Rerun: oh, the wind and rain

The Wind and Rain (April 19, 2003)

Gratefully, I stepped out of the wind and rain into the careful recreation of the 1903 cabin, each item neatly stocked and ranked with the appropriate precision of the engineer. Turning to look back into the blow, I noted a short, metal-topped wooden rail a few feet beyond the door of the cabin, about an inch wide along the top surface and about two-and-one half inches tall, running for fifteen feet or so in the sandy scrub. I took it for a path boundary from an earlier landscaping effort, overlooked by strapped groundskeepers.

For no particular reason I walked out to the rail. I began to teeter my way along it, balancing arms out, leaning into the wind.

The wind caught me and steadied me as I moved down the rail; I raised my head and the rain spattered my glasses and stung my face. Suddenly, I realized this rail was a recreation, as the cabin, of the rail the Wrights rode into the sky on December 17, 1903. The river of wind I faced and leaned on was the wind that launched us to the sky. Since earliest childhood, I’d ridden its’ tributaries around the world. The rushing sound of it ouside the portholed cabin remains a drowsy lullaby for me to this day.

I let the wind take my arms and raise them above my head.

The third Wright

Ken_wilbur_orville.jpg

As I was investigating various Wright-related imagebanks, what should I uncover but this amazing find, which appears to reveal the existence of a previously unknown Wright Brother. It’s thought, I think, that the third Wright, seen here for the first time, mostly stayed at home in Ohio, feeling vaguely dissatisfied and making occasional forays into humor writing. Later, he passes out of the family history, headed for New Jersey.

A Switcher's Guide, part 1

I had dinner Monday night with a good friend, a power geek with years of experience as a programmer. He recently purchased a Mac, the 12″ G4 iBook, and we had a chat about the experience and the operating system.

I promised him a switcher’s guide – helpfully, I found some others and I’ll start with these: The Idea Basket covers the new stuff in 10.3 from a new-to-the-Mac perspective. It’s ten pages long, and as such I only skimmed it. It did not appear to be as technical as I believe my friend might appreciate, I’ll link here because part of my objective here is to provide a useful document for others in addition to my friend.

Zeldman also covered the switch just about a year ago but covers it by comparison with the orientation of a user moving from OS9 to OSX, and highlights some cool little apps.

Speaking of software recommendations, Marc Liyanage not only provides some tasty stuff such as his long-beloved and now-official implementation of MySQL, but he also provides his own list of suggestions.

As The Apple Turns and TidBITS are where I get the majority of my computing news. Interestingly, though, my recent MacWorld announced a digital-only mac-oriented developers magazine, too. I also get MacAddict, which as oriented to less technical (read ‘younger’) users as it has been over the four or five years I’ve been getting it, has also consistently outshone the venerable Macworld with interesting editorial vision including some sorely-needed personality-oriented features (which they should be running every single month, I think).

The MacWorld-backed dev mag is called “Mac Developer Journal” and is a co-venture with the highly-repected O’Reilly house, whose online material has been the single best source of technical information about the new Mac OS for the bast couple of years. Sadly, if the website is an indicator, it’s unlikely to gain an audience – no preview content was easily available. Although you can get to a preview offsite by clicking the ‘subscribe’ button (counterintuitive web design for sure). They do an interview with DragThing’s James Thomson! Damn, I asked him for an interview years ago but never bothered to try to place a story, Oh well. The pub may be a competitor to the venerable MDJ (which, I swear, once was KNOWN as Mac Developer Journal) – and oddly, MDJ has a relationship with O’Reilly.

O’Reilly’s Mac Center has a raft of well-regarded books on OS X, such as the appropriate for my friend “Mac OS X for Unix Geeks” and David Pogue’s well-liked Mac OS X: The Missing Manual, Panther Edition. Despite the impressive book selection, the reason to come back and back to OReilly.com is the online content at, well, macdevcenter.com.

macdevcenter offers this useful collection of articles on working with Apache, email (but nothing on setting up postfix yet, darn it), and developing for OS X, and more.

This brief survey by no means covers all the ground needed: I haven’t covered my own suite of apps and emergency utilities, for example, or addressed backup. But this will do for a start.

seisun?

Sunday night, walking up the hill from seeing Master and Commander (verdict: excellent if reactionary, a forgivable vice in an historical romance, featuring the best sailing-ship sea battles ever committed to bits’n’film) we ambled by Clever Dunnes, which bravely lofts the orange, green and white in my otherwise unconcerned with tradition neighborhood. I’ve mentioned Dunnes before (the food is good, generous, reasonably priced, and up to the competition hereabouts) and I’ve wondered if the place would get a seisun going.

Well, I looked in the window as we strolled by and saw two slightly bewildered-looking folks playing or singing along with a couple others, and I think I saw two acoustic guitars and a bodhran – which makes me think I saw a seisun a-borning.

