Archive Page 8

Wine DB

Sherie and I enjoy wine. Reds especially, well Ben enjoys reds especially. And currently, Zins more especially…(Pause as I sip from the glass on my desk.)

So we occasionally visit a winery for entertainment. We are not actually that picky, as we can find a wine to enjoy anywhere, and often choose some moderate price stuff (Can you say 2 buck Chuck?). But after several visit to Rosenblum, because it is close to where we live and on our circuit, Sherie fell for the sales pitch of being on the wine club. So we are now Red Rangers at Rosenblum. And we also are on the club at Amador Cellars; a bit farther away, but owned by fiends of Sherie’s from the old days.

Now, in a wine club, you agree to buy some amount of wine that they pick out for you regularly. Usually several bottles every few months, at our level of commitment. And usually I like most of it, although you don’t get more than a bottle of anything, as these are meant as intro samplers to get you to buy more. Anyway, we sometimes buy more, and over time we have some many dozens of bottles in the garage “aging” or just waiting for us to bring them upstairs.

Now, I also buy less expensive “everyday” wines to drink, and many of these also end up in the garage. Which leads to the problem: what do we own, and where is it? Should we drink this bottle now, or wait to open it? Did we drink that special bottle I remember, or not? So I decided in my spare time to make a database of our wine collection that Sherie could access from her Mac laptop, and me from my PC desktop.

I decided on using Open Office Base instead of MS Access, as we don’t have MS for the Mac. And I am trying to learn to use Open Office regularly, for resume reasons. After a few days of work, we have a db that works pretty well. Some bugs yet, and it still resides on the embedded db on either local machine. So it is not a true “multi-user networked db,” which was the goal. Maybe I will get there sooner or later. See the picture above.

Anyway, we both have gotten carried away looking up info on the web about or wine, pasting text and pictures. After putting labels on the bottle tops, I can even tell at a glance what is where. And with a few reports, I can see at a glance what is ready to drink.

Email me if you want to share the work for your own collection. Maybe you can share back your bug fixes, because I have a place or two where I could not figure out the Basic to get it to do what I want. (Not that I am not a programmer, but a writer.)

Book Review “The Echo Maker”

I finished reading “The Echo Maker” by Richard Powers, a book I found in an airport book shop. The story centers on a character who has to put his mind-self back together after a very bad car crash. The setting is Nebraska in near current times, with a back story of the crane migration stop-over in late winter on the Platte.

Interesting because it uses a visisting scientist and popular book author to put forth ideas from (I think) current research on our brains and our consciousness. The reader gets to watch the various characters struggle with their self-image with mixed results. Mostly positive ending, but the professor-scientist characters story didn’t feel it had enough closure.

Quakes Coach is Yallop

Well, Frank Yallop will be back to coach the ‘Quakes, with Doyle as the GM. (LA Times) This should be good news; hopefully we can have a decent team by the second year, and compete in the playoffs by the third year or so.

Book Review “The Art of Cycling”

A while ago, I read “The Art of Cycling” by Robert Hurst. It is an explanation of how to ride your bicycle safely in the modern 21st century American city. Some may say the first chapters on the history/evolution of roadways, bicycles, and cars is long and boring, but it did help me to understand the modern landscape for transport in the city.

As you know, Sherie and I try to use our bicycles for regular transport where we live. We also try to walk. There are many weeks when I never start my car, but let it sit in the garage. So I was excited to read some ideas on how to live this kind of life safely.

Interestingly, the book explains what has come to feel like safe practices to me when I ride. I guess the idea of defensible space/time on a bike should be understood by anyone who drives a car. And anyone who rides a bike need learn these, or let evolution end his stupidity.

Recommended read for cyclists, also good for motorists who may want to understand why a person on a bike may be “in the way.”

Quakes News

So now it is confirmed that Frank Yallop is on board for the ‘Quakes. Even better, there as some writers that have slung some mud at that Galaxative corporate “brand” machine that couldn’t let FY do his job. I am so happy to see Ann Killion let it rip in the Mercury News. Now lets get on with team building, and stadium building, and fan building…

Quakes Coach

Well, Frank Yallop will be back to coach the ‘Quakes, with Doyle as the GM. (LA Times) This should be good news; hopefully we can have a decent team by the second year, and compete in the playoffs by the third year or so.

