FeelingElephants’s Weblog

31 October, 2007

Thanksgiving dinner without an oven (2 of 3)

Filed under: Amtrak, Recipes, Washington DC — feelingelephants @ 11:34 pm

Hey all,

Here is our Thanksgiving meal schedule. Aren’t we good? :-D

Thursday 22st of October

Lunch

Sandwiches
    Bread
    Avocado
    Sprouts
    Ham
    Turkey
    Cheese
    Lettuce
    Mayonnaise
Thanksgiving dinner
    Pumpkin pancakes
    Syrup
    Turkey
    Sourdough
    Corn on the cob

Friday 23rd of October

Lunch

Sandwiches
    Bread
    Avocado
    Sprouts
    Ham
    Turkey
    Cheese
    Lettuce
    Mayonnaise

Dinner

Guajillo a Mexican restaurant (one of the party insisted)

Saturday 24th of October

Lunch

Mac’n'cheese
    Red Peppers
    Salad
    Balsamic Vinegar
    Bananas

Dinner

Hamburgers
    Vegi patties
    Meat patties
    Hamburger buns
    Cheese
    Cucumbers
    Apples

Saturday 25th of October

Breakfast

Pancakes
    Syrup
    Flour
    Baking Soda
    Salt
    Eggs
    Milk
    Sugar

Leftovers are important: buy Tupperware

Identified common ingredients

Salt
Pepper
Butter
Milk
Turkey
Cheese
Bread

Ideas for Desert

Desert:

    Crepes,
    Flour
    Eggs
    Milk
    Butter
    Salt
    Chocolate,
    Whipped cream
    Ice Cream
    Oranges

Inspirational Quote:

I work for a Government I despise for ends I think criminal.
John Maynard Keynes

PS: I’m addicted to lolcats.

Earthquake in San Jose (Bay Area), California

Filed under: news — feelingelephants @ 12:13 am

No one’s hurt, no houses collapsed as far as we can tell. Some vases broke, and the Caboose didn’t budge! The earthquake was 5.6 according to the US Geological Survey. The mirrors on the stair swung about a foot according to those on the scene (ie my family).

Inspirational Quote:

Would you not like to try all sorts of lives — one is so very small— but that is the satisfaction of writing — one can impersonate so many people. Katherine Mansfield

30 October, 2007

Thanksgiving without an oven (1 of 3)

Filed under: Recipes — feelingelephants @ 10:03 am

My friends and I are meeting up in DC for Thanksgiving. We found a wonderful hotel which has small kitchens in the rooms! The kitchens has a big fridge (with a freezer), 2 burners (electric), a microwave, a toaster and lots of different kinds of cooking and eating tools (I have a list. Yes, yes, I am a kitchen dork). We are going to have a total of 5 meals (all breakfasts are covered by the hotel–did I mention this hotel rocks?) so each mini-group within our group in coming up with a proposed list of meal plans. Here is what we have thus far (I will have probably 2 more updates on this list this week, so expect some further postings:

Some meal component ideas
    Paella
    Tofu Stir Fry
    Tacos
    Latkes
Hamburgers:
    We need:
    Vegi patties
    Meat patties
    Cheese

    Sides:

    Cucumbers
    Apples

Mac’n'cheese
    Pretty self-explanatory

    Sides:

    Red Peppers
    Salad
    Balsamic Vinegar

Thanksgiving dinner:
    Pumpkin pancakes
    Syrup
    Sourdough
    Corn on the cob

Inspirational Quote:

There is no gravity. The earth sucks.
Graf Fito (1)

29 October, 2007

Promised pictures from Amtrak Capitol Expressway trip (and DC!)

Filed under: Amtrak, Washington DC — feelingelephants @ 9:08 pm

This gizmo is from http://www.slide.com their user interface is simply a joy to use. I especially like the GUI for changing the order of pictures. Enjoy!

