Zamboni-Cam(!)
Originally uploaded by baseballpajamas
This is the sort of email I'm sending while I'm sitting here at work supposedly thinking about modifications to an Electronic Health Record system:
"Hmmm. Maybe it DOES make sense to have the coop door around on the other side of the shed (under cover). Farther to carry water, but closer to the electricity source (for switching on lights) and I wouldn't have to worry so much about what the door looks like. Still might want to put the CHICKEN door facing the house, though (back right corner?)"
"It’s a curling term for when the skip calls the weight you should throw. Hack-weight is when you throw it from one hack, which is where you dig into the ice and slide out from, and if you throw hack-weight you mean it to land at the opposite hack. It’s used as a soft take-out. But if you’re trying to draw, which the person in the song is trying to do, draw to the button, and you’re throwing hack-weight, it means you’re too heavy. You’re sliding right through the house."
(Full Interview Here)
ON THE SUBJECT OF JOCK v. NERD, look: I don’t want to make too much of this.
OF COURSE I was being somewhat reductive for the sake of comedy.
BUT ESSENTIALLY I was talking about a difference of philosophy that sort of begins in high school, around the time most people are exposed to team sports and math, and they choose a path.
JOCKISM IS NOT ABOUT ATHLETICS per se. It’s a philosophy–of certainty vs. endless nerdish questioning; of happy conformity, vs. nerdish loner ostracisim. Jockism is suspicious of complexity, because that’s how you lose games. It’s more comfortable with what it can see, touch, feel, punch.
JOCKISM actually a great way to win a sports game or a ground war. Buts, gratefully, in this country at least that’s not what most adults ever have to do in their lives.
NERDISM conveys a certain comfort with technology, a certain faith in science to be sure, but also, it builds its teams around abstractions, ideas, weird enthusiasms. From Battlestar Galactica to cosplay to spirit photography to political news to sports, paradoxically sports*, and, well, the idea of free and fair elections in Iran.
AS THE INTERNET is the greatest idea propagation engine ever invented, It’s no a surprise that global geekism is on the rise
I SAID ON FRIDAY HOW CURIOUS it was that the fate of the protesters in Iran is so strangely entwined with the sleep schedule of the geeks maintaining the servers at twitter and YouTube.
THAT THE PROTESTORS’ STRUGGLE IS VISIBLE, on a granular, person by person level, gives them optimism, and it gives us a new window upon a remote land and culture.
WHAT WE SEE: similarity.
YOUNG PEOPLE, CLOSER TO US in wardrobe, vision, and optimism, than we might have thought. And though great divides may yet separate us, the protestors are similar in at least one way: they all use the internet. And not in the insidious, demonizing way we were warned of, to recruit terrorists and plan attacks on civilians. But in the most geekish way: to subvert authority with an idea.
WHEN IT HAS COME to democratizing the Middle-East, we’ve seen two different approaches.
ONE, INCREDIBLY JOCKISH: an invasion, a top-down imposition of a new kind of order.
THE OTHER, IS DIFFUSED, SPONTANEOUS, founded on ideas and spread by technology. If the protestors in Iran have never heard of Dr. Who, their efforts now are undeniably geekish.**
WE’LL SEE which effort is more successful. And I mean this truly, for it is the essence of geek to admit: I do not know.
WE’LL SEE.
*(AS I’VE MENTIONED BEFORE, Any fantasy baseballist has more in common with someone who dresses as an orc on weekends than an actual athlete, because they are analyzing and processing massive data, and communicating with unknown others on the web.)
** WHICH IS NOT TO SAY that they won’t need to organize some jockish kick-ass conformity before it’s all done.
Today was Day 4 and she biked all 59 miles (uphill, to 12,000+ feet). In fact, she's biked the whole thing ...minus four miles in a sag wagon. She sounds tired but great -- and quite proud of herself :)Tomorrow she does Independence Pass to Aspen (one of the most beautiful stretches of road I've ever seen) and has a little tribute for Wendy when she reaches the top.I think this little adventure is exactly what she needed.
Vermont Public Radio's Steve Zind is not in Iran, but he has family and friends there, and via Twitter has been passing along instant messages and other news he has received from the streets of Tehran over the last couple of days. It has the immediacy and confusion of live reportage…..