Octopodial Chrome

Stuff that Made Sense at the Time

The Personal Weblog of Bob Uhl


Monday, 30 October 2006

Emacs vs. vi; vi vs. emacs

Found a great list of reasons to prefer either emacs over vi, or vi over emacs. Note that recent releases of vim have added quite a few features (but of course, that begins to prove the whole point of emacs…), and it’s not nearly the primitive editor it was once; now it’s the primitive editor it is now. Emacs, of course, is not standing still: version 22 will soon be out. This years marks the 31st birthday of emacs; it’s a text editor older than I am, one which has been continually improved all that time.

It’s pretty nifty.

Friday, 27 October 2006

If All Stories Were Written Like Sci-Fi Stories

I’m been an avid reader of science fiction since my teens, but must admit that it’s not exactly top-notch stuff all the time. Why, imagine if all stories were written like sci-fi stories

Thursday, 26 October 2006

Image Quiz

The Image Quiz searches Google Images for pictures related to some keyword or keywords, then displays them to you; your job is to guess what keywords were used in the search. Strangely addicting, and loads of fun.

Tuesday, 24 October 2006

How Many of Me?

Ever wondered how many folks in the USA have your name? Well, HowManyOfMe.com lets you search.


HowManyOfMe.com
LogoThere are:
69
people with my name
in the U.S.A.

How many have your name?

At the moment there are 69 Robert Uhls out there.

Monday, 23 October 2006

Hungarian Uprising

Today marks fifty years since the Hungarian Uprising, crushed by the Soviet Union while the West stood idle. It’s a shameful episode in our history.

A Decade Since

Today marks ten years to the day since I met Karen, ten years since I fell hard for her—and almost exactly eight¾ years since I recovered.

I was in Abell Library (amusingly, the library home page is exactly as it was a decade ago) that evening, and saw a guy from my wing of Baker Hall; he was studying Kafka with a pair of girls. I got to talking with one of the girls: talking, and talking, and talking. She was fascinating: religious (like me!); a fan of Tolkien (like me!); a history geek (like me!). And although far from classically lovely, there was something about her I found attractive. No doubt it was the hunter green sweater & red hair pulled into a ponytail which together gave her a faint English look. I vaguely remember, once I’d left the library and she was out of sight, leaping into the air and clicking my heels together. Yup, I was well-and-truly smitten.

Hormones exist for several purposes, many quite useful (it’d get quite cold here in Denver without the beard I possess courtesy of some hormones which started their work almost twenty years ago), but they serve one end which is quite pernicious: they addle the brain. Our minds rely on our brains to process data for us; the brain is the mind’s calculator, its web browser, its interface to the body and through the body to the outside world. Under the influence of hormones the brain’s workings are confounded and the mind no longer perceives the truth. This is a good thing for the species as a whole, for otherwise no-one would marry. Women and men are fundamentally incompatible, and only through intoxication—whether by chemical or biological means—can we persuade ourselves otherwise. Eventually we sober up, but by that point it’s too late: we’re married, with children and mortgages and throw pillows and curtains and sleeping next to someone whose vocabulary possesses sixteen different words for the colour white.

It’s amusing how hormones persuade us that the object of our affections is exactly what we want. If one wishes an active mate, his brain fails to perceive that his beloved would really rather stay at home and read a good book; his hormone-addled brain sees the two skiing trips and the disused bicycle and ignores the bookshelves and the literary reviews. Likewise the girl who wants a scholarly young man: her hormone-intoxicated brain sees only the unread copies of Aquinas, Newton & Gould (inherited from his flat’s former owner) and completely overlooks the football jersey, the Playboy centrefolds on the wall and the C average. Hormones are brain damage.

In my case I had been taught to put friendship and intellectual & philosophical similarity at a premium and discount physical attraction—and I was only to happy to perceive exactly that. Why, Karen & I were practically identical! We read the same books; we thought the same things; we could sit and talk for hours (over twelve hours in one memorable instance). Why, we agreed on everything. Well, everything important. Well, almost everything important. And I could convince her on the outstanding issues. And besides, we were so similar on the big political issues of the day, e.g. we both opposed gun control. Even the fact that she wasn’t a classic beauty was a mark in her favour, for it proved that this was an authentic love. Hormones are brain damage.

In reality, we were similar insofar as we were both intelligent, quirky, middle-class, American teenagers of the 1990s who had both read the books that intelligent, quirky, middle-class, American teenagers read back in the 1990s. Sure, she wasn’t fanatically anti-gun, but that’s hardly rare in Texas. While we did have interests in common, we came at them from different angles and for different reasons: the boy who reads about Sts. Nicholas & Alexandra because they are the Royal Martyrs has little in common with the girl who reads about Tsar Nicholas & Tsaritsa Alexandra because they were famous historical failures. Hormones are brain damage.

