Bush's Final F.U. : Rolling Stone
The Bush Administration has been hurriedly cramming through last minute regulation changes in the form of executive orders.
…loaded firearms would be allowed in national parks, uranium mining would be permitted near the Grand Canyon and many injured consumers would no longer be able to sue negligent manufacturers in state courts. Other rules would gut the Endangered Species Act, open millions of acres of wild lands to mining, restrict access to birth control and put local cops to work spying for the federal government.
These executive orders focus squarely on benefiting the bottom line for Big Oil, Coal, Agriculture, Pharma and apparently anyone who has little concern for the well being of their workers. Read the full story and do a little research for yourself. Regardless of political affiliation it’s pretty appalling.
Related articles by Zemanta
- Uranium Exploration Near Grand Canyon
- Bush relaxes wildlife law limits
- Critics blast Endangered Species Act changes
- Bush relaxes rules on Endangered Species Act

The King's Highway: El Camino Real
Ricky Montalvo tweeted last Thursday that he had an idea for an El Camino Real photo project. Recently I too had been thinking about the King’s Highway after visiting a local San Diego Venture Capitalist; specifically, about the significance of the highway to the colonizing Spanish, the rich history associated with it and how it has changed so dramatically over the last 239 years. I thought it would be nice to travel the highway over a series a trips and shoot photos. So, when I saw Ricky’s tweet I direct messaged him a note and asked what he was up to.
Ricky Montalvo wrote:
Between So. SF & San Carlos, on El Camino Real are some of the best retail exteriors and motels I’ve seen. The idea I has was to simply go down that particular section of ECR and photograph the modern w/ the not so modern. Maybe even a “day in the life of” type journal.
Example: http://flickr.com/photos/rickymontalvo/2917159913/in/set-72157607781991439/
Although this is a processed image of mine, I’d like to approach it with more of a neutral look and color. Almost like this: http://www.lizkuball.com/southofcota/work/southofcota_13.jpg
I think you could do the same with your particular section down in SD and then we can publish it and ask the Flickr Community to fill in their parts, since ECR duns over 100miles of urban sprawl.
Thoughts?
-Ricky
Now, Ricky is an amazing multimedia artist and photographer. I, on the other hand, am not. I’m not afraid of embarrassing myself. So, I responded to Ricky with:
That’s awesome! I’ve thought for some time I would like to shoot up and down El Camino b/c it’s quintessentially CA. I had some ideas about the bells, but I like your idea better. Let’s do that. So the point to focus on the particularly urban sections, correct?
Ricky’s final response:
Correct. Nothing OFF El Camino, try to do a contrast of new and old. Get traffic, shops, motels etc. Give it that sense of urban sprawl and 70’s vintage with modern strip malls.
I’m going to take a stab at it this weekend. Let’s compare/colaborate via Flickr. I’ll create a private Flickr Group for us.
-Ricky
I asked Roy Kim, MindTouch VP of Engineering, to join me and Ashby (in case you’re new, that’s my [almost] 3 year old daughter) and we set out this morning. The El Camino Real begins in San Diego at Mission San Diego de Alcalá. This was the first Spanish Mission in California and was founded in 1769. While El Camino Real starts at the mission, in what is now called Old Town, San Diego, the highway breaks up quite a lot in San Diego County and doesn’t actually take shape until past La Jolla near Caramel Valley.
What we photographed will surely be very different from what Ricky shoots this weekend, but we had to capture the start of El Camino Real. We started at the Father Junipero Serra museum in Presidio park. The highway is supposed to begin at Taylor St. and Presidio St., but we found a bell, which are used to mark El Camino Real, above this spot closer to the museum. This must be the southern most bell on the Kings Highway.
After shooting around the Father Serra museum we shot in Old Town itself. Now, the fact of the matter is, today this isn’t El Camino Real, but the shots in Old Town were taken pretty much where the original El Camino Real would have been. The next outing I plan to shoot on El Camino Real near Caramel Valley, which is a suburban landscape with rolling hills and canyons.
I shoot with a Nikon d40x that has a stock 18-55mm lens. The Nikon d40x is a decent camera, but the lens I use is not that nice. Ashby shoots with a Fisher Price Kids’ Digital camera. I do not recommend this kids’ camera. Other than it being nearly indestructible the thing takes terrible photos and is actually difficult to use. For kids, I think a key chain digital camera is a better choice.
The conditions were pretty bad for photography. It was 68 degrees F and overcast with occasional drizzle. Alas, I wasn’t going to change plans on Ashby and we had a lot of fun. Ashby took it all very seriously. She framed her photos and was very excited to show me the shots. “Look at the steps I took a photo of.” “I took a picture of some leaves. Look. Look.” It was frickin’ awesome.
My Photos:
Ashby’s Photos:
For the record, Roy is a much more experienced photographer than myself; so, I’m interested in seeing his shots. And most of all, I can’t wait to see what Ricky comes up with.
>

