Towse: views from the hill

November 19, 2004

Amanda and Dessa done good.

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 2:55 am

I mentioned that we’d been to a nosh do at Bonhams and Butterfields last Friday.

Good nosh. Good wine. Dessa Goddard, Director, Asian Art, gave her talk walking through some of the more important pieces that were coming up for auction on Tuesday.

The nosh was a treat, the wine drinkable, and Dessa was obviously very much excited about some of the items coming up for auction.

Her pride and joy was an 18″ diameter copper-red design Ming dynasty dish that Amanda Miller, specialist, Chinese and Japanese decorative arts, had come across when she’d gone off to a San Francisco home to do an appraisal.

Amanda had come back from the appraisal visit with multiple photos of the dish Is this what I think it is? Dessa said she was standing on the family’s front doorstep bright and early the next morning because she could not believe …

Some dish! An Important Dish! An Important Ming Dynasty Dish! “A rare and important underglaze copper red decorated dish, Hongwu Period.”

We heard all about the dish. We were shown pictures and closeups from this angle and that. Top and bottom.

The dish was the belle of the Fall Asian Art auction. Dessa had been to Hong Kong and New York, showing it off. She’d been to London showing it off and getting some renowned someone to write the catalog copy.

Dessa showed it off on Friday evening, holding it while we all took turns getting a closeup look at a dish estimated to sell for $1-2m, yes, million. After we were through, Dessa carefully put the dish on its pedestal and set a plexiglass box on top of it.

A few minutes later, Dessa physically flinched when someone sat on a perch nearby. Too close. Too close. Far too close. A nudge to the pedestal might topple the dish. Dish smashed. B&B’s commission down the tubes. …

“Please,” Dessa said. “Don’t sit there.”

The family to whom the dish belonged had kept it filled with fruit on a sideboard and brought it out to use when they were having a cracked crab feed. Elinor Majors Carlisle, who had bought the dish in China in the twenties, was an entrepreneur back when female entrepreneurs were almost unheard of, a well-known Berkeley suffragette whose father founded the Pony Express.

Best of all worlds there were three very interested bidders on Tuesday. When the hammer fell, Giuseppe Eskenazi, a London Asian Art dealer, had the winning bid: $5.7 million.

Yow!

The Telegraph version of events and others from Google.

KFOG’s Live from the Archives #11

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 2:16 am

Speaking of CDs worth buying (we were, weren’t we?), the 11th annual KFOG Live From the Archives, a fundraiser for Bay Area food banks (this year a 2-CD set), is going on sale Saturday. KFOG is an amazing station with a huge heart. The 11th annual CDs are available for purchase online for those of youz who can’t pick it up local-like.

As the title implies, the CDs are made up of cuts from live KFOG concerts that KFOG has convinced performers to donate for the cause. The CDs have been well-worth having since I started buying them years back and it’s for a good cause, for peter’s sake.

BUY ONE! BUY A SECOND TO GIVE FOR A GIFT! BUY A THIRD IN CASE YOU LOSE THE FIRST!

Clips available online.

Zevon

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 1:49 am

Picked up Enjoy Every Sandwich this afternoon. Enjoy Every Sandwich is a collection of covers of Warren Zevon songs. Don Henley, Pete Yorn, Jackson Brown with Bonnie Raitt, Steve Earle and Reckless Kelly, David Lindley and Ry Cooder, Bob Dylan, & al. join in the homage.

Bruce Springsteen singing My Ride’s Here. What could be finer? Billy Bob Thornton singing The Wind, maybe. Good tunes, worth a buy, worth a replay, should you be thinking you need something new to listen to.

November 18, 2004

WORDCOUNT / Tracking the Way We Use Language /

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 7:21 pm

Another creation of Jonathan Harris.

WordCount™ is an artistic experiment in the way we use language. It presents the 86,800 most frequently used English words, ranked in order of commonality. Each word is scaled to reflect its frequency relative to the words that precede and follow it, giving a visual barometer of relevance. The larger the word, the more we use it. The smaller the word, the more uncommon it is.

