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    <title>Advogato blog for Johnath</title>
    <link>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/</link>
    <description>Advogato blog for Johnath</description>
    <language>en-us</language>
    <generator>mod_virgule</generator>
    <pubDate>Sun, 26 May 2013 07:16:51 GMT</pubDate>
    <item>
      <pubDate>Wed, 26 Sep 2001 18:29:15 GMT</pubDate>
      <title>26 Sep 2001</title>
      <link>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=27</link>
      <guid>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=27</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;FINAL ENTRY IN THIS DIARY&lt;/b&gt;

&lt;p&gt; &lt;p&gt;I'm moving my diaries to livejournal.com - not that 
advogato isn't a great place to be - just that a site 
dedicated solely to the management of journals is likely to 
do a better job of it.  Plus, it's a project I could see 
myself working on, and what better way to decide than by 
moving there?

&lt;p&gt; &lt;p&gt;People that want to find my journal entries from now on 
(including all the old ones posted here) should now go to 
&lt;a href="http://www.livejournal.com/~johnath/" &gt;http://www.livej
ournal.com/~johnath/&lt;/a&gt;.</description>
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    <item>
      <pubDate>Mon, 24 Sep 2001 16:02:27 GMT</pubDate>
      <title>24 Sep 2001</title>
      <link>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=26</link>
      <guid>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=26</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;i&gt;Since my last entry the world has changed far more 
than I have.  It's been a couple weeks now, and the flags 
are starting to fly at full mast again, which hopefully 
means that people are picking up and moving on.  I am going 
to do likewise.  This is our generation's JFK, even moreso 
than Challenger, insofar as two tragedies can be compared. 
It will hang overhead for a long time, but it does no one 
any good to punish themselves for the atrocities of others -
 so I'm going to go back to being happy and enjoying life, 
while never for a second forgetting the &lt;/i&gt;enormity&lt;i&gt; of 
this.&lt;/i&gt;
&lt;p&gt;IBM continues to please me, and now that we have moved 
to the new lab facility, everything's coming up roses.  
Slashdot had a story recently about all the fun jobs being 
gone, but I have to say, I like what I do, I like the 
people I work with, and I love this new facility.  I still 
think my job is great fun, I'm now signed up for a couple 
courses that at least *I* consider cool (UML and an RHCE 
crash course followed by the exam).  Heck, I even brought 
in a new rapid fire nerf gun this morning.  
&lt;p&gt;My "professional" business cards came in last week (the 
ones listing me as "Software Developer" and having regular 
contact information).  It will probably be another week 
until the "alternate" ones come in (listing my profession 
as "Hacker" and having, on the flipside, personal contact 
info and my pgp key id and fingerprint.  :)  The notion 
that I have a business card is strange and alarming and 
seems to indicate that someone in control of things is 
asleep at the switch. I'm practicing the suave maneuvers by 
which you can produce a business card out of thin air upon 
request.  So far I'm not very suave, updates as events 
warrant.
&lt;p&gt;Life continues to be good.  Amy and I are back into 
racquetball on a semi regular basis, and despite exercise 
mags telling you it's not as good as, say, running 10 miles 
a day, it's significantly more fun.  I have only kicked the 
ball into my own eye once so far.
&lt;p&gt;Don't play the slots.  This is my seasoned professional 
advice after visiting my first casino this weekend (Casino 
Rama, no less).  I bought in $60 in chips, turned it into 
$120 playing blackjack and then turned it back into $60 
playing the slots.  Ah well, a learning experience - next 
time it's nothing but blackjack and the poker rooms for 
me.
&lt;p&gt;Cooking rocks.  Need a new paring knife.  3.5 or 4".  
Pro S or Wusthof, I haven't decided.  And last week on iron 
chef, some master of pasta making was the challenger and 
had this great little wooden thing for hanging pasta to 
dry - need to get me one of those.
</description>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 20 Aug 2001 20:18:52 GMT</pubDate>
      <title>20 Aug 2001</title>
      <link>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=25</link>
      <guid>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=25</guid>
      <description>&lt;P&gt;Another month has passed and life continues to please me 
immensely, though I am really rather tired at the moment 
from a weekend of camping and not-sleeping.  

