Thursday, August 07, 2008

American vs. Mexican passport experiences

My passport was full and I’m starting an international trip tomorrow, so I spent part of today waiting in line at the San Francisco Passport Center. The bureaucracy was quick and easy; getting to the bureaucracy was the part that intrigued me.

The building the passport center is in is unmistakably a Federal building. Largely windowless cement walls, lots of cameras, a big sign on the door warning that the office is open only by appointment. Upstairs, in the office, was a scene that could perhaps be best described as cult-of-personality dictatorship meets Department of Motor Vehicles. After passing through the metal detector, I was instructed to take a number and wait a bit more than an hour in a big room full of rows of plastic chairs for my number to be called. An armed guard walked in circles around the room, constantly and intently scanning the crowd. The agents worked behind bulletproof glass. On the wall behind the agents were three pieces of decoration: A picture of George Bush, a picture of Dick Cheney, and an American flag.

Having finally been called up to one of the windows and been told to leave my passport and come back at 3, I walked down Folsom Street to my office. Passing through a sort of no mans’ land – a section of SoMa that neither Downtown nor Waterfront development has yet encroached upon, I came upon the Mexican Consulate, where the crowd was presumably on a mission similar to my own. Rather than being cooped up in a room, people milled about outside. Most intriguing, I thought, was the outdoor passport photography “studio,” set up in a vacant lot next door. I’m sure there’s lots of unpleasantness in the Mexican immigrant to the US experience, but the Mexican Consulate just looked like more fun than the American equivalent.

Monday, August 04, 2008

What I've been up to

If anybody is still checking my blog -- and that seems like a stretch, given the months of persistence it would have required -- you'll have noticed that I've been pretty quiet here lately. Where have I been?

I suppose the story goes back to mid-March, as I was completing my gradual withdrawal from my old job at PCH, where I'd been working on various developing country Internet issues for the last five years. I was vaguely intending to become far more research focused and had been applying for research jobs. Then I got a call from ServePath, where I'd done some network architecture work as a consultant last time I was between jobs five years ago, asking me to come in and do some more consulting. I agreed to stay a month, and I've been there ever since, working with a great group of people on a variety of network architecture projects. Most recently, I've been working on network infrastructure for GoGrid, an automatically provisioned virtual server system, kind of like Amazon's EC2 (but better, of course), which is turning into a really neat project.

When I haven't been working on that, I've been working on a few smaller consulting projects, working on course materials for a class I'll be teaching for the first time a week from now, and sort of taking advantage of yet another beautiful California summer by still getting out on my bike occasionally. I've also managed to fit in some very nice trips: Two weeks in the Czech Republic and the former East Germany at the beginning of the summer, and a week in New York a month later. I'm off to Kathmandu and then Bangkok a few days from now -- turning what used to be my job into a self-supported hobby, I guess.

So, life is being a lot of fun, but also incredibly busy. I keep finding things I intend to write about, but in general the moment has passed before I find the time and motivation. As overly-trendy and Web 2.0ish as it sounds, one sentence Facebook status updates seem to be more my speed these days. I suppose the best advice if anybody really wants to hear from me -- besides phoning me of course -- is to friend me on Facebook.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

A question on headlight security

I've got an old mountain bike that I use for commuting and around-town riding. Since I use it for lots of short trips, sometimes when I'm in a hurry and sometimes when I don't want to be carrying lots of stuff around, my goal for the bike is to just be able to lock it up and leave it without having to worry about it too much. This means the ease of disassembly that I like on my nicer bikes is not acceptable. I don't need it to be ultra-secure (ultimately, the bike isn't worth all that much), but need it to not be the low hanging fruit on any given bike rack.

The easy part of securing the bike was getting rid of all the quick releases. I replaced the quick release skewers with allen-wrench skewers and gave up on trying to get the lock through the wheels a year ago, and haven't lost any wheels. I figure my wheels are about as likely to get stolen in this configuration as the allen-bolted parts are on other bikes, and I'm fine with that level of risk.

The next step was to go about securing my Cateye headlight and taillight, which proved to be a little more difficult. They're designed for really easy removal, but cutting the quick release tabs off the lights (such that releasing them from their brackets would require a small stick or screwdriver, as well as figuring out where to stick the tools) has so far kept anybody from removing the lights from their brackets. The Cateye taillight bracket uses a phillips head screw to clamp it to the seat post, and that one appears to be secure enough. What I haven't figured out is how to keep people from removing the headlight bracket from the handlebars. Cateye's headlight brackets are designed to be installed and removed without tools, and I haven't quite figured out how to get around that.

The first headlight I had on the bike had an older-style Cateye bracket, with a quick release lever that then had to be unscrewed a bunch of turns. It looked possible to replace the quick-release with a more conventional screw, but I hadn't gotten around to it yet when the light got stolen. $30 later I had a new headlight, but with a harder to modify mounting bracket. The new ones have a plastic ring that gets turned to tighten the bracket, meaning there's no hardware-store-purchasable screw that can replace it. I contented myself with tightening it to the point where it was really difficult to turn the other direction, and figured that at $30 per headlight -- less than the price of a tank of gas -- I could afford to replace it occasionally. Getting it off wasn't going to require tools, but required enough turns of the plastic ring that it wasn't going to be a quick process either. That one lasted eight months, but got stolen at the North Berkeley BART station last week. I replaced it with an identical headlight, to which I made the same set of modifications. The new one lasted two days, before getting stolen at the same bike rack as the last one. Presumably, if I replace it the same way, it will get taken by the same thief in a similar amount of time.

I suppose I could start buying headlights in bulk, and my headlight expense wouldn't look so bad if I compared it to downtown San Francisco car parking, but still I think $30 every two days is more than I'm willing to pay. Besides, doing the modifications to make the light last that long takes a while.