WordCount data currently comes from the British National Corpus®, a 100 million word collection of samples of written and spoken language from a wide range of sources, designed to represent an accurate cross-section of current English usage. WordCount includes all words that occur at least twice in the BNC®. In the future, WordCount will be modified to track word usage within any desired text, website, and eventually the entire Internet.

If you think that’s neat-o, check out Query Count to see what words people are searching Word Count for. One of Zen’s favorite diss words is currently ranked #9.

10×10 / 100 Words and Pictures that Define the Time

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 7:11 pm

Jonathan J. Harris has executed a nifty bit of software titled 10×10 / 100 Words and Pictures that Define the Time. He sez, 10×10™ (‘ten by ten’) is an interactive exploration of the words and pictures that define the time. The result is an often moving, sometimes shocking, occasionally frivolous, but always fitting snapshot of our world. Every hour, 10×10 collects the 100 words and pictures that matter most on a global scale, and presents them as a single image, taken to encapsulate that moment in time. Over the course of days, months, and years, 10×10 leaves a trail of these hourly statements which, stitched together side by side, form a continuous patchwork tapestry of human life.

One downside is that the data is currently gathered only from Reuters World News, BBC World edition and NYT International News feeds, which leaves the “news” with a certain bias, but the method and the layout certainly boots one out of the usual page by page news reading habit.

THE ZOOMQUILT | a collaborative art project

Filed under: URL — Towse @ 5:45 pm

THE ZOOMQUILT | a collaborative art project

Yowzaa!

Update: New URL for Zoomquilt

November 17, 2004

Sneak thieves or how I spent my Tuesday

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 4:55 pm

Monday too, for that matter.

We came back to Dale from Hill after lunch on Sunday (having decided to bag the CRL soirée because his nibs wasn’t feeling like dancing) and there was no mail at’all in the mail box.

Understand that this situation is impossible under normal circumstances. We received no mail on Thursday because of Veteran’s Day. His nibs checked the mail before he drove up to San Francisco on Friday and the mail hadn’t come yet. We should’ve received a huge pile of mail (Th-F) on Friday plus our usual pile on Saturday, but in the mailbox? Nada.

Monday, I headed down to the P.O. to turn in the keys for the P.O.Box we weren’t going to be needing any longer and retrieve my (woo hoo!) $1/key deposit refund. While I was there, I talked to the P.O. staff about my lack of mail over the weekend. “I think my mail was stolen,” I said. “What should I do?”

The staffer asked me to wait and went in back to talk with our carrier, who was still mail sorting for the day. She came back to say that we’d had no mail. (“Impossible,” I said. “You don’t understand. We get *a lot* of mail *every* day.”)

Well, that’s what your carrier said. He said so far today he only had this in your bin. She handed me a copy of EE Times and asked if I wanted to speak to a supervisor. “Not now,” I answered, and left.

Sent his nibs a note telling him what had transpired vis-à-vis our missing mail and he said, “We don’t get a subscription to EE Times.” Really? I remember getting a subscription. Wotever. (Turns out we used to get a mailed subscription, but haven’t for the past four years. We now read it online. How time flies.)

In the afternoon I went down to check for mail and we received our usual pile. I checked the EE Times and, by golly, his nibs was right. The EE Times belonged to someone with our street number two streets over.

This mail mixup has been going on for over twenty years. A birth gift for the now twenty-three-year-old was misdirected and brought over to our home by the mis-receiver.

Twenty some years ago, a catalog order was misdirected. When I called the catalog company to say my order hadn’t arrived, they said it had been delivered and sent me a copy of the signed receipt. Not my signature, I said. That person lives two streets over.

Turned out the neighbor two streets over with the same street number was also a customer of the same catalog company. The catalog customer staff called the woman and asked about my package. She claimed that she’d ordered the goods that had arrived and they were hers. She’d paid for them.