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;Work continues to be a great place to be.  Right now I'm 
reading up on the different IBM big iron offerings 
available, just because I never did really know the 
difference between s/390s, as/400s, and rs/6000s, and it 
seemed like the kind of thing any self-respecting geek 
ought to know.  Suffice it to say that if anyone has a 640-
way s/390 that they don't need, I'll be happy to give it a 
new home.  :)  As long as I have stuff to do, work also 
keeps me pretty productive - my biggest problem right now 
is getting through things too quickly - but that's not 
intended as gloating, just as an observation that I must be 
enjoying it.  

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;Life outside of work is even better than life at work.  
Our exercising has been cut into heavily by Amy's wounding 
of her foot, but in the meantime I've gotten plenty of 
reading done.  For what it's worth, _Information 
Warfare_ by Winn Schwartau is a very interesting book, 
despite Schwartau himself not being one of my favourite 
writers.

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;We just picked up a new 32" TV and DVD player which 
pretty much rock my world.  Even greater though, is that we 
bought them outright - no credit cards, no financing - free 
and clear ownership.  That's a pretty amazing thing - at 
least to me.

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;Speaking of finances, I recently read _The Wealthy 
Barber_ and folks, if you're young, 
just getting started out of university, and though you're 
smart, you don't know a whole heck of a lot about finances, 
this is a book you should read.  I can now talk 
meaningfully about amortization periods and how much 
insurance is enough.  Much more importantly though, I now 
have an investment plan that will work and that, once my 
debts are paid off and I put it into action, will be 
utterly straightforward to maintain.  Having a girlfriend 
whose brother is a chartered accountant helps, to be sure, 
but his biggest contribution so far has been telling me to 
read this book.  

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;Geez, I'm sure I sound like every punk who thinks 
they're an expert after reading a -For-Dummies book.  For 
the record, I don't think I know everything, at all - not 
even close, especially on this score.  But a decent 
financial plan is also not an impossible thing to develop - 
it doesn't require you to watch the markets non-stop, or a 
calculator with 64 digit precision.  Okay, enough, I'm 
preaching now - but seriously, good book.

