Categories
General

More Trip Talk

This post is a follow-up on my last one…

1) The domain name I reserved is Everything-Everywhere.com. I had to go with a hyphen because the non-hypen was taken. It was that or a .biz or .info.

2) I’ve been using the equipment list from Vagabonding.com as my starting point for what I need on my trip. I don’t know much about video cameras, but the one he used looks pretty big to lug around the world. I don’t know if you can get the same quality in a smaller package, though. I don’t think a floppy drive will be necessary. USB drives should be good enough.

3) I am thinking on taking two digital still cameras. One will be a small camera for everyday use. I think my current camera, Sony DSC-T1, is the camera for this. The still photos are pretty good and it does OK video. I’d like to take an SLR camera for high quality photos too.

4) My biggest unknown is the video. How/where I will edit, store, and shoot video is up in the air.

5) Laptop. I’d like a better version of my current laptop, a Sony SRX87P. Built in WiFi is a must, as is a DVD drive, which mine doesn’t have. Lighter the better. I don’t want to lug a lot of cables around either.

6) Web hosting. I think I probably have this taken care of. If Google doesn’t recind their video hosting, the heavy bandwidth part might be taken care of too.

7) Video editing. I will work under the assumption that I will have to do some editing on the road. If possible, it would be great to have someone back home who could polish and do a more professional job on the raw footage.

8) Communications. I’m assuming that most cities will have some sort of internet cafe or something. If not, I’m SOL. I will probably bring some sort of headset for VOIP calls. I’m also assuming that I can upload low quality video/audio from the road, but may have to send DVDs with higher quality stuff back to the US.

9) I’m debating if I should try to contact people regarding sponsorship before I start, or wait until the website is up with content. I could start the site before I go and document the prepartations. If I approached someone now, would I just come across as a loon?

Any thoughts or ideas are welcome.

Categories
General

Trip Update

I think the solution to “how am I going to serve up video” for my trip website may have just been solved.

I’ve been asked by many people if my trip is still on. It is. I’m not going to start for at least a year, when I get done at the U. Till then, I’m going to plan and prepare. Selling the house is a big first step. Other smaller steps will be getting and idea for how I’m going to manage the technology, what I want to do for the website, etc.

I think I got a domain name and a site name nailed down. I haven’t reserved it yet so I’ll let you know what it is after I register it.

To give you an idea of some of the technology things I’m looking at, here is a video shot by Bietz using the Sony DSC-T1, the same camera I have. Its not what I’d use as a primary video camera, but it doesn’t suck either. Especially considering its designed to be a still camera.

One other item I’m looking at are lightweight laptops. I have a Sony currently, but I’m not sure its what I would want to take with me. Nothing I’ve seen so far has jumped out at me.

Categories
General

Reefer Madness

Sometime in the next few months I will have to take down my reef tank. In a wierd way I’m looking forward to it because it will give me an opportunity to start over with a smaller tank. My current tank was my first reef tank: 175 gallons. Most people start with a small tank and get bigger, but I’m going backwards.

Why am I looking forward to it?

  1. I can use the lighting I have for my 175 on a 50 or 75 gallon tank. This should provide a lot more light per gallon and allow me to grow SPS corals. Something I’ve had a hard time doing in my tank.
  2. If I transplant some of my current livestock to a smaller tank, it will look a lot better.
  3. Not having a tank as the centerpiece of your living room will give me more freedom to monkey with sumps and pumps.
  4. Maintainance will be a helluva lot easer if I can reach down into the tank and touch the bottom without the use of a chair.

In conjunction with my senior project, I’m going to see if I can get a sample of stromatolite and see if I can grow it.

Categories
General

Oh holy legislature

I’ve had discussions with people on differen issues (term limits being one) where a common argument used is how we need “experts” in the legilature, not the common folk. The assumption is that laws are passed by a well oiled machine. Or if not a well oiled machine, than by competent people. Or if not competent people, then at least people who read what they are going to vote on at least.

If that happens to you, bring up this gem. While your at it, remind them about this.

There is a group that is trying to get a constitutional amendment passed that would require:

  1. a public reading of all bills before they are voted on.
  2. seven day public notice before a vote takes place.

This would, in theory, eliminate sneak, late night voting when members are not in Washington and would all but eliminate enormous bills with line item spending if a quarum of members have to sit and listen to the bill being read.

Categories
Academia

Look for the Union label

The graduate students at the University of Minnesota are voting to unionize soon. I have no dog in this fight, so I can really care less what the outcome is. However, there are some things about grad student unions that make it very different than normal unions:

  • Grad student is not a career. Everyone in the union has a very finite amount of time in the union. There really isn’t a notion of seniority that would apply to most unions.
  • There will probably be an enormous split between the grad students in IT and CBS and those who work in CLA. Science people have better job outlooks and can get more grant money for research. If your an english grad student, this might be as good as it gets.
  • Very little bargaining power. In addition to being employees, they are students. They get their tuition paid for. If they go on strike, I can see the university forcing them to pay tuition, which would cause most grad students to have to drop out. Most are very poor and they need to get a degree to have any future job prospects. If push were to come to shove, I wonder how many grad students would risk leaving school for an extra $1,200/year.
  • They aren’t really an oppressed class. We’re not talking about coal miners living in a company town here. Most of the advocacy stuff I’ve seen boils the reason for unionization down to “we want a raise” which I think they could lobby for without unionizing.

Like I said, I really don’t give a crap how it pans out, its just interesting to watch. If they vote yes and do get a pay raise, the money will come from somewhere. It could come from a reduction in future grad student admissions and/or some combination of savings from the elimination of General College or other things.