Christmas Break

Last Christmas, I got Neverwinter Nights and spent the whole break playing it.  This Christmas, Lisa got me a Nintendo DS Lite.  And, well, I nearly spent the entire break playing it.  I did get a lot of home improvements done too (installed a sink [pedestal sinks are hard to install just because there isn’t any room to work behind them], installed track lighting in the kitchen, as well as lights under the cabinets, installed shelves in the nursery, etc), so it wasn’t as bad as last year.  But, I did play enough to win The Legend of Zelda, the Phantom Hourglass.

Phantom Hourglass was pretty cool.  It really takes advantage of the touch screen.  I never used the buttons at all.  So, it was an interesting game playing experience.  It was a bit repetitive on some of the dungeons, but otherwise, was fun to play.

If anyone out there has a Nintendo DS Lite and has recommendations for games, I’d really like to hear them.  I’ve got Madden 08, Age of Empires, and Lego Star Wars: The Complete Saga on my wishlist, but if there is anything else I should look into, please let me know.

Car Trouble in Boston

I forgot to mention maybe the most “memorable” part of my trip to Boston.  Our flight out, back home, left at 7AM (well, really, closer to 8AM, but I read the itinerary wrong and we got up early to get there for a 7AM flight).  So, I got up at 4:30AM to meet Chris at his hotel and catch a taxi to the airport.  At the same time, a guy was delivering the morning paper and had his truck parked in the roadway in front of the hotel.  The taxi guy pulled up next to the truck and I got in on the side next to the truck.  As I was getting in, and the door was open, the truck pulled away.  The door of the taxi caught on the truck and was damn near ripped off its hinges.  I pulled it shut with a slam, and it seemed to close.  So, off we went.

But, when we got to the airport, the taxi driver looked over the door and, clearly, there was some damage.  The door didn’t open or close very cleanly.

I felt pretty guilty.  But, at the same time, I didn’t feel it was all my fault.  I felt both the taxi driver and the truck driver were at fault, at least partially.

The taxi driver wanted us to just give him some money to pay for the damages.  Feeling as guilty as I was, I wasn’t at all sure what to do and, compounded with the early hour, I was not being very coherent or helpful.  Fortunately, Chris told him we wouldn’t just give him cash, but if he gave us a phone number, we’d do what we could when we got home.  The guy didn’t want to give us a number, it was cash or nothing.  So, we left without doing anything.

I felt bad, but didn’t know what else to do.

The season is over.

Well, there is still another game in our fantasy season, but I think I can officially declare my season over.  I’m playing our league leader this week, my brother Dave, he who has Brady and Moss, and the Patriots have a pretty lousy game.  I’m thinking, “Hey!  I have a shot!  I can beat Dave if my team does even average.”  Well, my team doesn’t do just average, they stink up the place!  1 point from Shaun Alexander.  3 points from Marion Barber.  15 points from Peyton Manning.  Only three of my players broke double digits!  And, to give you a real sense of how bad I did, my best player was my kicker, Rob Bironas!  Ugh!

So, I think I’m almost certain to finish last this week.  I was last coming into this week and I will be last this week.  Only a miracle next week would change things.  So, I will have the first pick next year.  Which is a quandry itself.  Do I use it on the best rookie prospect, like Brian did on Adrian Peterson?  (By the way, how about those Vikings?  They might make the playoffs!  Very cool!)  Or do I try to get the best player available?  Or do I trade it to some sucker, er, I mean, other owner for fantasy gold?  Lots to think about this year…

The Crucible of Liberty

The week after Thanksgiving, which Lisa and I spent in Idaho visiting our families, I went to Boston for the Materials Research Society’s Fall Meeting. I was a co-organizer of a symposium on novel nuclear materials, which I think turned out very successfully.

In any case, I’m a history buff, particularly on early American history (Revolutionary War and Civil War periods, in particular). I was in Boston for the MRS meeting 3 years ago or so. That time, it was horribly cold, so cold I didn’t really want to be outside. However, I did want to visit some of the sites of this historic city, so I did wander from the convention center towards the heart of the city, following the so-called Freedom Trail. I saw a couple of graveyards, and some other sites, but nothing too much. And then I reached that god-aweful City Hall building. I looked at hideous building, shivering in the cold, and thought “What the hell am I doing out here? There isn’t anything to see!” And so, I wandered back to the hotel.