The catalog staff knew she hadn’t ordered them. She hadn’t paid for them. The catalog staff knew. They had their customer records after all, but they couldn’t do anything about it, they said, because the item I’d ordered was out of stock and wouldn’t be restocked. They sent me my money back instead. Yes, I still resent that woman for stealing my argyle vest and then lying about it. She’s dead. Shouldn’t I let go of the resentment?

In any hoo, plan was for me to go to the P.O. on Tuesday and talk with a supervisor about the sloppy mail misdirection. We retrieved the six bills that arrived with Monday’s mail but kept the rest of the bundle of mail and ads and magazines intact so I could say, “See? See? This is the sort of mail bundle we get each and every day. There is no way we could have gone mail-less for three days no matter what our carrier says.”

The neighbors two streets over tend to write “NOT AT THIS ADDRESS” on mail they get which should have come here. Well, duh. Of *course* we aren’t at that address, we’re two blocks over here. But does the carrier notice? No, he just sends the mail back to the sender (or ditches it if the return reply postage isn’t guaranteed) and we’re out of luck.

Last month, one of our credit card bills went missing. This month, what with late fees and interest charges, we had an extra $80 some to pay. The credit card people wouldn’t take an “it never arrived” excuse.

I hate whacking at people, hate complaining to supervisors about their lackadaisical staff, but complain um. report I must.

On my way out the door to the P.O. yesterday, I found a pile of mail on our front stoop with a note from someone else in the neighborhood which read something like, we found your mail in our mailbox last night. We live far enough away from you that I don’t think the carrier messed up. The plastic bag was ripped open and it looks like whatever was in it is gone. I think you need to report this to the police.

The plastic bag was ripped open (leaving only the blowin ads and the billing charge) and the contents missing for an order his nibs had placed. Not only that, but the Sotheby’s catalog had also been taken out of its plastic mailer. Thieves must not have liked the looks of the upcoming auction. They left the catalog in the heap of mail.

I trooped into the P.O. and asked to speak to the supervisor. I told her how I’d been told the day before that there had been no mail for us over the long weekend. I showed her the pile I’d brought along and said, “See? This is the sort of mail traffic we get. There is no way we had no mail over the weekend.”

I told her about the misdirected mail and showed her the EE Times I’d been given the day before. “This is part and parcel of the problem,” I said. I told her about the mail theft. She had me fill out a thievery report. She told me to report the theft to the police. She is putting BRIGHT magenta notes on our bin and the corresponding bin two streets over so our carrier will remember to check. She said, “Luckily, both addresses are handled by the same carrier so we won’t have to deal with two different carriers.”

I said, “Luckily? The problem is because the mail is handled by the same carrier and he’s being sloppy when he sorts everything out.”

His nibs is contacting the sheriff with a “stolen mail” report today.

I called the catalog company which with absolutely (and I mean absolutely) no fuss or bother is reshipping the order.

Over breakfast today his nibs was checking the checkbook to see what critical things we might’ve lost in the mail. Billing for the younger young gent’s credit card bill, perhaps. Tickets for South America, perhaps. Hopefully, our monthly bank statement wasn’t taken. He thinks that’s due in another couple days. If our tickets don’t arrive in today’s mail, he’s going to call and see what’s what and see if we need to have them re-issued and re-sent. We leave less than two weeks from now and we need to make sure our tickets arrive before we leave.

Last time his nibs received an order from the same catalog company, he came home from work to find the mail box door flap dropped open because the package was bulky and the carrier hadn’t bothered to make sure the mailbox shut properly when he delivered the mail. Best guess is that the same thing might’ve happened again and some kids came by and noticed the packages and mail inside and decided to see what they could see.

Professional mail thieves wouldn’t have left the leavings in a neighbor’s mailbox, would they?

His nibs just called and now I needs must go down to the main house and wait for a sheriff’s deputy to arrive and talk to me about the mail theft.

