Sep 29 2011

Netflix or Qwikster? I Choose Both

Category: Uncategorizedpodrey @ 1:16 pm

Netflix is spinning off its DVD-by-mail service into a new company called Qwikster. Everyone is upset because the prices have been raised, and the ease of use may decrease because it will be two companies instead of one. The split hasn’t fully happened yet, but prices have already gone up and people are leaving in droves.

I’m not leaving, but i will be minimizing my plan. I actually used my Netflix data as a test scenario for work, and then i wrote a blog post about it for my company’s blog.

Conclusion: Keep the web streaming ($8) and 1-DVD-at-a-time mail service ($8). That reduces my current monthly expense by 30%.

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Sep 25 2011

Sunday Somethings, 25Sep11

Category: Uncategorizedpodrey @ 11:00 pm

Others writing the Sunday Somethings: Kerry

Something that makes me happy: The angle at which one has to hold one’s head in order to bite into a taco.

Something i’m struggling with: Well, it’s not me that’s struggling, but our Wii may be on its last legs. A year ago or so it started making this jet-engine noise whenever it was playing a disc, and now it’s flaking out and shutting down randomly.

Something tasty: I love sampling bruschetta whenever i find it on the menu, and i found a great one at Cristo’s, a new Italian/pizza place that opened very near us.

Something from the bridge table: Haven’t been playing much bridge lately.

Something i am reading: Cutting for Stone, by Abraham Verghese

Something happening around the house: The fridge is full of green stuff. I always feel better when i eat more vegetables.

Something i am thinking: We’ve been watching Breaking Bad on Netflix, and just watched the season finale. Things have really gotten out of control here. This is an excellent show.

Something i am looking forward to: Alaska! It’s official – we made our arrangements to visit Nathan and Heather in Alaska over Thanksgiving. As a bonus – Heather and i can continue our tradition of seeing the Twilight movies together, as Breaking Dawn Part 1 will be released just two weeks before i get there.

Something i am hoping: I hope the Braves win the wildcard. They were almost a shoe-in two weeks ago, but they’ve been trying to blow it.

Something random: I like it when strangers ask me for directions.

Something planned: Our book club will meet to discuss A Great and Terrible Beauty. And i’ll have my second night of league bowling.

Something captured: I can only rarely capture Nugent in the house, because he leaves the room if i even go near my camera. I swear, he knows where it is at all times, and leaves the room if i touch it. But this night he was tuckered out and i caught the cute guy snoozing.


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Sep 23 2011

Elevators

Category: Uncategorizedpodrey @ 11:04 pm

This is kind of silly, but elevators fascinate me. Whenever i need to go anywhere, i just press a button and it comes. People all over a building will push buttons, and the elevator prioritizes them appropriately.

Usually, an elevator on the ground floor will tell you where it is. There is not usually a similar indicator on other floors. I have always wondered why this is. I might like to know if it would be faster to walk down the stairs…

I did see this one set of elevators in a fancy hotel that had no buttons. You dialed in the floor you wanted to go to at the moment you pushed the button, before the elevator even showed up. Inside, there were no buttons at all, but there was a digital display that told you which floors it would be stopping on. That was pretty neat, but it didn’t really work, as it was a crowded hotel, and people kept getting onto elevators that weren’t going to the floor they wanted. You just get so used to getting on an elevator when it opens up.

Another thing i’ve wondered is how come you cannot un-push an elevator button. I have never seen that as an available feature. Is it really that difficult to program? Surely not. Sometimes i push the wrong button, why can’t i un-push it? Is it just not worth the effort, since it would only save seconds?

I’ve heard that programming an elevator is a common computer science project in college courses. Do any of you programmers have any insight into this?

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Sep 21 2011

Kate Bosworth and How to Count Cards

Category: Uncategorizedpodrey @ 9:03 pm

At the work conference last week, one of the evening activities was a Blackjack demonstration by Jeff Ma, who was a member of the MIT Blackjack team. The team took a ton of money out of the casinos before they were caught, and who knows, there may even still be an MIT team operating. Ma told us that counting cards is not illegal, although the casinos hate to lose money, so if they find you out, they can and will ban you. All the Vegas casinos know who he is, and while he can go into a casino, he cannot play Blackjack.

He also told us a funny story about making the movie 21. He had a cameo in the movie as a dealer, and so he hung out with the cast. One night, they wanted to take him out to say thanks, and Kate Bosworth (she played Jill in the movie) thought it would be a great idea to go out to play Blackjack! He went in and tried to sit down. The floor manager immediately said, “Dude, come on, what are you doing?” He explained it was just for fun with friends, “Look – it’s Kate Bosworth!” The Floor said he was talk to management. He left, came back, and the verdict was, “Not only are you not allowed to play Blackjack here, but if Kate is playing, you cannot be within 30 feet of her!”