PS: if you don’t like the interface, tell me. WordPress recomended several other Slideshow websites which I could try.

Have a great day!

Inspirational Quote:

“We know how you feel honey–and remember, when you father was your age, he was fighting the Germans”–Randy Paucshe’s Journey Speech

26 October, 2007

It’s not just me!

Filed under: politics-human rights — feelingelephants @ 6:33 pm

Congressman Mike Honda writes well on the need for civil liberties in Airports. The offensive TSA policy of singling assuming terrorist intentions of anyone wearing a head-garment has been modified but there are still many many problems with the invasive and abrasive policies in our airports. Thus I will be taking Amtrak tomorrow to DC! Expect pretty pictures of the leaves turning on Monday!

Inspirational Quote:

“If not actually disgruntled, he was far from being gruntled.” - PG Wodehouse

25 October, 2007

Mentoring Makes MAGIC for Middle and High School Girls (part 2)

Filed under: GHC07, politics-human rights — feelingelephants @ 9:32 pm

Hey all,

Just as I promised, here’s more info on MAGIC. I was very impressed by the women on this panel. But the facts of the MAGIC project are just as interesting (and potentially motivational). As a quick note, I just finished watching part of Randy Pausch’s presentation on Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams, and it seemed to me that a lot of the women at the Hopper Conference had had their lives changed by mentors. Professor Pausch, having achieved most of his childhood dreams, went on to try and help other people achieve their dreams. Being a mentor might give an adult the chance to help a child achieve her dreams.

MAGIC aims to be a nation-wide mentoring program for middle and high school girls. Here is the MAGIC website. PS, if you’re looking to just see a really pretty website, go and check it out. Talk about nice GUI (Graphical User Interface).

At the Hopper Conference MAGIC wanted:

  • To officially kick MAGIC off.
  • To recruit ten mentors.
  • To obtain ten mentee leads.
  • To recruit management help for MAGIC.
  • To recruit legal help for MAGIC.

Their goals for 2008 (as of the conference) are:

  • To recruit at least 30 mentors.
  • To recruit at least 30 mentees.
  • To reach out to at least 10 middle/high schools.

The MAGIC team is:

  • Ira Pramanick
  • Robin Wilensky
  • Meenakshi Kaul-Basu
  • Sue Young
  • Foz Saeed

All are Sun Microsystems employees but more than that, all are motivated to make this work.
This project is just starting and I would encourage anyone who is interested to check it out. Also check out Ira’s blog on MAGIC about MAGIC as well. I look forward to seeing where this group goes!

Inspirational Quote:

“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.” Aristotle

Jessica Dickinson Goodman

Official GHC 2007 Blogger

You may comment on this blog by visiting the GHC (Grace Hopper Conference) Forum.

Military Recruiters in High Schools

Filed under: Judicial Branch, politics-human rights, politics-tech — feelingelephants @ 4:04 pm

Hey all,

This is part of a mailing I got forwarded from the Palo Alto School District PTA:

Did you know that military recruiters have access to high school students & their directory info? “No Child Left Behind” (”NCLB”) entitles military recruiters to receive the name, address, phone number, gender, & parents’ names of all Juniors & Seniors [in Public High School].
**************************************

PRIVACY OF STUDENT RECORDS

Most of the information below is from

National PTA’s web site:

Two laws currently allow military recruiters to receive the names, addresses, & telephone listings of all juniors and seniors in high school. However, each district must

(1) provide notice to parents of the types of student info it releases,

(2) explain that parents have the right to request that the information not be disclosed, and

(3) include info on how to “opt out” of the release of such info, and any applicable deadlines.

The term “opt out” refers to a parent or student’s ability to request that their records & contact info not be disclosed. In addition, the Department of Defense (DOD) has created a massive database for recruiting & other “routine” purposes. It’s maintained by a group called “JAMRS” (Joint Advertising Market Research and Studies). The Pentagon has been building this database of info on more than 25 million children over the past five years. The database is updated daily and distributed monthly to the Armed Services for recruitment purposes. Parents and students can also “opt out” of being included in this database — but the info is not deleted; rather, it is moved to a “suppression file,” where the Pentagon will retain, but not release, the information.

