otro gringo

my life. on the internets.

2016 Resolutions: April Fail

What happened to April!? The weather in Rancagua is starting to not be so nice.

Let’s see how I did on my resolutions (spoiler: bad).

  • Guitar
    Barely picked it up. Now that I’ve forgotten how to play (mild exaggeration), I’m ready to pick it up again, and relearn everything. This time, with a trusty metronome right in the mix of things so I can learn rhythm.
  • Write more
    I did write some more. Not fiction, but I do have some drafts of things. We’ll see if they ever see the light of day.
  • Skype
    Yes! I managed to Skype again, and tentatively made Skype plans with other people that haven’t happened yet. The Skyping is important for Grace.
  • Read
    I actually read a few books in April, including Disrupted: My Misadventure in the Start-Up Bubble, Making Simple Automata, and The Idea Machine. I need some more fiction in my queue.
  • Watch less
    I probably watched less. Although Game of Thrones, Silicon Valley and Veep started up last Sunday so..
  • Exercise
    I’ve realized the importance of this, which counts for something, right? Especially since we’d like to take a short vacation down south, in the near future, and being fat and unable to hike much definitely limits what you can do.

I updated what I’m doing now.

2016 Resolutions: March

March has come and gone. Let’s see how I did with my resolutions.

  • Learn to play the guitar
    My playing has slowed down lately. I blame work which has been so busy that I haven’t taken breaks and played a bit. Need to get back on track.
    Learned the G7, C7, B7 chords, as well as F Maj7. I finally bought a metronome, after putting it off way too long. I know I don’t have great rhythm, and this is probably one of the reasons that my practicing has slowed down (I also know that this is just a cop-out).
  • Write more
    Nope.
  • Better communication
    I remembered to Skype. Grace has a good time doing it. At least with this resolution, I am remembering and trying to coordinate, although it doesn’t work out.
  • Read
    Making terribly slow progress on a few books, although I actually read an entire book, #AskGaryVee: One Entrepreneur’s Take on Leadership, Social Media, and Self-Awareness. It had some topics I was interested in, and the Q&A formatting made it very easy to get through. I read it just sitting at my computer.
  • Watch less
    Nope. When I’m tired and ready to sleep, I find myself watching a show instead of reading a book. Started Suits on Netflix, and have been enjoying that.
  • Exercise
    Ugh, nope. I know something needs to change.

2016 Resolutions: February Update

March is upon on us. Let’s see how I did on my resolutions for the month of February.

  • Learn to play the guitar
    My fingers don’t get sore anymore. This was a great development, and makes practice much easier. Last month, I was only on the E, A and D chords. Since then, I’ve also done Em (E minor), Am, Dm, C and G. The minor chords were easy, but C and G were a little harder. Especially C. A lot of my practice is just doing chord changes between C, G and the other chords.
    I’ve spent a lot of my time doing the chords for Hey Ya by Outkast. Although what I play, I don’t really recognize the song too much. I’ve also spent a lot of time on Brown Eyed Girl by Van Morrison, and a part of my playing of the song is actually recognizable. I’ve also been doing What’s Up by 4 Non Blondes which has a different strumming pattern that I’m trying to get used to.
    Upward and onward. I’m practicing for short amounts, probably 5-6 times a day. I like to practice in the evening, maybe watching something on my computer.
  • Write more
    Didn’t write more, unless writing a Chrome extension (that removes spoilers from TV shows on IMDb) counts.
  • Better communication with distant family
    Grace and I did Skype with a few different family members. Need to keep doing this.
  • Read at least 2 books a month
    No paso nada. Didn’t make any progress on books. Maybe the weather has been too nice for reading?
    I did just get my Kindle Fire setup and working with my ebooks. I started The New Confessions of an Economic Hit Man. I read the original book years ago when it came out, and enjoyed it. Looking forward to reading this updated version of the book. I think part of my lack of reading is from not having something interesting that I could immediately pick up and read for it.
  • Watch less movies / TV
    Last weekend, I spent many hours working on the Chrome extension, and I guess I could have been watching TV, so that’s good? Although I did watch all 10 episodes of season 1 of Mad Dogs. Fun show. I saw Deadpool in the theater, and was very entertained by the meta.
  • Exercise
    Went jogging a few times early in the month, but didn’t keep it up. Need to start eating better and getting out of the house.