Go Heels!
When I think of House undergrad library at UNC I’m immediately filled with exam anxiety and thoughts of how hard my life was back when I was a working student struggling to make ends meet. I remember the endless cramming, the sleep deprivation, the stress…errg…
Now, here’s how I’d like to remember House Undergraduate Library:
TARHEELS! TARHEELS! 🙂

Calling Roy…Roy?

I think the bst part of this pose is how he’s kicking up his foot in a frolicking manner. I think “frolicky” would make a good word.
P.S.-
Where are you Roy?
John Adams Thoughts on Government
Upgraded to WordPress 2.7
I just upgraded to WordPress 2.7. Wow, this new dashboard is gorgeous.
A bit chilly tonight
It’s a bit chilly tonight here in San Diego. I finished Robert A. Heinlein’s “Stranger in a Strange Land” this evening. It was a good read. Sex, religion, money, art…cast with a SciFi backdrop. What is not to like?
I’ve also started “John Adams” by David McCullough this evening. I just learned this was the book used to create the HBO mini-series on John Adams. Given my propensity to disdain all things popular I would have selected a different biography of Adams had I known this. Me thinks: great, I’m reading the Britney Spears of biographies.
Truth be told, I actually quite like the book so far. I have recently thought that it important to read about the founders of the United States. For several reasons really. These folks were wildly successful. I figure it could be inspiring. Also, it’s sure to be a nice underdog story and I’m a sucker for the underdog. Moreover, I’m tired of the recent wave of zealotry alleging the United States was founded a Christian nation. I’m curious how true this is and to what religious dogma the founders actually subscribed. Finally, I think when times are rough it’s wise to look back and get perspective.

I sound like a total wanker
I’m pretty hesitant to post this. This is really really old (in MindTouch time, it’s actually only a year old) and is a throw back to when MindTouch was solely focused on building community and adoption. Well, we nailed that out of the park and have since layered atop our community-centrism a business and sales unit. Nonetheless, these are our roots and I’m sharing this Microsoft produced video against my better judgment, after all I think I sound like a total wanker…
I should point out that the message in the video about being the best open source wiki is qualitative and stale. In fact, MindTouch is the MOST popular open source enterprise collaboration platform in the world. MindTouch Deki enjoys millions of users and hundreds of thousands of installations…all in less than three years of a public product wow… According to Sourceforge.net (the most active open source repository) MindTouch Deki is the top .001% of all open source projects.
Here is the Bitrock video. I like there video better. 🙂 Daniel and Erica are wonderful…oh and they have a great product too.
UPDATE: For whatever reasons it seems Microsoft took the videos off YouTube. Got me. Here’s another instance of the MindTouch “documentary”.

WOA….T?
Steve wrote a fantastic article on Web Oriented Architecture (WOA) that was just published At DotNet Developer’s Journal. It starts like this:
WOA, or “web-oriented architecture,” has proven itself as a viable approach to building large-scale, worldwide web services. This article introduces the principles behind WOA, how it is applied, and why it should be used even inside the enterprise.
And ends like this:
We have covered a lot of ground in this article. We defined WOA and REST in broad strokes. Then we put theory to practice and explored how WOA would be applied to an image processing application.
The examples illustrated the benefits of using established representations, such as Atom entries and feeds. The conventions defined by the Atom protocol gave us a well-defined processing methodology. If other processes within our enterprise are modeled using Atom, we will automatically have an intuitive understanding of them. This understanding scales outside of the walls of the enterprise to online web services as well.
We also saw how easy it is to work directly with HTTP, XML, and XPath using a WOA-friendly .NET library, such as MindTouch Dream. Using nothing more than raw HTTP request and response for documentation, we were able to translate resource interactions into running code that required just a few lines. In short, we were able to write our agent code close to the metal and it remained simple.
If you’re technical I encourage you to read in between.





