Knee Surgery – I love my Cane!

I had knee surgery on Thursday, October 16.  I thought it was arthroscopic knee surgery, but it turns out that the arthroscopic part was for diagnosis, and the rest was regular surgery, darn it!  I’m not into medical terms, or medicine in general, so my translation of “arthroscopic” means “you heal faster”.   OK – just to be thorough – here’s a link, from medline plus – http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/002972.htm.   I got squicked out just by reading the article!

I’m in the process of getting better.   Even though it was “regular” surgery, this is not expected to be a long drawn out kind of recovery.  Two things I really like are the following: artificial ice and my cane.

Artificial Ice.  I decided to ice my knee myself, instead of renting the “keep it cool” medical device you plug in.  The big breakthrough –  the blue stuff you put in a cooler, when you are going on a picnic.  At Walgreens I bought an artificial ice pack designed just for knees.  The freezer part has the liguid suspended in little globes on a sturdy piece of plastic.  Even after you freeze it, the sheet is bendable.  It comes with a velcro cloth pack.  You stuff the sheet of artificial ice into the cloth pack and attach it to your knee with the attached velcro strap.  The “ice” pack is easy to use and really swell.

I like my cane even better.  I got my cane at Walgreens, the same place I got the artificial ice for my knee.   I’d give you the brand name of the cane, but I took off all the tags.  My cane is a marvel of design – light aluminum,  adjustable, sturdy tip, padded handle, a strap, and it’s a pretty bronze color.  It’s so well designed that it fits over a door knob or the back of a chair, without falling off.  This is not the type of cane that you see on television shows like House, a cane just for pretty – this is a cane you can use.   I’m going to keep my cane in case I ever need knee surgery again.

Here’s a picture of my cane.  I shot it from the door of my place.  My cane is resting against the railing of the second floor walkway. 

My Cane

My Cane

 

 

 

I love my cane!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

amarez – mszv

MBA – at the mall!

It’s a bit of a trend – business schools with their own campus, either on the main campus, or at another location.

The business building at my school was old and creaky, though the university campus was very nice.   In January 2007, we moved to a new space, at a downtown mall!  You can’t just wander into the school area, from the shops at the mall, though we are in the same huge building as the mall.  As you can see, there are some great views of the mall from the business school “campus”.

View of the shopping mall

View of the shopping mall

 

 

View of the shopping mall from one of the corridors of our new location, taken through a glass window.  The business school is in the same building as the mall.  Our space – classrooms, offices, breakout rooms – is very nice.

 

 

 

 

 

 

I think it’s funny.

Regards,

amarez – mszv

Chihuly at the de Young – the landscape

I went to the San Francisco De Young museum last Sunday (September 21, 1008) to see the exhibit, Chihuly at the De Young – http://www.chihulyatthedeyoung.org/.

There are critics who hate Chihuly’s work.  They think it’s bereft of ideas.  It’s decorative, overblown, and “beautiful” without saying anything.

I think Chihuly’s work is beautiful – yes.  His installations put you in another world.  There’s a lot of it  – form, color, texture, imagery, light reflecting, all that.  Unlike some of his critics, I find them to be full of emotional resonance, and I also think there is more to them than simple beauty. 

To start with, I’m not sure that Chihuly categorizes his work as “art” and not “art”.    I think he knows the difference between a decorative work and a work of art (if you can even use such a term), but it’s not a dialogue he chooses to engage in.  So, he’ll do an art object that is, for want of a better word, “decorative”.  He’ll make an object that complements a room.  It’s decorative, for ornamentation.  Then, he’ll take that same object and change it.  He’ll change the scale, add to it, and mass it. He’ll put a hundred of them together.  Sometimes he’ll put them in a landscape.  The objects are transformed.

I think his chandeliers are examples of this – are they animate, inanimate, flowers, snakes?  There’s also this weird Baroque sensibility going on.  When he hangs them outside, over the canals in Venice – you ask yourself – what are they?  Are they Venetian crafts, are they plants, are they snakes, are they constructed, what is it?

