What is surprising about you?
Category Fun
Bookmark :
The other day I was talking with a friend of mine, and told them something about me - (that I'm a divemaster and used to co-own a dive store) and he was surprised. It made me think more about this - about how we all know each other, but in reality we only know a certain facet about each other - the "geek side" so to speak. I thought it would be a great exercise in learning more about each other if we could all list five things (or so - this ins't a test, you can go less or more) about us that would surprise your friends if they found out. List interesting things, crazy things, shocking things. But be careful, I would caution against listing illegal things - you never know who is reading this site ;)
So, in no certain order, here are five things that most of my friends would be surprised to know about me...
- I have had a myriad of jobs - all over the spectrum: auto repair, construction, avionics (USAF), drug store manager, pet shop manager, tech support, dive store owner, horse trainer
- I LOVE snakes and reptiles. I wanted to be a herpetologist when I was a kid. I know a pretty good amount about snakes native to GA and the Southeast, and I have handled (and "owned" - catch, observe for awhile, and release) multiple venemous snakes including rattlesnakes, copperheads, and water moccasins. My wife won't let me have any snakes now, so we have two turtles - a yellowbelly-redeared slider hybrid and a redeared slider
- I have been roller skating since I was 4. I worked at a skating rink as a kid as skate repair, floor guard, and helping teach skating. I'm pretty good, even today on my bad legs :)
- I was a distance runner in high school - and we won the state championship. I was the worst runner on the seven-man varsity team, and I could run 3 miles on a cross-country course in less than 17:40 - and I was the slowest.
- OK, skeleton in the closet time: from about 15 until I went in the USAF (at 18) I played "Rocky" in the Rocky Horror Picture Show at the local theatre for the Friday and Saturday midnight showing. Go ahead, laugh - it was one of the best ways to get, uhhmm, "involved" with young women during my raging hormonal teen years. I promise you there are many guys who would have worn a corset and fishnets if it meant having someone to spend some "quality time" with almost every time you wore them :) "Let's do the time warp again!"
OK, your turn - what is an interesting tidbit about you that you usually don't share? Anyone want to cleanse the soul and air out a skeleton or two? It is a new year, let's learn something new about each other...
Rock
**What happens if you get scared half to death twice?









Blog Roll



Comments
Ed My barber in Columbus, OH was best friends with Knight and would always say what an awesome guy he really is. I never appreciated it until the apology incident but also saw 5 minutes later how quickly his temper and demeanor could change when some idiot asked him to autograph a copy of John Fienstein's "A Season on the Brink".
Posted by Christopher Byrne At 11:44:34 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Things about me:
I married my high school sweetheart
I can't whistle
I once jump over the counter at a Burger King and yelled "I am the walrus".
I had an Elvis impersonator perform at my wedding reception. He was AWESOME!!
I am not the walrus
Posted by Damien Katz At 02:00:59 PM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
- Raised in New Jersey - a FAT little boy in family of 6 kids. Went to Catholic schools and truly believed that my 1st grade nun had eyes in the back of her head.
- Started playing guitar in 6th grade 'cause I wanted to play guitar at Mass. Spent hours a day practicing guitar (did start playing at Mass after we'd moved to Washington, then later in bluegrass band at square dances, then later in country band).
- Started wrestling in high school, lost lots of weight and got in really good shape. Then we moved to Washington State, where no one knew I'd been the fat geeky kid, and I loved having a fresh start at the beginning of 10th grade.
- Jobs I've had: newspaper routes, babysitting, yard work, shoveling snow, etc as a kid. From high school and beyond: Picking crops (various berries and beans), school janitor, gas station attendant (in a bad part of town - lots of robberies and bad things happening to lone attendants, so I often had a .38 tucked in my belt), worked for a year in a daycare center (I'd go home at the end of the day and just twitch -- I still say "Owie" when I get hurt, and "Oopsie" when I drop something), fruit cannery production line, ice cream truck driver, dishwasher, street singer (at Portland's Saturday Market and at Seattle's Pike Place Market). Taught private lessons on fretted instruments - and played guitar and sang in Country band at night (seen plenty of bar fights - never been in one and don't want to be)
- After years of music biz, married with a son on the way went back to college full-time while working full-time and got 2-yr degree in programming. Been a geek ever since.
- Did Hapkido (Korean martial art) very seriously for several years - still practice a little when no one's around. Broke my nose as a kid, broke a toe doing Hapkido, but most injuries (cracked ribs, torn quads, concussion, torn retina, gashes and bruises and pulls and sprains, oh MY) came from soccer as an adult.
- Rarely read fiction.
- Love the water and sunshine and favorite music is contemporary Hawaiian and slack key guitar. Am almost totally out of touch with popular music.
- Could easily see myself living in silence and meditating all day in a mountain monastery.
Posted by Joe Litton At 01:24:48 PM On 01/09/2005 | - Website - |
n := "twoallbeefpattiesspecialsaucelettucecheesepicklesonionsonasesameseedbun";
@For( X := 0 ; X < @Length(n) ; X := X + 1 ; T := T + @Right( @Left(N; @Length(N) - X) ; 1));
@Prompt([Ok];"";T)
Posted by Andrew Pollack At 08:43:53 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
data := "two all beef patties special sauce lettuce cheese pickles onions on a sesame seed bun";
S := @If(!@Contains(data; @Char(250)); @Char(250);
!@Contains(data; @Char(251)); @Char(251);
!@Contains(data; @Char(9)); @Char(9); @Char(13));
src := @Explode(Data; " ");
digits := (0:1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8:9);
digitsRev := (9:8:7:6:5:4:3:2:1:0);
numList := @Subset(((digits*100) *+ (digits*10) *+ digits); @Elements(src));
numListRev := @Subset((digitsRev*100) *+ (digitsRev*10) *+ digitsRev);-@Elements(src));
targList := @Text(numList) + S + src;
@Word(@Replace(@Text(numListRev); @Text(numList); targList); S; 2)
Incidentally, this is definitely backwards compatible to v3. It might work in v2. I don't remember what release introduced @Char and @Word. I don't think it would be difficult to make it v2 compatible, if we had the documentation on what @functions were available.
Posted by Nathan T. Freeman At 08:09:45 AM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
I picked Tobacco as a kid in Ontario ( for money)
I was a member of the 4 H club Swine division ( I had two pigs)
I sold newspapers, TVGuide and Greeting Cards
I pinstriped cars
I worked in a radio shack
I programmed in BASIC and DBASE for money
I managed a Night Club (Caberet) where I was a bartender , DJ and doorman.
Now I'm a Microsofty and ex-Loti - and I'm writing a novel in my spare time..