Avoiding spoilers on IMDB, and my first Chrome extension

IMDb does not care about spoiling TV shows for you.

When you go to find out more about a TV show on IMDb, on the right hand side, at the very top of the page, you’ll find top rated episodes with summaries. HUGE spoilers. Even just seeing a name can be bad, when there are multiple seasons of a show.

Of course, when you browse a TV show’s actor list, it’ll show you exactly how many episodes that individual was in. So if there are 60 episodes, and an actor was only in 48 of them, there is a good chance that they get killed (or just removed from the show).

Yes, you can avoid IMDb, but I don’t want to do that. I found another Chrome extension that hides the actor list, but I didn’t find any that would hide the episode summaries, so I decided to use this as a learning experience to create a Chrome extension.

I just published the Chrome extension that I wrote, and you can check it out, and install it at Chrome’s Web Store. Spoiler-free IMDb. I probably should add some better screenshots.

I made the icon for the extension. The IMDb logo with a spoiler bar through it. Although my Chrome extension doesn’t use spoiler bars, it just removes the potential spoilers completely.

spoiler-free-imdb

And finally, I learned that the site name is IMDb, and not IMDB. I’ve always typed that wrong.

2016 Resolutions: January Update

It’s already February. Let’s take a look at the resolutions that I set for 2016, and see how I did in January.

  • Learn to play the guitar
    Bought a nice guitar. And my fingers seem to finally be getting used to the steel strings. I try to practice for 5-10 minutes 4-5 times a day. I’ve finally gotten the E, A and D chords down, and my chord changes aren’t too lagged, and seem to slowly getting better. The first song that JustinGuitar.com tries to teach you is Three Little Birds by Bob Marley. When I try to play this song, my playing does not sound anything like a song. While I may have finally gotten some of the very basic chords, now I’m worried about the fact that I have no rhythm.
    Overall, good progress with learning the guitar.
  • Write more
    Other than the posts that I’ve written for this blog, I haven’t written anything else of substance. So despite the easy goal, I haven’t made any progress yet.
  • Better communication with distant family
    Well, we did Skype with one of my sisters, but it was because she reminded me that she hadn’t seen Grace in awhile. January is a busy month, since it’s the middle of the summer. I want to make sure I Skype more next month.
  • Read at least 2 books a month
    I didn’t finish any books in January. So much for getting much reading done. I went to the flea market in Valparaiso on Sunday, and picked up a copy of Llampo de Sangre by Oscar Castro. This is the first book in Spanish that I plan on reading. It’s a fictional story about a mine that produces a lot of wealth, and all of the drama surrounding everybody at the mine. I also picked up a few thin books, also in Spanish, in a series about Chilean history.
  • Watch less movies / TV
    Didn’t really keep track so I’m not sure how I did. I didn’t watch a lot. There were probably even a few times where I chose to do some genealogy research, instead of watching something — so progress?
  • Develop blog about Chile
    Didn’t do anything with this, except for think about it a bunch. I might have shared my ideas with a few people too. The domain is LifeInChile.com, and it’s just sitting there undeveloped while I do nothing. This month, I need to get it hooked up to hosting, and figure out a good WordPress theme for it. I think my main focus on the site will be for tips for gringos in Chile.
  • Exercise
    If eating is an exercise, then I exercised a ton in January. Otherwise this was a bad month for exercising.

I just happened to read this article about building great habits by making small changes, as opposed to making drastic changes that you can’t keep up with. Good read.

I bought my guitar

After 3 different trips to two different music stores, I finally bought an acoustic guitar. A black acoustic guitar. More specifically, I bought the Ibanez PF15ECE Dreadnought Cutaway Acoustic-Electric Guitar in Gloss Black.

