish furniture name generator

I love IKEA as only someone with a fascination with Sweden who has never lived there can. So I did this:



Wednesday, February 17, 2010

lykke li makes me want to take off my glasses and put on fake eyelashes


Specifically in this video that I can't embed, but also all the damn time.

shonagonisms: ways i know the universe wants us to be happy and decadent

One of the beast sources of antioxidants is a chocolate covered strawberry.

The existence of chocolate at all, and how well it goes with coffee, which comes from so far away.

The fact that baby animals are so soft and feel so nice rubbed against your cheek.

Fermented things are better for you and tastier than the sum of their parts. Wine and beer and cheese and bread and yogurt are all fermented.

Soft grass and warm sunshine, and the joy of laying in both while bees buzz around you.

Rose oil is one of the best oils for skin, and is a naturally intoxicating perfume.

Kissing someone you love is almost better than anything else.

Swimming naked in the ocean under a full moon in summer makes everyone beautiful.

The sheer variety of tea.

Beauty is everywhere.

tribute

The Priest said that we should think of Gramma's life and what she taught us, what we think is most important about how she lived it, and incorporate that lesson into our own lives. It's been almost two weeks since That Day When I Was Brave Enough Not To Leave, and I still don't know what I would choose.

I like that she would never complain, but the fact that she didn't is what led to her massive heart-attack: she didn't tell anyone that she had a clot they were trying to treat, and she never questioned the doctors who put her on a medication that might dislodge it. Which is what happened.

I like that she always helped everyone who needed it, and I'd like to do the same, but I'm still in a position of needing help myself.

I like that she was always smiling. Maybe I can manage that one-- smile more, frown less, and the thought processes that lead to each.

I want to be as settled as she was, never having to move because I have the home I want in a place I like, even when the neighborhoods around it aren't so nice anymore. I want to see trees I plant growing up into big towering things. I want to be that content.

I want to be loved like she was and is.

I want to be free to make blankets because I like to.

I want to not have to worry about money.

I want to be surrounded by family when I go.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

100th post!

Look at me talking about myself for a hundred posts! And look at all of you being so sweet as to let me! Because in this ever-unfinished work in progress that is who I am and where I'm going, this little blog is a vital piece of figuring out how to get there, and it's lovely that I have it and everyone helps me plot the course. I hope I'm helping you guys even a little as much as you're helping me.

It's been a rough February, hasn't it? All this crazy weather (which, of course, has nothing to do with climate change, because, as the crazies keep telling us from where they've hidden their heads in the sand, there's no such thing), and then all the family concerns. I won't say it isn't hard. It's the hardest February I can remember, because usually this time of year is just weeks of rain and tea and sleeping.

But March starts spring, and spring is all about new beginnings. Again. I have Projects in the pipeline. I have a month and a half until I can apply for Financial Aid and get myself back to the Ivory Tower (and then about two years before I go back again and get myself a Library Science / Archiving degree and never have to leave said Ivory Tower again). Sunday I have an interview to work at a B&B. Tonight, I have time to catch up on my posting, and maybe to read and write some. Yesterday, we started the countdown to Mardi Gras with Jambalaya and Beignets.

I've given myself five years to get out of this hole, and I'm going for it.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

while i wait to brave trauma with my family

...I've been wandering around the internets. I read a lot about Gypsy vardos and some about the Rom language. I read about Cabinet Beds. I read about Dooce's family and wondered at how good and clean and lovely their life looks in photos. I found a blog about Curiosities. And one about Amsterdam street fashion. And a new food blog with wonderful pictures. And a jewelry store that makes it's necklaces from antique wax seals. And a home store that makes beautiful one-of-a-kind prisms with little bits of nature inside.

And I want a prettier life.

One that's sweeter, where I can wear more jewelry, nicer clothes and eat better food all the time. Where I can watch the shows I want when they're on, and go to movies more, and take piles of pictures of all of us being young and happy and successful. Where I have time to write a book or two a year, and still grow a big lush garden. Where none of us have to do things we don't want to do just to survive.

I want a life where we all get to do what we want to do and can still pay the bills.

Monday, February 1, 2010

crisis: my gramma is dying

She had a heart attack, and while they were trying to figure out what happened, she had a stroke, and now she's in ICU. Last night, they said she had a 30% chance of survival, then they raised it to 50%, which was good for sleeping but apparently was way wrong. This morning, they're saying it's more like 15%. That number's so small.

I don't even know what to think.

My family is all on their way down from North Carolina tomorrow morning, and I'm in a holding pattern, waiting to see if I'm needed, to see if I need to cobble together a black outfit (I don't own a black dress, not even one suitable for a funeral), waiting for more bad news. My stomach is hurting, and I still don't know where my meds are. I already called Craig to warn him that I'll have to leave at a moment's notice. I can't really afford to miss a lot days of work, but I can't NOT go, I just can't. I live separate from my family, but I'm not that person who doesn't show up at funerals when there's someone to get me there. I've missed too many already because there wasn't anyone who could get me there-- my cousin, my uncle, my great grandfather, my step great grandmother-- but this time, there is.

I can't imagine my grandpa without her. I can't imagine my family without her. And grandpa says he'll just stop taking his meds and let himself die, and I don't know if I can take it twice, not after the ongoing sadness of last year. I guess I'll have to, if it comes to that, but... And what about Aunt Betty? Nino's already gone, and her kids all live far away, too...

Lin said last night that their house is the center of our childhood, and it's really true. Our own houses were changable and movable, and we never stayed anywhere, but gramma and grandpa lived in this house since the 50s, kept it up even when the neighborhood went to crap, and I just can't think of other people living there. I can't think of not having that place to go-- it was always where we could go if anything went wrong. Andy lived there when we moved once, so he wouldn't have to change schools; Lin lived there after her divorce; we lived there for entire summers when I was a kid; MaryLou and George grew up there, Dad did too. I can't even imagine unpacking that house...

I'm not good with this sort of thing. I'm a coward. I don't want to see her in ICU, I don't want to sit in a hospital crying while other people look and wonder what's wrong. I'm not good at feeling what I'm supposed to be feeling or responding how I'm supposed to respond.

Cyndy has a picture of me from last Halloween, and I look so Hispanic. I look like her.

Lin's trying for another baby, and she wants a girl to name it Amelia.

If it comes to the worst, is that enough?

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