I’ve never played Blackjack for real before, and I wasn’t aware that there is something called Basic Strategy. So, Ma says that generally, any player who doesn’t know what they are doing will give up a 3% edge to the House. If you play Basic Strategy, it reduces the House edge to only .5%. There is a chart (available in Ma’s book) that tells you exactly how to play in all situations, and apparently you can even take that chart with you to the Blackjack table.

Counting cards was simple, yet difficult. Simply add +1 for all cards you see that are 2,3,4,5,6. Neutral cards are 7,8,9. Subtract -1 for T,J,Q,K,A. You have to keep a running count, and know that when the deck is positive, it is a “good deck” for the player. This is because of the known way that the dealer has to play, such as always hitting on 16 or less. A positive count means there are a lot of high cards left, relatively. Especially as the deck runs out and there are fewer cards left. Blackjack is usually 6 decks of cards shuffled together. If there are 16 cards left and the count is +16, then all 16 cards are A,K,Q,J,T. When the deck is favorable to the player, now is when you are supposed to increase your bet sizes as your probability of winning has gone way up.

And that’s basically how they won all that money.

Once you master the basics, it really is a simple concept. The hard part was actually paying attention and doing the math as the cards flew by. At the Blackjack demonstration, our table and dealer counted the deck together, but even then it was hard to remember to pay attention and keep track. I think it would take a good bit of practice – you’d need to be able to put some parts of the process on auto-pilot. It’s the same with bridge – there are things Lance and I do at the bridge table that are just automatic – we don’t have to think about them at all because auto-pilot has taken over. Automating some processes allows you to spend your brain processing time on the important decisions.

The MIT team operated this way – they would have a handful of planted players who would count the decks at the various tables while betting the minimum on every hand. When a table was highly positive, that player would signal to Ma, who was the wildcard. He floated from table to table, betting large amounts of money on tables where the players had the advantage, then leaving quickly with his winnings.

The opportunity to beat Blackjack is waning, though, as some casinos now have an “unlimited shoe” where there is basically an infinite number of cards and you simply can’t count that. I guess it is expensive, because it’s not mainstream yet, but i imagine the door is quietly closing.

Pretty fascinating stuff.

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Sep 20 2011

Denver Doings

Category: Uncategorizedpodrey @ 9:03 pm

Lance and i spent last week in Denver. I was there for a work conference, and then we stayed through the weekend. This was our second week “on the road” as we had spent the previous week at the beach. I think we’re both glad to be back home, and Nugent is certainly glad to see us.

The conference, which our company was hosting for our software users, was superb. I had an easy time of it, too – most staff members who attended had some number of jobs, such as manning booths or live-blogging or holding up time cards for the presenters. My only job was to attend talks and talk to people, make them feel comfortable, and if possible find out how they are using our software and what we can do to help them do their jobs better.

The keynote speakers were amazing – someone called them “Nerd Celebrities,” and they really were. The first keynote was probably the person the attendees most wanted to hear from – our fearless leader John Sall. The second speaker was Jeff Ma. If you don’t recognize that name, then you might recognize the book that was written about him, Bringing Down the House by Ben Mezrich. Or, the movie that was created from that book, 21, with Kevin Spacey. He was part of an MIT Blackjack team that won many millions of dollars by counting cards at Vegas Blackjack tables. He was amazing. His new book, The House Advantage, is targeted toward the business world. One of the great things about this conference – they not only engaged him to give a keynote, but also to give a Blackjack demonstration one evening. He basically taught a whole bunch of software geeks, engineers and scientists how to count cards. Oh my, what has he unleashed should we all go to Vegas?

David Salsburg was another Nerd Celebrity. He wrote a book called The Lady Tasting Tea.  I read it this summer. It is a history of statistics. Sound dry? Well, it wasn’t your everyday page-turner, but to a mathematical person, there are lots of interesting stories and politics involved in the development of statistical methods.

Jonah Lehrer was the final keynote speaker on Friday. He wrote How We Decide, and is probably the most well-known of all the authors. Lance and I have both read his book, which is fascinating. His talk focused around the subject material of the book, which studies how our brains work, how we make decisions. He talked about things like moments of insight, gut instincts, and having a name or word on the tip of your tongue. He was a great speaker.

Lance spent the first two days of my conference in Denver essentially alone in the hotel room playing MegaMan. I was busy with conference activities and didn’t have a whole lot of time to spend with him. However, that changed beginning Thursday night, and we spent the next three days doing all sorts of interesting things in and around Denver.