Posted by Tony Ollivier At 11:50:42 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Bruce Elgort At 08:53:05 AM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
Others about me --
1) Despite having a job which I could theoretically do anywhere in the world, I live seven blocks from my mom and the house I grew up in. Michael Jordan (yes, that Michael Jordan) lived three blocks north of me when he first moved to Highland Park (now, he has a slightly bigger place).
2) My life plan when I went to college was to open my own bookstore. I worked at Waldenbooks growing up, a job I took because of my unnatural fan worship of Doctor Who. Only because I took a summer job on campus stringing 10-BaseT cables did I get into IT.
2.5) I can still remember the international standard book number of Lee Iacocca's autobiography -- actually, both of them -- from the number of hardcover copies I sold in 1984/5. (in case you want to test me, it was 0-553-05067-2 and 0-553-05102-4).
3) I graduated college when I was 20. My first job out of college was, officially and on my business card, "Bulletin Board Administrator". That would be a SYSOP to you and me, but the company was a bit more rigid. Being that the company was FTD, most florists wondered what the hell was wrong with our bulletin boards back at HQ that they needed someone to manage the thumbtacks and corkboard
4) In same said job, our department was created to generate revenue for what was then a trade association. The business plan was so screwed up that we tried to resell software to the general public. Yes, FTD. We ran an ad in the Glen Ellyn, Illinois, local newspaper, which I designed on DrawPerfect for DOS.
5) I walked away from a car crash where I t-boned someone @ 40 MPH (their fault). The car was totalled. Airbags and seatbelts really are life-saving devices.
oh, one more
6) I had one of the very first Atari 2600 units. It wasn't even called a model number then, it was just "Atari". And it came with both joysticks and paddles. And Air-Sea Battle & Blackjack were my first cartridges. My dad still has said Atari somewhere (and when are you going to give it back, dad?)
Posted by Ed Brill At 12:39:10 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
@Laurette: I hear ya! Back in 1994, I was the only woman in my entire graduating class on the university for Computer Science.
@Ed: My dad still has our Atari. Pong ROCKS in widescreen.
Posted by Jess Stratton At 12:06:12 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
I lived in Bermuda back in the 80s, where I used to attend Saltus Grammar School (high school), where the school uniform of course includes beige Bermuda shorts !
Bacardi used to have a very attractive building on the outskirts of Hamilton, on Pitts Bay road. Are they still there ? Where did you stay when you went there, at the Princess ?
Posted by Tim Leach At 11:59:40 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
2) I have never driven a car in my life.
3) I worked in a photo studio during high school and used to steal pictures of all the cute girls who went to my school.
4) I used a golf scope to see the blackboard in school and in college.
5) I was the Inter-Fraternity Council President in college.
6) I worked at college during the summers teaching Chemistry, Calculus, Physics and Fortran.
More to come...
Bruce
Posted by Bruce Elgort At 10:39:18 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Six years of contact football - someone's always breaking, dislocating, or tearing something. Not me.
A few years of working cattle (the branding/castrating part, which really beats the hell out of a person) and on farms, which is a pretty darned dangerous occupation.
Car accidents, including one where I was hit by a drunk woman that permanently disabled my back.
Rollerblading was invented in Minnesota, ya know. When you get to the emergency room, they use a wire brush to scrape the asphalt out of/off your skin. That part really sucks. I think it's why whiskey was invented, but they never game me any, the bastards!
Of most of the people I know, I can't think of any who haven't broken something. Maybe it's not, I don't know. I've done enough entirely stupid things that I won't post here that something should have snapped by now (other than my mind..... hee ha ha ho ho )
Posted by jon johnston At 01:08:44 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Most of the things about me that would surprize you are illegal- I'm not kidding, either- so I'll stay away from that. Let's just say I got away with all of them, and I'm not like that anymore.
1. I was in the Army for 3 years- when I was in basic training, my range buddy and I appropriated cookies and pies from the mess hall during kp, passed them into laundry bags through the window of the day room (we had to CLEAN it, not use it), and sold them to other guys in our platoon. $1.50 for a little pack of cookies and $4.00 per pie- I mean an 8" pie- LOL. The pies didn't sell as well because they're hard to hide. We kept ours in the ceiling. Oh, wait...is that illegal?
2. I rode a mountain bike 750 kilometers through Southern Germany (and countless miles more around towns we visited) when in the Army. I was about 220 lbs then instead of my current 320. We visited Wurzburg, Nordlingen, Rothenburg, Dinklesbuhl, Augsburg, Neushwanstein, Munich and Regensburg. It took 17 days and when moving from place to place we did at least 100 miles per day- even in the Alps.
3. I was a baker for 9 years before starting my career in IT. They don't call me biscuit man for nothing. My specialty is bread- I make a very nice crusty loaf of french bread, and can make cinnamon rolls that would blow your mind. I worked in a place where we made so many pecan pies we used to keep the filling in a 35 gal. trash can.
4. One time I....well, no I can't tell that....
5. OH! I know one that would surprize everyone: I shower EVERY day. No- really, I do!
6. I used to be a banquet waiter at the green marble hotel next to Lenox Mall (at last look it was a Marriot- not sure what it is now). I lied my way into the job (there is A LOT to know, so I was in trouble to begin with) and fumbled around at first (I was literally shaking the first time I had to pour wine for a guest- it happened to be the general manager of the hotel), but quickly learned to bring 7 plates of hot food out at a time with no tray. We were all hand service at the time (it was a Westin when it opened) and before the hotel opened we would practice carrying hot plates with water on them- walking in circles forwards and backwards. I served Loyd Bridges and his wife, Doc from Loveboat, Trini Lopez and that Atkins guy from the Blue Lagoon (he was an ass) while working there.
Posted by Tom At 06:14:04 AM On 01/06/2005 | - Website - |
Just as obviously, the Eggman. Googoogajoob.
Posted by Bob Balaban At 12:58:59 PM On 01/09/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Christopher Byrne At 02:24:58 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
What kind of horses?
I showed the first amateur Quarter Horse High Point Stallion in 86, World Champion Amateur Stallion in 87. Went âProfessionalâ for 10 years after that. Too many late nights in the truck burned me out.
Still have three in back yard and pick stalls every night.
Offshore Crane operator
Offshore Oil and Gas Operator
Drilled water wells in East Texas
Ship fitter for Offshore Supply boats (hottest job I have ever had)
Posted by Kevin Doolin At 01:11:53 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Brian Benz At 01:04:14 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Ben Langhinrichs At 02:52:14 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
1) I actually went to university to read a Pharmacy degree, nothing to do with computers at all. My CV reads otherwise as I changed courses later. I got into computers and the internet because it seemed to be an easy way to meet girls.
