Archive for the ‘travel’ Category

Bay Area Living

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

Here are my thoughts on living in the south SF Bay area now that my wife and I have been here for a while:

Pros

  • It is awesome being in such a cultural melting pot
  • The supply of interesting things to do is fantastic
  • The density of technology oriented companies and people is amazing
  • The weather is definitely better than central PA (although not as nice as an area like Santa Barbara)

Cons

  • Housing costs are ridiculous (other costs are higher too, but housing is 3-5x central PA)
  • Depending on time and direction, traffic can be horrible (mitigated for me by working from home)
  • The state government seems really behind the times – my wife and I both had abysmal DMV experiences (the process and technology are busted, the people were friendly)

Notes

  • A thumbs up to meetup.com for making it very easy to find groups of like-minded people to get together for activities
  • The Mercury News’ events section is also handy when looking for things to do

Overall

I am really glad we made the move.  My wife now has a job that she absolutely loves, and besides missing our friends from the east coast, we are both really happy.

In San Jose

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Clio and I made it to San Jose yesterday afternoon.  We are staying in a furnished short term lease apartment while we figure out where we will want to live in the long run. The location is excellent. After living in the suburbs for the last 10 years, it kind of odd that within two blocks of our place there is a big library, a grocery store, movies, and many restaurants and shops.

Getting closer to California

Monday, February 8th, 2010

Our trip out west is got a slow start due to the crazy snowstorm that hit the mid-east, but as of Sunday night we managed to make it to Lincoln, Nebraska.  Hopefully we will reach San Jose on Wednesday.

Moving out west (in a bit)

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

My wife and I have decided to move to the San Francisco/SiliconValley area.  We haven’t set a date yet,  but we are definitely moving sometime in 2010.

You know you are at a classy hotel when

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

the iron is cable-locked to the ironing board.  Welcome to the Best Western in Morgantown, WV!

If you like free seafood, you should live here

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

This is crazy, a hundred million crabs meet at this inhabited island to mate, and then billions and billions of baby crabs make their way back to the sea.

Traveling Man

Sunday, August 17th, 2008

I’ve been traveling quite a lot during the last four weeks (a week in Philly, a 2 day trip to Cambridge Mass to speak at a small presentation at Harvard, 4 days in Rochester NY, and then a week back in Philly).    While in Philly I’ve been working at the Comcast Center.  The building has some neat features.  There is a huge and amazing high-definition screen in the lobby that is a tourist attraction all in itself and shows  a rotation of short clips that range from merely cool to eye-popping.  On the 43rd and 44th floors is a cafeteria that gives an incredible view of the city and surrounding area (I’m not sure if you can access the cafeteria unless you have a badge).  If you are in downtown Philadelphia, it is worth heading over to the corner of 17th street and JFK Boulevard to check it out.

Earlier in the week  I was eating lunch at that cafeteria and looked up and saw the Direct TV blimp was circling the Comcast Center, which I thought was pretty funny (since they are direct competitors).  I think it would have been ever cooler if they skinned the blimp to make it look like a pirate ship.

On nights I have been bored I’ve started walking down to the Ritz at the Bourse theater, which has a nice selection of independent and foreign films.

If you have any interest in medical books (my interest in sports medicine has certainly increase recently), there is a wide selection of medical books at the Thomas Jefferson University Bookstore at 1099 Chestnut Street.   I picked up a copy of The 5 minute Sports Medicine Consult which has been neat to look through.

Indoor Skydiving

Monday, June 2nd, 2008

(I’m in the yellow helmet, the instructor is wearing the white helmet)

I wanted to do something fun when I was in Orlando on Friday afternoon and I flipped through a few of the tourist coupon books. I came across an ad for SkyVenture, which has an indoor skydiving facility and looked really interesting. I called and made a reservation for 2:00 PM.

I arrived at SkyVenture around 1:40 and the facility was interesting. There was a small office building next to a tremendous round tower where the indoor flying takes place. I parked about 30 feet from the tower and you could hear the roar of the huge fan ( ~ 1000 horse power!) that provides the 120+ MPH wind that people float in. I filled out the paperwork (basically a disclaimer saying my heirs can’t sue if I fly into a giant fan and get chopped up in legalese), paid, and then headed over to the tower to watch the group that was currently flying.

There were 5 or 6 people in the group taking turns and it all looked like they were having a lot of fun, but I could tell it wasn’t easy. Some of the people were pros and floated around effortlessly while others needed a bunch of help from the instructor. Towards the end of the session I was watching, the instructors jumped into the air stream and did some crazy almost Matrix-like maneuvers.

Around 2:00 out instructor called for everyone to head upstairs to the class and equipment area. The class consisted of a mother with two young daughters and myself. The instruction was somewhat of a let down, it took about 5 minutes and mostly consisted of the instructor telling us to relax, make small movements and then showing us a few hand signals he would give (raising chin up, and straightening or curling your legs) when in the flight tunnel. We would have to use hand signals because there is no way you can hear over the fan noise if you are in the air stream.

In the classroom there was a table you could lay down on and I expected that the instructor would have us use it to practice the skydiving position but no dice. He did show us the position we should use (stomach facing down, chin up, knees bent at about a 70 degree angle, arms bent), but I felt somewhat short-changed on the instruction since the price per minute of time inside the wind tunnel itself was really high (basically $20-30/minute) and it would have been nice if we could have had a bit of more realistic practice first during the “free” classroom time.

After the class session was over, another customer who had about 10 indoor skydiving sessions under his belt also joined us to get equiped. We got suited with knee and elbow pads, jumpsuits, earplugs, helmets and goggles and then headed down to the wind tunnel entrance.

The experienced guy went first and he was able to float around pretty comfortably. One of the young girls (maybe 10 years or so) went next and she required a bunch of assistance from the instructor. Then it was my first turn (I had paid for (2) 2 minute sessions). The first minute or so was pretty awkward, I would feel like I was getting the hang of it and float for a second and then I would shift position a tiny bit and start flying up, down, or sideways. The floor was a spongy mesh and you were never falling fast so it was no big deal if you hit the ground. The instructor helped guide me sometimes with a hand and sometimes with hand signals. Towards the end of the first flight segment I started feeling more comfortable and then the flashing lights went off indicating my 2 minutes was up and I had to exit so the next person could take their turn.

During my 2nd turn it went a lot smoother, I was able to spend much more of my 2 minute turn gliding around and expending less effort trying to stabilize myself.

This is definitely something I would like to do again next time I’m in a location that has this type of facility. It was a lot of fun and I’d recommend this to anyone. Note that there are weight restrictions, so if you think it might be an issue, ask about it when you call for a reservation.

Shuttle launch was awesome

Sunday, June 1st, 2008

I didn’t bring a useful video camera. Here is a video that someone shot from what appears to be the same viewing area I was at:

Event Collisions

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Don’t you hate it when something interesting comes up and then another cool event is scheduled for the same time? Me too. As I mentioned earlier, I am heading down to Orlando on Thursday to catch the Space Shuttle Endeavor’s launch this Saturday. It turns out that the World Science Festival will be held in New York City the same dates as my Orlando trip. I browsed the schedule and there are a lot of interesting topics. I really wish the two events were happening on different weeks, I’d definitely trek up to the big apple to catch some of the talks.

On the bright side, it is just under 100 hours until Endeavor is supposed to launch and no major snags have occurred yet.


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