Archive for January, 2006

24?

Monday, January 16th, 2006

so saturday night at around 9:30pm, tina and i decided to try to watch 24 hours of 24 season 4 to catch up before season 5′s premiere on sunday. season 4 was on sale for $39.99 at target and tina knew she wanted to buy it so we rushed to target just before close to buy it and started watching at 9:59. we calculate that we have more than enough time to finish all the episodes (~40 minutes each) AND take a 3 hour nap AND make it to church!

about 3 episodes in, i realize that i’ve seen some episodes of season 4 (i have this bad habit of watching shows out of order and not realizing it until i’m rewatching everything in order… i’ve seen most of arrested development season 2, but not much of season 1). then tina, who i thought never saw season 4, tells me she’s already seen season 4… so really we’re watching season 4 for no real reason…. yet we continue to watch.

watching completely throws off my sense of timing. at around 5-6 episodes in, it’s midafternoon for the characters and some time after midnight for me…. i think. i’m really not sure, it really felt like afternoon to me! i think i fell asleep half way through the 12th episode, though i can’t remember anything for sure. to complicate my lack of sense of timing… we’ve been having intermitten 30 second blackouts due to a crazy wind storm. so my alarm clock is flashing since the last blackout and my cell phone is dead since i forgot to charge it… i have no watch!!

we go to bed after the 12th episode. i just went to bed, i didn’t bother setting my alarm because my alarm clock wasn’t even set to the proper time. i wake up sunday morning… erp, i guess it was afternoon. tina actually tried to set an alarm but had set it for 12am instead of 12pm…. so instead of being ahead of schedule (like we were when we went to bed), we end up being behind schedule and unable to finish the remaining 12 episodes before the season 5 premiere that night.

that was my failed attempt at a 24 hour 24 marathon.

as for the show… i’m not sure i’m really a fan of 24. it’s got pretty good action scenes (kinda scary) and some twists. i never really liked season 1… it was kind of annoying how dumb the characters were. it seems like in order to really make the show work, they have to dumb down some of the characters so that jack could rescue them. i saw bits and parts of other seasons and maybe they were a bit better… but i dunno if i’d follow the show continuously. saw the premiere of season 5 last night and it was pretty exciting. some things you could tell would happen even without seeing how season 4 ended. there is an annoying teenage kid (how does one go from moody, untrusting little teenager to willing to risk your life to warn man-who-lied-to-your-mom of terrorists in less than a hour!??! and what makes you think you can even warn him?! just ’cause u hang out with the superspy for less than a hour doesn’t mean you got some of his superspy skills by proximity!!)

dubai anyone?

Sunday, January 15th, 2006

anyone want to go to dubai? they just opened up a mall with indoor snow!!

——————————————————————————
In Dubai, Let It . . . Snow?

By Jonathan Finer
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, January 15, 2006; P01

It might have been shorts weather on a recent winter day in Dubai at the juncture of sand and sea, the air a typically cloudless 85 degrees, the breeze desert-dry. But inside a stadium-size sanctum at the brand new Mall of the Emirates, the forecast called for man-made snow.

So instead of beachwear, I rented a parka and mittens and stepped into a surreal, faux-winter bazaar, where gleeful children flung ice balls, careened down a bobsled run and darted in and out of igloos impossibly out of place in a building whose parking lot is lined with palm trees. Sandal-clad men and women, some also wearing traditional Arab robes and head scarves, looked on in amusement through the mall’s fogged windows.

Ski Dubai, a $275 million wonderland with five sloping runs and a chairlift reaching diagonally into the misty expanse 25 stories above, opened in December, along with a quarter-pipe for snowboarders.

“It really is mind-boggling. You can see your breath,” said Sadia Mahmud, a smiling financial analyst who visited with her 5-year-old son. “You go from the desert to the Alps in just a few steps.”

I had traveled to Dubai (population 1.2 million as of 2003) to see what I had heard was a city rapidly becoming a caricature of excess, a surreal oasis on a horn of the Arabian Peninsula jutting into the mouth of the Persian Gulf. “You have to see this place to believe it,” said a college friend I was visiting on a stopover from Baghdad, where I normally work. He was right.

With a more permissive attitude than their neighbors toward Western-style capitalism and lifestyle features like bars and dance clubs, Dubai’s government has carefully cultivated an exploding economy centered on oil, financial services and, increasingly, real estate and tourism. Even a stock exchange opened in September.

