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Wednesday JPR 2013

March 3rd, 2013 Comments off

Wednesday was my absolute favourite day of the round-up. It was mid-week, we were half way through, already, the round-up. But before I can begin, I must say many of us had a late night at Joe Webber’s Princess bar. The jet lag had caught up with me by then, and the morning was rough, and yet I rush to the Parish Hall to get to session that I pinned up on the board: “How to be a Better Consultant?”. Well it did not happen, people were not interested in this topic and there was another one happening at the same. Instead, Romain Pelisse and I had a long chat downstairs in the comfy chairs. We poured over web sockets, Java, Scala, Red Hat and of course travelling to different countries to see clients. I just found Romain fascinating, and the fact that he does training for Red Hat is a good thing too. Sometimes, coincidence is the best thing, what does not occur is the destiny and the true path.

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This is the official sheet that host must fill in to record a podcast session for the JavaPosse Round-Up; here is mine on Functional Programming

The second session of the second day was a little vacant. So I thought I am going to propose an session. I grabbed a post-it note and felt tip pen and scribbled down: Functional Java. Well what did I know. People was interested, people including Bill Robertson, Dick Wall, Bruce Eckel and Daniel Hinojosa. I think from this talk that I was letting my Scala learnings slip away. I know why, because I have writing feverishly on the Java EE 7 book, which is the main priority. I will get back on the Scala horse sooner rather later. Bill Robertson had a great deal to say about Closure and ClojureScript schemas. It was an interesting session to say the least.

The title Engineering Management Techniques and Insights was the final and third session of Wednesday. This was hosted by Barry Hawkins and Guy and myself. The other people were the instigators of the session, in truth. As guy put it: how can we lead without managing? The session revealed that there were no easy answers to great engineering management. There topics dived into a performance reviews, 360 reviews, Agile retrospectives; management by walking around the office was controversially seen by some, not particularly myself, as a bad idea. I believe this is going to be an interesting podcast, because you may or may not agree with the points on the tape.

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In the afternoon, I met up with Chris Phleps and we went to the Crested Butte, the weather was gorgeous, absolutely kind to us. Chris is a skier and I am a snowboarder; the funny thing is that we are both owners of GoPro helmet camera. Chris had a first generation and I had recently invested 200 quid in a third generation. It was a lot of fun riding together. If you want to see more about winter sports, please see my other related blog entry.

Day 2 of the Conference Wall.

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In between the sessions on Wednesday, I went to the Camp Four coffee shop just around the corner from the church. I saw this outside painting with oil colours the Crested Butte mountain. This local painter is called Shaun Horne; his paintings are displayed at the Telluride Gallery in Colorado, http://shaunhorne.com

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Camp 4 Coffe shop just around the corner. Hmmm Coffee+++

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The mystery cosmopolitan cocktail from the Princess bar on Tuesday night: actually, it tasted delicious. A chance for developers to unwind and truly forget about professional work and the day job.

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Uh oh. I have been caught red-handed with the cocktail in hand! To my right is Bruce Eckel, the co-organiser of the JavaPosse Round-Up open space conference, Bruce Eckel. This photo was taken by James Ward, who was working behing the Princess bar, helping out Joe Webber.

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Categories: community, Conference, javaposse, Scala, Travel Tags:

Snowboarding Crested Butte 2013

March 2nd, 2013 Comments off

Some stuff about winter sports:

JPR 2013: Thursday Introduction #2 from Peter Pilgrim on Vimeo.

JPR 2013: Going Downhill with Chris Phleps from Peter Pilgrim on Vimeo.

JPR 2013: Thursday Wipeout! Last Run of the Day! from Peter Pilgrim on Vimeo.

Thursday Best Solo Download Run from Peter Pilgrim on Vimeo.

JPR 2013: Wednesday Video 1 (GPR0011) from Peter Pilgrim on Vimeo.

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PS: On Friday, I completely messed up the GoPro footage: wrong camera alignment. There should have been no excuses, because the Hero, Third Generation has the GoPro mobile phone app, which allows a user to preview the camera! So I missed out on recording the whole group on Friday: DJ Hagberg, Chris Marks, Chris Phelps, Jeremy and myself. Bloody Hell!

