Exiting my car with my brother, outside his apartment.
Me: [picking up package of instant noodles from my backseat] "Do you want this yakisoba?
Tom: "It's been in your car for five months, but sure. It's time to give the yakisoba a home."
Me: "By home, do you mean your apartment, or your stomach?"
Tom: "First one, and then the other."
Me: [laughing very hard] "And then the one again."
Monday, October 29, 2007
and at work, i paste my novel into the code comments
rory: how's your nanowrimo.org thing going ?
rory: are you simply dumping huge chunks of code into your novel ?
rory: "and then.. the programmer wrote this: ...."
niniane: lol
niniane: yeah!
Sunday, October 28, 2007
Steve Jobs
Tom: "Do you know who wrote the game Breakout?"

Me: "No. Who?"
Tom: "Steve Jobs."
Me: "Wow. [pause] Well, he'll never top that one."
Tom: [raise eyebrow]
...
Tom: "Can't skill at work be transferred to dating?"
Me: "No, definitely not."
Tom: "It would work for Steve Jobs though. He can just convince you that he's good in bed."
Me: [laughing]
Tom: "Steve Jobs will show you something amazing tonight."

Me: "No. Who?"
Tom: "Steve Jobs."
Me: "Wow. [pause] Well, he'll never top that one."
Tom: [raise eyebrow]
...
Tom: "Can't skill at work be transferred to dating?"
Me: "No, definitely not."
Tom: "It would work for Steve Jobs though. He can just convince you that he's good in bed."
Me: [laughing]
Tom: "Steve Jobs will show you something amazing tonight."
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Gorgeous art
Why don't we have an art museum like this in San Fran??

Architecture is all high ceilings and glass.

Clouds.

Some of my real-life friends aren't this alive.

I was there in 2000. I want to be there again in 2008.

Rodin. Remarkable.

I sat in front of this painting for 20 minutes. I know it's because of my current frame of mind, which is contemplative about the important things in life and how family and friends are so important, and I need to devote time to them during our limited time on this earth.

Enormous mystic clock in the gift shop. Less than $200. Almost bought it. Just didn't want to carry in suitcase.

Reminded me of Frank Capra house from when I visited as a Caltech student.

The color, the shape, the texture. Two thumbs up.

Brunch and coffee with Kater-bean. Sitting at the bar just like the first time we met...

Architecture is all high ceilings and glass.

Clouds.

Some of my real-life friends aren't this alive.

I was there in 2000. I want to be there again in 2008.

Rodin. Remarkable.

I sat in front of this painting for 20 minutes. I know it's because of my current frame of mind, which is contemplative about the important things in life and how family and friends are so important, and I need to devote time to them during our limited time on this earth.

Enormous mystic clock in the gift shop. Less than $200. Almost bought it. Just didn't want to carry in suitcase.

Reminded me of Frank Capra house from when I visited as a Caltech student.

The color, the shape, the texture. Two thumbs up.

Brunch and coffee with Kater-bean. Sitting at the bar just like the first time we met...
Friday, October 19, 2007
i miss her already

