John versus the termites

On 5 August 2008, I wrote about the termites we found in our 1930 home in San Jose, CA. We had the termites killed last summer but the insects had done major damage to one end of our garage. (Well, it used to be a garage but has long been home to John’s HO-scale model train layout and workshop.) Termites prefer to infest where the morning sun first shines: the worst damage was on the eastern face of the garage, next to the river wall.

In between looking for work, my husband, John Plocher, has been ripping out the damaged areas and rebuilding the two walls and roof. In addition to being a experienced Software Architect and Engineer, John is a capable electrician and carpenter (as well as being an apprentice welder).

Most of the demolition happened last autumn but work stopped when it started to rain. The construction area was covered by a huge blue tarp all winter. Now that the year’s rain is mostly done, repair construction is progressing well. We are taking design inspiration from many sources (including the old Stanford barn in creating a roof cupola for air and light, instead of a simple skylight).

Here are some photos of the project so far:

termites hollowed out a wood beam

termite damage in a wood beam<br /> photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

ripping out damage

ripping out termite damaged area<br /> photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Paul & John save eagle doorknocker

Paul Dickinson Goodman and John Plocher save the eagle doorknocker<br /> photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

more termite damage

more termite damage<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

new wall under blue tarp

new wall under blue tarp<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

new roof frame

new roof frame with John Plocher<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Stanford barn cupolas

Stanford barn cupolas<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

John’s cupola plans

John's cupola plans<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

looking through cupola-to-be

looking through cupola-to-be<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008-2009 Katy Dickinson

Leave a comment

Filed under Home & Family

Consolidated Rock & Mineral – Vacaville Rock Shop

When we were little, my brothers and I knew there were three
things which could almost always get our mother to stop the car
during a long driving trip: a roadside historical marker, an
antique store, or a rock shop. We were most interested in the
rock shops. Last Saturday, my son Paul and I drove 92 miles
from San Jose to meet my mother and our friend Patty (who
drove 61 miles from San Francisco) at the Vacaville Rock Shop,
also called:

Consolidated Rock & Mineral

5115 Quinn Rd

Vacaville, CA 95688

(707) 448-5525
Consolidated Rock and Mineral, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Patty has been telling us about this amazing place for years and
we did indeed have a wonderful time when we finally got there.
The very large shop offers a little of everything from all over
the world: minerals and gems (rough, polished, or cut and set), fossils
and petrified wood, redwood slabs, plus more utilitarian items such as
stone bowls, goblets, bookends, and tabletops. We wandered around
happily for about three hours.

Paul, Eleanor, and Patty

Paul Dickinson Goodman, Eleanor Dickinson, Patricia Martini, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
amethyst nodule

amethyst nodule section, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Paul Dickinson Goodman
fossil fish

fossil fish, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Paul Dickinson Goodman
sabertooth cat head

sabertooth cat head, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Paul Dickinson Goodman
fossil snail

fossil snail, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Paul Dickinson Goodman
Patty and Eleanor

Eleanor Dickinson, Patricia Martini, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
crystal lamp

crystal lamp, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
fossil shells

fossil shells, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Katy

Katy Dickinson, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Paul Dickinson Goodman
jasper slice

jasper slice, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
rounded crystals

rounded crystals, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Mexican opal

Mexican opal, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
iridescent labradorite

iridescent labradorite, Vacaville Rock Shop
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson and Paul Dickinson Goodman

Leave a comment

Filed under News & Reviews

New Rector at St. Andrew’s

The last few weeks have been very busy at my home parish,
Saint Andrew’s Episcopal
Church
:

    • Two weeks ago, we enjoyed our annual visit from
      Bishop Mary,
      who confirmed twenty
      teens and adults.
    • Yesterday, we said a sad goodbye to our Interim

      Rector
      for the last two years, the Reverend Kate Atkinson.
    • This morning, the
      Vestry
      and Rector Search Committee gave an informal but delighted welcome
      to our new Rector (the third Rector for St. Andrew’s
      since 1957), Rev. Channing Smith. Bishop Mary will formally install Channing
      as Rector in September 2009.

Some photos:

Bishop Mary Gray-Reeves

Bishop Mary Gray-Reeves at Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church, Saratoga, California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Rev. Kate Atkinson

Rev. Kate Atkinson at Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church, Saratoga, California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Rev. Channing Smith

Rev. Channing Smith at Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church, Saratoga, California
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2009 by Katy Dickinson

Leave a comment

Filed under Church

Mating with the Wind

Our house and garden are covered with Cottonwood Fairy Fuzz every year when the female Cottonwood poplar trees along the Guadalupe River release their seeds. We are in the middle of this charming mess of fluff right now. Drifts of seeds line the edge of every walk. In the short distance between my office in WP668 and the house, I collect tiny tufts of fuzz in my hair and on my clothes. Every spiderweb is full.  Some photos:

Trumpetvine with cottonwood seeds<br /><br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

fennel with cottonwood seeds<br /><br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Aloe with cottonwood seeds<br /><br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2009 by Katy Dickinson

1 Comment

Filed under Home & Family, News & Reviews

What I Love About Sun – After 25 Years

I just filled in the order for my anniversary gift from Sun Microsystems. It feels odd to have worked at one company for 25 years (since June 1984). I have been thinking about why I have stayed so long. Here is what I love about Sun:

 

    • Smart people who create amazing technology.At Sun, I have had the privilege to work with many great innovators and those who foster innovation, including:
      Carol Bartz,
      Whit Diffie,
      James Gosling,
      Vinod Khosla,
      Greg Papadopoulos,
      Radia Perlman,
      Eric Schmidt
      (who hired me), and
      Ivan Sutherland.