What a week. …

Update: Two (count ‘em TWO) deputy sheriffs arrived on my doorstep. One did most of the talking. The other stood to the side with his shades on. Deputy #1 (after I’d told my story), “Someone found your mail in their mailbox? Maybe the mail carrier just delivered your mail to the wrong address.” Um. No. See? When his nibs called to say I needed to be janey on the spot to meet an officer — the sheriff’s department insisted that someone be there to give them a report in person — he also told me that he’d called the person who’d returned our mail on our doorstep. Turns out she’s further away than we’d thought. She’s in the next town over. Different carrier.

Added the deputy with the shades, Different post office even.

After chatting for a while, they asked if I wanted to submit a police report. What did I want them to do for me? Well, I said. I really didn’t think there was much to do. We were handling the possible lost plane tickets and such. The catalog company was resending our order gratis.

The reason we’d called them was because the post office asked us to when we submitted a stolen mail report at the P.O., I assume so that the sheriff would know that mail was being stolen. The two said that ours was the first report in a while for this neighborhood.

Our neighbor across the street, I told them, had had problems a couple years back and ever since we’ve taken all our outgoing mail to the P.O.

The person the next town over said she’d had her mail stolen a year or so ago and when the authorities found the lady (with mail addressed to our benefactress sitting on her front seat), the thief was busy filling out credit card applications.

Deputy with the shades says, that’s nothing. A few years ago, we picked up an older lady in an older Honda in Cupertino. She had the back of the Honda crammed full with stuff. Your mail, your neighbor’s mail, your neighbor’s neighbor’s mail. Took us hours to sort through all the mail. She wound up with a hundred and thirty or so counts of mail theft.

Well, good luck with it and thank you, I said.

His nibs tells me he called the travel folk and they said the tickets weren’t missing. They were sending the tickets tomorrow — UPS. The younger young gent’s credit card bill usually doesn’t arrive until later in the month. Ditto the bank statements.

Mayhap all is well.

May sneak thieves wake up with their jammies in a twist and stumble as they get out of bed..

November 16, 2004

Netscape Mozilla Firefox hot links

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 1:35 am

… and carrying on with those thoughts.

If you click a link from a Netscape mail or a Netscape mail/news, the link opens up in a Netscape browser window.

If you want the link to open up in Firefox, either drag the link and drop it into an already open and on the desktop Firefox window or drag the link to the Firefox task on the taskbar, wait for Firefox to open and then drop the link into Firefox.

November 15, 2004

Netscape Mozilla Firefox "Send Link" and how I spent my day …

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 11:42 pm

I’ve been using Netscape 7.x since forever whenever. Netscape incorporates Mozilla Firefox and I love some of the Firefox features — ^T new tab keeps my desktop from sinking under a load of windows — but Netscape doesn’t update as often as Mozilla does and has some other hinky oddities so I moved over to Firefox 1.0 when it came out of beta last week.

Only problem was that one of my habits when I’m surfing is to “send link” or “send page” when I hit something interesting, type a comment or two about why the page interested me if I’m so moved and save the “mail” as a draft. I have a draft folder full of interesting URLs that I can search through with Netscape’s search feature.

My problem with Firefox (and how I spent my day) was that when I used “send link” in Firefox, Firefox pulled up the Microsoft mail program instead of Netscape, my default email client. I set the default using IE’s tools, I set it here, I set it there, I set it, set it everywhere.

Final solution:

Pull up Windows Explorer: My Computer

Tools >> Folder Options

Select the File Types tab.

Scroll down to URL:Mailto Protocol

Click the Advanced button

Click the Edit button

The “action” should already be “open”

The Use DDE box should be checked

Notice that the Application used to perform action is listed as that nasty Microsoft e-mail application.

Set the following instead:

Application used to perform action:

“C:\Program Files\Netscape\Netscape\Netscp.exe” -nosplash -compose “%1″

Application: Netscape Mail

The -nosplash will make sure the Netscape window itself doesn’t open — otherwise you get the Netscape window and the mail window.

The -compose will make sure the Netscape mail compose window will open.

%1 will feed through whatever link it is that you’re trying to send.