Wow, what would it be like to have a roommate that is also your very good friend? Would life just be completely perfect?
Thursday, October 18, 2007
never knew Grace Hopper was so funny
Neha posted this Letterman interview with Grace Hopper:
She's very funny!
So bad-ass! You go, Grace Hopper! Show 'em, sister!
She's very funny!
Letterman: You're known as the Queen of Software. Is that right?
Grace Hopper: [nodding matter-of-factly]
So bad-ass! You go, Grace Hopper! Show 'em, sister!
Sunday, October 14, 2007
Ronald McDonald
Tonight I went for my introduction meeting at Ronald McDonald House. I met the two staff people, got a tour of the house, and ate dinner with three families staying there.
It was very interesting, and different from the rest of my life. The house is three stories, with ten guest rooms. Most of the families are young parents with premature newborns.
One American family was acting perfectly normally -- joking with each other, talking loudly. Two Hispanic families sat and ate quietly. Elizabeth, the staff person who gave me the tour, spoke to them in Spanish about their baby girl who was born weighing only two pounds.
It had the sense of community that I feel is missing from the rest of the US. People were thrown there by circumstance, and they were each doing their own thing, but also wanted to be congenial to each other. It felt more real somehow, because people were dealing with crisis rather than trying to promote some goal or get ahead in their careers or something. Everyone was fighting for their baby to get well, and not competing against each other in any way.
I learned that 90+% of babies who are born very premature actually end up fine. This is surprising, because when a coworker's baby was born three months premature, I looked up the stats, and the survival rate was below 25%.
I am starting my first official volunteer shift in two weeks. I'm really looking forward to it. I want to learn basic Spanish so that I can speak with the Hispanic families (20% of the families).
I feel really inspired.
I'm going to be working two shifts per month. My duties are to help tidy up the rooms, generally clean up the house, and run other errands such as pick up a basket of donated pastries from Starbucks. I was very happy about that last -- it combines my love for Starbucks, baked goods, and FREE food.
It was very interesting, and different from the rest of my life. The house is three stories, with ten guest rooms. Most of the families are young parents with premature newborns.
One American family was acting perfectly normally -- joking with each other, talking loudly. Two Hispanic families sat and ate quietly. Elizabeth, the staff person who gave me the tour, spoke to them in Spanish about their baby girl who was born weighing only two pounds.
It had the sense of community that I feel is missing from the rest of the US. People were thrown there by circumstance, and they were each doing their own thing, but also wanted to be congenial to each other. It felt more real somehow, because people were dealing with crisis rather than trying to promote some goal or get ahead in their careers or something. Everyone was fighting for their baby to get well, and not competing against each other in any way.
I learned that 90+% of babies who are born very premature actually end up fine. This is surprising, because when a coworker's baby was born three months premature, I looked up the stats, and the survival rate was below 25%.
I am starting my first official volunteer shift in two weeks. I'm really looking forward to it. I want to learn basic Spanish so that I can speak with the Hispanic families (20% of the families).
I feel really inspired.
I'm going to be working two shifts per month. My duties are to help tidy up the rooms, generally clean up the house, and run other errands such as pick up a basket of donated pastries from Starbucks. I was very happy about that last -- it combines my love for Starbucks, baked goods, and FREE food.
Tech
In a week, I'm going back to Caltech to give a talk. I've been back a few times for talks and career fairs, but this time I am anticipating it more.

Millikan Pond in the morning light. I saw this sight a few times when walking to hand in a problem set after staying up all night.

View down the Olive Walk toward the Athenaeum. Olives fell from the trees during the summer, and the brick walkway became completely covered in crushed olives.

I have the most ambivalence about Dabney House. Having lived there for four years, it is the location with the most emotional draw. Simultaneously, it is a private residence of sorts, and I feel as though I'm intruding by walking through the House. The graffiti on the bathroom walls no longer look like art -- now they look messy.
I'm looking forward to getting a chocolate milkshake with chocolate chips, from the student coffeehouse.

Millikan Pond in the morning light. I saw this sight a few times when walking to hand in a problem set after staying up all night.

View down the Olive Walk toward the Athenaeum. Olives fell from the trees during the summer, and the brick walkway became completely covered in crushed olives.

I have the most ambivalence about Dabney House. Having lived there for four years, it is the location with the most emotional draw. Simultaneously, it is a private residence of sorts, and I feel as though I'm intruding by walking through the House. The graffiti on the bathroom walls no longer look like art -- now they look messy.
I'm looking forward to getting a chocolate milkshake with chocolate chips, from the student coffeehouse.
Saturday, October 13, 2007
Bustling around my dining room, getting ready to carpool to work with Sha-mayn.
Me: Did you see I brought out an 8-ball for the party?