The Ibanez PF15ECE Performance Series Acoustic-Electric Cutaway Guitar uses mahogany back and sides to provide rich, warm lows and sweet sustain. The Fishman Sonicore pickup and SST preamp assure an accurate reproduction of the guitar’s natural tone when plugged in. The gloss black finish, gold die-cast tuners, and pearl dot inlays give the Ibanez PF15ECE a distinguished appearance. Ibanez includes an onboard tuner with your PF15ECE Guitar!

Awww yeah, mahogany, gloss, gold, and pearl.

guitarPhoto taken directly from Ibanez’s website.

It was surprisingly hard to purchase this guitar because both stores discouraged, and were downright unhelpful about me purchasing a guitar with steel strings, since I didn’t know how to play. They also encouraged me to purchase the cheapest guitar possible (something that most sites suggest is a bad idea).

I was planning on only getting an acoustic guitar, and not electro-acoustic, but I liked this one, and it sounds great. Maybe someday I’ll want to hook it up to my computer, or an amp.

It also comes with an integrated tuner, but it wasn’t clear to me how it worked (even after watching the salesperson barely able to use it). So I used a free Android guitar tuning app called GuitarTuna. It works well. I know it works well, only because I was actually able to tune my guitar, and without this app, I would have not been able to.

The guitar came with D’Addario coated 80/20 bronze strings. Don’t know what that means exactly, but it’ll probably be useful information for when it’s time to restring.

The guitar is black, and I like that, because my favorite guitar player was Johnny Cash. He didn’t always play a black guitar. I could have probably gone with any guitar type, and Johnny Cash probably played a similar one at some point in his life. But black is cool, because Johnny Cash is cool and also “The Man in Black”, and also if you Google “johnny cash guitar”, the first site selling a guitar in the results selling a special edition of a black guitar, for $6,000. Maybe someday…

Eventually I need to purchase a case for the guitar. But I took it home in its cardboard box. I also bought a dozen medium Dunlop picks with a tortoise shell pattern. I was disappointed to discover that the picks are actually made out of celluloid, and not actual tortoise shell (just kidding).

And that’s it. Now I have to actually sit down and learn how to play.

I’m writing this because my fingers are too sore to keep practicing right now. I’ve started the Beginners Course at justinguitar.com. I’ve spent some time on the D chord, and the A chord. Tomorrow I’m sure I’ll spend even more time on them, and then maybe the E chord!

Of course, Wikipedia has an alphabetized list of musicians who have made notable use of Ibanez guitars.

CodeMash 2016

CodeMash is a tech conference for developers. Held at the Kalahari (African themed resort), during the first week of January, in Sandusky, Ohio. This year, the conference was January 5-8th. Our company went for the third and fourth day.

I’ve only been learning to develop in Java since January of last year, so this was my first time at CodeMash. There are many, many sessions to choose from, and here are the ones that I went to. I carry a small notebook with me, but don’t try to take too many notes (usually I’ll just write down specific URLs, application names, or book titles).

Decided to go with all caps for the session titles, since that’s what CodeMash does, and I don’t have to worry about capitalizing or formatting.


IS YOUR API LEAKING? BREAKING APIS TO INCREASE SECURITY
Joe Kuemerle @joekuemerle

I enjoyed this session. It was a broad overview of a lot of the security (or non-security) surrounding APIs. The speaker wears a kilt too. I feel like I have to mention that.

He talked a bit about timing attacks, and the importance of rate limiting.

He also manages the repository for all of the presentation content for CodeMash (that speakers want to share) at https://github.com/TechConf/CodeMash2016 .

The slides


THE CODE BEHIND THE VULNERABILITY
Barry Dorrans @blowdart

This speaker from Microsoft went over some security bulletins from Microsoft, and looked at specific problems, and how they were resolved. I found it very interesting. He was funny, and seemed to really enjoy the topic.

