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Another re-tired day

December 10, 2004 by DaveSchappell

I think this is what I was looking for when anticipating ending formal employment. Here is what a typical action-packed day looks like:

8am – make coffee, drink coffee, check email

8:15am – read the paper

9:30am – take some ebay and amazon sale items to the post office

10am – buy some vitamins at the drugstore

10:30am – pick up Eugene on the east side, and head to pacmed building

11:15am – sign some paperwork at the ex-employer, signing over patent rights

11:30am – buy lunch at Salumi with Eugene and Mark – laugh a lot – enjoy lunch at Waterfall Park

12:10pm – enjoy a grande latte at Zeitgeist Coffee, and have Mark pay for it!

12:15pm – spot some artwork to show Karen to see if she likes it:

12:30pm – take Mark back to work (sucker!)

1pm – Eugene & I head back to the house, watch some South Park

1:30pm – drive to American Games to check out Poker Chips, then go downtown to shop

4pm – leave Eugene downtown, and head home to watch Sonics vs. Mavericks – can you believe that the Sonics are 16-3?!?

5:30pm – kick back and relax after a long tiring day ๐Ÿ™‚

Filed Under: Personal

Henry Art Gallery

December 8, 2004 by DaveSchappell

I had a lazy day around the University of Washington campus today — enjoyed browsing the magazine selection on University Avenue, gobbled up a lunch sushi plate, and then made my way to the Henry Art Museum to see their exhibition, WOW (The Work of the Work). I had wanted to visit after I saw a writeup about an exhibit that featured a small circular room, with an oval cut in the ceiling exposing the sky. I learned that this room (Skyspace), created by James Turrell, was only one of several excellent experiences.

I really enjoyed an installation entitled Pollen from Hazelnut, which was a large room, with a white floor, with a yellow center painting on the floor… painted such that it made it look soft… like a carpet, or pollen, I suppose.

Everyone will want to see, and enjoy, a visual treat by Olafur Eliasson, called Your Compound Eye, a sort of prismatic cone that you look into.

There were several other installations, probably called something like ‘new media’, ‘visual media’ or the like. Short looping movies, etc. Also some traditional art such as sculpture, photographs, and some paintings.

My favorite installation, by far, was entitled Tall Ships by Gary Hill. It is hard to explain, but if you are in Seattle you absolutely must see it. You walk toward a very dark room, and then a museum attendant directs you to walk toward a pitch black hallway. After your eyes adjust a little bit, you start to sense that the hallways is long (it ends up being ~70 feet long!), and as you start to walk down the hallway, you notice faint spots of light on each side of you. When you stop to look at the light, they start to move, and suddenly you start to see someone walking toward you. If you stand their long enough, you see a person (old, young, male, female) walk right toward you and then stop and look at you. If you move to the left, the image looks that way, and vice versa. As you move away, the image looks toward you leaving, and then loses interest and walks back from whence they came. It is a very personal experience, because of the darkness, and the interaction of sorts. I didn’t ask, but I’m assuming their are sensors of some kind to figure out where you are standing (left/center/right, near/far) and then they are using CD-ROM projections of the people. In any case, it was exceptional — makes me want to return for more!

One more note — the Henry Art Gallery is collaborating with Western Bridge on WOW. Western Bridge is a free museum in South Seattle — I can’t wait to visit to see more works by these, and similar, artists.

If you go, tell them I sent you.

Filed Under: Personal

Rare monkey clan discovered in Portland…

November 26, 2004 by DaveSchappell

I’m not sure what to make of these creatures… scary, eh?

renee valenter

connor valenter

nolan valenter

 

Filed Under: Personal

BBS Nostalgia

November 11, 2004 by DaveSchappell

1985 Dave with Apple Computer bbs

I just ordered the BBS Documentary DVD because in the late 80’s, I spent quite a bit of time running a BBS (Bulletin Board Service) on my Apple II+. It was called the Magical Tavern BBS, and my alias was The Spaniard. I ran it out of my bedroom in my parent’s house (give me a break, I was 14-15 years old!), and honestly, I loved it. I had sparked my interest in computers when the first TRS-80 was purchased by my middle school (Schuylkill Valley Middle School), I learned BASIC programming — my first computer was a Texas Instruments TI-99/4A, and I loved it. But, honestly, it didn’t hold a candle to the Apple II+. I spent a ton of time on the BBS, chatting, exchanging cracked software, phreaking, etc — boy, what you could get away with before you turned 18 ๐Ÿ™‚

Anyway, I just ordered the DVD, and it had a cool feature for folks who order before November 14th. That is, the producer is giving folks a chance to include a paragraph on the final DVD (<2,000 characters) to talk about their own BBS experiences. I took advantage of that… heck, with the amount of time I spent on BBS’s, and with the impact it had on my future career (6+ years spent at Amazon.com), it was well worth it!

Also, if you were ever into BBS’s, also check out his other site, textfiles.com — awesome stuff.

Filed Under: Personal

Mount Rainier view atop Mount Si

November 5, 2004 by DaveSchappell

mount rainier dave schappellDistant view of Mount Rainier, from top of Mount Si

I was feeling ready for a hike today, so my friend Karen and I head off to conquer Mount Si in North Bend, WA. A lot of folks give this hike grief because of the heavy traffic that it gets during summer; that said, you can’t discount how difficult it is — 4 miles up, with 3,200 feet of elevation gain — brutal! Needless to say, I underdressed… forgot that winter is on the way, and before we reached the top, we were passing light snow spots. It was brisk enough at the top that we spent maybe 10 minutes max, snapped some photos, and then quickly headed back down. By the time we got to the car, I was already starting to feel woozy. By the time I got home, I knew I was in trouble. I spent the next 3-4 days totally knocked out with chills, joint pain and general misery.

Nevertheless, the view was amazing… reminds me of why I love Seattle and Washington!

Filed Under: Personal

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Dave Schappell is a coach, consultant and investor, based in New England.

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