In some works – such as the room with what looks like large glass reeds – he pares it down.  The reeds are huge, and glowing, but fairly simple.  He takes a landscape full of repetition – the reeds – and he changes it.  He adds light, color, and he blows it up – the reeds are huge. I think he plays on what it means to be a landscape.  It’s familiar and unsettling at the same time.

He plays with size and scale.  One of my favorite rooms was a room which had two boats – one with glass balls, and one with what looked like flower/plant things, all in boats.  What’s really interesting was the scale.  The glass balls in the boats appear to be so much bigger than the organic looking things in the other boat.

I think Chihuly’s work deals with 2 things
– what does it mean to be organic
– what does it mean to be a landscape

He also play with design.  He likes design.  I like it too – I like seeing a color, a pattern get transformed – in his 2D drawings, the Indian baskets and blankets he collects, and the glass that he does, as influenced by the baskets and the blankets.

I think he’s also not afraid of referencing something domestic and pretty, like a family garden.  In the last room of a show, he makes a garden.

It’s also bravura work, but there’s bravura work out there, even in contemporary art land – I’ll leave it to the reader to come up with examples!  Bravura is fine with me.  

I loved the show, and it belongs here – it felt like home.

Chihuly at the de Young - Ceiling

Chihuly at the de Young - Ceiling

 
                       
Looking at a ceiling covered with glass objects.  It felt like being under water.
                 
                 
               
              
               
               
                
              
         
   
                                                
                            
                      
        
Chihuly at the de Young - Glass Reeds

Chihuly at the de Young - Glass Reeds

                                               
The Room filled with Glass Reeds
                                                                                                                   
              
Chihuly at the de Young - Floats and Flowers

Chihuly at the de Young - Floats and Flowers

 

     

 

Floats and Flowers – in Boats      

 

 

 

                                                                              

                                                                                                            

  

Chihuly at the de Young - The Garden

Chihuly at the de Young - The Garden

 

 

 

Closeup of the the Garden Room

 

 

 

 

Regards.

amarez – mszv

                                 

 

The buildings were sold – the best hi-tech company in the world

A friend of mine called me up the other day and told me that this was his last day in one of the original buildings of our former company.  The buildings were sold.  He was moving into another building, the next day.

It’s a common story – big hi-tech company is bought by another big hi-tech company.  Some of the technology remains, but the company is no more. The industry doesn’t stay the same. The landscape, the network, the mesh, the world, it changes.

I know that. People say “change is good”, as if it were a mantra, or a talisman, or a truth they want to believe.  In reality, change is change.  Some of it is good – some not so good.  It’s just change.

If you ask me, this big hi-tech company was the best hi-tech company in the world.  We had thrilling products.  It was a wonderful place to work.  We knew each other well.  We had a history.  We had a culture.  Don’t get me wrong – it was a real place, with real people.  Good things happened, but terrible things happened too.  That’s how real places are, with real people. 

If you never worked for a great company, then you can’t understand this.  I told people at my new place (an educational institution) the story of the buildings being sold. They tried to understand, but I don’t think they did.  Now, if I would have said – “well, what if our great educational institution was gone, after over one hundred years of existence –  would you tell me that change is good?”   “No”, they would tell me – “that’s different!”.

It’s not different.  The world changes, but that doesn’t invalidate what we had. I wish there would have been a way for the best hi-tech company in the world to continue, all by itself, successfully, happily, creatively, with me there too – but that didn’t happen.

Lest you think I’m being completely maudlin – I feel I need to say this – I’m not being maudlin, nor am I “stuck in the past”.  I’m working with good people (smart too!) on interesting things.  I’m making a difference. In everything I do in the work world, I try to bring some passion, a “you can make it better” vibe.  I believe in both technology and in our ability to make things better.  And I follow tech companies with interest, and yes, affection.  It’s a big world – there doesn’t have to be only one great hi-tech company in the whole world!

 
I’m ending this post with a tribute.

Today is Friday. Late Friday afternoon was a special time for us.  Here is what I did.  I brought up Google Maps, and I found the location of the original company buildings.  I switched to street view. I clicked on the map, modeling how I traversed the physical landscape of my company, at their headquarters in California.  I Google Map “drove” past the original buildings, and then I drove past the buildings in California where I used to work.  Then I opened a beer.

