Kelly was so excited when she went to vote that she thought she better write Paul’s and Mitt’s names on her hand so she would be sure to remember all the guys on the “handsome” ticket.
Month: October 2012 Page 1 of 2
Day 437 of 1000
Kelly is taking some very hard classes this semester. From before they started college I frequently reminded the kids they needed to visit their professors often. There is more reason to do that than for instruction and socialization with the instructor. Face to face visits were always motivational for me, especially when I was not doing so well in a class. Somehow, I was more invested in doing well after a professor visit than if I just hung back and tried to get it on my own. That advise paid of BIG time with Kelly today. I hope she continues to make use of this essential academic behavior.
Lorena’s brother Rigo flew up from Toluca Mexico to New Jersey a couple of days ago to a town that is dead center in the path of Hurricane Sandy. The will not let him leave his hotel. Toluca’s temperatures ranges from a daily high of around 66 degrees to around 75 degrees in the summer.
Update: Minita just sent a note telling us Rigo had gone to work at his companies home office, but will return to the hotel as soon as he can. He is not in too much danger.
Day 435 of 1000
Early voting started her in North Carolina a few days ago. Lorena and I just voted for Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan. Kelly will vote for them tomorrow.
Day 426 of 1000
We had some folks over for dinner last night. They mentioned they liked Mexican food. Lorena loves that because she not only loves to eat it; she enjoys preparing it, too. I took this picture while she was preparing the salsa yesterday afternoon. The reds and greens of Mexican foods are vibrantly colorful and I could not resist taking the picture. It was vry good to eat, too!
Day 424 of 1000
Kelly was in the front of the Reince Priebus (chairman of the Republican National Committee) campaign event in the brickyard at NCSU earlier today. She was photographed and filmed by several news organizations and interviewed by the local news radio station 680 WPTF. They gave her a sign to hold during the talk and she even MADE EYE CONTACT with Reince! It doesn’t get much better than that! She is hardly even willing to talk to the rest of us plebians in the family now that she has elevated her game and obviously MUCH more sophisticated and important than us.
Day 423 of 1000
Yesterday, I left the house at about 6:00 AM and did not return until about 11:00 PM. In between, I waited in a printing factory for people to finish stuff they should have had complete before I got there. Our company will get paid for ten hours of work while only about three hours of work were performed. The rest of my time was spent waiting. That always makes me kind of sad. Still, it was a nice day. I spent quite a bit of time talking to a technician who wants to finish a bachelors degree in manufacturing engineering. Tomorrow, I am going to visit a professor at a university that has an online manufacturing engineering program. I am going to try to connect them up.
The chance to help someone was made all the more pleasureable by a visit to Lorena’s community college classroom by our bloviating democrat congressman, David Price. I did not get the entire story straight, but it seems that this congressman visited Lorena’s particular classroom at Wake Tech to see if the students had any questions. When they didn’t, the professor asked him a question that he could not answer, but still had to gall to pontificate irrationalities and waste everyone’s time. When the congressman left the room, everyone congratulated the professor.
Day 421 of 1000
I just got off Skype with my mother-in-law, Conchita. She just returned to Monterrey from Georgetown, Texas where she went to a church convention with Pepe and Nena, her brother-in-law and sister. They had a great time. It is pretty odd that Grandpa Lauro did not go along, but his mother is 95 years old and needs someone to be close by to help out, so I guess Lauro drew the short straw.
We talked for about twenty minutes. I am always amazed at the community of Mexicans we know in Northern Mexico and Texas. They are very, very closely knit and love to get together with each other. That is the way it should be. Community like that is to be valued greatly. Some of our friends from North Carolina and Oregon went to the convention, too. We are feeling pretty bad about not being there ourselves. We are absolutely going to make our best effort to be there next year.
Day 420 of 1000
I have finally changed my mind on grits. I have always prided myself on loving all kinds of food, but struggled more with grits than just about anything else. Today, after meeting, we went to the elder and his wife’s (Tom and Sharon) house for dinner. She served us shrimp grits. WOW! I had three servings! I also learned that the best way to make Crème brûlée is with a blow torch. These are very, very special people and not just because they are master chefs. We are grateful that we get to be in church with them every Sunday (at least).