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;Cooking continues to rock, and I make a mean 3-mushroom 
linguine.</description>
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    <item>
      <pubDate>Thu, 19 Jul 2001 14:42:43 GMT</pubDate>
      <title>19 Jul 2001</title>
      <link>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=24</link>
      <guid>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=24</guid>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;3-4 weeks seems to be settling down as my intra-entry 
interval, so here I am again right on, or perhaps a teensy 
bit behind, schedule.
&lt;p&gt;Life is still grand - I'm not so rabid about cooking in 
the mornings any more - I've gotten pretty good at the 
perfect omelet, I just generally prefer to sleep for the 
extra 10 minutes that a bowl of cereal buys me.  Dinner 
though, is still a cooking party.  I got my manual pasta 
maker, which makes a world of difference believe me.  When 
amy &amp;amp; I cook the packaged pasta now - even the good 
quality 
stuff, it just seems flavourless by comparison.
&lt;p&gt;Work is making sense now - I'm actually producing code, 
starting to merit IBM's investment, and generally 
understanding what's going on to a far greater extent.  The 
beauty of working on a product line that came into 
existence a month before you joined the company is that 
everything is very one-point-oh, but that's a double edged 
sword.  No question it's where I want to be, I love this 
kind of work - work that actually requires/allows me to 
make relevant decisions - but it's... interesting at 
times.  Imagine the amount of documentation that exists, 
for instance, on something brand new and kind of 
complicated to boot.  Now cut that estimate in half and 
spread it all over a company with 350,000 employees.  
Interesting.
&lt;p&gt;I guess my CompSci profs should be proud - their message 
got through to me - document document document - and now 
I'm in the real world, reading vast expanses of code, and 
the documentation is sparse.  Or not where I'd expect it, 
anyhow - it does exist... somewhere.  But I'll continue 
doing my part anyhow - in-code explanations, javadoc 
comments on every method - actual written specs that are up 
to date.  Maybe that makes me a keener.  I'd like to think 
it also makes me a better developer, though.
&lt;p&gt;My hacking life is done by proxy right now.  I'm 
learning php while teaching it to Amy, who is going to 
whip up her first cgi driven site and who has relatively 
little programming to fall back on.  PHP seemed like a safe 
choice - I might have recommended JSPs, I'd certainly enjoy 
reading a couple books on the subject, but I think that 
would be too much extra work for too little extra 
payout - at least for her needs.  So our evenings right now 
are cook dinner, racquetball, SQL tutorial.  Or cook 
dinner, racquetball, C-style syntax refresher.  Or... etc.  
Essentially, I just read through the php docs faster than 
she does, and answer the questions she has since I've got a 
little more background to which to attach this stuff.  I 
gotta say, btw, props to PHP's doc writers - they use 
excellent, unambiguous language when describing the 
features of php, makes a compsci major feel quite at home.  
Does manage to be a little intimidating to newcomers 
though, I'm guessing.  Perhaps there should be "Programming 
PHP" and "Learning PHP" style manuals, to steal from perl's 
format.  Perhaps there already are...
&lt;p&gt;&lt;b&gt;Extra! Extra!&lt;/b&gt;  I find out, just after writing 
this, that I have had copyrights infringed-upon!  How 
exciting.  My &lt;a href="http://psych.utoronto.ca/~reingold/courses/ai/" &gt;AI 
tutorial&lt;/a&gt; (written a couple 
years ago for psych students) has been copied, almost in 
full, by &lt;a href="http://padova.fimmg.org/ring/docs/ai_tutorial.htm#inde
x" &gt;these guys&lt;/a&gt;.  They have preserved 
our names at the top (though they removed the mailto:'s) 
and they have removed all our copyright notices.  
Charming.  I've written to the prof with whom I wrote the 
tutorial, to get his thoughts on the matter.  I'm inclined 
to let it be - I wrote that tutorial because I thought 
people might find it educational, maybe even interesting.  
For the most part, I'm happy it's reached a larger 
audience.  I do wish they'd been a little more polite about 
it though.  We'll see.</description>
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    <item>
      <pubDate>Mon, 18 Jun 2001 21:18:32 GMT</pubDate>
      <title>18 Jun 2001</title>
      <link>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=23</link>
      <guid>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=23</guid>
      <description>&lt;P&gt;For two weeks now, I have been an IBM employee.  I have 
also just finished moving, and so the short story is that 
my life has been very busy.  All things considered then, 3 
weeks since my last diary entry can hardly be considered 
surprising.
&lt;P&gt;Home life is good, great even, but takes some getting 
used to.  We love the apartment: the move from a 
basement with little light and no climate control to a wide 
open, spacious apartment with frostbite-level air 
conditioning and a downright pretty kitchen has just been 
incredible.  I have ordered in once in two and a half 
weeks, and even then it was more just to try the local wing 
joint than because I really needed to - cooking is every 
bit as rewarding as I thought it would be, and I am eating 
splendidly.  :)  We haven't started playing racquetball 
regularly yet, but we've played enough sporadically for me 
to know I'll enjoy it, and we've even gotten a semi-regular 
poker night going, so all in all, I'm pleased.  
&lt;P&gt;The getting-used-to that I mentioned is mostly getting 
used to working real hours.  8 hours plus an unpaid lunch, 
plus commute, can make a day feel pretty long, and make my 