I was not familiar with the “Turkish i” problem. This article has a good explanation of how/why it can be a problem. I could see this being a really obnoxious bug.

The slides


OWASP TOP TEN PROACTIVE DEFENSE 2.0
Jim Manico @manicode

This was definitely the most excited speaker that I heard at CodeMash, and very passionate about computer security. I was a little familiar with OWASP, because I’ve used some of their pages for reference, but I’ll be checking out their sitemore. They’re just a volunteer group that cares deeply about computer security. This session was an excellent overview of many of the most common and important security issues.

His entire session is a PDF from OWASP that anybody can download and use.


CONCURRENCY IS CHILD’S PLAY! (POWERFUL, NAÏVE, AND FULL OF “OOPS!”)
Nuri Halperin @nurih

He used some volunteers to work through and visualize some scenarios with concurrency, as well as the problems that can come along. Couldn’t a copy of his session online.

He also briefly mentioned quantum entanglement, something that I was not familiar with, and don’t really understand, but found interesting.


HOW TO GAMIFY YOUR SECURITY AWARENESS FOR BETTER SECURITY AND A MORE ENGAGING EMPLOYEE EXPERIENCE
Mike Woolard @wooly6bear

This had some interesting ideas for getting employees excited about security. Definitely would have been fun if I weren’t working remotely, having the opportunity to compete and/or catch employees slacking off (not locking their machine, etc).

I wasn’t familiar with bWAPP, a buggy web app with plenty of vulnerabilities, and a good way to learn about some bugs you might not have known.

I also wasn’t familiar with FoxyProxy before CodeMash, and this is an excellent way for your browser to easily work with a proxy tool, such as Burp Suite, and you don’t have to do IP changing manually.

Slides can be downloaded here


WHY AGILE? THE ECONOMICS, PSYCHOLOGY, AND SCIENCE OF AGILE’S SUCCESS
Matthew Renze @MatthewRenze

I wasn’t familiar with what Agile was, and so this was a good introduction for me. Can’t say I was really familiar with any specific development processes. This was my first time hearing about the waterfall method and this would probably be the closest thing to what my company has always done, although that’s changing now.

He mentioned The Wisdom of Crowds – James Surowiecki.

The slides


PROGRAMS THAT WRITE PROGRAMS: HOW COMPILERS WORK
Craig Stuntz @craigstuntz

This is one of the first sessions that I was really interested in when I first looked at the CodeMash session list. I thought I might learn something useful– but I didn’t expect it to be my favorite session at CodeMash. It was very interesting, and also entertaining.

I didn’t know anything about compilers, and this was a great intro. The speaker walked through every step of the compilation process and explained what was supposed to happen.

The slides with his notes added


YES, AND!
Michael Hagesfeld @mhagesfeld

This session was on communicating well. The speaker is experienced in improv comedy, and tied that into communicating better with people in your office. One of the ideas is that you try to avoid negative responses, so you respond with something positive (“yes, and…”), even if you’re rejecting what the other person is saying.

I didn’t find his slides from CodeMash, but here is the same session from somewhere else that he spoke, and the slides appear to be mostly the same thing.


A PEEK BEHIND THE CURTAIN – HOW PENTESTERS “SEE” YOUR WEB APPLICATION (AND HOW YOU CAN TOO)
Monika Morrow @FortyTwoWho

I enjoyed this session a lot. Next to the Compilers session, this was probably my favorite session. I think it was mostly because I enjoyed seeing someone focus on and work with Burp Suite (which I have a little experience with).

I wasn’t familiar with SwitchyOmega, a Chrome extension for changing proxies, and it looks good, even better than FoxyProxy for Chrome.

I only use the free version of Burp, since the professional version costs $395 a year, and is too rich for me right now (since pentesting is just a hobby). She showed some of the benefits of the professional version (after someone asked), and I can definitely see the use of the extensions that you can get from the BApp Store.