An advantage for travelers is an abundance of swanky hotels and restaurants, although prices ($200 per night and way, way up for luxury accommodations) may seem daunting to those more accustomed to the region’s less lavish locales. Nonetheless, tourists and business travelers are flocking. The number of hotel guests the country has accommodated nearly doubled in the past five years to about 5.4 million per year, according to the tourism office.

The ability of this small city-state — one of seven that make up the United Arab Emirates — to adapt to a seemingly inhospitable geography is first viewed on approach from the air, as an unbroken sea of yellow sand to the west gives way to vibrant green irrigated plots for giant stone houses.

Dubai draws frequent comparisons with Hong Kong, for its role as a financial center linking two cultures — in Dubai’s case, the Middle East and the West–and to Las Vegas for its “top-this” approach to opulence and development. (Most forms of gambling, however, are illegal.) Along the main highway through the center of the city, the scope of construction is simply staggering. Hundreds of large construction projects are underway at once, including dozens of high-rise buildings. Reportedly, about 16 percent of the world’s large construction cranes are in Dubai, a number often cited and difficult to verify. A collage of glass-and-steel skyscrapers, half-built towers and a veritable forest of cranes define the skyline in all directions.

“When my aunt first went to New York and saw the skyline, she told them it didn’t seem like much because she had already been to Dubai,” said my host, Hassan Sattar, a Pakistani investment banker who moved to Dubai with his family last year.

Among them is the world-renowned Burj Al Arab Hotel, built on a man-made island in the Persian Gulf and shaped like a sailboat mast and mainsail. It bills itself as a “seven-star” resort, and guests are assigned a butler with every room. Other artificial archipelagos — one of which is shaped like a palm tree, another a map of the globe — house some of the emirate’s most lavish and exclusive new developments, including homes bought by such Western celebrities as aging rocker Rod Stewart and English soccer star David Beckham.

On a billboard near the center of town, next to a vast building foundation, is an artist’s rendering of the Burj Dubai, a spiraling tower under construction. At up to 160 stories, developers say, it will be the world’s tallest building upon completion, set for 2009. “Throughout history, only a handful of structures have had the power to change history,” says a statement on the project’s promotional Web site, above a photo of Egypt’s pyramids.

Ski Dubai is the latest, and perhaps the most incongruous, attraction for a growing legion of tourists and business travelers, who heretofore have engaged in more climate-appropriate pursuits like water sports and sand safaris that take them deep into the rolling dunes of the Arabian Desert in all-terrain vehicles.

As part of the $13.60 cost of admission to the snow park ($10.90 for children), the resort provides matching black winter garments that make kids all but indistinguishable to parents as they frolic in the snow. Access to the ski slopes is a bit more expensive (about $35 for adults and $30 for children for a two-hour pass during peak times).

Inside the sprawling complex, which covers about 5 1/2 acres and can accommodate up to 1,500 customers at once, the temperature was a frigid 28 degrees (it is lowered even further at night to assist with making snow). Developers say it’s the world’s first indoor black diamond run.

I visited the mall with Hassan, his wife Sadia, a doctor, and their children, Uzer, 6, and Maha, 4. Uzer took his first-ever sledding runs, tumbling off of the plastic cart at one point but smiling all the way. Maha preferred the igloo and a large ice sculpture of a polar bear. After about an hour, their parents and I got cold.

“Next time we’ll go skiing,” Hassan said as he tried to corral the kids, who clearly did not want to leave. “Imagine telling people you learned to ski in Dubai.”

Ski Dubai, at the Mall of the Emirates, is on Shiekh Zayed Road, Exit 39, heading toward Al Barsha. Various snow park passes are offered, such as the ski slope day pass ($56-$60), which includes the whole ski or snowboard getup, down to the pants and socks (but bring your own hat and gloves). Group and private lessons also available. Ski Dubai info:http://www.skidubai.ae.

For information on travel to Dubai: Dubai’s Department of Tourism and Marketing,http://www.dubaitourism.ae.