Denver itself was pretty amazing. First of all, it was absolutely beautiful! You’ll be walking along downtown and turn down a side street, and off in the not-so-distant-distance are these friggin’ gorgeous mountains! The 16th Street Mall was pretty cool, too. It is just a street like all the other streets, but it is home to lots of shops and restaurants, and the only traffic allowed is the free shuttles, which go up and down 16th Street all day long. You get on, you get off, no tickets, no nothing. How nice is that?

Baseball – Thursday night, the conference crowd was planning to go to the Rockies game. I said “See ya!” to them, gave my ticket up to a customer on the wait list, and Lance and I went to the game with the regular people. It is a pretty neat ballpark. Six rows from the very top, there is a row of seats that is painted purple (see Lance below, with purple seats in background). That row represents the point that is exactly 5,280 feet high. Of course we went up there and experienced it. I’ll tell ya, those seats were HIGH and STEEP. We both got a little dizzy looking down. The Rockies lost to the Giants, 5-8.

Dog Agility and Georgeann – Friday, the conference ended at noon. For me, it ended a bit earlier, as I skipped the final bit in order to get ready for our afternoon. For $39 we were able to rent a car with unlimited mileage. We drove 30 minutes south to a town called Castle Rock where my cousin Georgeann was competing with one of her dogs in an agility competition. What a neat thing. There were jumps and teeters and tunnels. I’ll have to write another whole post on the thing. Afterwards, we followed Georgeann back to her house, another 40 minutes south to Colorado Springs. We talked and drank gin & tonic (my first, yum), then went out to this amazing restaurant. I wish I remembered the name. They made their own guacamole, and they did it table-side. I have never cared for guac myself, but this stuff was delicious. One of my first tasks when I get home will be to buy the ingredients and experiment. I could be a real hit if I bring this stuff to dinner parties.

Snooze – Breakfast was at Snooze, which I had heard recommended from multiple people throughout the week. We were two blocks away when we saw a crowd of people hanging out on the street. “What are the odds that crowd of people is waiting outside our restaurant?” Sure enough, they were. It was about 10 am on a Saturday, so of course a popular breakfast house was packed. We were told the wait would be 75 minutes, but luckily it was only about 30, as many people were bailing without telling them. The hostess would call a party’s name, and they would no-show, this happened for about half the names called. The food was SO GOOD. Well worth the wait, even if we had waited the full 75 minutes. Very unique dishes, and very very tasty.

Ballpark Tour – Our “thing” that we’ve been trying to do in any big city that has a baseball team, is take the ballpark tours. We can’t always go to a game, because of course sometimes we travel in off-season months. But we CAN usually get a tour; it seems all of the ballparks have tours available year-round. I find them very interesting, as there is usually lots of history. The Coors Field tour was a little disappointing compared to some of the others. Only four baseball trivia questions for the whole 90-minute tour (Lance went 4-0 on those, by the way). The tour was a female, and i hate to say it, but the women just don’t seem to give the most interesting tours. The best ones are the geezer men. We do enjoy getting down on the field and sitting in the dugouts, though.

OSU Alumni Club – There are Ohio State Alumni Clubs everywhere! We wanted to find one so we could watch Ohio State play Miami, Fl. In fact, there are two alumni clubs in Denver. The first one we tried to go to was so packed we could hardly get in the door, but three blocks away was another one, Maloney’s, which was also dedicated to the Ohio State game. It was a good venue, despite having to watch OSU lose. It turned into a dance club after the game, which was fun for a little while.

The Unsinkable Molly Brown – Margaret Brown (apparently no one called her Molly until Broadway and Hollywood got ahold of her story) and her husband bought very nice home in Denver around 1900 after he struck copper, gold and silver in the mountains after the silver crash and everyone else had left. The house they bought had all the cutting edge technology of the time, such as electricity and running water. Molly Brown is well-known as one of the survivors of the Titanic. The house tour was interesting to me, although I think Lance didn’t care that much.

All in all, a great time. As i said, we’re definitely glad to be home though, getting back into our usual routines.

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Sep 13 2011

Dear BlueRay

Category: Uncategorizedpodrey @ 8:01 am

Dear BlueRay,

I recently had an opportunity to use you at a rented beach house. I thought we were living in an era where everything is modern and technological and wireless and most of all EASY. I have to say, i did not find using you to be at all easy.

Admittedly, it did not help matters that the remote controls for all the TVs in the house did not seem to be synced properly with you. Perhaps you will blame that as the real problem. However, i have the following questions for you, BlueRay:

1) Why does you have a ‘Play’ and ‘Stop’ button on you? Surely if people are expected to use remotes to operate your fancy self, you don’t need silly buttons on the outside.

2) However, you DO have buttons on you, so you DO apparently think people will sometimes lose the remote and need to be able to press ‘Play’. Why don’t you include the other basic buttons as well? Something such as ‘Next Scene’ and ‘Previous Scene’ is all that would minimally be needed in order for people to at least manage to get back to the middle of the movie they had turned off the night before, or, in my case, to Episode 4 of a TV series.