home time feel pretty short, but I'm getting there - the 
nights are starting to feel less cramped - and having 
weekends all to myself, with no essays, with *nothing* 
overhead, is an unmitigated joy.
&lt;P&gt;IBM is turning out to be surprisingly cool.  Red tape is 
almost non-existant, which is simply unbelievable for a 
company this size, but there it sits.  I am working pretty 
heavily with XML and Java, which is a happy place for me to 
be, and I'm doing some pretty fun stuff to boot, designing 
the tools that will be used to make a business 'e'.  It's a 
bit jarring at first - you start to twitch because all 
around you people are spouting these buzzwords: e-business, 
XML (DTD, Schema, etc), integration tooling - and to be 
sure, some part of it is just buzzword parrotting, but a 
surprisingly large proportion of these people are actually 
using the terms because they're appropriate - they're using 
the technologies because it's the right choice to make, not 
because of the infamous phb factor - heck, my b doesn't 
even have ph!  :)
&lt;P&gt;Point is, work-wise, home-wise, things are pretty 
pleasant.  Geek-wise, things are still a little too busy, 
and a little too still-in-their-moving-boxes for the geek 
factor to get going again, but it will come, and lord help 
me, a significant chunk of my upcoming paycheques will be 
feeding that geek fetish.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <pubDate>Sat, 26 May 2001 16:49:47 GMT</pubDate>
      <title>26 May 2001</title>
      <link>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=22</link>
      <guid>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=22</guid>
      <description>&lt;P&gt;One week till we move into our new place.  That's pretty 
exciting, and it means 9 days till I start work.
&lt;P&gt;Predictably enough, May has not quite been the reading-
gorge-fest I had hoped - too many things crop up when you 
think you have time off - but Java is still being absorbed, 
and I picked up the O'Reilly XML book, so that's next on 
the hit list.
&lt;P&gt;Life is good, but most of my life is in boxes at the 
moment, so life is also pretty lean at the moment; imagine 
being down to only about a dozen books.
&lt;P&gt;No significant hacking has transpired for a while - I'll 
have to get back in.  Paradoxically, I think I will do more 
free-time hacking when I'm working than when I have time 
off.  Go figure.
&lt;P&gt;This entry's pretty lightweight, since I'm on my way out 
the door, so I'll compensate with a poem from Louis Dudek 
which I really like.
&lt;P&gt;
&lt;BR&gt; &lt;B&gt;Freedom&lt;/b&gt; &lt;BR&gt; &lt;BR&gt; &lt;I&gt;My two dogs&lt;BR&gt;
tied to a tree&lt;BR&gt;
by a ten-foot leash&lt;BR&gt;
kept whining and howling for an hour&lt;BR&gt;
till I let them off.&lt;BR&gt;
&lt;BR&gt;
Now they are lying quietly on the grass &lt;BR&gt;
a few feet further from the tree&lt;BR&gt;
and they haven't moved since I let them go.&lt;BR&gt;
&lt;BR&gt;
Freedom may be&lt;BR&gt;
only an idea&lt;BR&gt;
but it's a matter of principle&lt;BR&gt;
even to a dog.&lt;/i&gt; &lt;BR&gt; &lt;BR&gt;</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2001 05:29:20 GMT</pubDate>
      <title>11 May 2001</title>
      <link>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=21</link>
      <guid>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=21</guid>
      <description>&lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;Today I finished school.&lt;/b&gt;</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <pubDate>Mon, 23 Apr 2001 22:56:42 GMT</pubDate>
      <title>23 Apr 2001</title>
      <link>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=20</link>
      <guid>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=20</guid>
      <description>&lt;P&gt;Today's diary entry is brought to you by the word: 
&lt;B&gt;Transition&lt;/b&gt;.
&lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;End&lt;/b&gt; - I submitted my last marks file today for 
the course I tutor.  I've TA'd this course for 4 semesters 
now and it's been a lot of fun.  I may have actually set a 
couple novice programmers down the right path.  I'll have 
to find another way to teach now, I like it.
&lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;End&lt;/b&gt; - I am studying for the first of my 2 exams - 
Natural Language Programming.  This is it - I write one 
wednesday, one in early May, and then school's done.  I 
will come back, I will take other courses but in the larger 
sense, for the time being, school is over.
&lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;Beginning&lt;/b&gt; - I bought The Java Programming 
Language 3rd ed. the other day.  That means I'm officially 
ready to 
start the Java binge that will occupy much of May.  That in 
turn reflects the fact that I will be starting work for IBM 
in a month.
&lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;Beginning&lt;/b&gt; - Last Saturday Amy and I signed the 
lease.  We are officially apartment owners now.  We are 
officially roommates now.  We even put a deposit down on a 
couch, chair and ottoman set we like.  I don't know whether 
this, or the IBM job, is the bigger beginning.
&lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;Beginning&lt;/b&gt; - My 8" Sabatier Chef's Knife arrived 
last Friday, meaning the trip towards becoming a competent 
cook has also started.  Of course, I can't do anything with 
it yet except take it out and look at it approvingly, or 
slice baby carrots with it - but you know, I'm still 
jazzed.  :)</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <pubDate>Mon, 9 Apr 2001 07:18:37 GMT</pubDate>
      <title>9 Apr 2001</title>
      <link>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=19</link>
      <guid>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=19</guid>
      <description>&lt;P&gt;Goodness, my certs are slipping fast: from Journeyer 
down to Observer in a month or so.  What's that about?