After the holidays, I’ll look into this further – but if this is what’s happening, I really should drop by. It’s only blocks away.

The King Thing

Movie Review | ‘The Return of the King’: Triumph Tinged With Regret in Middle Earth – Elvis Mitchell weighs in with hugs all around; the New York Film Critics’ Circle drops some science for the Academy to follow up on, and in general, advance word is good.

Alex Ross looks at Tolkien’s debt to Wagner in the New Yorker, whilst the magazine defers a review proper in this ish.

Not to worry, though: a few trolls are unafraid to loft their black banners in resistance to the praise. The San Diego Union Tribune’s David Elliott says, “The saga sags,” and goes on to mock an online fan. Clearly, he’s pledged to the Dark Lord.

Christopher Tolkien recently denied that he’d gone over to the dark himself, saying, “The suggestions that have been made that I ‘disapprove’ of the films, vent to the extent of thinking ill of those with whom I may differ, are wholly without foundation.”

Director Jackson, for his part, recently expressed interest in shooting the trilogy’s prequel, The Hobbit.

As someone who wrote with joy at great length about both previous movies and the books, I appreciated this sensitive, if brief, analysis of the books by John Garth in the Scotsman.

Tomorrow, the day the film is released, is also the 100th anniversary of the Wright Brothers’ first flight, and will see a reenactment attempt at 10:35am EST, 7:35am here. I’ll be out of bed looking for coverage.

White Elephant II

It’s a strikeout, ladies and gentlemen (Ken, too). I couldn’t come up with any research or articles that discuss the origin of the American custom or its’ growth.

Alas.

White Elephant I

We attended our second White Elephant gift exchange last night. Tonight as we were eating or out shopping or someplace, Viv asked me where the term and the tradition came from.

I told her that I understood it to refer to a tradition in an Asian country, possibly Thailand, where white elephants are a sacred symbol of the king, and when found, become his property. The elephant. however, may not actually be delivered to the king, but instaed may lodge with whoever is deemed best able to keep it on the kings behalf – but at their expense.

The analogy to what Americans mean by the term is obvious, I think. But when and where did the White Elephant Party begin and when did it become so very widespread here?

I thought I’d invesitgate.

With regard to the Asian roots of the term, my version is certainly popular:

White elephant (1851) supposedly arose from the practice of the King of Siam of presenting one of the sacred albino elephants to a courtier who had fallen from favor; the gift was a great honor, but the cost of proper upkeep of one was ruinous.

– from the Online Etymology Dictionary (Sources), a personal project of one Douglas Harper. It’s a find in and of itself, I’d say.

The online edition of the 1894 Brewer Dictionary of Phrase and Fable has it thusly:

White elephantKing of the White Elephant. The proudest title borne by the kings of Ava and Siam. In Ava the white elephant bears the title of `lord,” and has a minister of high rank to superintend his household.
 –  The land of the White Elephant. Siam.
 –  To have a white elephant to keep. To have an expensive and unprofitable dignity to support, or a pet article to take care of. For example, a person moving is determined to keep a pet carpet, and therefore hires his house to fit his carpet. The King of Siam makes a present of a white elephant to such of his courtiers as he wishes to ruin.

(Siam is an antiquated name for the country we now call Thailand, just in case you never caught The King and I.)

This still leaves the matter of the factual basis of the story wide open, however. What King of Siam in particular? What year did this happen in? Does it still occur?

This unsourced but rather detailed and knowledgeable page discusses the roots of the animal’s importance and role in both Burma and Thailand, even directly addressing interactions between vistors from Britain and the United States in the nineteenth century. Interestingly, it does not discuss the American meaning of the word or cite a specific incident that paralells our usage of the word.

Further research found only anecdotal citations, so I’m concluding that while it’s surely possible that these animals were used in just such a stratagem, it’s unlikely that such an event was ever factually recorded. Furthermore, the term entered English at a time when it was common to denigrate non-European customs as impractical – the phrase ‘sacred cow’ forms a nice bookend with ‘white elephant’ – and the pejorative meaning with which Americans use the term appears to reflect this usage.

I shall examine the evidence for the growth of the White Elephant Party on the morrow, as the Google-hunt is likely to be more arduous.

More on Ken's dilemma

kencard.jpg Ken sent me this card recently. Shortly thereafter, a humorous aside he’d written more than a year ago generated an angry letter from an ex-coworker whom we’re both fond of and hold in high esteem.

He’s a laugh-riot, ladies and gentlemen, a reg’lar Henny Newman! He’s taken the Mel Brooks exposition of Aristotle’s Treatise on Humor and turned himself into a living monument to comedy!

Plush dolls and playing cards. I’m tellin’ ya, I’ll make a mint off this kid.