PS PS: See you all next time at the JavaPosse RoundUp!

Categories: javaposse, JPR, Snowboarding, Sport, Travel, Winter Tags:

Initial Days of the JavaPosse Round-Up 2013

February 26th, 2013 Comments off

On Saturday, 23rd February 2013, South London, early in the morning, having packed my snowboard and a small Samsonite grey suite case overnight, I got up, trying my best not to disturb my partner. I was on my way to London Heathrow. The morning Sun sternly pushed its sunlight through seeming impenetrable clouds in to average Londoner grey day. A couple of snow flakes magically decided to reveal themselves every cubic metre on the fresh wintry quest for vanity. The United Airlines plane took off time to Newark at 10:15. I could sit and back and relax, so they say.

I have to immediately say that Argo, the movie that Ben Affleck won the Oscar Director for, is great, even though you know the result. I was rooted for the government workers to get out. It told the story from both sides, especially the Iranians were frustrated with their lot, their Shah of Iran, who escaped with billions of gold. In my opinion, Ben Affleck is the next Clint Eastween, if this is the standard of his first directed movie. That was the highpoint of transatlantic voyeur; and a large hint of the frustration to come to me.

I attempted to code and write content a little. I had bean researching how GlassFish Embedded application server v4.0 and WebSockets 356 played together, and following the expert group mailing list. Danny Coward now wanted to renamed the current annotations in the specification JSR 356. WebSockets endpoint were not been injected by the CDI Container present GlassFish, and this was a frustration on the plane. Luckily before I took flight I changed the gradle settings to include providedCompile 'org.glassfish.main.extras:glassfish-embedded-all:4.0-b77'. This brilliant idea that I had was fantastic, running “gradle idea” sort of worked, but I realised that I missed one other dependency providedCompile 'javax:javaee-api:7.0-b77'". There was no available Internet on the transatlantic plane. It was time to put the machine away.

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View into Montrose

Eventually, I landed at Denver International Airport after 18 hours, where they do have free-WIFI, only to be shocked at the news: The 19:30 flight from DEN to GUC (Gunnison) was canceled. I got on the internet with phone, something about Dianne Marsh and the Weather and delayed and cancelled flights. United Airlines service customer desk at gate B33 did confirm cancelation of the flight, I was stuck in Denver for the overnight. The clerk handed me a pink slip for the airport hotel. My annoyance really almost saw the milk almost boiling over on the stove: no, I just caught it in time, flicked the switch, the British Gas was extinguished and gladly no lactose was burned: this time. The smell, anyway, would have been so awful. The sense of decorum, in myself, returned, sort of. United had given be a confirmation of Monday 25th February at lunchtime as my next guaranteed flight out to Crested Butte. Two nights in a Denver hotel: you got to be bloody joking! Decorum was gone by the time, my neurons interpreted, filtered and assessed this aural data.

Matt Zimmer, the organiser of the house in Crested Butte that I am staying in, and a friend had also suffered the cancelation of the last United flight to Gunnison many hours earlier. Without Internet access, I was none the wiser. Matt decided to get his luggage and travel by road the next day with D.J Hagberg. I elected to re-route my flight to Montrose, 60km further out from Crested Butte and thanks to advice from Dianne Marsh, I was flying out the next morning on Sunday at 08:10AM. I overnighted at the DoubleTree hotel, about 25 minutes by free shuttle from Denver airport. I was exhausted and my head was minced like Baked Beans.

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I am standing outside the vacation rental house, 329 Maroon. This photo was taken by Matt Zimmer who organised the rental this year. I thought that let somebody else be responsible for a chance, having being the “housemeister” for 2009, 2010 and 2011.

 

Eventually, I arrived at Montrose, the next day, having survived the ordeal of wearing the same clothes for a second day. Bum hole! United had not sent my snowboard and trolley case onwards with me. I reported my missing luggage and got on the Alpine Express, so much for the best laid plan. The original intention of arriving on Saturday night, was that I would have a full Sunday to go up to the mountains and enjoy some powder and board to my heart’s content before the Round-Up on Monday. Chagrin, I love the French. They had a wonderful footballer, didn’t they, Zinedine Zidane.

