Five-color press check & a Wiimote hacking DJ

CLCV Scorecard production - Alonzo Printing

Quite a day today. This afternoon, I went to the press check for the CLCV Scorecard at Alonzo Printing in Hayward. That’s always fun (no, really). I got to go on the tour for about the fourth time (because I was there with my new boss; it was her first time there). I think Alonzo does great work, I like the people there, and it’s now the #1 environmental printing company in the country or something like that.

As an aside, the two things I describe here are better documented on Flickr. I use it [or did at the time — JG, 1/21/2023] as a complement to what I’m doing here.

Anyway, after work, I finally let Amy — who is my semi-erstwhile trivia teammate and a former Pub Night denizen — drag me along to this thing called “Dorkbot SF“. This group of total rejects (or Übermenschen — who can figure it out?) gathers together, in their words, in “a monthly meeting of artists (sound/image/movement/whatever), designers, engineers, students and other interested parties… who are involved in the creation of electronic art (in the broadest sense of the term).”

Evolution Control Committee at DorkbotSF, Retox

It is definitely a broadly inclusive thing — the folks presenting tonight showed off: a faux-touchscreen/Wii-controller-hacked visual solution to the problem of not being able to mouse fast enough to DJ; artwork created on a “laser cutter,” which, you know, cuts or etches many types of materials using a laser, based on raster or vector artwork (but don’t put anything in there that will give off toxic fumes); and plans, or maybe just pipe dreams, for truly kick-starting space tourism.

I enjoyed it, of course, and will certainly go again. One of the things that appeals to me about Dorkbot, despite its silly name, is that it exists at the crossroads of art, science, technology, and long-term thinking. One of my other recent local discoveries, The Long Now Foundation, is somewhere in the same neighborhood, but Long Now could be Dorkbot’s more serious uncle.

Seeing the passions that people pursue — what they throw themselves into — really inspires me. It makes me think about how I could express what I want to express in different media. (It also makes me realize I don’t pay enough attention to what it is I actually want to express, or express it enough.) Music really resonates with me at a special level.

It seems to me that to this point I really haven’t decided exactly which way I’m going to go yet. I definitely continue to put my effort into things I consider at least somewhat worthwhile. I’m certainly going to avoid doing things that I don’t enjoy OR I don’t think are doing anything to improve society. Ideally, I will continue to iterate myself to a point at which I love what I do all the time, because it’s my own unique contribution to making this world better in some way. Ambitious? Yes.

Perhaps the important part of what I’ve been doing to this point in my life is the documentation and synthesis of all these different kinds of ideas and experiences and situations I’ve encountered. At the risk of sounding simultaneously pompous and hopelessly trivial (a particular talent of mine, I think), I’d like to be something like a really great bottle of Scotch. All these crazy things thrown into a wine barrel for many years, waiting, deepening, growing… and then all of a sudden you pour it out and it’s a masterpiece like nothing else you’ve ever tasted.

In the short term, at minimum, I’m at CLCV. And 2009 is going to be my most productive year there yet. The changes that have taken place since May — Susan leaving and Jenesse and Warner being hired — make me certain of that. CLCV’s incoming CEO (starting January 2nd, 2009), Warner Chabot, is already hitting the ground running. He has indicated quite clearly that he plans to give some desperately needed executive-level attention to CLCV’s brand and communications efforts, both online and off — as well as some actual investment. (By the end of 2009 we might actually have launched a new back end for our website that allows us to actually interact with our members online.)

To which I say “Thank you,” and “Finally.” I have said a couple times to anyone that will listen (and probably people that don’t) that, when Jenesse and then Warner got hired, it was as if I got a new job without going anywhere. Except some of the good things stuck around, like the good working relationships I’ve built with the vast majority of my co-workers, and my knowledge of the organization, and my nice 11th-floor office, and my five weeks of vacation.

(It occurs to me that the changes at work echo the larger context of emerging from the long national nightmare that was Dubya’s so-called presidency….)

my Bay Area first after six years

I slept through my BART stop.

