Thursday, January 26, 2006

person of interest

This is a quick entry to maintain Ed's blogging quota. Jay asked for an update on my thesis, which I am close to furnishing. Possibly later today, although most likely not. This weekend I am off to the great country of Canadia. If you don't hear from me next week you can assume that I have been detained on re-entry for questioning. On the flip side it means I will have a free trip to Cuba or some other exotic locale. Viva democracy!

Monday, January 23, 2006

No more TV for me

That's right, the TV has been unplugged. Not only has it been unplugged, it has been shoved under the bed. This quarter is starting of poorly as far as being productive with school work, so I figured it was time to bite the bullet because, quite frankly I don't have the will power to not watch TV when I get home. I figured it wasn't so bad when I'm coming home at 10 or 11, a bit of TV before bed. Problem is when I come home at 5 intending to study, but veg out instead. It may come back out at the end of the quarter, but then again maybe not. I only have 5 months of school left, I think I can make it that long.

In other news the car is back, thanks to some last minute financing from my generous parents who I'm sure are just as eager as I am for school to be over for a while. Thanks! Also I have a new cell phone since my old one was crapping out on me. I qualified for the new every two years thing, plus I got a discount for buying online, so it was practically free. Greatest part is it has a camera. Now if I could just figure out how to transfer the photos to the computer...

And finally, I just found out that my computer loan is being processed, so a new computer is in the cards. My old computer is also crapping out on me, and I have already spent 700 in repairs. Why is it that an acceptable life for a computer is around 5 years. Of course it doesn't help that my computer was yanked off a table onto a concrete floor a couple years ago. Fortunately Apple has developed a magnetic connection for the power cords now, so that when you don't realize the cord is wrapped around your foot you don't end up staring in dumb shock as a $2000 piece of equipment hurls to the floor.
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Tuesday, January 17, 2006

It was a nice long weekend...


which means I accomplished very little, with the exception of finally having my car towed to the mechanic. It has been dead since before Christmas, but since I don't drive very often I wasn't under much pressure to get it fixed. Not to mention fear of the repair cost, which is coming in at a lovely $1100.00!! Where on earth does a poor broke student get that sort of money you ask, good question. Let me tell you a little something about my friends at Citibank.

Apart from that the weekend was very relaxing. I had a late breakfast at a great little French bistro downtown on Saturday, and a late brunch on Sunday. Of course that sort of decadence is at an end since sending the car to the mechanic on Monday. I am really looking forward to being employed so I can buy a car with a 10 year bumper to bumper warranty.

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

MacWorld Expo

I am in the market for a new computer, so I was very happy that the girl at the store told me to hold off for a few days since the MacWorld Expo started today. And of course at the end of the keynote address Steve Jobs announced a new laptop, the Macbook Pro. So now I need to hear more about it. Anyone know anything? (I'm looking at ed and Scott...)

Monday, January 09, 2006

cocktail experiment


This weekend I went to a cocktail party (featuring Budweiser Select) at a friends house. It was meant to be fancy dress, but given the mix of classy beer (I would have chosen the champagne of beers) and cocktails, I chose to dress in a short sleeve button up with a little bowtie, classy.

But on to the point of this post. Some of you may be familiar with the hilarity involved in "capping" when you hit the top of a friends freshly opened beer with your empty bottle (to avoid having the fun back-fire on yourself). The beer in your friend's hand foams over onto their hand and floor, causing hilarity and sticky linoleum. Having witnessed just such an event, we began wondering why this actually happens, what makes the beer foam over like that. Fortunately the party was full of scientists, unfortunately most of them were geologists and proved fairly useless in answering our question. The only possible option was to run a a highly controlled test in the backyard.

The first part of the test was to recreate the trick for a girl who had never seen it, but was our best hope for an explanation. Not having seen it before she of course was foolish enough to hold the target bottle...Hilarity all over her hand. We were working on two hypothesis (like I said it was official sciency business) one that it was the pressure created by forcing air into the target bottle, the other that it is the vibrations moving through the target bottle. The pressure idea was put forward by the geologists, the vibration by and architect. To test the pressure theory we tapped the top of the bottle with an open palm, the idea being that the palm would actually create a tighter seal... hence more pressure, but would absorb more of the shock and create less vibration. Unfortunately we did not account for the loss of friction in the now beer covered hand, and the application of downward force resulted in a broken bottle and beer sacrificed to the gods of science and party. At that point, fearing the loss of additional beer, we switched to a non-alcoholic beer that had rightfully been left on the back porch after it was brought to a party two summers ago. The second attempt at the palm test did not result in foamy beer.

The next test was to place the bottle onto a table and hit it with another bottle. The reason it was on a table was to remove the up and down shaking effect caused by being hit downward. On this attempt the beer (if you can call it that) did foam over, proving that it was not caused by shaking. At this point we declared vibration the likely cause and went back into the house, because even when most of the guests are architecture and geology students, you can only run highly scientific experiments in the backyard for so long without risking your party cred.

So now I ask all of you, what do you think causes the foam effect?

Wednesday, January 04, 2006

Back at school


School has started up again, and I celebrated by showing up late to my first class. It wasn't intentional, and was really bad form since the prof is on my thesis comittee. So for all of you who could probably care less, here is my class list: Theories of Representation (examines different types of architectural representation- types of drawing, models, photos, etc and how and there effect on architecture) Active Controls (HVAC, Eggress, electrical systems, etc) Ethical Practice, and Studio. This quarter I am working with three other guys on a competition entry. We are designing a swimming complex with competetive and recreation facilities. On top of this I will be meeting with my thesis comittee every other week. Hopefully this will be a much more productive quarter than last.

And now an explanation of the sign. The rumor is several years ago a student got hold of the forms needed to have a sign placed on a building. Who knows how they came up with the random name, or how it actually made it through the channels, but there it is in all its confusing glory. The sign is outside my studio, which is located in what we call the thesis house. The house is located on the fringe of campus, away from the rest of the department, and is primarily used by people working on their thesis, hence the name. Imagine filling every room of your house with tables and desks, then fill all the remaining space with years worth of crap (model supplies, paper, plywood scraps, furniture mock-ups, etc) and you understand. More pictures to follow...