Return to form
Sun Aug 09, 2009 22:57 (UTC -5)Well, now what?
During my trip to Europe, I spent so much time writing for this blog that I thought I had almost forgotten how to write normal posts. You know, ones that don’t include 18 pictures or chronicle everything you’ve done over a period of several days in minute detail. Ones that have how many links at the end? Two? Three now? Is that too many? Whatever. I come across a lot of cool links. (I actually did forget at one point.)
Before the trip, I had messed around with panoramic photography, aided by Hugin and Autopano-SIFT. During the trip, I made sure to take panoramic pictures whenever I saw something particularly breathtaking (or wide). Well, they wouldn’t be panoramas until I stitched them together, but you know what I mean. Now that I have free time (and a reasonable amount of processing power), I’m making them. You can see woefully tiny versions in a dedicated Facebook photo album that I’m continuously updating. Maybe when I’m done with all of them, I’ll put them on this site. Maybe. (I get charged for exactly how much storage and bandwidth I use at all times.)
I’ve also spent the past few days playing Peggle at TJ’s house (again) and having dinner with some relatives I don’t often see (again). Apparently a lot of my relatives have been reading this blog as well. The ones without computers have been reading the print version courtesy of my dad’s laserjet. The attention wasn’t just on me but also on my second cousin Jared, whom I hadn’t seen since he was yea high. Turns out he’s the lead singer of a band back home in Minnesota. Pretty cool. (Minnesota or the band? Probably both.)
Random observation: I just realized that my last post wasn’t my first called “Back in the USA.” The automatically generated post slug (“back-in-the-usa-2″) in the URL tipped me off, so I got curious. Although I rarely leave the country, I wrote about my friend Kevin being back in the USA after a trip to Honduras in 2005. The title of my last post was a reference to the Chuck Berry tune of the same name, continuing my streak of (mis)appropriating song, movie, and book titles; schoolyard rhymes; Olive Garden dishes; and other familiar phrases.
Just as I’ve written about my trip to Europe, a BBC correspondent writes about what it was like to spend eight years in the USA.
Dead At Your Age is a site that can tell you what famous and accomplished people you’ve already outlived. Here’s what it says for me today:
You are 20 years and 27 days old today.
That’s exactly half the life of somebody famous. In another 20 years and 27 days, you will have lived exactly as long as Vitas Gerulaitis. He was a tennis player who won 24 singles and who, with Bobby Riggs, lost the 1985 Battle of the Sexes match who died at the age of 40 years, 54 days of carbon monoxide poisoning.
(Via The Presurfer)
Somebody programmed some sort of laser cutter thing to move around just such that it plays the Super Mario Bros. theme. Well done. (Via waxy.org)

2 comments
#1 by Chuck Smith: Wed Aug 12, 2009 14:04 (UTC -5)
I was just thinking you might enjoy reading Adventures in Smalltown America by Bill Bryson. Travels around small towns in the states by a guy originally from Kansas, but who lived most of his live in England. Really cool stuff!
#2 by Jordon Kalilich: Mon Aug 17, 2009 11:23 (UTC -5)
Now I remember: you showed me a bit of the book. I should check it out. I’ve heard a lot of good things about him.