Calendars

March 30, 2008

Shiawassee River Paddle Event - May 18 2008 - Holly to Fenton, Michigan

Shiawassee River Paddle Event
Sunday, May 18, 2008

Start : WaterWorks Park in Holly, Michigan

End : Strom Park in Fenton, Michigan

Distance : 7 scenic miles of numerous twists and turns

Canoe Rental available with Heavners Canoe Livery

Schedule :

10:00 am : On-site registration begins WaterWorks Building, Broad Street

11:30 am : Introductory Ceremony North side WaterWorks Park

11:45 am : Experienced Canoeists Start at Millpond, Broad Street

12:15 pm : Novice/Youth Canoeists Start at Millpond, Broad Street

12:45 pm : Kayak/ Single person canoeists Start on Shiawassee River, Broad Street

** 1:15 pm : Leisure/fun paddle Start on Shiawassee River, Broad Street **

6:00 pm : Final river sweep completed

On-site availability of snacks and water.

Shuttle transport from 1pm – 6 pm for continuous transport of boats/ people

Trophies for First and Second Place in all three races.

For more info and photos, visit websites :
www.headwaterstrailsinc.org
http://shiawassee-river.blogspot.com/

Registration Forms :
http://www.headwaterstrailsinc.org/RiverRaceregistrationform2008.pdf

Questions ? Call Sue Julian, 248-634-3513.

Rain or Shine !

March 15, 2008

St Urho's Day in Detroit - Conga se Menne - Cranbrook - March 15, 2008

For more St Urho's Day information see
St Urho - Legendary Patron Saint of Finland

Happy St Urho's Day 2007 (last year's links)
delicious tag urho

St Urho, of course, drove the grasshoppers out of Finland, saving the grape crop; his day is March 16, one day before St Patrick's, and two days after Pi Day (3.14).

15 (Sat) Conga Se Menne in concert, 8 p.m., Cranbrook Performing Arts Center, Bloomfield Hills, Mich. For information, call (248) 645-3000. (via the Finnish American Reporter)

From the Observer and Eccentric:

You've heard of singing in the shower? Get ready for songs about saunas...and hunting, fishing, forests and cold winters in the U.P. from the Marquette band, Conga Se Menne.

The group that combines traditional Finnish schottisches and polkas with blues, funk, Latin, reggae, rock, and Caribbean beats, will perform a concert called "Finnish Reggae and Other Sauna Beats," from 8-10 p.m., Saturday, March 15 at Cranbrook's Art Museum, in Bloomfield Hills. The concert, co-sponsored by The Finlandia Foundation National and The Finnish Club of Detroit, will include a cash bar and traditional Finnish refreshments. Doors will open at 7 p.m., allowing time to check out the museum's current exhibit, "Eero Saarinen: Shaping the Future," a look at the life and work of one of America's most innovative architects. Admission to the concert, which includes entrance to the exhibit, is $15 per person for the general public and $10 per person for members of the Finlandia Foundation National, Finnish Cultural Center and the Finnish American Club of Detroit. The event is free for ArtMembers@Cranbrook. To reserve tickets, call (248) 645-3314.

"Living Inna Northern Paradise" (Conga Se Menne)


February 02, 2008

Groundhog Day / Candlemas 2007 roundup

Some good friends celebrate Groundhog Day, and we enjoyed their company today. Some things I learned:

  • You should have half your hay left on Groundhog Day
  • People start looking for last frost dates for the season on Groundhog Day
  • In Europe it's Candlemas Day
  • Traditional foods include crepes and pancakes
  • Bellinis are delicious, and I think it's possible to do an all-Michigan version in season

More reading and links:

Groundhog Day category on Mama Lisa's World Blog has crepe recipes and a song:

Quand on fait des crêp’s chez nous

Quand on fait des crêp’s chez nous, ma mèr’ vous invite
Quand on fait des crêp’s chez nous, ell’ vous invite tous
Un’ pour toi, un’ pour moi, un’ pour mon p’tit frèr’ François
Un’ pour toi, un’ pour moi, un’ pour tous les trois.

groundhog.org - official site of Punx. PA Groundhog club

If Candlemas be fair and bright,
Come, Winter, have another flight;
If Candlemas brings clouds and rain,
Go Winter, and come not again.