I desperately wanted to be Zidane, World Cup winner 1998, on the Sunday, so skilful on the football, able to hide his true emotions and then engineer a flash of instant magic that regularly produced the killer pass to the Brazilian legendary striker, World Cup Winner 2002, Ronaldo, when they both played regularly and so sumptuously together at Real Madrid. Alas, my modus operandi were not that good, when speaking to customer representatives on Skype. I was first to arrive at the vacation rental house on Sunday, managed to get an Internet connection, got on the blower to United to see about my snowboard. The web site, United Baggage Resolution Centre, yes it is all true, Dear Lord, is a load of bollocks. Sorry! Excuse my French. The status was always Tracing Your Baggage, Please Check Back Later; and I did every four hours. I went around Crested Butte, got a bite, a Hawaiian style Teriyaki Chicken, to eat at the Last Steep, which is quite decent. I supposedly reasoned that it was good to have finally made it back here again in Crested Butte for my fourth Round-Up event. I, then, withdrew a bundle of US Dollars for spending money. It could have been a blast. It wasn’t to be. I was safe. Instead, I did some coding more on Java Web Sockets, I found out about the techniques for responsive CSS web design and yes that Gradle Dependency was the cause of the CDI injection failure. I solved it. Tyrus 1.0-build11 is the version of the reference implementation inside GlassFish 4.0 server build 77. Great though that was, a change of fresh warm clothes would have been the clincher.

Matt Zimmer arrived in the evening at the vacation rental house in Maroon. Immediately, we went off to Bruce Eckel’s house later in the evening, as D.J. Hagberg also made it to Crested Butte from Denver through the mountain passes. Being a local Coloradian, D.J said that the four hour trip on a regular day took them seven hours, the weather was turbulent high up on 11,000 feet or so. Experience obviously counts: he is a very safe driver. You’d trust him with your life.

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Crested Butte, Main street, on Sunday afternoon

The mini-progressive dinner at Bruce’s place where everyone contributed a little bit of this, a little bit that, steak; pork chops; a six pack beer, which I did along with my brother-in-spirt-man, Chris Phleps ; a couple of bottle of wine went along way to taking my mind off the baggage ordeal. It was good to meet and greet and see the Round-Up folks from 2011, when I was last here in Crested Butte. Fred Simon, Diane Marsh, Chris Marks and several other regulars were here ahead of time. Also Hans Dockter of Gradleware and Gradle was present at Bruce.

Monday morning started in a despondent fashion with a fifth call over Skype to the UBRC , the status of the website was the same Still Tracing. I learnt by now to try a different tact on this; my partner often suggested this alternative manoeuvre when communicating with customer representatives anywhere in the world, she says: Tell them, only, what you want. I asked for my snowboard and my case to be put on the next available plane to Montrose and I also asked them for the exact location of where the luggage currently was located as the website was useless at revealing this data. I should say, that all calls, go out to India. I am not surprised by outsourcing suffice to say you can figure out yourself the rest of my reaction to this situation. The fifth customer rep said they do all they could, they will send a message to emergency expedite the bags.

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Matt Zimmer (L) and James Ward (R) discussing Scala Play Framework during the Free Day on Monday. The workshop took place at the “Posse’s old” rental house.

So my Monday, started at Posse house with Matt Zimmer learning a Scala Play framework with James Ward leading us through an introduction and blocking and non-blocking actions. I thought James did a good job. Monday is a free day for the Round-Up; we could learn Big Data if we wanted to, instead we study a topic that interests us collectively. For me and a few others, an introduction to Play Framework was a good topic. We learnt about a tool call Apache Bench and found that on Mac Book Pro at least, Mac OS X, Play does scale nicely to 1000′s of web request on the same machine. James attempted to reconfigure the Execution Context, of the Play’s underlying fork join framework, which is derived from Professor Doug Lea’s incantations or close enough, as all road lead to his Rome, his knowledge of Java Threads and Concurrency is primus uno. We concluded there must be an issue with the number of collected input and output resources at an operating system level. Matt was a little unimpressed with this as he decidedly had commercial Scala and Play project on the line. Marek Radonsky thought the issue could be a configuration failure with the Netty server library, which Play Framework relies on for asynchronous input and output. Still, Play, for me represents a little bit of dichotomy in comparison with the Java EE world.