PDF of the slides + notes here


ACTORS, EVOLVED
Rotem Hermon @margolis20

In this session, I was in over my head. He talked about the Actor Model, and what can be done with Virtual Actors, so you can have concurrency, without the problems of concurrency.

The slides are here


SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT LESSONS LEARNED FROM INDUSTRIAL FAILURES IN THE 1980S
Charlotte Chang @pushorpull

There was no way that I could miss this session based solely on it’s name. This session was a very entertaining history lesson, taught by someone who was very excited about the topic.

She spent a lot of time talking about General Motors’ factory, Freemont Assembly, and the terrible problems (production issues, and awful employees) that it had while it was open from 1962 to 1982. The factory reopened as a joint-venture with Toyota, and was much more successful, thanks to Toyota’s management and ideas.

So GM sucks, Toyota rules.

Books mentioned:

The Toyota Way – Jeffrey K. Liker
Rude Awakening: The Rise, Fall and Struggle for Recovery of General Motors – Maryann Keller
Collision: GM, Toyota, Volkswagen and the Race to Own the 21st Century – Maryann Keller
The Machine that Changed the World – James Womack, Daniel Jones and Daniel Roos

The slides are here


I wasn’t sure about what session to go to during this hour, and ended up going to this one because a coworker suggested it. I am glad I went.

EVENT DRIVEN ARCHITECTURE: A PRIMER
Shawn Wallace @ShawnWallace

While this topic is very far from anything that I was familiar with, the speaker did a great job with the topic, including showing a demo of what it might look like for a retail business. I was able to get a basic understanding of what event-driven architecture is.

The slides are here. And the demo he used is available here.


#DEPLOYSMARTER
CONCENTRATE ON CODING: AUTOMATING EVERYTHING ELSE

Timothy Corey @IAmTimCorey

This session focused on making life easier using Jenkins to deploy. The idea being that you don’t waste your time doing a bunch of things when you want/need to focus on coding. I don’t use Jenkins, but it is something that I’ll learn more about later.

To get the slides, you have to text DEPLOY to 44222. It’ll ask for your email, and then send them to you. There is also bonus material that he’ll send you, a 10 page report of the plugins that he uses with Jenkins.


So, I skipped out on the previous session, since it was focused on Jenkins, and I knew that I’d get the slides later on, and headed over to this..

PROGRAM SOME HEALTH INTO YOUR LIFE
Stan Jonsson @sjonsson

I walked into this session in-progress, with a bag full of gummy bears, courtesy of the candy bars that CodeMash had setup in the hallways. So basically I ate candy while in a session about healthy living.

This session was great, and something that I really needed. He shared a lot of common sense that gets ignored.  To lose weight, ultimately you need to burn more calories than you consume.

He talked about staying motivating, and also said that you should track yourself to stay honest. When you see your progress, it is easier to avoid slipping. He had different ideas for staying motivating. There is lots of technology out there that can be used. Things that you can wear, as well as apps that you can have on your phone.

I’m going to start using the MyFitnessPal app to keep track of what I eat, as well as my physical activity (of which, there is not enough).

The slides are here


And those were all of the sessions that I went to. I learned a lot, got excited a lot (there were times when I wanted to walk out of a session, and get on my laptop), and had a great time.


Katelyn’s Krusade / Katelyn’s Kloset

CodeMash made a small donation to a charity called Katelyn’s Krusade, and gave them an opportunity to present themselves, and what they do. They modify toys so that children with special needs can operate them. Neat idea, and it has really helped a lot of children realize what they can do.
And then they had something in the evening where you could help, by “hacking” one of the new toys that they had, and get it functional for a child. This was a fun challenge that I did with some of my coworkers. We got a new toy, the Busy Ball Popper. We had to remove it from its box (without destroying the box, or any of the packaging, so it could be repackaged and presented to a child and their family, as a brand new toy. We had to open up the toy, and figure out where to connect a wire to operate the toy remotely, and then solder on the wire with a special switch that a child can connect their own custom controller to, to operate this, and other tools.