Regards,

amarez – mszv

Night Swimming

I live in the land of perfect weather, here in coastal California – a town on the peninsula south of San Francisco, to be exact!  It almost never freezes.  It’s mild in winter, warm in summer but with cool nights.  Did I also say it wasn’t humid?  The weather is perfect.

Once in awhile the weather changes and it’s hot.  Hot as in high 90s (F) and warm even at night.  That’s when I run my portable air conditioner in my bedroom, and that’s when we all complain about the heat.

But – there is night swimming!

Yes, the first photo, below,  looks a bit mysterious, even spooky.  There used to be lights in our pool, but there aren’t lights anymore. But – there is light all around, so it’s fine.  I’m not the only person who enjoys that rare wonderful night swim.

California Pool at Night

California Pool at Night

                                                                                                                                                                                   
For those of you who thought the first photo was spooky, how about twilight swimming?
California Pool at Twilight

California Pool at Twilight

All for now,

mszv – amarez
                                                                                                 

Two Pools

I love swimming pools.  I love the ocean and lakes too, but I’ve done most of my swimming in pools.  Outdoor pools are the best.

The town where I grew up, northeastern US, has the best public swimming pool in the area.  It was wonderful when I was growing up, and it’s still wonderful.  It’s hot here in the summer.  When it’s not raining, it’s great swimming weather!

Hometown Pool - August 2008

Hometown Pool - August 2008

 

 

 

My hometown pool,  summer, 2008.  The hand is that of a family member, doing laps in the lap lane.  I’m the person taking the picture (waterproof camera).  What a great day.

 

 

 

 

 

Pool where I live - SF Bay Area

Pool where I live - SF Bay Area, south of San Francisco

               
              
This is the pool where I live.  It’s a shared pool – everyone in the small complex can use it.  It’s a wonderful pool, though it’s not heated, and the humidity is low around here, and our nights are cool.  This means that my pool swimming is limited to summer and early fall.  It the pool  was heated our pool season could go from spring to fall.
         
Sometimes, when I go for a dip, I’m the only one at the pool.  So then it’s my very own private pool!
             
I love summer.
amarez – mszv

California – it’s the weather

If you haven’t lived in coastal California (west of the inland valleys, west of the major mountain ranges), it’s hard to describe how comfortable it is.  Perhaps a bit of data will help –

City-data.com (http://www.city-data.com) has a wonderful collection of metrics on US cities and towns.  Let’s look at Menlo Park, a town in the San Francisco Bay area, near the town where I live.

http://www.city-data.com/city/Menlo-Park-California.html

Average Climate in Menlo Park, Californiabased on data reported by over 4,000 weather stations

Menlo Park, California - Average Temperatures (F)

Menlo Park, California - Average Temperatures (F)

Menlo Park, California - Average Preciptation (in)

Menlo Park, California - Average Preciptation (in)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Menlo Park, California - Cloudy and Sunny Days

Menlo Park, California - Cloudy and Sunny Days

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What does this tell us?   Spring, summer and fall have warm (not hot!) days and cool nights.  In winter the weather is mild (doesn’t freeze) and it rains a bit.  It doesn’t rain in spring, summer or most of fall.  There are a sunny days, even in winter.

It’s also not humid, so it’s really, really comfortable.

I’ve tried to think of a few disadvantages to the weather.  When you live in the land of perfect comfort it’s hard to come up with anything.  Let’s see – you have to remember to bring a jacket in summer –  after the sun sets it gets chilly.  And night swimming isn’t great around here –   it’s hard to force yourself to get into a pool when you are wearing a jacket over your swimsuit.

If you enjoy four distinct seasons this isn’t the place – we have seasons, but they are subtle, more wet and dry, a Mediterranean climate.   You have to enjoy looking at a dry land for much of the year  – golden hills in the distance, punctuated by the green of the trees.  When the rains come everything gets green.  And – oh yeah, we do have natural disasters.
      
It doesn’t matter – I live in paradise.
amarez – mszv