Jonathan Finer is a Washington Post reporter currently on assignment in Baghdad.

original story at http://http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/13/AR2006011300579.html?sub=AR

Wednesday, January 11th, 2006

i can’t sleep. i “went to bed” at 11:00… i’m still lying awake on my bed

i’m already stressed about having to go to work tomorrow… every day, my biggest stress after leaving work is going back to work the next day

i can almost guarantee that i won’t get into the office before… 10? 11? even tho i may be up by 8 or 9

don’t tell me to look for a new job, i already know i have to. the problem i have is that i’m unable to job search. every time i job search, i freak out realizing that that (whatever is in the job listing) isn’t what i want to do! i have two degrees that have supposedly prepared me to work with computers and i’ve come to realize i hate computers (except for the occasional game or to read interesting articles on the internet). TWO degrees. i know that yes, a lot of people don’t end up working in what they study, but there was a reason i studied what i studied. despite being mediocre AT BEST in computer science, that was my best option. i can’t do anything else. i suck at everything else. i have no interest in everything else. CS was what i was most passionate in… isn’t that just sad? the thing i despise and knew i hated, as early as 2001, is the only thing i’m remotely passionate about. i can’t bring myself to apply for another job in this field. but then, what other field can i and will i want to apply for?!

i freak out because i don’t want to end up at another shitty company doing shitty work. this was the company i chose. this was my “dream” job… and look how badly that turned out. how does one not feel burned by this experience?! i idiotically CHOSE THIS job! i WANTED this job! WHAT WAS I THINKING!??!?! will i make the same mistake again?!

i freak out because i dread the job search process. i hate having to talk about goals, where i see myself in two years, my strengths, my weaknesses… what a load of crap i must sound like in interviews. i hated it the first time around. i hoped to just luck out and love my job and never have to job search for another 20 years until they forced me into early retirement or some crap like that. i know that was unrealistic to expect out of a first job… but you know me! i easily settle! it doesn’t take much to make me happy! simple minds, simple pleasures…. just throw me a bone occasionally!! apparently, that was too much to ask.

here’s to another day at work…. let’s see if i can make it to 5 before i freak and rush out yelling/crying

how k-mart and the IT industry compare

Tuesday, January 10th, 2006

having worked at k-mart for about a month (i found another job doing computer maintenance stuff soon after… the worst mistake of my life as it lead me down the path i am currently on) and the IT industry for about a year and a half now… i think a comparison is in order…

K-Mart IT Industry
pay $6.50 a hour substantially more than $6.50/hr
benefits i’m sure they offer 401k and insurance (as i was a teenager while employed there, i didn’t really pay attention), but most importantly… they gave you your birthday off :-D 401k, insurance, paid sick leave, 3 weeks vacation, floating holidays (take off on your birthday), and i’m sure a bunch more
interest new customers nearly every day, new stories to hear. little kids, teenagers, adults, the elderly… you get the whole spectrum. seeing what people purchase… what kind of crap people try to pull off (“it was on the clearance rack under a sign for $0.99″…. “sorry ma’am, but i think someone misplaced this VHS/DVD/MP3/all-everything gadget on the clearance rack, it’s ringing up for $100″) the same freaking thing over and over and over (and over) again
challenge so back in the day, when i worked at k-mart, they had ghetto registers that didn’t allow you to ring up multiple quantities, you just had to scan them in individually. also ghetto? the scanners, they would usually work, but some times they wouldn’t. one day, my scanner was broken. so i spent the whole day hand-entering each UPC barcode on each item. my customers were very understanding when i explained what was wrong. many of them gave me sympathetic looks as i tried to process their purchases as fast as possible. and then…. came the cat lady…. with 185193859183919 cans of cat food! so with no quantity button and working scanner, i handtyped the barcode for each of those cans (ok ok, it was more like 50 cans)… the customer was very understanding, even the people waiting behind her were very patient. the reason why i bring up the “cat food incident” is because although you would think the IT industry would be more challenging… it is indeed NOT! just like at k-mart, it’s a lot of mindless button pushing! unlike k-mart, where you’ll rarely have to actually type the same numbers over and over again (unless you run into a lady with 50 cans of cat food, no quantity button and working scanner… which btw, won’t happen now because i noticed they got new scanners and computers at k-mart and one time, the cashier rang up multiple items for me with a quantity button!) and where you get to have a cool scanner that makes beep sounds as things are rung up, the button pushing in the IT industry rarely varies… it’s the same buttons over and over (and over!) again
future prospects so K-mart’s filed for bankruptcy multiple times… so that doesn’t bode well. there are other similar stores to choose from. overall, the retail industry is very volatile (always depends on how the economy is doing) but they always need cashiers. the problem though is that there are always people that can do the job… i think the future is marginally better for the IT industry… though i’m hesitant to say that for sure. granted they always seem to be hiring and it’s a thriving industry, there was also the dot com burst a couple of years ago that slowed down all computer-related business… there’s also that pesky outsourcing business!
ethics martha stewart? worldcom accounting scandal? enron?? (ok, so enron’s not really IT, but it’s corporate!)

i still think K-Mart was one of the best jobs i ever had…. so if you’re looking for a job that pays well and offers little challenge (basically, my dream job out of college! trust me… it’s not worth it :-( ), try the IT industry! if you’re looking for a job that will be interesting every day and money is not an issue (bah! i wish :-( ), try K-Mart!

olympic countdown!