You're History - Groundhog Day

As the light grows longer
The cold grows stronger
If Candlemas be fair and bright
Winter will have another flight
If Candlemas be cloud and snow
Winter will be gone and not come again
A farmer should on Candlemas day
Have half his corn and half his hay
On Candlemas day if thorns hang a drop
You can be sure of a good pea crop

Catholic Encyclopedia: Candlemas

From Jerusalem the feast of the fortieth day spread over the entire Church and later on was kept on the 2nd of February, since within the last twenty-five years of the fourth century the Roman feast of Christ's nativity (25 December) was introduced. In Antioch it is attested in 526 (Cedrenue); in the entire Eastern Empire it was introduced by the Emperor Justinian I (542) in thanksgiving for the cessation of the great pestilence which had depopulated the city of Constantinople. In the Greek Church it was called Hypapante tou Kyriou, the meeting (occursus) of the Lord and His mother with Simeon and Anna. The Armenians call it: "The Coming of the Son of God into the Temple" and still keep it on the 14th of February (Tondini di Quaracchi, Calendrier de la Nation Arménienne, 1906, 48); the Copts term it "presentation of the Lord in the Temple" (Nilles, Kal. man., II 571, 643).

Jamie Zawinski on Bill Murray in Groundhog Day

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January 03, 2008

How to keep your new year's resolution

Every year about this time, people make a bunch of promises to themselves, spurred on by blank pages in the shiny new calendar. And every year, sometime in the next few weeks, they will be regretting all of those new commitments and will slide back to their old habits.

Here's some set of resolutions I have made for myself, and some way to keep them over time.

1. Walk 10000 steps a day, seasonally adjusted. I'm doing this with the help of Walker Tracker, which I've been using long enough to get some sense for seasonal variation in my exercise (and my motivation to track exercise) based on the weather and the shorter days. January is actually the easy month for this since the weather isn't getting worse; the hard months are October and November. Time commitment is 5-10 minutes every 2 or 3 days to upload the numbers; my pedometer has a 7 day memory so I can miss a day and still be in sync.

2. Remember people's birthdays. The current birthday-tracking tools are Google Calendar, Facebook, and the Mac OS Address Book; they all fail to notify me enough ahead of time to stick something in the mail. Perhaps I should switch to my sister's strategy of remembering birth months, which allows for making this a 12x/year task instead of a 365x/year task. Time commitment is a couple of hours once or twice a month, plus eternal vigilance for keeping track of people's birthdays.

3. Send a postcard. This should be an attainable goal, but I'm currently just a tiny bit away from having all of the materials at hand to send a postcard to anyone I know at any time. The current bottleneck is postage stamps - I have postcards a-plenty, and enough postal addresses in enough places to get by. The Post Office has a postcard stamps by mail subscription, which would send 100 postcard stamps per month for $26; that seems a little much, though it would force the issue. Time commitment is about 15 minutes a card now, though it would probably be easy to get this down to 5 minutes if I got everything sorted out.

4. Log my hours to Basecamp. Basecamp, bless its blackened soul, lets you track every hour of the working day; it doesn't make it particularly easy to report on what you've done so that you make sure it happens. This Javascript bookmarket gives you in one click what it takes Basecamp 8 to do, shows you a report of hours logged to date for today. Demain Turner's Basecamp Bookmarklet: Hours Logged Today. Time commitment is about 30 minutes a day in making sure that everything I do has a prescribed category.