Day 419 of 1000
This morning Kelly got out all the materials she received at the NCSU career fair so that she could start responding to people. As she pulled stuff out of the shopping bag that held all the stuff that was handed to her, the little thing at the left fell out. It is a screwdriver set that she got from Lincoln Labs up in Massachusetts. She was not really thinking of applying there, but the little tool set is so cool, she decided she would go ahead and throw her hat into the ring!
We agreed that just about the best way to decide which summer internship to take is to base it on the coolness of the stuff they give out at the career fair. We think the speakers she got from Siemens still wins, but not by much. I have been looking for an excuse to get in touch with my buddy, Evan, from Licoln Labs anyway. I wonder if they have any need for statistics people?
Kelly is kind of sad because she needs to dress up for her first internship interview (with Target for a logistics position here in North Carolina) on Tuesday followed by the Business/Management career fair on Wednesday. That is a lot of dressing up just to try to impress corporate HR types. Still, I think she really likes the whole process. A classical ENFP.
Update: I was STRONGLY admonished just now. Kelly has NO objections–none at ALL about dressing up two, three, or even seven days per week. She is PASSIONATE about dressing to the nines! ¡Mea culpa! I KNEW that!
Day 418 of 1000
We watched the Paul Ryan vs. Joe Biden Vice Presidential debate on the internet last night (http://cspan.org). We have always enjoyed presidential elections. I think the first to which we paid any attention as a family was the 2004 race between George W. Bush and John F. Kerry. We wrote about it in this blog. Kelly and Christian made some posters the night of the election, jumped up and down, and shouted slogans. Kelly was certainly into it more than Christian, but Christian pays attention, too.
Politics and elections are Kelly’s sports. The page of the notes are from her Linear Algebra class last February. The Republican primary debates were going on and Kelly could not help herself. She is a pretty good caricaturist and she spent a LOT of time drawing the different candidates in the margins of her notebook. She did it enough that you can see significant improvements in her caricaturing skills from the beginning of the election to the end.
We are a very conservative family. We spent a lot of time in homeschool studying the reasons we believe what we believe. Something that fascinates me about our intrafamilial political positions is that Lorena is easily the most conservative of us all. Someday I need to write about her thoughts on illegal immigration.
We plan vote early (they allow that in North Carolina–we vote at Wake Tech Community College) so we can make some popcorn, turn up the internet, and stay up late on November 6.
Day 417 of 1000
Christian has been stressed out about a test he took about a week ago. He was pretty sure he was going to get a score of about 70%, but was hoping for 80%. He messaged me today that he got a 94%. We were both happy. I am happy about something else. I have spent a lot of the day loading a Linux development environment into a virtual machine on my computer. That is part of my job! I have to pinch myself when I think about what I am doing for a living. It does not get much better than that.
I have been pretty down on the change to Ubuntu Unity from the normal desktop that they had previously, but after talking to my buddy, Andrew about Windows 8 and Android, I realized there is a pretty big shift in desktop architecture going on and I better get on board or I would be left behind. Thankfully, I have a very cool project going on with Linux and the Microsoft Kinect right now, so I decided I would do the development on a Linux platform rather than Windows. I am not all the way to loving the whole new Unity thing, but I am to the point where I can see it is really not so bad. Give me a few more days and I might really love it. I will keep you posted.
Lorena and I celebrated our marriage with family and friends twenty years ago in Monterrey. I changed my header and added a couple of pictures below that were taken at the wedding. I thought of this song: Click here to open in this browser. Click here to open in a new window.
Day 416 of 1000
This is a photograph of my nephew, Matias. His father, Lorena’s brother, Lauro is a passionate artist. Tom Layman, a good friend of Lorena’s family painted during his frequent overnight visits to their home. Lorena believes that is when Lauro caught the fever. He started to take art classes whenever he got the chance and used many of his electives during his engineering degree at ITESM to study art.
Lauro travels a lot so he does not get to paint as much as he would like these days. Still, he does what he can, even working with an oil painting app on his iPad during his frequent flights. You can see his art bio here and some of his paintings here. The funny deal is that the kids made friends with a like-minded guy named Darren out in California this summer who they connected with Lauro via Facebook. Darren also has a young son and an online web site.