But my hormone-addled senses convinced me that dating Karen made sense, that it was a logical, rational thing to do. There was one hitch, though: she had a boyfriend—but he went to a school roughly six hours away. I figured that I had a pretty good chance; after all, don’t most high school relationships break up once they become long-distance in college? I’ve often wished that he’d gone to Austin College as well, for then it’s likelier that I’d have given up. Instead, I persisted for over a year, in defiance of all logic & reason. Hormones are brain damage.

Karen is blameless in all this: she mentioned Scott the evening we met and never led me to think she would break things off with him. If anything, she was very clear that they were quite fond of one another and that she & I had no romantic future. Despite the evidence, I was convinced that I could somehow win her affections. Hormones are brain damage.

I was a lovesick pup for month after month; I spent every possible minute with her; I bored my friends with talk of her; I spent the summer break of ’97 pining after her; I contacted her immediately after she got back on campus; in short, I made a complete and utter ass of myself. I alienated my friends and neglected my studies. Hormones are brain damage.

It’s odd how quickly these things can start & end. I fell for Karen in an instant, and I fell away almost as quickly. I still remember the day: it was the end of the 1998 Jan Term (very possibly 23 January, which would be nicely symmetrical) and my best friend Phil & I were sitting in his dorm room polishing off a magnum of hard cider we’d made. I can still see the winter sun slanting in through the blinds, and can still remember saying, You know, I don’t think I’m in love with Karen anymore. It was as simple as that, like a light switch being flipped on.

For a time after my brain cleared I strongly disliked her, although it wasn’t really her that I hated; it was the error of which she reminded me. Eventually that shame subsided and we became decent acquaintances. Karen’s married to Scott now, with one son and another child due in a month or two, and I’m quite happy for them.

I wouldn’t have things turn out any other way. Karen & I would have been a big mistake even if she’d be amenable: we’re just not anywhere a good match, but hormone-drunk I was convinced we were. Hormones are brain damage.

The Secret Persuaders

Before America entered the Second World War, Great Britain had 3,000 spies in the United States, all working to turn public opinion in favour of the United Kingdom. Quite a story.

Friday, 20 October 2006

Vicipaedia

Wikipedia is available in Latin. Great resource if you’re learning that language, or want to hone your skills.

Saturday, 14 October 2006

Message in a Bottle

A girl in Scotland threw a bottle into the ocean and it arrived in New Zealand, making the journey at an average clip of 369 knots, which is completely absurd. Is it a hoax? Did someone pick it up in an æroplane somehow? Strange story—one wonders what the truth of it is.

Christmas on Moonlighting, circa 1985

I just watched the first Christmas episode of Moonlighting, from way back in 1985. At the end the camera pans out of the scene to reveal the entire studio & its crew, all singing The First Noël. It’s striking how much our culture has changed: in 1985 one could make a Christmas episode featuring a religious song; nowadays one cannot even refer to the Christmas season, but rather to some absurd holiday season. It’s sad how low we’ve sunk in a mere 21 years.

Thursday, 12 October 2006

USS Princeton Enters San Francisco Bay

My brother Tom sent me a of his ship entering San Francisco Bay for Fleet Week. It’s a pretty cool shot.

Wednesday, 11 October 2006

Family Reunion

After attending Stephen’s boot camp graduation, we headed down to Dallas for my mom’s family reunion. It was good to see my various relatives again. We’re an odd lot: highly intelligent, highly excitable, more than a little weird. The high point was the presentation to Granddad of an album of photos & reminiscences of his life. He’s done a great deal of good for many people, but naturally I’m most grateful for the fact that he married my grandmother and begat my mother.

After San Diego & Dallas the return to Colorado was a bit of a shock: in our absence the temperature had dropped into the 30s and it seemed that winter was truly upon us. It’s warmed up since, but one can tell that it is on its way. Late fall and early winter are the finest of times, and I’m eagerly looking forward to them.

PFC Uhl

This past Friday my kid brother graduated from US Marine Corps boot camp at MCRD San Diego. Our family (save for Tom & Em, who are deployed on their respective ships) flew out for the ceremonies and so forth associated therewith. We’re all very proud of this newest young Marine. God grant that his career will be successful and safe.

Monday, 02 October 2006

Downtime

Sorry about the recent outage here at Octopodial Chrome. Something went wonky with my DSL bridge last Wednesday and it took until today to get a replacement (gosh, ain’t overnight delivery over a weekend fun!). Things hsould be up & running fine now, though.

The experience has led me to re-evaluate my Internet approach. Expect some changes in the semi-near future…


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