Riding home in the dark

First commute home after the change back to standard time. My faithful commuter bike has two lights forward, one rear, and I have another rear on my helmet. So I have a “main” and a “secondary” light in each direction. Also reflectors on my wheels (yeah, I left those heavy things on there years ago when I purchased the bike.) and reflecters on my ankles and arms and paniers and..

Well, you get the idea, I am trying to be seen. And I was seen on the way home by all motorists and bicyclists (more below) except for one guy at a four way stop. A large sedan rolled through from my right, just as I was starting up from a “near stop.” It was my turn; in fact, a bus was waiting for me to go from my left. I just slowed a bit to let the sedan go first, and the bus had to pause a bit to wait for me. But I got home safely. And I felt pretty safe too.

I was surprised how many people were still on bikes. Yes, the weather is still pretty nice, just a bit cool. And all bikes I saw had lights! The industry sure has got a lot of LED flashing lights on the road in Berkeley/Albany these days.

Now, I know it is not legal to have a flashing light on a moving bike, but everyone does it, usually front and rear. (My two taillights are typically set this way, and my secondary headlight as well.) I think one is more visible with the blinky setting.

Now lets see how often I can ride this winter, and not chicken out for a bit of rain or whatever….

Loss of MLS Coverage by USSoccerPlayers.com

Letter and reply from me from ussoccerplayers.com quoted below:

Editors:

Thanks for the efforts over the last couple years. I truly morn this loss of coverage from you, as there is a great need for an insightful voice outside the PR machine of MLS. (In fact, I continue to get more and more disgusted with all the spin and hype that the MLS official site calls coverage.) I will miss your voice and analysis.

Ben Lukas

Albany, CA

—–Original Message—–

From: USSoccerPlayers [mailto:newsletter@usnstpa.com]

Sent: Monday, November 19, 2007 10:03 AM

To: benlucky@sbcglobal.net

Subject: USSoccerPlayers: Nov 18, 2007

After several incidences concerning access and basic media relations at the local and league level, the 2007 MLS season will be the last that USSoccerPlayers.com treats as a regular beat. Moving forward, USSoccerPlayers will treat MLS the same way it does the Premier League, focusing on the play of US National Team players.

Annually, we spend around $45k covering MLS in general. This money like the rest of our budget comes directly from the members of the US National Team. It has historically been our editorial position that covering MLS in its entirety allows us to have a regular content schedule past the National Team schedule.

On one occasion this year, we had it confirmed that we were a minor outlet, at the level of glorified fan sites and shouldn’t expect anything past the basic in terms of access and credentials. On another, we were denied a credential for reasons that only discounted the years of work we’ve done covering Major League Soccer.

At the same time, we’ve been told by MLS staffers how much they like our coverage.

We remain one of the only soccer-specific outlets that pays all our contributors, takes every piece through multiple edits, and abides by our own policy for professionalism at games we cover.

Major League Soccer’s media relations is not at the level of the other professional sports, even when it’s staffed by people who have worked in those sports. Where the NFL, NBA, and Major League Baseball provide access, interviews, and raw materials well past Major League Soccer and still manages to run comprehensive league websites, MLS opts for one or the other.

The result is the kind of coverage where writers chase press release material and the majority of articles are responsive rather than the kind of profile or investigative work you read or see with the other sports.

There is better coverage than asking personnel and players the same vapid questions or confirming your allegiance to the project of soccer in America by not straying past ‘how great is it that…’

We are a player-owned outlet, and the players themselves have always been in agreement that there’s no value to yet another attempt at overt public relations.

As an outlet, we have an obvious solution to our specific issues – we pull general coverage. We notified the League of this last week and did not have anybody work Sunday’s MLS Cup final or attend any of the media events associated with MLS Cup.

In no way was this a flippant or easy decision for us. We’ve spent considerable effort and money covering MLS, and hoped to be a part of the solution for better working conditions for ourselves and our fellow MLS journalists. The fans deserve a better product.

Thanks for your time.

Editors

USSoccerPlayers.com


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