The .exe description should point to wherever your netscp.exe resides.

Simple, no?

Very simple, if someone tells you explicitly how to do this.

Update: Well, now it isn’t putting the link and header in the e-mail. I took the -compose out. I took the -nosplash out, so now I get the correct MAIL window, but I also get a Netscape window that I have to shut down. More to follow, whenever …

At least I can send myself URLs using Netscape …

Application used to perform action:

“C:\Program Files\Netscape\Netscape\Netscp.exe” “%1″

November 12, 2004

The week that was

Filed under: Uncategorized — Towse @ 7:25 pm

This seems to be my week to be sociable.

Monday evening we had dinner at Caesar’s for the quarterly meetup of the Telegraph Hill Dwellers. Program was a guy from “the” local polling firm talking about what the vote results meant for San Francisco, that bastion of blue. Being as we’re pale blue bordering on pink (or vice versa), the conversations with our fellow (blue) travellers, who just assume everyone is as blue as they and who assume that their passions about what should be built where and by whom are universally felt, were um. interesting.

Nan, who sat across from us, proceeded to tell us what ratfinks our friends Gail and Paul were because of the things that happened while G&P were building their place up the hill from Nan and Nate. Gail and Paul, of course, are out of town and weren’t there to defend themselves and Nan had strong views about some of the hoops and loops that Gail and Paul had to jump through to get their place up near Coit Tower built.

Tuesday I joined four buddies plus two daughters of buddies to attend the annual fundraiser for the YWCA-Silicon Valley (note new name!) with Sally Ride giving an interesting talk about space and her astronaut years and her push now with her summer science camps for girls to keep girls hooked on science through those dangerous years when we get labelled geeks or worse (definitely unattractive and blue-stocking) for being the smartest in the class.

Thursday I had lunch with my little bro’ as we checked out a new local falafel place, which replaced a donut shop in the same location, followed by a dinner at the San Francisco Italian American Club, a fundraiser for North Beach Citizens, honoring Ed and Mary Etta Moose.

Francis Ford Coppola did his thing. Willie Brown was MC. Dianne Feinstein stop by to read a proclamation. Nancy Pelosi was in town and talked about what a treasure the Mooses are. A good time was had by all. Our table companions had strong views on various subjects. Strong views. Can’t we all just get along?

Today is lunch with Don May and BillT. over in Berkeley and an event of some sort at Bonhams and Butterfields tonight with Dessa Goddard of their Asian Art department.

Let’s see. Then I have a day “off” before a Sunday meet-up/do down at the Wax Museum for the 40th anniversary of the California Republican League. Don’t know what the League is all about? Follow the link. (And, yes, whoever pulled the page together does not know how to spell “hors d’oeuvres.”)

Is the social whirl my choice? I guess, in a way. His nibs wouldn’t sign up for these events without asking me first, asking if I’d like to go. I do like to go, mostly as a cultural anthropology sort of look-see at what makes people and groups tick. Last night, f’rex, our table had folks who meet at 8 a.m. at a local coffee shop and conspire to make their community a better place.

I’m not the world’s most outgoing person, I don’t work the room like some people did last night, but I do strike up conversations with people and everyone is always interesting in some way, even if that “some way” is that they are the most self-centered being in the room.

Speaking of which, Willie Brown was charming, funny, self-deprecating. I can see why people like him. Having only read about him in the papers, it was interesting to see him in action. Nancy Pelosi was shooting off showering sparks of energy. Dianne Feinstein was gracious. Fun to actually see these people in the flesh and in their political ‘sonas that I’ve only ever read about before.

We also met the Mooses and were charmed by them. I’d struck up a conversation with a woman who was standing alone while the cocktail party chatter swirled around her. Turned out she was Mary Etta’s younger sister, down from Sebastopol for the event. She wanted to make sure we met her sister and her brother-in-law.

Gotta go. Lunch with Don and Bill, so I need to zip over the bridge and into Berkeley before noon.

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress