Autoblog: “Honda has announced that next year it will cease motorcycle production at its Marysville, OH manufacturing plant. That facility’s output, along with that of the Hamamatsu, Japan factory, will be shifted to the the company’s brand new bike plant in Kumamoto next year.”
Category Archives: Weblog
Home Again
Tammy and I made it back to Springfield safe and sound. Â What’s more important is that we both are rested–mentally. Â A weekend in one of our favorite places is usually enough to help us relax but the weather cooperated with a couple of fantastic days of sunshine. Â I’ll try to write more in the next couple of days and post a picture or two.
12 Years Man!
Paraphrasing a line from Grosse Point Blank, it’s been 12 years (man!) of marriage with Tammy. Our official anniversary is February 29th, a date that appears every four years and since we were married in 1996, an election year, I run for “re-election” each anniversary.
The first few years were tough to learn how to be an adult in an adult relationship. I knew that Tammy and I were meant to be together and that’s what kept me going. Being in a strong marriage is hard work and I’m glad I put in the effort. I’ve been rewarded with a lifelong friend, wife, and partner. She’s invested the time in me to make sure I can realize who I am other than “Tammy’s husband” and that’s something that few others in my life were willing to do.
Many people talk about the importance of another person when their life is “saved” through a near-death experience. Tammy saved me from a life of mediocrity and gave me the chance to step away from the shadows of the past and become a much better person.
I love you Tammy. Happy Anniversary.
New Software
GusMueller: “Acorn 1.1 has been released, woot. And it’s about time too- the ‘intro’ price was starting to look a bit permanent. You can read the release notes on the Acorn wiki.”
Congrats to Josh Marshall
Jarrett House North: “The world seems to agree. Having won a George Polk Award for legal reporting, TPM’s crowdsourced investigatory model now stands as a new high water mark in what lowered transaction costs can do to journalism. No matter how quiet, distributed, and seemingly boring, no matter how voluminous the documentation in which the offense is buried, you can now count on one thing: bloggers will be there to put the pieces together and spell out the uncomfortable truth.”
ICA & CA Habitat for Humanity Pattern Book
Veritas et Venustas: “Development practices over the course of the last 60 years have eroded, and in some places obliterated, this great American tradition. Instead of building mixed-income neighborhoods, we have built single-income subdivisions isolated from each other.”
R2D2 knit hat
MAKE Magazine: “This R2D2 knit hat from the Craft: Blog was just too geek-chic to not cross-post here.”

"Tenderizer" ring
MAKE Magazine: “Ken Goldman’s ‘Tenderizer’ ring”

Knit gas-mask hat
For the knitters who read this weblog…
Boing Boing: “Craftster’s Teriyakimoto knitted this (non-functional) gas-mask hat for work and play”

A Vacation for Steve
I’ve been in Phoenix for the last few days for a conference. Normally that would sound really boring, but not this time. One of the vendor that [we](http://dazzee.com) represent is [Secure Computing](http://securecomputing.com). Each year they hold a partner conference where they unveil not only some of their latest and greatest gear, they educate the higher-level partners how to take better advantage of the sales “channel” system.
This year, the owner of our company was going and invited me. Due to a scheduling conflict, our most senior engineer, Eric Goethals, came along instead. So far we’ve had quite an adventure. I’ll save that for the next post.
Right now, I’m looking at a pair of these on the floor of my suite:
I spent the afternoon at the [Bob Bondurant School of High Performance Driving](http://bondurant.com) as part of a group outing. We got a chance to take a Cadillac CTS on an autocross course and ride in the passenger seat of a brand new Corvette coupe! Eric and I buddied up for the autocross: I ran one test and two timed laps in the driver’s seat while he rode shotgun. It was fantastic! Eric’s time in the second chair paid off since he beat my time by more than a full second.
After our half of the group was done, we swapped sides of the facility and jumped in the passenger’s seat of a 2007 Corvette for two “hot laps”. Two very experienced and professional drivers made two quick laps of the facility’s short course. Eric took and early ride and pronouced it “awesome”. I waited for a late ride and got the pleasure of two “four wheel drifts”. The tires had heated up to be less sticky than you might think, so the first and last big sweeping arcs were taken in full drift with opposite lock on the steering. That meant, at 70 miles an hour, we were turning left with *all four tires* without traction and the steerwheel turned all of the way to the *right*.
It’s a moment I’ll never forget.
Heading in to the souvenier portion of the offices, I scored the shoes you see above. They are from a company called Piloti which makes racing shoes. These are the less serious models that are not fire-retardant but they are arresting red as you can tell. I also snagged a grey and yellow workout shirt, but it looks like I won’t be wearing it.
The owner of the school, Mr. Bondurant, addressed our group and passed out awards for fastest (and slowest) times on the autocross course. After the formalities were over, I asked him for an autograph and he graciously obliged. Tomorrow is the 40th anniversary of the school and meeting the founder and historic racer was the penultimate moment.
Tonight is an awards dinner for partners and I’m wearing the shoes. I want everyone to know just how much I enjoyed my day.