When i was a little girl, we didn’t have you, BlueRay. We had your grandfather, the VCR. VCR had a remote control, too, but he at least also had all the necessary buttons available on his box. I know this because in our house with three children, the remote was always misplaced, and guess who was sent to press the buttons to fast-forward. That would be me, BlueRay. Me.

In the end, we couldn’t even use you, BlueRay. We had to attach a laptop to the TV and watch our DVDs that way. I’m sorry, but i am not impressed. In the software world, we call this a “usability problem.” You might want to talk to your manufacturers about this.

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Sep 11 2011

Sunday Somethings, 11Sep11

Category: Uncategorizedpodrey @ 8:42 pm

Others writing the Sunday Somethings: Kerry

Something that makes me happy: The sound of the ocean.

Something i am struggling with: Mosquito bites galore! In five previous years of this beach trip, we have never had an issue with mosquitoes while we sat outside in the ocean breeze sipping our wine. This year, we all got eaten alive! The funny thing is, of our many trips to the grocery store, no one ever put bug repellent on the list. I think we were all in denial.

Something tasty: Wine is tasty, and the Shull family as a whole consumed a fair amount. I have to say my favorite was a Zinfandel that we tried (can’t remember the label). I don’t think i’d ever had red Zinfandel before.

Something i learned: I learned that i apparently have a very good email archival system at work. I checked work email a few times this week, and oddly three times i was asked to resend something or dig up something. From vacation, i was able to very quickly do this without hassle. I rock.

Some things i am doing towards my goals:

Something i am reading: The Panic Virus, by Seth Mnookin.

Something happening around the house: We have done minimal unpacking so far – just the toiletries necessary

Something i am thinking: I’m really grateful to the Bojangles staff in Tarboro, NC. I left my purse there when we stopped for dinner on the way back from the beach, and didn’t realize it until we were 30 minutes away. Crapola. But we called and they had found it and kept it safe. Along with the Southern biscuits we were served for dinner, they served us a nice dose of Southern hospitality, and the manager called me ‘Sugar” as she handed me my bag.

Something i am looking forward to: A business trip to Denver, CO this week.

Something i am hoping: I’m hoping to find the inner extrovert inside of me this week, as one of my primary functions is to talk to customers and bring back their perspective on our software.

Something random: Ann Taylor is my new favorite store.

Something planned: A ballpark tour at the Rockies stadium. It has become a “thing that we do” whenever we visit big cities – we try to get a tour of the baseball park. They have so much history, so even if you’re only a so-so baseball fan, like me, it’s always fascinating.

Something captured: The beach! It looks so peaceful and tranquil in this photo, but the waves were particularly rough this year.


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Sep 10 2011

Is It Tuesday?

Category: Uncategorizedpodrey @ 2:39 pm

This post was written on Tuesday September 6, and apparently i forgot to press ‘Publish’. Rather than skip it, i have decided to post it late.

Pardon me for forgetting the Somethings this week. I seem to have forgotten what day it is. The beach will do that to you.

Gloating? Why no, i’m not gloating. If i were, i would tell you that as i write this i’m sitting outside with a bottle of beer on the deck of this beautiful beach house.  The deck faces the ocean, which you can see glimpses of about a quarter-mile away, and you can hear the crashing of the waves. We have a constant ocean breeze. The deck, facing East, gets the afternoon shade and is a lovely place to sit and read, or write blog posts. The sky is a Carolina blue with puffy white clouds, and i am wonderfully relaxed. (OK maybe i’m gloating a little.)

The beach has been lovely. The ocean waves near high tide did knock me to my rump and roll me in the sand earlier today, so that i had sand and tiny shells everywhere. I think next time we shall try to go nearer to low tide. Despite that, it’s been wonderful. Beautiful weather so far, though i think we’re due for a little rain in the next few days. No matter.

I couldn’t help checking work email once today, but i only replied to one email to folks in China who already have to wait a day to get any response from us; i figured i wouldn’t make them wait a whole week.

I’ve read two books already and part of a third one. A Great and Terrible Beauty for book club was pretty quick, but i couldn’t wait for it to be over. It was no Hunger Games. Little Bee by Chris Cleave was very good, but sad. I’m halfway through Rudy Guliani’s Leadership. It’s interesting, but today i’m switching back to my Dance with Dragons reread. I need something a little more fun.

We have three dogs with us this year. They have been a source of endless amusement. Zoe is a mini-dachschund, and loves all people. She will crawl into anyone’s lap. Nugent tried to play with her before Yoshi got here, but she is more interested in people than dogs. Now that Yoshi is here, it’s a Nugent-Yoshi humpfest as they try to assert dominance over one another.

It might be time for another nap.

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