So, now the lighting question: How do I make the light stay on my bike? Does anybody still make headlights that bolt onto the bike by default, without modification? If I can find an older Cateye bracket, where the quick release thing should be replaceable with a hardware store screw, will it be compatible with newer Cateye headlights (which are a lot brighter than the old ones)? Or should I install yet another new Cateye bracket, but squirt some superglue into the thumb screw? I'm assuming in the superglue case, I could cut the plastic strap on the bracket if I really needed to take it back off.

Oh, and if anybody encounters somebody selling a pair of Cateye HL-EL220s with the quick release tabs broken off, they're mine.

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Peaceful non-torch-relay protests

The Olympic Torch Relay was supposed to go past my consulting client's office today, so some co-workers and I went outside to watch.

The torch relay got moved by protest-scared organizers to a previously-undisclosed and spectatorless route, so we didn't see that. What we did see was one of the most peaceful and harmonious protest/counter-protest sets I've ever seen. Bands of anti-China and pro-China protesters marched down the Embarcadero in large numbers, sometimes with the two sides trailing each other, and sometimes mixed into the same groups. I saw no violence and no arguments. Everybody seemed to be getting along -- a model of civil discourse.

I'm sorry not to have seen the torch, but I'd have been more sorry to have missed what I did see today. And I'm sad the world missed receiving the message that could have been sent by including the torch in today's demonstration of peaceful free speech.

I took lots of pictures.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

George Lakoff on why Obama is going to win

I saw a fascinating talk by George Lakoff yesterday, on why he thinks Barack Obama is going to win the Presidential race. Obama talks in ways people think, he said, while Hillary Clinton and much of the Democratic establishment not only don't, but don't understand that they're doing anything wrong. Obama talks in terms of ideology, and then brings up issues to fit the ideology. Clinton talks about issues, and then tries to make the ideology fit the issues.

Here is Lakoff's Huffington Post article on the topic. Like the talk, it's interesting reading.

Many thanks to Sylvia Paull for organizing yesterday's session

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Berkeley and Military Recruitment

Berkeley, where I live, has been in the news a lot in the last few weeks, The City Council, at the urging of some protesters, passed a resolution saying Marine recruiters weren’t welcome in town. It’s been controversial, and has been being pitted as yet another liberal vs. conservative battle. That perspective is unfortunate, as there are plenty of good liberal arguments against the actions of the protesters and the Council.

The war in Iraq has been a series of tragic and perhaps malicious errors on the part of the US Government’s civilian leadership. But even if the protesters were protesting military recruitment in general (which they’re not, but more on that later), their protests would be misguided. The US has been a remarkably stable democracy for over 200 years in no small part because our military follows orders from the civilian government. No matter how much many of us in Berkeley take pride in thinking for ourselves and not following orders (I would certainly make a terrible soldier), our military following orders is something we should be very happy about.

Countries where militaries second-guess civilian governments abound in the world – Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Thailand to pick some recent examples – and the results are not good. Over and over again, all over the world, elected governments do things that spark protests. Militaries decide their help is needed and overthrow the elected governments. Populations cheer briefly, and then discover that their military rulers are less competent and less responsive than their elected leaders were. By that point, it’s too late. Election mechanisms have had to be declared invalid to justify the coups, the military leaders are afraid of personal consequences if they give up power, and chances are several of what would have been election cycles go by before the situation gets resolved, often violently.

We in Berkeley may not like what our military does, but if we believe in democracy – our right to elect our leaders, and our right to protest – we should be thanking them anyway. But we also need to recognize the responsibility imposed on us by having a powerful military that does what our elected leaders tell it to. Because the military does not have a choice about what battles it goes into, we who elect the government have a responsibility to the military, and to those our military is told to help or attack, to elect a government with good judgment. I’m all for protesting the war, but those who do so should direct their anger where it belongs: at the President and Congress, not at our high level military officials, and certainly not at people with no decision making authority in a local recruiting office.

All that said, the targeting of the protests is perhaps less of an issue than what the protesters and Council have asked for. They have not asked for an end to military recruiting; they have asked for an end to military recruiting in Berkeley. There might be confusion about whether this was an ideological or jurisdictional stance, but they’ve answered that with rhetoric about military recruitment being a violation of Berkeley’s pacifist traditions. This follows campaigns in previous years to get military recruiters out of the local high school, in the guise of keeping Berkeley’s young people safe. This, I believe, is where the protests go from being a misguided publicity stunt to being blatantly self-serving. The protesters are not only protesting the wrong people; they’re protesting the wrong thing. They’re not asking for an end to a war pursued by their own elected government. They’re just asking to have it fought by those from less powerful towns.

I will grant that slipping into that sort of self-interest is tempting. At a time when US military action was mostly humanitarian, my high school friends and I used to take great pride in the things we had said to get the local Army recruiter to stop bothering us. Sergeant Maxwell was pretty annoyingly aggressive. After the 9/11 attacks, one of the first things I did was to read the rules on the military draft, and was quite glad to see that my chances of getting drafted were very low. I like to think that I have more to contribute to the world than I could contribute by being shot at, but realistically so do most of the people in the military. In other words, I’m a wimp, I’ve let my government’s war become somebody else’s problem, and even recognition of that won’t make me go enlist. But the US does need a loyal military, and those of us who aren’t part of it ought to be all the more grateful to those who are.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Press

Breaking months of silence in this blog...

I appear to have made it into newspapers or newspaper websites twice in the last couple of weeks:

http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/1010/p01s01-ussc.html (I'm in the fifth to last paragraph on the last page).

And, much more fun:

http://www.abqtrib.com/videos/2007/oct/17/147/