2) I once got a job in McDonalds. I tell friends and colleagues that this is because I went on a Total Quality Management training course and wanted to learn about how McD's have such high customer sat ratings. I mention that I always wanted to learn how to cook burgers anyway. The truth is that there was a girl called Alex that worked there and it was the only way to get to know her better. As my heart was truly in the job and I wasn't doing it for the money, my burgers actually looked like the pictures.
3) I sing karaoke, sometimes twice a week. I'd always wanted to sing publically and one week a girl I liked was singing and I figured it would be a good way of getting to know her. We later sang a duet to "Summer Nights" from Greece.
4) I once applied to the British security services to be a government agent. I quite fancied myself as James Bond and figured it would be an easy way of picking up women. (are we seeing a pattern here?) As it turned out, my language skills weren't really good enough and the starting salary wasn't worth the effort of brushing them up to the level required.
5) I love owning high performance cars and taking them to the race track or drag strip. As well as being a typical guy when it comes to cars, I figured it would help pick up women. One of my cars, in 18 months of ownership, was responsible for 7 different dates. I can't believe how shallow some people are and how stupid I was to believe dates with people like that might go anywhere.
6) I have a secret blog that details my invariably successful love life, access is by invitation only but naturally it runs on Domino. I'm currently in negotiation with a UK magazine publisher to publish extracts from it in a forthcoming article about online dating.
Posted by Ben Rose At 07:43:05 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
a := @Explode( "two all beef patties special sauce lettuce cheese pickles onions on a sesame seed bun" ; " ");
b := @Subset( @Do( n := ("9" : "8" : "7" : "6" : "5" : "4" : "3" : "2" : "1" : "0");@For( x := 0; x < @Integer(@Log(@Elements(a))); @Do(n := n*+ ("9" : "8" : "7" : "6" : "5" : "4" : "3" : "2" : "1" : "0");x := x+1));n); @Elements(a)) + a;
T := @Implode(@RightBack(@Sort(b);2));
@Prompt([Ok]; ""; T)
-rich
P.S. In production code, I'd use Andrew's method
Posted by Richard Schwartz At 03:06:53 AM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
Chris - Oh yes, dressing 12 burgers buns in 29seconds is an art, although it's funny at family BBQ's.
Ed - No bones broken here.
Rock - Take all beef patty, special sauce, lettuce, cheese, pickle, onion on a sesame seed bun
Posted by Ben Rose At 02:10:27 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Ben Rose At 02:27:08 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
umm.
that is, I played in the Indiana University Pep Band while in college, and he made a guest appearance as our conductor one time. "This one time, at band camp..."
nevermind, back to pre-Lotusphere haze.
Posted by Ed Brill At 03:11:59 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
@Jess - I know what you mean about basic. I did "basic lite", otherwise known as USAF basic training. It was kewl, in a masochistic sorta way, because it proved to me that I could do it - and I got to see first-hand the way it works psychologically. Tech school in the USAF was one of the best years of my life. About like 4 years of college crammed into one year - and getting paid for it
What martial art did you take? I take Choi Kwang Do - in fact I will test for my black belt on 17 Sept 2005 - woohoo!
BTW, thanks to everyone for participating - this is FUN
Rock
Posted by Rock At 03:49:26 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Ben Rose At 02:36:57 AM On 01/06/2005 | - Website - |
1. I have a Bachelor's and Master's degree in Chinese history and anthropology, no university credentials at all in computer science or engineering.
2. I could sight-read IBM punch cards at the age of 12 (hey, there are only 64 characters to keep track of)
3. I worked for 3 summers at Atlantic Records in New York. Got free tix to a few AWESOME concerts: Bangladesh, Allman Brothers @Fillmore...). Shook a few very famous hands. But the Beatles (on another label) are still my faves.
4. I dropped out of college after my first year because I hated it. Took 2 years to travel around the world, lived in New Zealand for 6 months and had a job copy-editing on a newspaper.
5. The college that I dropped out of because I hated it had a very strong fraternity system. I used to write letters to the editor about how fraternities suck. The Inter-fraternity Council elected me "Asshole of the Year", the first time such an honor had ever been bestowed upon a freshman. I am still proud of it.
6. I love RHPS, and have been secretly in love with Susan Sarandon since I first saw it. But I assume Tim Robbins has nothing to worry about....
7. My grandmother taught me to play poker when I was 8. I'm pretty good at it. Had a great game in Vegas several years ago with industry luminaries Damien Katz, Rocky, Karen Hobert. The Turtle, who witnessed the game but did not participate said to me the next day: "It was AMAZING! The more bourbon you drank, the more money you won!" Heh heh. I know the rules for Bridge, but I'm not much of a player, too hard.
8. I love it that Penn Gillette loves Uma Thurman.
9. I know ALL the lyrics to "The Beverly Hillbillies" and "Car 54 Where Are You?". I can never remember all the verses to "The Addams Family".
Posted by Bob Balaban At 02:08:26 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
So lets see...
1. I slung burgers and fries at McDonalds for two years in High School.
2. I was a bartender in college for my first two years (which explains why I almost flunked out and had to transfer schools
3. Bobby Knight personally (and sheepishly) apologized to me once for something he did not need to apologize for.
4. I spent 3 years working on an unfinished Ph.D. in Political Science at The Ohio State University.
5. I was a buyer of TOMAHAWK Cruise Missiles (TM) and condoms for the US Government.
Hmmm..do I feel cleansed? Not yet
Posted by Christopher Byrne At 01:45:03 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Uh, Chris, exactly which is more efficient then?
n := "twoallbeefpattiesspecialsaucelettucecheesepicklesonionsonasesameseedbun";
@For( X := 0 ; X < @Length(n) ; X := X + 1 ; @Do(T := T + @Right( @Left(N; @Length(N) - X) ; 1)));
@Prompt([Ok];"Backwards Burger!";T)
Posted by Andrew Pollack At 08:39:10 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Ben Langhinrichs At 02:17:43 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
1. I received a military designation when I was 12...Airborne Iceworm...for being the youngest to have ever travelled that far North with the military. I was part of a touring troupe. We went to Alert Bay Forces Base...approx. 200 miles from the pole.
Which brings me to item 2
2. I was part of a troupe of singers, magicians, dancers, etc. who entertained the troops in Alert Bay. I was a magician's assistant. It was my first paying job (besides babysitting). Yes, I'm a member of the Magician's Guild...sworn not to divulge any secrets (so don't ask).
3. I perform every summer at the local Rennaissance Festival. Yes, in costume. Just FYI, the wenches have way more fun than the wealthy...(and I've tried all the characters on for size)...and pirates have waaaay more fun than anybody else. I do such a good British accent that I constantly get asked what part of England I'm from.