      I believe that the world is a better place because of Sun Engineering.

    • Generous people who think beyond themselves.Sun is a company for people with big hearts.

      I am proud of both large and small gifts, particularly:

       

        • The 545 senior staff and executive mentors in my
          SEED worldwide Engineering mentoring program who spend time they rarely have to help others down the path they have walked
        • The anonymous donor of the Free Milk Foundation half gallon which quietly appears in our hall’s refrigerator every Monday morning
        • Sun’s CTO, Greg Papadopoulos, who has supported the
          Anita Borg Institute and its Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing, the American Heart Association’s
          Heart Walk, the SETI Institute, and so many other worthy efforts
        • Sun’s commitment to ecologically responsible products, and to volunteering in our local communities worldwide.
    • People with a sense of fun.Sun Engineers will put unreasonable effort into creating a great joke.
      Ever since I watched the senior Software developers putting Eric’s office into the pond in 1985, I have enjoyed Sun’s pranks and April Fools jokes. Sun has a sense of humor.

As the Oracle-Sun proposed acquisition progresses, I hope that what I love about Sun will be valued, grow, and continue to create great technology with a passion which makes the world better.

7 Comments

Filed under News & Reviews

SEED and PreSEED Mentoring Applications

Since 14 April, SEED
and PreSEED have been receiving applications from Sun Engineering
staff to join the worldwide mentoring program. The PreSEED application
period closed yesterday (Human Resources is now verifying application
information). The GSS SEED application period was extended
to 4 May 2009 (Monday). What we have so far:

    • PreSEED term
      • 76 PreSEED applicants
      • 64 complete applications
      • Applications from: Belgium (Zaventem), China (Beijing, Chengdu, Hong Kong, Shanghai), Czech Republic (Prague), Germany (Ratingen), India (Bangalore), Ireland (Dublin), Italy (Milan, Padova, Roma), Japan (Tokyo), Russia (St. Petersburg), Spain (Madrid), United Arab Emirates (Dubai), United Kingdom (Camberley, Sale), USA (California, Colorado, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, & Texas)
      • Applicants’ Origins include: Belgium, Brazil, Canada, China, Colombia, Germany, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Laos, Pakistan, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, Spain, Taiwan, Ukraine, United Kingdom, USA, VietNam
    • Global Sales and Service SEED term
      • 29 GSS SEED applicants
      • 16 complete application
      • Applications from: Belgium (Zaventem), China (Hong Kong), France (Velizy), Germany (Kirchheim-Heimstette), Italy (Padova), Japan (Tokyo), Netherlands (Amersfoort), Norway (Oslo), Slovakia (Bratislava), Spain (Madrid), Sweden (Gothenberg, Kista, Sundsvall), Switzerland (Zurich), United Kingdom (Camberley, Conventry, London, Sale), USA (California, Georgia, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, Virginia)
      • Applicants’ Origins include: Belgium, China, Denmark, England, France, Germany, Hungary, India, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Norway, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, USA

The GSS term participants will be chosen by an executive Selection
Committee. PreSEED has a time-based acceptance process: we will take
the first 50 with complete and verified applications.

Leave a comment

Filed under Mentoring & Other Business

Two Talks

I recently gave two talks here at Sun Menlo Park:

 

    • To TechBridge, for “Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day” on 23 April
    • To the annual Sun Design Summit (27-28 April), on “One time vs. Cyclic Survey” design

For “Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day” on 23 April, I talked with a group of 30 teen girls from the TechBridge after-school program for girls, sponsored by the  Chabot Space & Science Center in Oakland, California. I was the last speaker in their busy day at Sun. I told them about my work with SEED Engineering Mentoring but also about my kids and WP668, the
1916 railroad caboose in my backyard where I have my office. I showed them photos on my blog and  my daughter’s blog. After my talk, the girls tried to program a peanut butter and jelly robot, which was very funny. At the end, they said what they enjoyed most about their Sun day. The Executive Briefing Center tour and Nicole Yankelovich’s Collaborative Environments project from Sun Labs were tops. One girl even said that learning about having an office caboose was her favorite!

To the designers and usability experts at Sun, I talked about surveys in general, and the difference between one-time and cyclic surveys. Six years ago, I created Sun’s “How to Survey” web page in self defense. As a Six Sigma Master Black Belt, I was getting too many requests for information about survey design, tools, policies, etc. So, I put together and maintain a SunWeb page which covers:

 

    • Key Questions
    • Reference Documents by Sun Experts
    • Additional Resources:
      Policies, Helpful External Tools, Books and Articles,
      Survey Tools & Services
    • Example Surveys

Most of my presentation was drawn from information and resources I have posted on “How to Survey”. I chose to submit this topic for Kartik Mithal’s Design Summit because usability and design staff are so frequently involved in customer data collection. Also, because so much of the good advice in this area comes from Usability Engineers, such as:

Robin Jeffries
, Jakob Nielsen, and Jared Spool. The second page of my presentation was:

Why Should You Care? cat ear and eye<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Listening to the

Voice of the Customer

Makes Your Work More Effective. 

Surveys are One Good Way to Listen.

.

 

I think both talks went well: the audience and I learned something. One of the TechBridge teachers told me about the fun and interesting Algebra vs. The Cockroaches computer game*. Several of the Design Summit audience members sent me additional information to post on the “How to Survey” SunWeb page.

* Algebra vs. The Cockroaches is now on my Good Free Games list.

Katy Dickinson speaking at Sun Design Summit 2009<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Terri Yamamoto Katy Dickinson's badge Sun Design Summit 2009<br /> photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson and Terri Yamamoto

Leave a comment

Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains, News & Reviews