Well, this time, it wasn’t so cold. And, when I got to the City Hall, and looked at it with a mixture of both disgust and awe — awe that such an ugly building could be built — I decided to see what was on the other side. And THAT is where historic Boston is. I wandered a bit around the true heart of the city and saw some pretty cool sites. There was the oldest Mall in America, which probably, considering our consumer culture, should be one of the most important sites in the country! I saw a pretty impressive cemetery, overlooking the harbor. And, I visited Paul Revere’s house.  Which was very cool. The house itself isn’t overly impressive, but just the sense of history associated with the house, and the description of how the family lived (a couple of tid bits:  many early Americans didn’t celebrate Christmas, as they felt that was against the spirit of Christianity to ritualize such holidays (though it isn’t clear if Revere’s family did or did not celebrate Christmas); the master bedroom doubled as a parlor for entertaining and many rooms had dual uses like this; and Revere had a total of 9 kids and while they didn’t all live in the house at the same time, the ones who did shared one room).

I also visited the Green Dragon tavern, which is the place that Revere and other revolutionaries met to get a pint and talk.  I don’t know if they maybe planned some of the revolutionary activities there or not, but many of them often gathered there.  I asked if they had a souvenir glass, but, alas, they did not.  Seems like a pretty cool marketing opportunity to me:  “The Green Dragon, where freedom was discussed over Boston’s best beer.”  Ok, maybe they could do better than that, but something.

Anyways, it was a much better visit than the first time.  I appreciated much better the city and what it means to American history.  There is still a lot to see, but seeing as how the MRS is always in Boston, I’m sure I will be there more than a few more times.  Maybe it will be warm enough for one of those visits to really spend a good day getting to know the city.

The Golden Compass

I’ve been meaning to read Phillip Pullman’s His Dark Materials series for a while.  But, I just haven’t found the time.  I even bought the first book in anticipation of the movie, but didn’t get it read before the movie came out.  Instead of waiting until I got to it, Lisa and I went to see the movie adaptation this past weekend.

First, some comments on the movie itself.  I liked it.  It wasn’t perfect.  My main problem with it was the pacing.  I felt that there was too much action, from the point of view of getting me to care for the characters.  I think I was meant to be much more emotionally involved in the characters than I had the time to do.  For example, the scene when Lyra tells Yorik the bear how much he means to her, well, I didn’t get the feeling that there was any reason for her to feel so strongly for the bear.  I think it is likely that, in the book, the relationship between the two characters is much more developed, but in the movie, it was just too fast paced for that relationship to be developed.  So, I think they intended for me to be more involved with the characters than I was.

But, the story was very cool; I really enjoyed the world Pullman created.  And the effects were done well.  I didn’t like the flying witches in that their flight didn’t fit in quite as well as some of the other special effects.  And when Lyra is riding on Yorik:  I don’t think CGI guys have that kind of thing down yet.  Animating one character being thrown about by another must be very hard (Legolas on the back of the troll was the worst CGI in The Fellowship of the Ring).  Despite thse short comings, though, I enjoyed it.

Then, there is the whole controversy about the anti-religiousness of the movie.  I understand that the anti-Church tone of the book was toned down for the movie, and I think that it is not too overpowering in the movie.  As Lisa pointed out, the movie feels less anti-religion and more anti-authority, anti-totalitarianist, anti-fascist.  The point of the movie, and I would assume, the book, is that people must think for themselves.  The Magesterium (which, I read somewhere, is what the educational wing of the Catholic Church is actually called) is a totalitarian organization, telling people how to live, how to behave, how to think.  Lyra represents those who would think for themselves.

In this light, I really don’t understand all the protests.  I guess people feel threatened by what they perceive to be an attack on their religion.  However, I have to be honest:  if this movie causes someone to doubt their faith, to question their beliefs, I can’t believe they were very strong in the first place.  If parents are afraid that this movie and the books will corrupt their children, will send them an anti-religion message, then the years of brainwashing they have already experienced just didn’t sink in enough.  If years of hearing the same message from their church, pastors and priests, and parents is overthrown so easily, then maybe the message wasn’t so strongly accepted in the first place.

I think the message of the movie is exactly the kind of thing every child should hear.  They should think for themselves.  If, after watching the movie, kids think about their beliefs and why they hold them, and even if they come out of the experience with even more conviction for their beliefs, that is a good thing.  Kids should be encouraged to think for themselves, to question everything around them, to discover the world on their own.  And if a movie like The Golden Compass can contribute to such behavior, then there should be more such movies.

Blah, blah, blah… I've got the blahs.