Despite the horrifying use of K as a replacement for the letter C (in Crusade and Closet), “hacking” this toy for charity was my favorite thing out of all of CodeMash, and I really hope they do it again next year.


Water slides

Then there was a party in the Kalahari’s giant indoor water park (good thing it is indoors, because this was the first week of January in northern Ohio.) There were some huge water slides. I went down the first one. Did not enjoy it. I went down a second one. Did not enjoy it, and discovered that I am not a fan of going down water slides in the dark.


 

CodeMash was a lot of fun and worth flying over 5,000 miles for (Santiago, Chile to Atlanta, GA to Detroit, MI — and then carpool with coworkers to Sandusky, OH). I’m looking forward to next year!

I am going to learn to play the guitar

One of my New Year’s Resolutions for 2016 is to learn to play the guitar. Part of my resolution is that I record myself playing something intelligible by the end of June.

In the early 90s, when I was attending a private school in Valdivia, I was put into guitar classes. I didn’t have much interest, and went along with it because I wasn’t given a choice. Later that year, for a school presentation, my entire guitar class played several songs on the guitar. I was given a plastic bird whistle, which I had to dip into water and then blow into, so it would make bird sounds, like this video. I think that shows where my guitar skills were at.

Now I wish I’d cared more.

I checked Ask MetaFilter, because I was confident that someone had asked about learning the guitar, and I was right. There was lots of information. I liked the responses in http://ask.metafilter.com/216825/Guitar-101

They refer people to Justin Guitar . This guy Justin in London has put out over 900 guitar lessons on video, and all are completely free. He supports himself by donations, and people buying through his store. The Beginners Course is nine different stages, and there are multiple lessons, each with videos for each stage.

Before I can start the Beginners Course, I need a guitar.

So now I have to figure out what guitar I should purchase.. I’m pretty sure that I want an acoustic guitar, but I don’t want to spend too much on my first guitar. Decisions, decisions.

The books I read in 2015

Starting in 2016, I want to write at least a short blurb about every book that I write. I’ve always kept track of the titles of the books that I read, but it is easy to forget what you read, and how much you liked or disliked it.