Wearing the same clothes for the third day did its best to sally my enthusiasm for the Round-Up. I was beginning to lose the will to live by the afternoon, I refused an offer to go snow shoeing around the town of Crested Butte. I hope I didn’t come off with being like a damp squib to the other Round-Up people. The prospect of extensive physical sweat in the only clothes I had on my back knocked the desire out of me, clearly. By this time, Andrew Harmel-Law arrived and I followed him on tour of the vacation rentals, the Posse House, then Bruce Eckel’s house.

I decided by late afternoon to get back into writing that WebSocket Java EE 7 example for my forthcoming book, incidentally called Chapter 7 WebSockets, at the time of writing. Chris Phelps was there at Bruce Eckel’s house and he showed off his cool JavaScript example: AngularJS and Backbone. He said, “It’s was step up from JQuery”. I was impressed so much by AngularJS and Twitter Backbone, I need to add a client example of this into my up and coming book only to show the state-of-the-art. Barry Hawkins, the long time Agile consultant who transferred to California and a gaming company, Riot Games, was also at Bruce’s house, he was learning Kernighan and Ritchie’s C Programming Language. We had a light smirk on this topic. The irony of all. For many of us C was a one of the first professional computing programming language when we read at University or began our careers. No offence to Barry was intended. Learning is a lifetime of progress, so respect is due, to all those who continue with improvement. A few others, Andrew and somebody else, decided to delve into the Groovy programming language. I think shared knowledge learning with somebody else to trade idea is great way to jump into a new technical area, especially when you know that the people that you conserving with, have quality, it was like the meeting of the England Football team international training at Bisham Abbey. Andrew will probably be amused or get slightly annoyed with that national football team comparison, because he, just like my partner, is Scottish, but you know what I mean about quality developer, designer and experienced people, many of them great Americans. The point you know when you are standing with peers of high quality; you have met these sort of professionals, then you know what the quality and the standard is for evermore.

A bunch of us headed to Secret Stash, my mood was somber, I did my best to put on a Lady Gaga appearance emotionally, but my version of Poker Face didn’t hold up so well and my tell came to life and revealed itself when the restaurant and the cooks were 15-20 minute late with my pizza whilst everyone else at the table was tucking into pork infested pizzas. I was hungry, frustrated with United Airlines, and everything else. Eventually the BBQ Chicken arrived; it was just okay. I cracked a few jokes, and war stories here and there. I fist pumped with Chris Phleps about respectively terribles ordeals in the IT industry. We both needed to get the funk out of our collective systems. We both moved on to something better, it was good to give each other that support.

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Monday night dinner at the Last Steep restaurant. From left to right: Guy, Dimitry, Chris Marks, Chris Phelp, Andrew Harmel-Law, Todd Costella, and Me.

My fight with United continued for seven time after 8pm on Monday. Finally, a breakthrough, my baggage had been located in Denver and they were sending it through to Gunnison, unfortunately the Indian UBRC representative could not tell me either when exactly and how it get to Crested Butte. I went for a short nap, read a few emails and tweets from London UK. Not much going on, Ben Affleck was now a super star actor and director and so was the actors Anne Hathaway with Daniel Day-Lewis making Oscar history. Some cheer at the achievements of others. I ruminated a little about the remaining schedule for my book. Life could be worse. I was fortunate to make it Crested Butte at all.

I dragged my flesh and bones over to the Ted talks taking at the local Matinée theathre in Crested Butte. I was half interested in the Ted talks by 10pm; too much was going in the grey cells. I was, indeed, not looking forward to a fourth day of wearing the same clothes, then, a Dame in shining armour reared her head. I got a message via Matt Zimmer after the Ted talks: Tracy Quinn the wife of Java Posse member, Carl Quinn, Netflix, said she had got my snowboard at Gunnison Airport. The Java Posse team was also a day late getting to Crested Butte, they finally flew in on the evening flight.

Thanks to them, now I have my snowboard and trolley bag for this next morning. I am eternally grateful for their support and bringing my stuff over as well as other people who also had delay baggage to Crested Butte. We can go as we mean to. I have to rush off now to the Tuesday round-up the first proper morning of the Round-Up, wish me luck.