4. I used to hang out with slalom racers and street racers. My car was a very peppy little VW Rabbit. Extremely well modified with anti-sway bars, a stainless steel Stebro exhaust kit and lots of other really cool mods. Never won anything, but had a total blast trying.
5. Used to have a 2-day party every year at my house called "The Chili Jam". I'd made 10+ gallons of chili and invite friends, family, co-workers and everyone I know in the music business (between 60 and 100 people at top count). Everyone would bring their instruments and we'd jam, drink and eat chili 'till the next day (at midnight I'd make a couple of trays of nachos and watch all the drunken fools 'feeding frenzy' their way through it in 30-seconds or less..o.k. small things amuse me). The following day, everyone would become conscious slowly, pick themselves up from wherever they fell and we'd all watch movies until everyone felt o.k. enough to go home (ask me about one chili jam's "Night of The Living Nannies" if you see me at Lotusphere...it's a good story).
Posted by Deb (ChangeWarrior) At 05:31:52 PM On 01/10/2006 | - Website - |
I can recite the "Big Mac" construction song from memory - both forwards and backwards.
And I don't like Big Macs.
Sure, you can test me at LS05. I would type it here, but that wouldn't prove anything, now would it?
Rock
Posted by Rock At 01:31:21 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
1) My first job was selling and checking tickets on a local train (public transportation) in Stockholm, Sweden. 20 minute round-trip, got boring pretty quick. Most fun was Friday/Saturday nights with all the drunk people going to/from the city.
2) My first computer job was as tech-suport at Microsoft in Sweden. Never used a MS product or even DOS when I got the job, had been using CP/M-86 until then. Was employee #42 at MS in Sweden.
3) Worked as a developer writing voice response applications to be used over the phone. Made some games, dating service, astrology programs, etc. The company was then aquired by a Dutch phone-porn company, so while I wrote a "pimping program" for farmers (to order bulls/semen for their cows), college-aged girls were in the studio reading/recording pornographics stories...
4) I was in the army for 13 years, in a unit similar to the US National Guard or Army Reserves. I joined when I was 15, stayed in until I moved to the US in 1998. Also did a year (full-time) in the Air Force. Why is it so much fun to shoot things and blow things up?
5) I met my wife online in 1996, she was in Idaho and I was in Sweden. We met IRL just 10 days later when I was in Redmond to visit Microsoft, I had started my job as a journalist by then. Got married a year later and stayed married for 6 years.
Back then it was very suspicious to meet online, hehehe...
Posted by Karl Martinsson At 06:25:25 PM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
1. All through college, I'd planned to get my PhD in medieval lit and teach Chaucer at the college level. My first "real job" cured me of that, but I still love the history and literature from that time period.
2. My first "real job" was at a rock 'n roll radio station in San Francisco. It didn't pay anything, but the perks were amazing. I don't think I ever had to buy tickets for anything, even long after I left the job.
3. I love to knit. Am absolutely obsessed with it, and usually have several projects going on at the same time.
4. I spent a very long couple of hours in a holding cell in a Chicago police station with my college roommate and a weapons dealer (that would be two other people...my roommate was not the weapons dealer). It's a long story, but didn't involve any arrests and I wasn't at fault. Really.
5. I've been a vegetarian since I was in 7th grade (approx 13 years old). Started as lacto-ovo (dairy is okay), but added fish when I went to college because everyone said I wouldn't get enough protein otherwise. Probably a good thing, too, because I spent my first two years in a small college in rural Iowa -- not a mecca for vegetarians.
:)
Liz
Posted by Liz Olsen At 06:10:12 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Both are three lines of code. One will work again in similar situations to reverse other strings of words. One will appear to work, but will produce results which do not match the expectation.
What happens to Ben's "customer" if McDonalds adds (gasp) Special Bacon to the Big Mac one day?
I'll take the bacon-safe solution, and use the time I don't spend coding the fix to buy Ben a vanilla milkshake at Lotusphere 2005.
--Andrew
PS: Yes, Ben did in fact see me disassemble a Dell laptop, remove the motherboard, fix a bent pin on the pcmcia card slot, and re-assemble and reboot the machine during a round table discussion at a Penumbra meeting in D.C. What he failed to mention, is that the only tool I had was my leatherman. Yes, there are pictures.
Posted by Andrew Pollack At 05:17:48 PM On 01/06/2005 | - Website - |
"It's astounding
Time is fleeting
Madness...takes its toll"
:)
Rock
Posted by Rock At 04:30:29 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
1. I love anything to do with numbers and cards. My grandmother taught me to play for pocket money when I was 7 and I soon learnt to cheat
2. I slept on a futon for the first 13 years of my marriage then we bought our first bed but having no idea how much they cost ended up going to a shop and buying a 'mid range' one for 6000 USD. It took us 5 years to pay it off but it's the best bed in the world
3. Unlike Rich I pretty much read fiction exclusively or old film / theater books from the 1920s and 1930s. I read 5 - 7 books a week and skip sleeping at least once a week to read. I have a rule never to read a book with a map in the front pages
4. I hate exams - I walked out of my A level Biology exam when I was 17 without even turning over the paper and left the country soon after. 6 months later I came back and had to learn to type and take shorthand to get a job (100 wpm teeline)
5. Just about any joke in the world, no matter how old and corny will make me laugh
Posted by Gabriella Davis At 09:59:59 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
-rich
Posted by Richard Schwartz At 01:03:51 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Nathan T. Freeman At 04:54:38 AM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
Wow, thanks for sharing, Devin!
Rock
Posted by Rock At 01:59:04 PM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Ben Langhinrichs At 12:19:19 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Where do you go from there?
1. I'm a complete coward when it comes to roller coasters. Total yellow streak. If someone is in danger, I'll grit my teeth and do it. Otherwise, forget it. I know what real fear is, and see no reason to subject myself to false fear.
2. I do in fact, on rare occasions, actually care about someone else. This will shock some of you, but its actually true. Its just like those "feelings" they keep talking about in those H.R. training videos we have to sit through at the fire station. How wierd. Don't tell anyone.
3. Unlike many programmers, I have absolutely no musical talent at all. None. Zero. Not rythem, not tone, none.
4. Growing up, and really until I joined the fire department, I'd never considered myself a brave person. I'd have actually said just the opposite. In school I was one of the smaller kids, was a good sprinter but otherwise a poor athelete (A.D.H.D. kids are frequently up to a year or so behind their peers developmentally) and did not do what I considered "brave" things. I was in my 30's before I learned that bravery isn't about not being afraid.