5. Never eat lunch alone. I have Thursday covered pretty well, but all of the other days are suspect. As a family saying goes, "no meal unaccounted for", and by sometimes not having a good lunch plan I don't manage to eat as well as I should. Some piece of this is technology (e.g. trying Noonhat to automate this), some of it is day-before planning (make sure to bring in a lunch to eat with coworkers), some of it is scheduling two weeks out so that you have a nice queue and some is last minute Twittering. This should be doable in about an hour of planning a week.

These are less "new years resolutions" and more "ongoing patterns to try to maintain". The typical pattern follows this simple rule:

That which is measured, improves.

which is true so long as the tool you are using to measure does not impose its own burden of measurement. The best measurement tools generally watch you passively as you go about your ordinary events and log quietly and unobtrusively; the worst ones attach a cognitive overhead of perpetual self-surveillance.

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December 04, 2007

story ideas month by month

from a Perry Marshall recorded call (very long, interesting, but very long)

January - keep your new years resolution; how to drive in ice and snow
February - heart month; seasonal affective disorder, effect on appetite
March - March Madness basketball; cosmetic surgery for bikini season
April - spring cleaning, income taxes
May - summer vacations, Mother's Day, the problem that Mom faces
June - Christmas pitches, stay safe on vacation
July - Independence (the word), travel safely with kids
August - hot summer weather impact on business, back to school
September - Labor Day, weddings, census
October - lawn and garden cleanup, consumer information month
November - winterize car and home, heating costs
December - unusual gifts, gift certificates, save money on taxes

The instructive effort would be to use Google Trends to quantify the peakiness of each of these in time and space, and synchronize your annual seasonal efforts early enough to capture interest and to be properly indexed when time comes for people to search.

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November 06, 2007

Spot the comet: 17P/Holmes

from the Hackers list from RGK3

So I came up with a set of simple instructions which is good enough to
work at second- and third-hand. Some of you astro-inclined types
might pass this along to your local neighborhood groups or whatever.
Once you spot it, you will never forget how.

Go outside about 8 or 9 o'clock.

If you don't know where West is at your location, figure out where
the sun set - that part of the sky will still have a lighter blue
dome than the rest. This is West.

Stand so West is on your left shoulder.

So East will be on your right shoulder, North will be straight ahead.

Now look about halfway between North and East.

Make a fist with your right hand, and hold it out at arm's length.

About 3-4 fists up from the horizon will be a constellation that
looks like the number 3. Or a "W" on its side. (It's called
Cassiopeia, but that's not important here.)

From the middle of this constellation, move your eyes down about 1
fist, and over to the right about 1 fist. There appears to be a small
triangle of three stars. (Last week the triangle was isoceles, but
this week it has morphed almost to a right triangle.)

The bottom star on the left is not a star, it's the comet. You can
see plainly that it is a fuzzy ball. (The comet is occupying the
right angle.)

It should look just fine [...], even though it's on the outbound
leg. The reason it has hardly any tail is because it was quiescent
all the way 'round the Sun until it just blew up or something past
Mars. It is only recently developing a tail, which is pointed away
from us, along its direction of travel, so we won't see much. Also,
it has apparently broke up. Truly a once-in-a-lifetime experience
which you should imprint on your own rods and cones.

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November 01, 2007

Event promotion with Twitter and Google Calendar "Quick Add"

Here's a recipe for promoting your event using a combination of Twitter and Google Calendar.

1. Make some friends on twitter. BE MY TWITTERFREND PLEEZ
2. The recipe for events is to enter "what", "who", "where" and "when".
3. You are writing for both a Twitter audience and for data entry.
4. Please test by cut and paste into Google Calendar "quick add".

What:
5. Put the URL if any in the what part of the event; that becomes event title.

6. Include a #hashtag or @reference in the text to refer to something.

Who:
7. Use both a Twitter @name and a real name in the who part for maximum visibility.

Where:
8. The where clause is preceded by the word "at".
9. If Google Calendar can't geolocate the phrase, it turns this clause into a search. Be creative.
10. You are indexing into Google Map's Community Maps and you can put more information there.

