timbu::musings

I’m Still Packing

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Travelers' Tales India: True Stories (Travelers' Tales Guides)

I’m getting ready to go right now. I can hardly put the book down, but common sense says I have to keep packing.

Grand Central

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Click on that link and it will connect your phone to my voice mail. I’ll then get an email with your voice mail in it. If I choose to do so, I could also have it connect us directly using one of my many phone numbers.

It’s “Yet another company” offering the “one number” to rule them all. This time it’s google that owns them, so it might get some traction. We’ll see. Who wouldn’t like a universal phone number.

Toy Train II

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Toy Train II

Originally uploaded by smdeep


If you have been around me for even a few minutes lately you’ve probably heard about my plans to visit India.

One place I am headed to is Darjeeling, in the foothills of the Himalaya’s.

I had a very hard time picking where in India I should visit. I finally narrowed down my choices and decided that I should visit Darjeeling. The lure of tea plantations and the Himalaya’s was a huge factor, but another factor was this little train called the Toy Train. I’m not a huge railroad buff, but I knew I wanted to travel on a train in India – this one was too cool too pass up.

Little Classics

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Little Classics

Originally uploaded by timbu


My mom dug up some of my old books to pass along to Matthew.

It was fun to see them. I was surprised to see what good care I took of these books.

It’s funny to this day there are a few books in this lot where I am not entirely sure that I read the full, un-abridged, no pictures version of the book.

Thanks Mom!

Who needs it?

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Check out this google page showing edits on google map in near real time. It’s kind of mermerizing. I just saw someone move a pizza place in Minneapolis. This is much better then TV during the writer’s strike.

Recent Edits on Google

really, only 44%

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44%

Link Roundup

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Here are a few links.

  • Interesting article on psychopaths

    I loved this quote, “It could even be argued that the criteria used by corporations to find effective managers actually select specifically for psychopathic traits: characteristics such as charisma, self-centeredness, confidence, and dominance are highly correlated with the psychopathic personality, yet also highly sought after in potential leaders. It was not until recent years—in the wake of some well-publicized scandals involving corporate psychopaths—that many corporations started to reconsider these promotion policies.” I can say I’ve ever worked for a psychopath yet, although I’ve heard the horror stories.

  • The Feltron Report 2008.

    Instead of a form Christmas letter, this guy packages up his year in corporate annual report form.

  • Scoble write about “What to do if you’re laid off in 2008 recession”

    There is a ton of good advice, although I’ve never heard of someone who can continue to go to the office after they are laid off.

  • 40 years of driving on the right side in Sweden

    Evidently Sweden switched the side of the road they drive on in 1967. Who knew? What if the US decided to start driving on the left? Ron Paul should look into that. I think you might be able to accomplish this in Minnesota if you had to given our large Swedish population, but the rest of the country would be a steaming wreck. [Link courtesy of glt]

  • Author: timbu
  • Published: Jan 22nd, 2008
  • Category: Books
  • Comments: Comments Off

Wait for it …

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I love reading books for pleasure. A few years ago I realized that there are lots of people who rarely or never read a book for fun. There were a few interesting articles lately on this topic you might want to check out.

The basic finding is that reading for pleasure and rates of reading proficiency both appear to be trending downwards in young adults. The NEA study attempts to correlate other items like education attained, rates of voting participation, rates of volunteer activities in order to highlight the fact that if reading is lost as a past time perhaps societal losses will be experienced beyond the local bookseller and publisher. The reading rates for voters was especially interesting to me. While people always bemoan rates of voter turn out, since voters tend to be readers and non-voters tend to be non-readers perhaps this is a better informed electorate.

The NEA document is pretty long, you might want to wait for the movie version.

India

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I am planning a trip to India. Everything I read speaks to the contrasts found in India. I noticed this article, “Book now for the flight to nowhere” over the weekend. A man bought a non-functioning plane and uses it to provide entertainment to people who might never be able to ride in a plane. It’s funny since although I like traveling I wouldn’t really want to sit in a plane for fun – although I can imagine wanting to if I never had. I guess to some degree we all want something we can’t have.

The other article that caught my attention was “The Ink Fades on a Profession as India Modernizes“. It was a story about a gentleman who used to be employed as a free-lance letter writer. As you can imagine as literacy improves, cell phones become ubiquitous and email and txt msg is more prevalent his chosen work is shrinking. I am hoping I can find someone like this who will either a) write a letter home for me or b) allow me to write some letters for his customers.

  • Author: timbu
  • Published: Jan 21st, 2008
  • Category: Books, Travel
  • Comments: Comments Off

Colder than here

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Antarctica: Life on the Ice (Travelers' Tales)

A few years ago I ran into the web site “Big Dead Place” and it reignited my fascination with Antarctica. I have read a lot of the first hand accounts of early explorers. Reading how people cope with the challenges given current technology and resources makes for an interesting contrast.

I ran into a mention of the book “Life on the Ice” on the O’Reilly Radar. Since I was Christmas shopping at the time, I decided I needed a copy of the book.

The book is a collection of fairly personal essays about Antarctica. The writing was unusually good. I suppose you really get a chance to compose your thoughts during six months of darkness. There were essays focused on the natural beauty, the human relationships and covered some aspects of the science projects that go on. The comparisons between penguin and human behavior made me laugh out loud at least once.

I would sure like to get a chance to visit there someday. I’m not sure if I have what it takes to winter over, but I would love a nice long visit.

Given my next big trip will be to India, maybe I should pick up “Travelers’ Tales India: True Stories” by the same publisher.

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