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Visit Google SF and California Tour

October 16th, 2012 Comments off

Van Riper invited JUG leaders and Java Champions to visit Google San Francisco. After the last sessions of the JavaOne conference, circa 5pm on Thursday evening, we walked as the motley crew from Hilton SF, to Google’s office next door to the Embarcadaro bridge. It was a real blast, and the hosts treated us fine. I thought it was pretty cool to see the USA Googler’s in their environment. We went on a mini-tour of the building. The views from the terraces of the Embarcadaro were stunning. Of course, a visit to Google is nothing without eating in the cafetaria, I have to say that the food was really nice, plenty to go around and it was after hours for working people, and I was impressed.

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This sign speaks for itself

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Stephan Janssen [L]

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Kirk Pepperdine [L] sitting and Heinz Kabutz [R] figure out what is wrong with the muscle relaxer massage chair

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Bruno Souza and Juggy

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The famous slide between the third and fourth floors. It was chance to behave like a five year old again, yay!

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Great view behind me of the Embarcadaro bridge and Treasure Island, memories of the Pearl Jam of the previous night. What a party?!

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A group photograph of the people, all of visitors to Google SF 2012. Thank you very Van Riper!

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Am I ready to become a Google Evangelist? Probably I could do it. Get Google to start developing JavaFX and/or Scala applications, and then I will be there on the spot, most likely ;-)

The day after JavaOne, I hit the road, jack … I took a shuttle back to San Francisco Airport (SFO) for fifteen bucks and hired a rental car for the remainder of my stay.


View California Fly/Drive Tour Peter Pilgrim 2012 in a larger map

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The Obligatory photograph of the Powell Street to Fisherman’s Wharf trolley car!

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Outside the Palo Alto Apple Store, many people pay their respect the former Apple CEO and co-founder

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On my checkout-of-hotel day in SF, Uniqlo had just opened a new store near Union Square, they had shipped in an old 60′s motor just for show. The queue for the new store were quite long, and therefore the police closed off a couple of streets, the nearby traffic was brought to a standstill. I caught these men wrestling with an Oldsmobile.

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The Santa Cruz sunset

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The rental ride from SFO where they upgraded me from an economy to this stylish silver grey thing.

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Monterey harbour and tons of boats

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Monterey fisheries, canneries and more white bait than you can shake your tackle at

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A veritable Pelican Brief

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Cannery row (or road)

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On the way Hearst Castle, I stopped off at Eagle Castle to visit some vineyards, and a small-scale movie was being shot on-location. I think the working title was to be called “Katanga’s Successor”

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The front stairs and façade to Hearst Castle, I took the upstairs guided tour only

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The Roman bathhouse at Hearst Castle

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Sunset along the Pacific coast

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Los Angeles beaches, Vernice beach

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Baywatch! Los Angeles at Sunset or very nearly the end of day. The sea is liveable and swimmable compared to 500 miles up the coast at Santa Cruz, where it was extremely cold even to skinny dip! Be warned, the waves are much more powerful here, in California, if you come here yourself, please don’t take any risks. I did not. And yes, they have lifeguards and helicopters on duty along Vernice, Santa Monica and Long Beach.

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West Hollywood, the Boulevard at night

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This is actually meant to be distant photograph of the lead singer of King’s Leon, Caleb Followill, at the Oracle Appreciation Event, JavaOne. This is the iPhone 4S though, so it is not too bad, having said that.

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This is the house band at the Red Hat Party, during JavaOne, which took place at the Museum of Modern Art in San Francisco, quite near to the Moscone Center and the W Hotel

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Real proper sand at Vernice Beach, makes a big difference to Brighton pebble beach in England!

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On the Redondo beach pier, in Long Beach, Los Angeles

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California 2011 Part Two

November 5th, 2011 Comments off

Where do you go from here?

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Petaluma’s Boulevard movie theatre

 

My California tour continued from Petaluma to Santa Rosa across the US 101 to Napa Valley, Castiloga and then to Sacramento City. The tour swung southwards to Oracle’s Redwood Shore for a final presentation. After that I stayed with friends, Larry and Patti at Menlo Park.