5. I taste just like chicken, if properly cooked.
Posted by Andrew Pollack At 03:30:56 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
@Andrew: guilty as charged. And no, I will not explain chunking. Some things are better left forgotten
@Damien: The technique is a variation on an old trick that I first learned in IBM 360 assembler trick, but I'm sure it's older than that even. You fill a buffer with integers descending from N to zero. You treat your input string as an array of length N, in this case an array of words. Then you step through the buffer, replacing each integer value N with the Nth entry from the array, effectively reading the array backwards into the buffer. Why would you do it this way instead of just reading the words backward? Because it's actually a more general technique. It can be used to rearrange elements of an array into any pre-determined order, so the same code with a different order of bytes in the buffer could (for example) put the odd words in ascending order and the even words in ascending order, etc. In 360 assembler, the substitution (of bytes, not words) could be done with a single TR instruction. Variations on this techique were often used for rearranging byte-order when dealing with data from different-endian architectures.
@Ben: the milkshake is on me. I can't drink a milkshake on my diet, but I can certainly spill it on myself. Please bring a towel
-rich
Posted by Richard Schwartz At 04:26:49 PM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
- I won a freckle contest when visiting my Aunt in Tulsa, OK.
- I'm not a sports fan -- got tired of watching the Razorbacks perform opposite of the predictions.
- Moved to OK after graduating w/Math and Physics majors.
- Started programming on an IBM 7094 in Fortran and Basic Assembler Language
- My claim to fame: I've never written a COBOL program.
- I am a duplicate bridge enthusiast.
- My wife and I travel a lot -- might have visited more countries than Ed Brill.
- Last night reminds me why I'm not a sports fan.
Posted by David Bailey At 11:00:18 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Ben Langhinrichs At 11:57:59 AM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
a := @Explode( "two all beef patties special sauce lettuce cheese pickles onions on a sesame seed bun" ; " ");
@For( X := 0 ; X < @Elements(a) ; X := X + 1 ; T := T + " " + @Subset(@Subset(a; @Elements(a) - X); -1));
@Prompt([Ok];"";T)
Posted by Andrew Pollack At 09:49:55 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
2. I turned down graduate fellowships from top-ranked schools in both computer science and political science in order to get married and go to work right out of college. Five years and one divorce later, I was turned down by four of the top five business schools in the country. (I didn't apply to the fifth.)
3. I am a collector of teddy bears. I have no idea how many I have, but it was over a hundred a few years ago. And no... they do not sit in glass cases. They would be lonely and very unhappy that way.
4. I once went to a costume party wearing a bear costume, carrying a picnic basket, and inviting people to have a treat. When they moved the napkin covering the basket aside, figuring that they'd find some cookies, they found a couple of chopped up baby dolls covered in ketchup instead.
5. I read almost no fiction. I have never read any Tolkein or any other fantasy, and excluding Douglas Adams the sum total of science fiction that I have read is a single Heinlein novel. In fact, even including Adams, I can count the number of novels that I have read in the last twenty years on just a few fingres more than two hands.
6. I can call up an immense stockpile of trivial facts, but I have a terrible memory for names and faces.
As for Rocky Horror, I went for the first time on the night that I got my driver's license, and I had already seen it about a half dozen times before I went to college. It hadn't shown in New Hampshire yet, though, so when it finally opened up for midnight shows at a theatre near campus near the end of my freshman year I was one of only two people in the audience who knew the audience participation lines. Got a lot of strange looks that night, but people caught on soon after that. Probably saw it over 25 time before college was over, but lost count. Never did the dress-up though.
-rich
Posted by Richard Schwartz At 04:23:52 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
1. When I was 17, I lived in a car.
2. I'm scared of amusement park rides.
3. My dog's name is Esophagus Jesus Blumenfield III but we just call him Gus (see http://www.cnsla.com/pix)
4. I'm a theatre geek.
Posted by Amy Blumenfield At 06:53:35 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Oh, and this year in my family my youngest daughter broke both her arms, my second eldest broke her arm (radius/ulna breaks, mid-arm), my wife broke her right arm, and last week I tore a muscle in my arm.
Guess we're a rough family
Rock
Posted by Rock At 12:50:36 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Andrew Pollack At 05:02:26 PM On 01/06/2005 | - Website - |
1) I also played Rocky in the RHPS floor show while in high school. I saw it at the Sombrero theatre, and did floor show at both the Valley Art and Mann's Christown. Rocky (Oliver) is right, playing Rocky (creature) was a great way to meet girls. I did the show every Saturday night for close to a year.
2) I've owned a LOT of cars. My brother has even said that I go through cars the way that most guys go through shoes. Details at: http://www.devinolson.net/spanky762/spankysplace.nsf/plinks/DOLN-68E4XJ
3) I used to do stage construction (high steel) and lighting work for Rock & Roll shows. I never went on tour, I was a part of the local crew in both Phoenix and Los Angeles. I have worked shows for Faith No More, Guns -N- Roses (multiple shows), Metallica, The Rolling Stones, The Who, and Bob Seiger. Something interesting I discovered while working these shows is that some of the folks you think would be cool are absolute assholes, and some of the folks that have a "bad" reputation turn out to be totally cool froods. My buddy Terry and I can be seen in the Rolling Stones "Steel Wheels" concert video. Well, actually you can't see my face. The camera was on the ground, and we were "clipped in" to the steel about 60 feet up. Terry was a few feet above me, and needed a light. The camera "shot" us as I was reaching up to light his cigarette for him (when working high steel, everything -even a cigarette lighter- is attached to you by a saftey line, which means I couldn't just hand him my lighter). So what you see in the video of me is my ass end holding the lighter for Terry. Great shot of him though (back in the "hair" days).
4) I used to run movie theaters for a living. I started working my junior year in high shool at the Big Sky drive in, cleaning the field in the afternoons and doing tickets & Snack Bar (trivia note: at a Drive-In, the place where you get your food is a Snack Bar, at an indoor theatre this is called a Concession Stand -I have no idea why this is). By the middle of my senior year in high school I had worked at 4 of them (the Big Sky, Rodeo, South Twin, and Nu-Vu -all owned by Transamerica Theatre Corp) and was managing the Nu-Vu (the only Spanish drive-in in Arizona). After I returned from my Marine Corps service I went back to work in the movie theatre business, only this time for indoor multiplexes. I spent 10 years in this field (try having 2 full-time careers, it can be quite tiring) before I finally "had it". I have worked for every major theatre chain in Phoenix: GCC (General Cinema Corporation), AMC (American Multi Cinema), Harkins Theatres, Mann Theatres, Plitt Theatres, Syufy Theatres, UA (United Artists) Theatres, and Blair Theatres. I used to teach a union approved projectionist's booth school, and have run every major type of projection equipment from carbon-arc with 20 minute changeovers & mono sound to fully automated Xenon bulb projectors using continuous loop platters and THX certified sound systems.