Tuesday, January 10th, 2006

31 more days before the opening ceremonies!!!

btw… is it turin? or torino?!

extra change

Tuesday, January 10th, 2006

so i started one of my 101 things to do… i emptied out my jar to start collecting coins again. last time i cleaned it out was when i moved out of my north point apartment… i had $87 in just paper bills! this time… i had (hand counted so it might not be accurate):

3 – $5 bills
13 – $1 bills
89 quarters
57 dimes
42 nickels
197 pennies

grand total: $60.02

i collect too much change! … how does one deposit these at the bank? like do i have to count ‘em out for them to verify? or do they have some nifty technology like dave & buster’s where they can just weigh it and know how much it is?

WHOA WHOA WHOA

Monday, January 9th, 2006

THERE WAS A MAN OUTSIDE MY OFFICE WINDOW SWINGING AROUND WIPING IT!!!!!!! it was amaaaaaazing!!! like curious george in curious george takes a job (though not nearly as impressive as the man was only using one hand to wipe windows, not like george using all 4 of his limbs)

i’m on the 9th floor too!!! hehheeheheh, he’s since left. but i can still see the string he’s swinging on!

i wish i brought my camera to work today! drats!!

light yogurt ick

Monday, January 9th, 2006

i bought light yogurt today for breakfast because it was on sale 10 for $5! i don’t recommend it. it is nasty. waaay too sweet… i don’t think i can even finish it!

on the other hand? turkey hill green tea with ginseng & honey? pretty good!! though i think i still prefer their regular iced tea

slacker?

Saturday, January 7th, 2006

it’s come to my attention that a lot of people have this perception of me… that i am a slacker. not that i disagree with that (i think i list my expertise/profession in some online places as slacker, bum, etc. etc.) but it got me wondering. besides just saying i’m a slacker/bum, do people perceive other things i do (or perhaps, don’t do ;-) ) as proof that i’m a slacker? why do some people give off the impression that they are always busy and always working hard, while others appear to be goofing off all the time?

one argument against the “always busy, always working”… maaaaaaybe you’re always busy and always working because you slack off too often! thus, creating a backlog of work that needs to be done and the impression that you are hard working! maaaaybe the people who appear to be goofing off actually are the people who’ve already worked hard and have already finished all their work so really they’re not goofing off, they’re celebrating! :-P

or perhaps the opposite is true… the people who appear to be goofing off are actually pre-celebrating the completion of their work (in other words, procrastinating)! and you’ve just caught them in the middle of their pre-celebration. and right after you look away, that’s when they’re hunkering down to do work. procrastination doesn’t count as slacking off because you eventually get the work done and 9 times out of 10, end up having to work harder than if you had planned it out properly.

i think a lot of people have heard stories of my sleeping from freshmen year of college (thanks psycho for spreading those lies!!) and so they think all i do is sleep! since when does sleep = slacking off!? sleeping requires a lot of effort, concentration, and energy! and in order to get all your work done while still maintaining 15 hours of sleep requires a lot of work too! (so maybe i didn’t get all my work done, but if i HAD…) i used to hate living next door to bingbin banana because she would always be in bed by midnight, with all her homework and studying done!!! she definitely wasn’t a slacker!

finally, just because you don’t enjoy what you do and aren’t as passionate about it as others, doesn’t make you a slacker. i think the fact i hated CS and wasn’t passionate about it may have contributed to the perception that i did diddly squat (combined with the fact that i did, in fact, do diddly squat) BUT i think being indifferent towards something doesn’t automatically mean you’re slacking off (tho certainly, who would blame you if you wanted to slack off?).

what makes someone a slacker?

i… can’t…. get… to… work….

Friday, January 6th, 2006

i can’t bring myself to get up and go to work anymore

yesterday, got up and all ready except for changing, then went back to bed for another hour and a half, got in at 11!

today, set the alarm for 6:55 in a futile attempt to get to work early… woke up at 9:30 and now am bumming around after showering

this is what happens after you take a week off from work and realize you don’t want to go back!!

Maury: What do we do when we fall off the horse? … we… get back on the horse!
Zoolander: Sorry, Maury. I’m not a gymnast.