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The river that runs through Petaluma: the Petaluma

 

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Across the tracks in Petaluma

 

Wine Country Day

A vineyard field so typical of the Napa Valley and the Castiloga region

 

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Old town department store-like architecture

 

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Hired Blue Mustang near Bodega

 

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Sunset at Bodega Beach

 

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Bodega Beach knee end and large swathes of sands

 

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Bodega beach, just after sunset, time to head back to Santa Rosa. Moon is in shot. Time to drive.

 

Wine Country Day

Wine Country and Castiloga Geyser

Wine Country Day

Castiloga Geyser

 

Wine Country Day

Chateau Montelena arrived for a Wine Tasting. Unfortunately, financial funds and lack prevented me from buying any of their plonk. I would have need another suitcase and paid excess weight fees to the United Kingdom. However I recommend this Cabernet grape, chocolaty and cherry for any locals in Silicon Valley, because it was exceptional.

 

Wine Country Day

The local Asian-fusion inspired garden at the Chateau Montelena

 

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Architecture of Sacramento, this federal security like building was on lease. Almost all of the buildings, which I saw were depressingly out to let. It was measure of just how the deep recession went and certainly sobering impression of the economic downturn of 2011. I gave a hefty sigh.

 

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What do you get if you could add? Justin Bieber: If I were a billionaire and this empty building in Sacramento. "Your name here", indeed. My answer: I do not know, either, but I am sure that you would make something amazing.

 

 

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The story of our times. Even this classic period piece could be using someone care and attention. Yet, this is the era of the credit crunch and the breaking down of the Eurozone. I have seriously doubts that anyone going moving into this Spanish style tienda low-housing any year soon.

 

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Example of mixed architecture in modern downtown Sacramento showing influences across the ages. Looking over to China town.

 

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Oracle Office building at night on Redwood Shores. Rush! Rush!

 

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Apple store in Palo Alto the day after all my last speaking engagement 14th October 2011. Passing Steve Job’s still clearly felt by inhabitants of Silicon Valley and a great of mark of respect.

 

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More tributes here at Palo Alto Apple Store

 

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Bridge across Palo Alto to Menlo Park and the sun appears to go down, my last day in California for 2011. It is fitting tribute to a rewarding trip.

Categories: architecture, California, Java, JavaFX, Tour, Travel Tags:

California 2011 Part One

November 5th, 2011 Comments off

Which direction do you go in?

California 2011

Long walk along Geary Street on Saturday

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Walking past an example of small-scale scraper architecture

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Street tap dancing skills at SOMA, San Francisco, crossing of Old Navy Store, Powell Street station

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Destination reached, a shot from the building where Best Buy store located along Geary Street, 2.5 miles from SOMA. Blue Angels jets were flying by constantly.

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I passed through Japan town in San Francisco, along Geary street walk

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I am standing in Japan town

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Dave Briccetti (L) and myself (R) at the SVCC Sunday. We are both eating slices of pizza at lunch.

 

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Kevin Nilsson (L)

 

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Peter Kellner (L) announces the prizes on Sunday 9th October 2011

 

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Happy attendees for Silicon Valley Code Camp

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Santa Cruz, California. Unfortunately the rides were closed. Summer time had passed, the sea was freezing cold.

California 2011

Laughing Sally, Santa Cruz boardwalk

From Santa Cruz, I drove north back to San Francisco, across the Golden Gate brige to Santa Rosa. The next day I dropped by TWiT TV in Petaluma on my way to Bodega Beach. Thanks to Liz Romero for allowing me access to the TWiT facility

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Visiting TWiT (This Week in Tech) offices in Petulama, Northern California. The home of Leo Laporte and Sara Lane!

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The TWiT Wall in the foyer

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Sara Lane (R) co-hosts TWiT’s Tech News Today (TNT). Live!<.p>

 

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The portable studio rig on actual wheels

 

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Jason Howell co-host / producer of Tech News Today on sofa wheels. Literally and real life.

 

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The Tech News Today today team co-host (R) Sara Lane, host (M) Tom Merritt and (L) co-host Iyaz Akhtar.