5) My grandmother taught me to shoot (with a bb gun) when I was 5 or 6 by having me color pictrues of indian's faces on paper plates, suspending them in the branches of various apple trees, and then shooting at them from the tree-fort I was "defending". I know this isn't very PC, but this was the 60s and I was a little kid. Thanks to her instruction, I became an expert shot (earned my "Expert" rifleman's badge while in Basic Training) with the rifle. I'm okay with my pistol (Combat .45), but not nearly as good as I am with a rifle.
6) I joined the U.S. Marine Corps during my senior year of high school. I had had an allergic reaction to a bee sting when I was five, and lied about this to get in. Just before graduation, during a "last chance to tell the truth or you go to jail" meeting with my Drill Instructor (Drill Instructor Corporal Petrovitch -remind you to tell you about this guy some time), I admited this to him. I was then pulled from training, and given a full back scratch test at Balboa Naval Hospital. It was discovered that I was no longer allergic to bees (yay! I get to go back to training); however I was (and still am for all I know) extremely hypersensitive to the Asian White Faced Hornet. (WTF?) Because of this, they decided that I was not physically fit for training. I was perfectly fit for duty, and had this not come out until after basic I would have simply been issued a "bee kit" and sent back to duty. So, I was given an Honorable Discharge, with an RE-3F rating (which means that I can only get back into the service if the supply of children, infirm, and old women is exhausted). This really bummed me out, but considering the events that have occurred since, I think my life has turned out MUCH better than it would have if I had stayed in.
7) I have been electrocuted too many times: I have taken a full 220v 3-phase blast across my chest (left hand grounded, right hand cutting into a live feed) causing a blackout, a trip to the hospital, and blood in my urine for a week. I have taken a blast through my entire body (feet grounded, left hand on live feed) from an 10,000v carbon-arc rectifyer (ouch) resulting in a blackout and a trip to the hospital. I have taken a 24v, 10amp blast across the chest (right hand working on amplifier power supply, left hand grounded) causing a "lock on" (couldn't let go) until the breaker tripped. This one also resulted in blackout and ambulance ride (this was the most serious of all -that much "juice" should have killed me instantly). I have taken dozens of 110v zaps as well. The really irritating part about this is that all of my major and most of my minor "zaps" have been caused by somebody else. Meaning, in all three of the "big ones" I had personally ensured that the power was disconnected (breaker locked off or equipment unplugged) before beginning work, only to have somebody else plug it in or switch on the breaker while I was working. It has gotten to the point now that I don't let anybody help me (in fact, I scream bloody murder if you even try) or even come near me when I'm working on anything electrical.
8) I can play the recorder or pennywistle with my nose.
All right, that's enough. Time to lock the closet for now, lest any more skeletons manage to break out.
Oh yeah, @joh (Comment posted by jon johnston 01/05/2005 10:08:44 AM) - God invented whiskey to stop the Irish from taking over the world.
-Devin.
Posted by Devin Olson At 11:36:50 AM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Colman Carpenter At 07:26:49 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
I had a summer job just after high school working in a factory. I was responsible for operating an ink roller machine that transferred a fake wood grain onto toilet seats. Over the next year or two I worked in a number of factories (temp work in the midwest means primarily factory work). I made insulators that are placed in between car engines and dashboards to keep heat and noise out of the car. I also worked at a sausage factory cutting apart large strings of bratwurst. Had to do this in a room that was cooled to just below freezing in the dead of summer.
I won my first shooting competition when I was 11. It was a Jaycee's kids gun safety program and I got to go to a State air rifle competition at the end.
Placed 8th out of 100+ shooters in a regional 100M .22 rifle shoot when I was 12. The next youngest competitor was 18. Soon after, I switched to competetive shotgun sports.
Throughout high school I shot on the only all-womens' trap team in southeastern Wisconsin with my mother, aunt, and a few other family friends. We won our class a few years in a row.
When I was a junior, my mother and I entered what had always been called the county 'Father-Son' shoot. From that point on, they had to change the name to 'Parent-Child' shoot. We took second place.
Between my junior and senior years in high school I was the womens' state trap shooting champion in Wisconsin.
Posted by Melissa Gena At 03:20:56 PM On 01/09/2005 | - Website - |
1 - I worked 5 years at a Burger King and almost dropped out of college for a full time management position there.
2 - I used to sing and dance in way-off Broadway musicals.
3 - I was asked to be a male dancer in a drag show to raise money for aids research. I chickened out when I learned about the costumes!
4 - I thought I may have made a career mistake by getting into Notes and leaving COBOL.
5 - I too have danced in a corset for a Western musical number of a show that I directed.
There are a bunch more... like my best friend said at my wedding "I'm proud of my skeletons!"
Posted by Kevin At 12:36:15 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Other things:
@A bunch of you: Barely finished high school. Was living with Michelle (no, not the person I ended up marrying) by my junior year. Lived near a college for about 4 years. Went to classes about 3 times -- except for Lit. I tested out of freshman comp so they put me in a philosophy class. It rocked, because we discssed philosophy under a tree instead of being spoon fed.
Posted by Andrew Pollack At 03:42:19 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
@Richard -- The prosecution rests.
Posted by Andrew Pollack At 05:43:40 PM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
Rock
Posted by Rock At 06:36:41 PM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
Did I just make that any clearer? I'm not sure I did.
Posted by Ben Langhinrichs At 05:09:11 PM On 01/06/2005 | - Website - |
2) Over 10 years of working in Notes (Dev & Admin) , I can count on 1 hand the number of women I have worked with who coded
3) I have never, and will never sing karaoke style
4) My absolute favourite ever tv show is Buffy the Vampire Slayer - I have every season on dvd, and barely go a month without watching a couple of episodes
5) I worked in a supermarket for 4 years while studying at uni
Posted by Laurette Rynne At 01:16:50 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Ok I am just kidding but I could not resist...
Posted by Christopher Byrne At 09:23:23 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
- I know that if you're working around a lot of acid, you wear 100% polyester clothing. The worst job I ever had was breaking dead car batteries in half with an axe when I was 14. We recovered the lead. We also smelted aluminum.
- I helped put the sound and fire alarm system in Texas A&M's Kyle Field football stadium around 1980-81. Was nearly killed (kilt) three times on the job. I was going to become the youngest certified fire alarm guy in Texas at one point, but decided not to because I realized someone would want me to stay in Texas and do that stuff.
- I have never broken a bone in my life.
Posted by jon johnston At 12:34:47 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/news/drwho/2004/12/06/15823.shtml
The BBC is just about to start showing a new series of Doctor Who. I'm not a fan personally, but Billie Piper (phwoar !) is the Doctor's new assistant, which is reason enough to watch it ! Also, BBC7 does a radio version which you can listen to online -
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbc7/listenagain/sunday/rams/1800.ram
Anyway...