Here’s betting neither of these apples fall too far from the tree.
Day 412 of 1000
This is the last of the NCSU career fair stuff Kelly received. There is probably more, but it is time to move on. The range of companies at the fair was staggering–Lumber, electronics, software, pharmaceutical, furniture, construction, the government, medical device, automotive, etc., etc., etc. Everyone needs engineers and technically capable employees. That was my immediate thought when Kelly showed me the three pairs of footies she received from Hanes. I should have thought that the textile industry would have a big presence at NCSU–the south has been the center of the world for textiles throughout much of its history.
Day 411 of 1000
Christian is working a second day of his fall break in the OSL lab at NCSU. His professor popped him an email last night and asked him if he might want to apply for an undergraduate research. Then, this morning, when Christian went in to start work, his professor gave him an idea for a project that would integrate well with the other research he is doing. The really cool part is that he could use an Arduino on the project and it is very much EE oriented. I will write more as I know more.
Kelly went to the annual scholarship dinner for the College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences. She was one of only four in her college to win a Dean’s Circle Scholarship. That is a merit only scholarship specifically for competitive recruiting. It was quite an honor and she had a great time. She talked with donors and other honoree’s at a dinner that featured “lots of forks.” We thought she looked quite fetching so we took her picture!
Well, I never going to try that again. Christian had to work on his research project today on the Centennial Campus at NCSU. My plan was to work in the Hill Library on the main campus at NCSU and wait for him. That did not work out because, even though NCSU is on fall break, so there was no place to park. So, I decided I would run over to the Cameron Village Library. The things I learned there include the following:
- It is quite and attractive library
- You can drink coffee in the stacks (unlike the Holly Springs Library)
- The wireless is free, but not so good
- The coffee is expensive, but bad
- The environment really is not so bad if you do not need internet access
- It is not so easy to talk to the people at work in a library setting
I am going to need to avoid libraries as a regular places to work. Early in my career, I thought work from home would be an awesome thing. The first time I had an opportunity to work from home, I realized I am not really a work from home kind of guy. I like to be in the same building with at least some of the people with whom I am working. There are some limited things I can do better when I am completely isolated, but they are out-weighed by the benefits of working at work. I think it is a personality thing.
The upshot, then, is that I will try to work from home when I cannot go to the office and I will only go to the library when I have a compelling reason like when I need some isolation for a week or so of coding.
Meanwhile, back at the NCSU career fair, Siemens gave out very impressive paper speakers and the NSA (a government agency spending OUR money) gave away very impressive red water bottles. What does the company that really made business computing happen hand out? Cloth shopping bags. How weak is that. They are trying to win the hearts of engineers with cloth shopping bags. That would absolutely give me pause if I were looking for a job as a geek.
Do I want to go to work with the company that either made speakers cheap enough (or was willing to spend the boat load of money) to hand them out to every engineer at a major university career fair or the company that had their HR department buy cheesy 15¢ cloth shopping bags from China? It is a pretty sad commentary.
Day 410 of 1000
Lorena, Kelly, and I listened to the debate between President Obama and Mitt Romney last night. Christian was too busy hacking together a new build for his Nook with a more recent Linux kernel. I scanned a couple of the doodles from Kelly’s sketch book that she did during the debate. She is still asleep (almost 9 AM) because it is the first day of something called Fall Break for Kelly, Christian, and Lorena. I do not ever remember having a fall break when I was in college. Maybe that is because I went mostly to schools with quarters while NCSU and Wake Tech both use a semester system.
I think Lorena and Kelly will hang out here most of the day, but Christian and I are going to be pretty busy. Christian is going to run down to work with Dr. Kudenov at the Optical Sensing Lab at NCSU this afternoon. Of course, I work, but I have a dentist appointment in the early afternoon after which I will run to the Hill Library at NCSU to do some programming for work while I wait for Christian to finish up. I envy him the undergraduate work he is doing. It is real science and engineering and all about discovery with a purpose. The jury is still out, but it surely seems like he found a great project that will both teach him some tools and give him some great tools to help him in grad school.