**************************************

NATIONAL PTA’S POSITION

National PTA seeks to increase awareness & community sensitivity about the collection & dissemination of info regarding students, and believes that such records should respect the right to privacy and be relevant to a child’s education. National PTA supports legislation & policies that would change current law by providing for an “opt in” policy where interested students & families can instead choose to request contact from military recruiters. Parents & students deserve to know who has their information, and parents should be involved in the important decision to enlist in military service. In particular, National PTA supports H.R.1346, the Student Privacy Protection Act of 2007, by Rep. Mike Honda (San Jose). Rep. Anna Eshoo, who represents this area, is a co-sponsor.

National PTA’s web site hasn’t been updated, but their info about the equivalent bill in the previous Congress (H.R.551) is online [...].

**************************************

FURTHER INFO, SAMPLE LETTERS, ETC.

For more information on military recruitment in schools & the DOD database (including details on how to “opt out”, sample letters, & links to other web sites), go to National PTA’s web site [PDF].

Inspirational Quote:

“”The neurotic has problems. The psychotic has solutions.” -Thomas Szasz

Dumbledore is gay!

Filed under: politics-human rights — feelingelephants @ 3:37 pm

Ok, I’m a week late. But in case you hadn’t heard… Here’s what JK Rowling actually said. This all happened at NY’s Carnegie Hall which JK Rowling was visiting part of the Scholastic’s Open Book Tour Sweepstakes. This approximate transcription is from The Leaky Cauldron, one of the major Harry Potter fansites.

The question was: Did Dumbledore, who believed in the prevailing power of love, ever fall in love himself?

JKR: My truthful answer to you… I always thought of Dumbledore as gay. [ovation.] … Dumbledore fell in love with Grindelwald, and that that added to his horror when Grindelwald showed himself to be what he was. To an extent, do we say it excused Dumbledore a little more because falling in love can blind us to an extent? But, he met someone as brilliant as he was, and rather like Bellatrix he was very drawn to this brilliant person, and horribly, terribly let down by him. Yeah, that’s how i always saw Dumbledore. In fact, recently I was in a script read through for the sixth film, and they had Dumbledore saying a line to Harry early in the script saying I knew a girl once, whose hair… [laughter]. I had to write a little note in the margin and slide it along to the scriptwriter, “Dumbledore’s gay!” [laughter] “If I’d known it would make you so happy, I would have announced it years ago!”

Some people are critical of the announcement. Some have outright negative reactions. Some search for new meaning from the series. Some are fans of Rowling but not of her boy hero. Some Lolcats were horrified. But most of the opinions I’ve read and heard boil down to one statement (paraphrased from my First Amendment Law teacher): “I never thought of Dumbledore as *anything*”. And it’s true. And for me, that’s what makes her announcement both cool and melodramatic. It is a great thing that *it doesn’t matter that Dumbledore is gay*. And in that same vein, why did it matter to her as a writer? Anyhoo, that was my fluff for the day,

Inspirational Quote:

“On a scale of tragic deaths, Dumbledore’s ranks somewhere below Sirius’s and slightly above Charlie Brown’s aunt drowning in Lake Erie on a fishing trip.” A very funny letter to JK Rownling after Book 6 (Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince).

PS: A totally off-topic gamer rant about silly people who name themselves Dumbledore on Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game (MMORPG)’s like World of Warcraft (WoW).

Do and Don’ts for Hopper bloggers (my list)

Filed under: GHC07 — feelingelephants @ 11:31 am

Hey all,

Here are some things I learned while being an official blogger to the Grace Hopper Conference.