1. When I was a student, I once had summer job where I ran the "Pepsi challenge" (a blind Coke - Pepsi taste test) everyday, on a Dover - Calais cross channel ferry.
2. I'm a bee-keeper. Last year was a great year and our bees produced 80Kg of delicious honey !
3. I can click my toes !
4. Apart from my native England, I've also been fortunate enough to live in Australia, Bermuda, France and Italy.
5. I DONT'T dance, okay !
Posted by Tim Leach At 05:38:00 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
1. I can play pool well. And I HATE it when people ask if I need help when I tell them I want next game.
2. I secretly always wanted to go through Basic Training for the army. Not to join the army per-se, just to see if I could actually do it. And learn some skills at the same time.
3. I used to take gymnastics and martial arts.
4. Most of my house is cheap flea market and yard sale finds that I enjoy painting and finding a place for. Granted things have a high-turnaround rate in my house, so the quality isn't that great.
5. Here's MY skeleton in the closet: I absolutely love KC and the Sunshine Band. Wholeheartedly.
Posted by Jess Stratton At 03:33:29 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
One of the more bizarre negotiations I had in a prior career was a grant to the American Breeders Service (a subsidiary of W.R. Grace & Compaby) for the privatization of the cattle breeding industry in Poland. The pictures in the manual to be translated made it clear to me I am glad I did not make that career choice (unlike my old college roommate who breeds sheep in upstate New York).
When I questioned computer costs and fuel costs to justify the grant amount, their project manager said that I did "not know enough about the cattle breeding industry to ask 'intelligent' questions about their proposal.
Needless to say this pushed a button and I responded "what the hell do I need to know about bull semen to ask 'intelligent' questions about computer and fuel costs?"!
Posted by Christopher Byrne At 12:21:33 AM On 01/10/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Ben Rose At 02:38:42 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
I alternated between Eddie/Dr. Scott and Riff Raff.
Posted by Stan Rogers At 02:01:34 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Sub Click(Source As Button)
Dim strRecipe As String
strRecipe= "twoallbeefpattiesspecialsaucelettucecheesepicklesonionsonasesameseedbun"
Dim strNew As String
Dim iLength As Integer
ilength=Len(strrecipe)
While Not (ilength < 1)
strNew = strNew + Mid$(strRecipe, ilength, 1)
iLength=iLength-1
Wend
Messagebox strNew
End Sub
Formulae are just so inefficient
Posted by Christopher Byrne At 04:51:57 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Tony - what do you do at the Evil Empire now? What did you do for the Rebel Alliance?
Ed My job while I was in college (to be a math teacher, of all things) - and the job I had before I was hired by Lotus - was with WaldenSoftware, which at that time was a division of Waldenbooks. I think EB bought them later on.
Kevin - worked with Paso Finos at a farm outside of Valdosta GA called Paso Fino de Verde, owned by a man named Fred Green. I was responsible for Espirito de Verde (barn name "ugly") who was a shy, spirited show stallion and whose father was the first national Paso Fino Grand Champion. I never worked my way up to showing Ugly in the ring, but it was still kewl that I was friends with and got to ride a $30,000++ show horse. He was my buddy.
Laurette - we gotta get you out more! I was one of two people hired by Synergistics to open the Atlanta offices. At one time our entire development staff was women (4 of them) except for me and another guy. Our overall mix in the office was more women than men too. Before that I worked at The Future Now/XLConnect, and we had quite a few women on staff there too.
Tim I drink an inordinate (unhealthy) amount of Cokes. I have taken the Pepsi challenge on numerous occasions (and the RC challenge, and the supermarket challenge, and...) and I am 100% at guessing what I am drinking. Like an alcoholic knows his drinks, I know my carbonated sodas
Ben - glad to hear Vonage is working out for you! Haven't I actually seen your blog somewhere? I could have sworn I have been to it. Oh, and what type of car(s) do you own now? I like cars a bit myself, but I am really into motorcycles at the moment.
Thanks again for participating everyone - this is a great deal of fun!
Rock
Posted by Rock At 08:38:12 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Ben Langhinrichs At 09:34:55 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
I (and a few crazy Australians and New Zealanders) once climbed to the top of the Cheops Pyramid in Egypt. We went up before dawn, and were almost arrested by guards when they saw us coming down later that day.
I spent nine months living in (and restoring) a 17th century farmhouse with no running water or electricity in the village of Moncarapacho on the Algarve coast of Portugal.
I was a champ swimmer in high school â made it to the Olympic trials, but not further.
I lived with 9 New Zealanders and Australians in a big flat in London for almost two years.
I had an infected Kidney removed in Goreme, Turkey.
I spent a year working and living in Australia. I lived five doors down from Mel Gibson on Beach Road, Coogee Beach (a suburb of Sydney). I saw him once, washing his own Jeep Cherokee in front of his house. Said hi and he said hi back. The next year I was trekking though Mae Hong Son, Thailand, and he was filming âAir Americaâ there. Said hi again as we passed on the street, he said hi back. Pretty sure he didnât remember me. Never actually met him.
My sister has been on Doctor Phil a few times.
Despite the fact that I have authored several books and articles on technology, Iâm self-taught - I donât have a college degree. But Iâm starting on one this year.
Posted by Brian Benz At 01:01:05 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
a:=@Explode( "two all beef patties special sauce lettuce cheese pickles onions on a sesame seed bun" ; " ");
T:=@Implode(@Sort(a; [CustomSort];
@Member($a;a)<@Member($b;a)); "");
@Prompt([Ok]; ""; T)
Out geek that, I dare you!
(Granted, it will only work because of one special feature of this particular saying)
Posted by Ben Langhinrichs At 04:14:12 PM On 01/06/2005 | - Website - |
I worked with Ed a lot and did internal field enablement for Notes and Domino WW. My job was based out of cambridge, but I lived and worked out of my house in Vancouver, BC.
As an evil sith lord, I'm a Business productivity advisor for the Provincial governments across Canada.
I don't really sell anything - but I'm working to have the provinces fully deploy the latest version of microsoft anything that they own. ( but it's mostly in the collaboration space)
Posted by tony Ollivier At 11:18:05 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
The Music Man (8th Grader in HS Play because they needed boys for the boys band)
High School
Carousel
Showboat
Fiddler on the Roof
Guys and Dolls (Did lighting and blew up the board)
1997- Community Theater
Camelot (Had one line
Also sang in The Messiah for the Athens Choral Society that year. Only problem was is that I am not a true tenor or baritone but am stuck in the middle.
Hence the love of Karaoke!
@Ben - Swarthmore? Does that make you a Quaker as well?
Posted by Christopher Byrne At 03:10:29 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Ben Langhinrichs At 05:21:15 PM On 01/06/2005 | - Website - |
My friend, would you like to try to explain "Chunking" to the good people of Rocky's forum?