  1. Sycamore Row – John Grisham
    Like all Grisham, I enjoyed this.
  2. The Shining Girls – Lauren Beukes
    A time traveling serial killer being pursued. Interesting concept, but I was a little disappointed by what I felt was a lack of explanation.
  3. What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions – Randall Munroe
    The XKCD guy. This was a fun read.
  4. Everything is Bullshit: The greatest scams on Earth revealed – Priceonomics
    This has a lot of their blog posts. Some of it was interesting.
  5. Wool Omnibus (basically first 5 books) – Hugh Howey
    Fun post-apocalyptic concept where people live in silos. Some excellent characters, especially Juliette. Look forward to seeing the movie someday.
  6. Yes Please – Amy Poehler
    As a fan of Saturday Night Live, and Parks & Recreation, I enjoyed reading various anecdotes that Amy shared.
  7. I Only Roast the Ones I love: How to Bust Balls Without Burning Bridges – Jeffrey Ross
    This was entertaining, and gives some insight into delivering scathing remarks.
  8. So You’ve been Publicly Shamed – Jon Ronson
    This book discusses online lynch mobs, a scary, and very real thing today. You’re pretty much screwed if you were to become the target.
  9. The Circle – Dave Eggers
    Fun short book about a company like Google/Facebook where your social media interactions are all that ultimately matter, and you eventually lose all privacy.
  10. The Flinch – Julien Smith
  11. Silver Screen Fiend – Patton Oswalt
    Patton watched a lot of classics. It became a problem. Book was kinda dull.
  12. Linchpin – Seth Godin
    Same ol’ Seth Godin. Can’t really remember this one.
  13. The Damage Done: Twelve Years of Hell in a Bangkok Prison – Warren Fellows
    The experience that this author went through was absolutely brutal. Also some of the things he described are really, really disgusting.
  14. Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End – Atul Gawande
  15. The Most Dangerous Animal – Gary L. Stewart
    This author is convinced that his father was the Zodiac Killer. He presents an interesting case, and story for it. Fun read. There is a lot about the book that you can find online, but I would suggest checking it out, after you read the book.
  16. Armada – Ernest Cline
    I’m a huge fan of Ernest’s first book, Ready Player One, so I read this as soon as it came out. The plot and premise was very exciting, but the overall story felt condensed. The book was too short. It could have easily been two or three books, and developed a lot better. Armada felt like reading a book on fast-forward.
  17. Everybody Loves You When You’re Dead – Neil Strauss
    Bunch of random, mostly interesting celebrity anecdotes.
  18. Wolf in White Van – John Darnielle
    This was creative, and I enjoyed it a lot. Well written, and especially impressive because it is the writer’s first book.
  19. The Martian – Andy Weir
    I was blown away by the movie, so I had to read the book. The book is great, although the dialogue and character development is a little weak. Still a very entertaining read.
  20. Troublemaker: Surviving Hollywood and Scientology – Leah Remini
    I was a fan of her on King of Queens, but not a fan of her being a Scientologist. I was very interested in hearing about her experiences in Scientology. There was some wacky stuff that went down. I recommend this if you’d like to read some insider Scientology stuff (such as Tom Cruise’s wedding).
  21. The Racketeer – John Grisham
    This book has a fun plot, and I couldn’t put it down.
  22. Gold of the Gods – Erich Von Daniken
    This book is supposed to be nonfiction, but the author has been completely discredited. Still an entertaining read. He is supposedly led through tunnels in Ecuador where there is gold, statues and even a library with metal tablets. Of course, he believes that this was all aliens. He later admitted that he never went to this cave, and it was all made up.
  23. Steal Like an Artist – Austin Kleon
    Short, motivational book. I’d recommend to anybody looking for a boost to their creativity.
  24. Seveneves – Neal Stephenson
    This book, like everything that Neal writes is dense and long. But it’s a fun read. From Wikipedia: “The story tells of the efforts to preserve human society in the wake of apocalyptic events on Earth, following the disintegration of the Moon.” I didn’t quite finish it in 2015, but including it on this list.

There are more books that I haven’t included in my list for whatever reason.

Also I just realized that every single of these books, I read as an ebook.

photo credit: bookself via photopin (license) (removed until I can make this theme handle images better)

My Resolutions for 2016

  • Learn to play the guitar.
    I’ve always regret not caring about learning to learn the guitar when I was put into guitar lessons in the 3rd grade. Grace is interested in learning the guitar (yeah, she is only 3) and if she sees me learning, it might help maintain her interest, and I could probably help her. Setting a goal to record myself playing something intelligible by the end of June. I’ll need to set weekly practicing goals, but not sure what they’ll be yet.
  • Write more.
    I completed NaNoWriMo in November, but didn’t do much beyond that. Set a very low goal of 3000 words a month (only 100 per day).
  • Better communication with distant family.
    I’m pretty bad about communicating with people, and usually just rely on Facebook chat or emails, so I want to make sure I call more, especially with Grace, so she can see them. Skype at least twice a month.
  • Read at least 2 books a month.
    I managed to read over 24 books last year. Important to keep this as a goal though, because it is easy to slack off, and not get any reading done. At least 50% of what I read should be nonfiction. I intend to read at least 2 books in Spanish this year.
  • Watch less movies / TV.
    I actually didn’t watch as much as I have in previous years, but I should be accomplishing other goals, before watching something. More guitar and writing. More than a goal, this is a reminder to myself.
  • Develop blog about Chile.
    I registered a great domain name last year. I just have to set it up, and then start posting. Get website setup by February. And then start coming up with at least one post a month. The post should be useful and/or interesting.
  • Exercise.
    Gotta put this on here so that I feel guilty.
  • Keep track of my resolutions.
    During the year, see where I’m at with my resolutions, and post an update.

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