When:
10. Be careful with relative days (today, next week) to avoid confusion when these are seen later.

To be done:
11: build a bot that reads a twitter stream and autopopulates a Google Calendar with events.

UPDATE: a2events calendar via a search at Terraminds. @bkerr is threatening a public google calendar (the #11 TBD).

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October 25, 2007

Marshall Poe (Iowa, Atlantic Monthly): Wikipedia: Academia's Friend or Foe, Eastern Michigan University, Thursday Oct 25 2007, 7pm, 201 Pray-Harrold Hall

Marshall Poe is speaking in Ypsilanti tonight (oct 25 2007). Here's his interview in The Atlantic: Common Knowledge: Marshall Poe on the marvels and pitfalls of Wikipedia, the fastest-growing encyclopedia in human history.

EMU is hosting a year-long lecture series on "Wikipedia and Academia." The first lecture/discussion (by yours truly) will be tomorrow night (Thursday, October 25) at 7 pm, in 201 Pray-Harrold Hall on the EMU campus. The subject will be "Wikipedia: Academia's Friend or Foe?"

Next semester there will be three more lecture/discussions:

-Larry Sanger (co-founder of Wikipedia; founder of Citizendium), "Wikipedia, Citizendium and the Future of Online Collaboration"
Thursday, February 7, 7pm, EMU Student Center Auditorium

-Andrew Keen (author of Cult of the Amateur), "The Dangers of Wikipedia"
Thursday, March 6, 7pm, EMU Student Center Auditorium

-Katherine Walsh (member of the WikiMedia Foundation Board of Trustees)—Title TBA
Thursday, April 10 7pm, EMU Student Center Auditorium

If you have questions, please contact me.

Marshall Poe

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September 26, 2007

Halloween Trick or Treat hours for Ann Arbor, 2007

As always the Arborwiki Halloween page is the place to go. I'm starting to get search queries already for this term; please fill in the wiki page, and when it's reasonably complete I'll post the details here.

UPDATE 2: Ann Arbor News hours (will reconcile)

UPDATE:

According to the October issue of Ann Arbor Family the trick-or-treat times for the 31st are as follows…….

Ann Arbor 5-8 pm
Bridgewater 5-7pm
Brighton 6-8pm
Chelsea 4-6pm
Dexter 5:30-7:30pm
Manchester 5-7pm
Milan 6-8pm
Saline 6-8pm
Superior Twp. 6-8pm
Ypsilanti 6-8pm

More details on arborwiki!

September 24, 2007

Scott Johnston, JotSpot PM - Future Direction of Google Apps

from the Ann Arbor SPARK site:

Hi-Tech Tuesday
The Future Direction of Google Apps
Sponsored by: Ann Arbor SPARK

Presenter(s): Scott Johnston, Product Manager for JotSpot

Date: Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Time: 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM
5-5:30 p.m. - Registration and Networking
5:30-7 p.m. - Program

Location: SPARK Central
330 E. Liberty
Ann Arbor

Cost:
Member $0
Nonmember $25
Student $5

Join Scott as he talks about the future direction of Google Apps. He will discuss how businesses can use Google Apps to give employees powerful communication and collaboration tools that will help bring their productivity to the next level. He will also present on how service firms can use Google Apps to extend their offerings to customers.
Scott Johnston is currently the Product Manager for JotSpot as they work to integrate their products into Google. Scott was the VP of Products for JotSpot when it was acquired by Google in November of 2006. Prior to JotSpot, Scott was the Director of Engineering for Kintana, a start-up in the IT process automation space. Kintana was acquired by Mercury Interactive in 2003.

Scott graduated from Brown University with an Sc.B in Electrical Engineering and Computer Hardware Design.

Scott grew up in Ann Arbor and is an avid Michigan Fan. Scott is currently attempting to erase the first two football Saturdays of '07 from his memory.

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