DO:

    1. Charge your lap top (if you bring one) any chance you get. There’s nothing more irritating than having to sit in the back of a good panel because you need to be plugged in.

    2. Ask presenters for their slides. I have had trouble finding the slides of the presentations (”It’s not Magic: I can prove it” and others) I really enjoyed and wished I gotten her to email them to me so I could either post them (if a given presenter was ok with it) or just write a more factual post.

    3. Introduce yourself to your panel. This isn’t a hard and fast rule, but I found a lot of presenters didn’t expect to be assigned a blogger and I wish I’d had some business card or something to hand them so they could look up my post–more readers = good.

DON’T:

    1. Stress about getting perfect posts. So much will happen so fast that it may be hard to do perfect justice to every panel you cover. Post during your time slot, and come back to it later if you have time. I know I will be revisiting More Active Girls In Computing (MAGIC) and the Making the Future Web Accessible to People with Disabilities panels in future posts–because they were so cool I found I had trouble posting about them.2. Over schedule yourself. I marked out my entire day in my Conference booklet in the morning if I could and then chose to skip some unassigned panels to make sure I had enough time to breathe, eat and post. Being stressed and sleep deprived is no way to experience such a wonderful conference.3. Be overly structured. If you’re fascinated by a panelist, stay afterwards to answer questions. I did this in a lot of my panels and learned a lot. The panelist may be able to answer questions which are not easily stated in 10 words or less in front of a microphone.

And the most important thing of all…have fun! Sit and watch other women be smart, intense, geeky, normal and exited. Come next year!

Inspirational Quote:

Leaders of the future will have to be visionary and be able to bring people in - real communicators. These are things that women bring to leadership and executive positions, and it’s going to be incredibly valuable and incredibly in demand.” Anita Borg

Jessica Dickinson Goodman

Official GHC 2007 Blogger

You may comment on this blog by visiting the GHC (Grace Hopper Conference) Forum.

21 October, 2007

Outstanding Women in Computer Security: A Panel

Filed under: GHC07, Judicial Branch, news, politics-tech — feelingelephants @ 7:50 pm

What made it so impressive were the women involved–each of their stories is a both a comfort and a clarion call. This post does not have a lot of one-liners–it is a word-picture of what a woman (or any person) can be in the high tech security sector. Also, check out Valerie Fenwick’s blog on this same panel. Enjoy!

Moderator: Carrie Gates, Computer Associates

Has a background in security research. And think’s she has the best job in the world: she gets to find a professor with a PhD student and fund that PhD student to do research on security stuff–at the end of 3 years they have results and a hopefully a PhD.

Carol Taylor, Eastern Washington University

Has a PhD in Intrusion Detection. She loves teaching.

How she got into the field:

She was studying software metrics in grad school and then had to find something else to do and began playing around with intrusion detection. She soon figured out she would never run out of work doing security and kept on doing it.

A day in her life

She spend a lot of time on class prep–she reads a lot and develops a curriculum. She also spends time guiding students. For professional development she writes papers and goes to conferences. She is also constantly think things up–how can I add to this? How can I get funded to do this?

Succeeding in security

Security is a very multidisciplinary field. Someone who wished to succeed in security needs a background in more than just CS–knowing about psychology or education would been beneficial. She herself has a background in biology.

Why is security a good field–and why is it s good field for women?

It is an unending set of problems. When technology changes, there’s new problems. “It’s a great field for it’s potential” she says. It has a technical background and a social background. Because women tend to have a broader perspective than men, “women are perfectly suited for this field”.

Rose Shumba, Indiana University of Pennsylvania,

How did you get into Security

She was encouraged by a mentor (Mary Micco) to get into Information Assurance. When she had to take a course she got really interested in Software Research.

What helped?

Grants. Lots of grants.

Daily life

Teaching and mentoring students–her female students are always hanging around her office to talk.

How do you succeed in security

Read extensively to keep up in this ever changing area.

Why is security a good field–and a good field for women?

To the question is it a good field for women she answered “yes and no”: if you’re eager to explore and find out about stuff you would like security. You must be a really hands-on person. If you have a heavy teaching load and kids waiting at home and family obligations this field can be really hard.

Becky Bace, Infidel

A quick note on her Consulting firm’s name. She told the audience the name came from something her father in Alabama used to say.

He’d tell her she shouldn’t grow up to be a hussie.

But since it was too late, she should never be a brazen hussie.

As she was already that, she should never become an infidel hussie.

He told her she was on the path to being an infidel hussie but wasn’t quite there yet.

She got into security by accident: a friend asked her come in to deal with some raucous hackers and she stayed on.

She pushed some of the initial Intrusion Detection Systems into market–and fairly recently her consulting firm ended up dealing with a company which was based on the product she had pushed to market.

Some interesting comments:

When you work in a really young industry you can have effects you might never expect.

Security has a great role to play when the Market is going down.

After 9/11 VCs (Venture Capitalists) got very interested in the growth of the security industry.

Books she has written (they sound fascinating):

Intrusion Detection

Forensic Testimony for Technologists

Helped to edit Geekonomics (coming out soon!)

Got a Masters in Special Education because of an Autistic son. Has found that understanding that some people who act oddly do so for reasons they can’t control opens a lot of doors for you because you can interface with people other people won’t.

Daily life

Talks a lot to the press, does a lot of editing and writing.

Ruth Nelson was a mentor and wrote some of the seminal papers on cryptoprotocal design. Did some of the initial cyptoprotocal design. Helps her be a very good heretic. :-D

How do you succeed in security

Do your homework. Read with a perspective: what was the reasoning behind the people writing what you’re reading? figure this out and then stand on their shoulders.

Why is security a good field–and a good field for women?

If there’s any situation where women can do better than men it is this one. There’s such a great community. You tend to float on the ballast of the community around us.

If you want to make your mark, do it in a young area–and this is still a very young area.

Kathy Jenks

Daily life:

As a Director she works with other organizations to secure all of Sun’s products, not just the OS for OpenSolaris. She spends a lot less time writing code or reviewing code–her time is taken up strategising about what products are necessary. Spends time speaking with customers and reading to keep up with the industry. In addition to being a Director, she is also a manager.

How do you succeed in security?

You need to be curious. You need to pay attention to the Industry. You need to understand the challenges of your customers and what they need to protect (network, file system, disks, etc). And then you need to think: what’s coming down the road 10, 20 years ahead. Having an objective perspective and a open mind. Approach all of the solutions openly.

Why is security a good field–and a good field for women?

Very multidisciplinary area–when hiring, she looks for people with OS background, network management, Java, C, C++, XML and lots of other things. There’s always challenges and things you need to do. Security applies to protecting our country, all of our customer’s countries, your medical data, your bank information, you privacy data: it crosses all social boundaries. If the question is “why security for women?” The answer is “why not?”

Questions from the Audience

Question:

If there is an undergraduate who is interested in Security, what classes should she take?

Take an elementary business course–if you understand a business, then you know what to protect.

Question:

Who could fund someone to go to Black Hat?

Some Universities will pay for you to go.

You could also go to DefCon–Professor Taylor uses a video on forensics from their website for her classes.

Email the organizer, tell them you’re a student and offer to volunteer (offer to work the registration desk–you’ll meet everyone interesting as they register).

Comment:

Read CISSP for background information on the security industry.

Inspirational Quote:

The King and his men stole the queen from her bed
And bound her in her [bower]
The seas be ours and by the powers
Where we will well roam
Yo ho, all together, hoist the colors high
Heave ho, theives and beggars,
Never shall we die

~Pirates of the Carribean: A World’s End

Jessica Dickinson Goodman

Official GHC 2007 Blogger
You may comment on this blog by visiting the GHC (Grace Hopper Conference) Forum.

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