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;4 days left&lt;/b&gt;.  I don't want to sound like I'm just 
waiting for school to be over, I've loved university life, 
and a non-trivial part of me still clings to the notion 
that these will not be my last days here, that I am just 
going on hiatus for a bit.  Having said that though, in 4 
days, I'll be 2 exams away from being a University 
Graduate, "with all the privileges and responsibilities of 
that rank."  Man.  4 years of essay writing and formalized 
thinking have left me no better off for expressing how I 
feel.

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;May&lt;/b&gt; is going to be a really great month, I 
think.  One 
day of interruption to write a logic exam in what will 
otherwise be a month of hacking and knowledge absorption.  
I will get to make some important upgrades to 
&lt;A 
HREF="http://www.canonicaltomes.org"&gt;CanonicalTomes.org&lt;/a&gt; 
and maybe even some upgrades to beep, of 
all things.  That, plus learning all there is to know about 
Java.  We're talking immersion.  We're talking remind-me-to-
change-my-underwear-and-eat-occasionally immersion.  By 
God, it'll be beautiful.

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;Amy got the IBM job&lt;/b&gt;.  The ramifications of this 
sentence 
are myriad and complex, so if necessary, re-read it.  It 
means that we can sign a lease.  It means that we can buy 
furniture.  It means she and I will be living together.  It 
means we will both be in positions we like, at good pay, 
and insofar as the above contributes to one's sense of 
wellbeing in the universe, it means we will be happier. 

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;I'm so in to cooking now&lt;/b&gt;.  4 years of living in 
an 
apartment without a stove has made me nutty.  I'm all about 
cooking now.  If May is Java-month and June is Getting-
Established-in-New-Life-month, then so help me July through 
December will be Johnath-learns-how-to-be-a-badass-cook-
month.  I can't wait.  Yesterday on impulse I picked up a 
Sabatier 8" Chef's Knife (forged, of course) for $15.  It's 
an "Elite" which is a far cry from their nicest line, but 
an 8" forged high-carbon blade for $15 is tough to pass 
up.  Or maybe I'm really obsessed with this cooking thing.

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;How cool is it that CanonicalTomes has precisely the 
books I will need for Java- and Cooking- months?  It does 
exactly what I want it to.  This pleases me.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
      <pubDate>Sat, 17 Mar 2001 23:48:34 GMT</pubDate>
      <title>17 Mar 2001</title>
      <link>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=18</link>
      <guid>http://www.advogato.org/person/Johnath/diary.html?start=18</guid>
      <description>&lt;P&gt;Been a busy month.

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.canonicaltomes.org/" &gt;CT&lt;/a&gt; is now 
in full swing.  It's been slashbacked, it's been k5'd, and 
it's now got well over 500 books, and coming up on 1200 
votes.  Nice.  It is also actually useful now - I've 
managed to find books in topics I wasn't familiar with that 
are agreed to be standards (dude, &lt;a href="http://www.canonicaltomes.org/topic.cgi?
topic_id=107" &gt;Blacksmithing?&lt;/a&gt;)  Now it enters the next 
phase - slower growth, plus some time for me to work on 
incorporating suggested features and fixes.  In this form, 
it will incubate for a while, followed maybe by a re-
announcement down the line, when it's all polished and 
useful.  

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;School is winding down - 6 things left, 3 weeks left, 
then it's all over.  Man.  I don't yet have anything to say 
about that.

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;Apartment hunting is going very well, we think we've 
found The Place - at least for a year or so, till we can 
pick up a mortgage on a condo.  Good location (Yonge &amp;amp; 
Finch, for any Torontonians reading) - significantly north 
of the downtown core, but still on the subway line, still 
very much *in* Toronto.  The building itself rocks 
hardcore, our suite will be a little small but very 
workable, and hey, right now I live in a 12'x18' basement 
with no kitchen, so you know, I'll cope.

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;Still very jazzed about IBM.  Very.  I have already 
decided that in May, I will be reading many many books on 
Java, I will be steeping myself in Java, I will, by the end 
of it, grok Java in all its infinite glory.  And XML.  
Middleware at IBM means Java + XML, it seems.  In a brand 
new lab facility.  Ubiquitous wireless LAN.  Multiple on-
site cafes and restaurants.  This rules.

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;Birds are coming back, and when I walk across the iced-
over grassy parts of campus, the ice is at that stage where 
everywhere you step, it cracks through, and little 
fountains of brown meltwater soak your shoes.  It tried to 
snow today, but I think this is just winter throwing a final
tantrum; spring is coming very soon, which also rules.  
Spring is it for me.  Except for the rain, I am all about 
spring.

&lt;p&gt; &lt;P&gt;I have been watching way too much of the cooking channel 
lately.  I am looking forward to having a stove and to 
being able to cook without a microwave.  Anyone recommend a 
good cooking knife?  I want a good cooking knife.  Ming 
Tsai has these really cool looking ceramic knives, all 
white, and apparently they hold their edge much better than 
steel, but they're wicked expensive.  I'm thinking just a 
good set of Henckels.</description>
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