Posted by Andrew Pollack At 08:02:04 AM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
-rich
Posted by Richard Schwartz At 07:55:08 AM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
yawn * yawn
Sub Click(Source As Button)
Dim v As Variant
Dim x As Integer
Dim txt As String
v = Split("two all beef patties special sauce lettuce cheese pickles onions on a sesame seed bun", " ")
For x = Ubound(v) To 0 Step -1
txt = txt & " " & v(x)
Next
Msgbox(txt)
End Sub
Posted by Andrew Pollack At 09:57:45 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
src := @Explode(Data; " ");
digits := (0:1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8:9);
digitsRev := (9:8:7:6:5:4:3:2:1:0);
numList := @Subset(((digits*10) *+ digits); @Elements(src));
numListRev := @Subset(((digitsRev*10) *+ digitsRev);-@Elements(src));
targList := @Text(numList) + @Char(250) + src;
@Word(@Replace(@Text(numListRev); @Text(numList); targList); @Char(250); 2)
Yes, it's limited to handling 100-word phrases. Extending it is pretty trivial.
Posted by Nathan T. Freeman At 04:52:05 AM On 01/07/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by At 03:10:56 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
We were married three years later
Rock
Posted by Rock At 02:55:25 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Car wise, nothing too exotic as my budget doesn't stretch that far but I did own a 280bhp Mazda RX-7 Twin Turbo for a while which was great fun. Due to it's light weight it was good for 0-60mph in 5secs and a top speed in excess of 180mph on the dial. Cost me £30,000 in 18months that car...enough for a small house in Canada!
Currently driving a 3.2litre V6 VW Golf R32 which is significantly more economical, quite necessary during divorce settlement, but maybe a new toy in the future
Posted by Ben Rose At 09:09:51 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Ed Brill At 12:45:04 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Tim Leach At 09:29:39 AM On 01/06/2005 | - Website - |
1. I did the "working in a restaurant" stint during the final years of school.
1a. During that time I wrote my first paid for program on a Sharp Basic programmable "calcuputer". Think Spaghetti...
2. I started studying "electrical engineering" but switched to psychology after just one year. The m/f ration switched from 400/2 to 40/60 - but that didn't help me to pick up any (I tried though)
3. I picked up a girl in the job I worked in besides university. That gave me an excuse to drop out of university completely. We then spent the next 2 or 3 years working and living together. After the company folded, we found out that we didn't have anything else to talk about.
4. A couple of years later I met a woman, talked all night, went swimming naked in the lake at 4 am (with her and other guests) and invited her (actually I wanted to invite another girl, but she was quicker to accept) to see RHPS (the movie) which was showing open-air at the lakeside the next day (actually, same day in the evening). Before the movie I then rummaged through her underwear. She hadn't the slightes clue to what the movie was about, but came along and hoped nobody would recognize her with that strange looking man next to her...
We married soon after and still are (after almost 10 years)
5. I started Notes Development in 1992 - I was hired for that purpose, sent on a course a couple of days after and freaked out the instructor, because after 2 days class I had emulated his "for sale CRM" application in all important features.
that must be enough for now
Posted by Jens-Christian Fischer At 04:52:35 AM On 01/06/2005 | - Website - |
Eddie eh? "Meatloaf again?" has to be one of the best audience participation lines in the movie!
Posted by Christopher Byrne At 02:11:06 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Your script and formula samples would generate something like: "nubdeesemasesanosnoinoselkcipeseehcecuttelecuaslaicepsseittapfeebllaowt"
Reversing all the letters doesn't leave you with pronounceable words to impress the customer with (and yes, I could recite it bidirectionally as well back in the day, but I've recycled those brain cells or killed them off since then...). Anybody for building an array or list of ingredient strings and looping through THAT in reverse?
/pretty sure I should be embarrassed that I noticed this to begin with...
Posted by Rob McDonagh At 08:51:31 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Rock
Posted by Rock At 02:43:31 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Slightly better than a teddy bear, I guess. (@Richard, I have this picture in my head now, and I cant get rid of it..)
Confessions? Well, there's the public LotusFear ones like trying to trip up Al Zollar on his first appearance whilst trying to get to the podium, or asking the "why dont you support outlook client" back in 1999.
1. Played Violin for near 12 years and ended up on the front desk of 1st fiddles for the youth orchestra. Didnt pull any hot chellists, however, despite near constant attempts. Wind ? pah!
2. Set up a pirate radio station at university.
3. Got beat on unreal tournament by my daughter when she was 12. (And I was *good*)
4. I have a wife+kid - most folks just see the beer monster and assume that nothing that short, hairy and drunk can possibly be married, let alone with the same person for 20 years. (I'm scared of her..)
5. Left University after flunking maths, and worked my butt off in nightschool to get a diploma four years ago. (Kids. Get your degrees young - they're much harder to get later)
6. My high school (1,500 kids) built a religion around me for three years. Unpleasant.
(I did martial arts whilst at school and a hundred pounds lighter. Now I either bounce or flatten...)
Rocky Horror ? Wow. I used to have the "audience Partici.....Pation" tape in the car. Got some odd looks at the lights, screaming "You've got no f**king neck!". Oh and attending RHPS last night in Edinburgh with a gay friend abd being utterly shocked at the audience in bondage gear. It *was* that scary.
Therapy ? Us ?
---* Bill
Posted by Wild Bill At 07:38:29 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
bunseedsesamieaononionspicklescheeselettucesaucespecialpattiesbeefalltwo
Whew!
Rock
Posted by Rock At 02:32:22 PM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
I went to school to be a chef. Have worked in many industries before IT, Cooking, Construction, Sales, I even serviced vending machines for a while. I did Inventory Control At Lotus During the Jim Manzi years.
Thats how I got into this racket. I complained too much about the applications I was using, so you know what happened next.
John
Posted by John Coolidge At 01:16:13 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |
Posted by Chris Miller At 10:55:17 AM On 01/05/2005 | - Website - |
Hmmm, some things about me that I'm happy to share...
I went to school for mechanical engineering, and did my thesis work in high performance athletics (your body's max vo2 capacity)
Outside of work my life pretty much revolves around sports. I play ultimate frisbee, tennis, and volleyball (Yes, I am vertically challenged, I was a defensive specialist and setter for years). I've just started indoor rocking climbing.
I'm a huge Police/Sting fan, but I also listen to a lot of techno, and like Celtic music!
I'd rather be working in the entertainment industry (movies, video games, etc) than in software.
I'd rather be taking photos for National Geographic than working in the entertainment industry.
Finally, I'm not really short, I'm just standing far away.
Posted by Alan Lepofsky At 10:54:19 PM On 01/04/2005 | - Website - |