Sha-mayn: Hehe, yeah.
Me: [shaking the 8-ball] Will my party be a smashing success? [reading 8-ball] "My sources say no."
Sha-mayn: Aw.
Me: [shaking 8-ball again] Is that because it will be an EXTREME smashing success? [reading 8-ball] "Very doubtful."
Sha-mayn: Heh.
Me: Maybe this thing is broken. [shaking 8-ball] Does Sha-mayn still love me? [reading 8-ball] "As I see it, yes." Damn, it's working! Oh, no! That means my party isn't going to be a smashing success.
Sha-mayn: [ushering me down the stairs to the front door] Niniane, I'm not going to console you on this one.
Me: Did you see I brought out an 8-ball for the party?

Sha-mayn: Hehe, yeah.
Me: [shaking the 8-ball] Will my party be a smashing success? [reading 8-ball] "My sources say no."
Sha-mayn: Aw.
Me: [shaking 8-ball again] Is that because it will be an EXTREME smashing success? [reading 8-ball] "Very doubtful."
Sha-mayn: Heh.
Me: Maybe this thing is broken. [shaking 8-ball] Does Sha-mayn still love me? [reading 8-ball] "As I see it, yes." Damn, it's working! Oh, no! That means my party isn't going to be a smashing success.
Sha-mayn: [ushering me down the stairs to the front door] Niniane, I'm not going to console you on this one.
Monday, October 8, 2007
Tom & Tech
Tom: I had dinner with nine Caltech people on Sunday.
Me: Oh cool.
Tom: They were telling me about the personality of the Houses. Avery House has no personality.
Me: That's always been true.
Tom: Guess what they said about Dabney House.
Me: Hippies?
Tom: Exactly. Hippie-loving treehuggers. Guess which House they would've put me in?
Me: Lloyd.
Tom: What's the personality of Lloyd House?
Me: Nice, upstanding citizen.
Tom: Okay. They all said I should go to Page House.
Me: Page is just like Lloyd House, with a LOT of drinking.
Tom: Nothing has changed.
...
(a few exchanges later)
Me: You have a reputation for drinking? You're not even of age!
Tom: I don't know why they think that. Some of them had only known me for thirty minutes!
Me: Good God, how much did you drink during those thirty minutes?
Me: Oh cool.
Tom: They were telling me about the personality of the Houses. Avery House has no personality.
Me: That's always been true.
Tom: Guess what they said about Dabney House.
Me: Hippies?
Tom: Exactly. Hippie-loving treehuggers. Guess which House they would've put me in?
Me: Lloyd.
Tom: What's the personality of Lloyd House?
Me: Nice, upstanding citizen.
Tom: Okay. They all said I should go to Page House.
Me: Page is just like Lloyd House, with a LOT of drinking.
Tom: Nothing has changed.
...
(a few exchanges later)
Me: You have a reputation for drinking? You're not even of age!
Tom: I don't know why they think that. Some of them had only known me for thirty minutes!
Me: Good God, how much did you drink during those thirty minutes?
Crackberry compulsiveness
In the past two weeks, the severity of my crackberry addiction has started to scare me.
I joined a Facebook group called "I check my email an unhealthy number of times per day". How true it is.
I delayed 2+ years to get the blackberry, for fear this would happen. I finally caved in order to be able to look up directions and yelp reviews on the road.
But now look at the obsessive shell of a human I have become.
I need to wean myself off this addiction. Unfortunately I think it's more powerful than cigarettes are for smokers.
I joined a Facebook group called "I check my email an unhealthy number of times per day". How true it is.
I delayed 2+ years to get the blackberry, for fear this would happen. I finally caved in order to be able to look up directions and yelp reviews on the road.
But now look at the obsessive shell of a human I have become.
I need to wean myself off this addiction. Unfortunately I think it's more powerful than cigarettes are for smokers.
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