Coming back from SFO to 19th Street is nearly an hour ride. I slept through most of it, waking up briefly at 24th and Mission, Montgomery, and right when the doors closed at my stop. Oops.

(I’m writing this at MacArthur, waiting for the train home–a little too keyed up to fall asleep again.)

Notice how the media use “GOP” as shorthand?

Many, if not most, of the articles I’ve been reading lately refer to the two major parties as the “Democrats” and the “GOP”. I know “GOP” is supposed to stand for “Grand Old Party.” But now I propose a few new backronyms for GOP:

  1. Getting Obsolete Party
  2. Going Overboard Party
  3. Geriatric Out-of-touch Prevaricators

The possibilities are endless, really. Any other suggestions?

but keep voting!

There are important things in California still to decide… and nationwide… so keep voting till the polls close!

gohlkusmaximus calls it for Obama

If you add the 200 electoral votes NBC News has called for Obama to the 55 he’s going to win in California, the 7 he’ll win in our neighbor to the north (Oregon), and the 11 in the great state of Washington, and, heck, give him the 4 in Hawaii… that gives him 277 right there. Bam.

(Damn, Olbermann just scooped me on MSNBC while I was typing this, and then the browser crashed! Ah, well. Still, calling it earlier than any major media outlet… of course, it’s a little less irresponsible for me to do it than it would be for them.)

“I voted twice”

Ha, ha…

This is the kind of thing I find amusing

Guess which sticker I made?

Today’s the day!

My third niece, Susan, was born today in North Carolina! I get to meet her in about six weeks.

Edit: Here she is!

Susan Louise Gohlke

Oh, and, yeah, there’s an election! Things have been incredibly busy at work lately — what with the election coming up, and the Scorecard scores being released, and the preparations needed for the December 3rd fundraising event…. and though I didn’t give a ton of my free time to helping elect Obama, I spent a lot of time at work doing so, and gave his campaign money on nine occasions in 2008. Plus I contributed to some local and national Congressional races.

The Things He Carried

Jeffrey Goldberg writes about the “hopelessness” of airport security in The Atlantic:

During one secondary inspection, at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago, I was wearing under my shirt a spectacular, only-in-America device called a “Beerbelly,” a neoprene sling that holds a polyurethane bladder and drinking tube. The Beerbelly, designed originally to sneak alcohol—up to 80 ounces—into football games, can quite obviously be used to sneak up to 80 ounces of liquid through airport security. … My Beerbelly, which fit comfortably over my beer belly, contained two cans’ worth of Bud Light at the time of the inspection. It went undetected. The eight-ounce bottle of water in my carry-on bag, however, was seized by the federal government.

Important ALCS on TBS question

Why does Buck Martinez sound like a bicycle horn?

Voter registration deadlines in California

Just so you know, California voter registration deadlines are coming up. Here’s what I posted at work yesterday (yes, this is shameless):

It’s a critical year for environmental voters to get out and vote on November 4th! Here are this year’s voter registration deadlines in California, which are coming up soon.

  • The big one: You must register to vote by October 20 in order to vote in the November 4th election.
  • If you want to register as an absentee (i.e. vote-by-mail) voter, you must do so by October 28. (Get more info on voting by mail from the California Secretary of State’s office.)
  • If you are an absentee/vote-by-mail voter, you should mail your ballot by at least October 31 (it must arrive by 8 pm on November 4th, when the polls close).
  • Though we don’t encourage you to procrastinate, sometimes election day sneaks up unexpectedly. If you hold onto your ballot too long, that’s okay — you can drop off your ballot at your Registrar of Voters office anytime, or at your polling place on the day of the election. (Your polling place is on the voter information packet you should be receiving in the mail, or you can find out through the Secretary of State’s office.)
  • If you somehow lose your ballot, or your official yellow vote-by-mail envelope (and though I hate to admit it, I’ve done it), you can go to the polls on election day and cast a provisional ballot, which will be counted when it is verified that you didn’t vote by mail.

There’s a lot more information for voters available from the Secretary of State’s office.

I added a little pitch for money, which I don’t really need to duplicate here…. 🙂

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