Headache Update

Two weeks ago, my 16-year-old son Paul started attending regular school at
Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital.
That is, he was in class for a week then last week was Spring Break.
He starts up again tomorrow. The Hospital School offers two two-hour
sessions a day, morning and afternoon. They have one room for grade school
and another for Junior High and High School. Kids who are not able to go to
the classrooms get hospital room visits by the teachers. Tuesday afternoons, Paul
goes to OT (Occupational Therapy) and PT (Physical Therapy). Paul likes the
Hospital School but misses his friends and regular High School classes.

Paul still has bad headaches and falls down from dizziness several times a day.
He feels dizzy if he walks very far.
The pain is also effecting his memory. Pain is very subjective but I can tell
Paul is in pain when he stops interacting and starts to hunch over. About an
hour after he takes Tylenol (acetaminophen), he opens up, moves more
freely – laughs and talks comfortably. Friday, we start work with the
Pain Management Clinic
at LCPH. I hope they will be able to offer
some help or at least a new perspective on the problem. I hope that this is
not one of those problems that Paul just has to grow out of.

The quote on the Hospital School hallway sign offers an image of hope for the
future: “A gymnast in the air, the graceful gull swoops and glides along the
coastal waters.”

LPCH school sign

Lucile Packard Children's Hospital school sign
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
LPCH hallway art

Garth Williams watercolor painting Charlotte's Web Lucile Packard Children's Hospital
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
LPCH garden

Lucile Packard Children's Hospital garden
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
LPCH garden iris

Lucile Packard Children's Hospital garden iris
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2009 by Katy Dickinson

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Caboose Window Seat Done

My husband John Plocher
just finished creating the window seat for
WP668, our 1916 backyard caboose. We bought WP668
in January 2006. WP668 has my desk in one bay window, facing our
house across the garden. Princess Birdie is my 13-year-old pet cockatiel. She has
one cage in the kitchen and the other next to my desk in WP668.

The bay behind my desk features a lovely custom three piece

stained glass window
created for us by
Vince Taylor
. The new window seat is deep enough so that the space below can
store the window screen inserts John made last year. The seat will eventually
have a cushion.

WP668 bay

January 2006

WP668 caboose bay, January 2006
photo: copyright 2006 John Plocher
Rebuilding the bay window

February 2008

WP668 caboose Rebuilding the bay window, February 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Linoleum floor installed

May 2008

WP668 caboose linoleum floor installed May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Glass installed May 2008

WP668 caboose Stained glass installed May 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Window Seat frame February 2009

WP668 caboose Window Seat frame February 2009
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
John and window seat top

WP668 caboose John and window seat top
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Adding window trim

WP668 caboose Window trim installation
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Caulking cracks

WP668 caboose Caulking cracks
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
Installing under seat storage doors

WP668 caboose Installing under seat storage doors
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson
All done!

WP668 caboose Window seat all done
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

WP668 caboose Princess Birdie cockatiel
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2006-2009 by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

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Here Comes Everybody

I recently finished reading a wonderful book Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations by Clay Shirky (2008). I heard a discussion with the author on KQED Radio and ordered the book. My copy is now full of check marks in the margins and yellow highlights over excellent and well-expressed ideas. I keep quoting Shirky in conversation!

Some key passages:

    • “… many of the significant changes are based not on the fanciest, newest bits of technology but on simple, easy-to-use tools like e-mail, mobile phones, and websites, because those are the tools most people have access to and, critically, are comfortable using in their daily lives. Revolution doesn’t happen when society adopts new technologies – it happens when society adopts new behaviors.”
      (from Shirky’s “Collective Action and Institutional Challenges”)
    • “The internet augments real-world social life rather than providing an alternative to it. Instead of becoming a separate cyberspace, our electronic networking are becoming deeply embedded in real life.”
      (from Shirky’s “Solving Social Dilemmas”)
    • “…a good social tool is like a good woodworking tool – it must be designed to fit the job being done, and it must help people do something they actually want to do.”
      (from Shirky’s “Promise, Tool, Bargain”)
    • “New tools… start with a huge social disadvantage, which is that most people don’t use them, and whenever
      you have a limited pool from which potential members can be drawn, you limit the social effects.”
      (from Shirky’s “Promise, Tool, Bargain”)
    • “One of the biggest changes in our society is the shift from prevention to reaction… Society simply has less control over what kind of groups can form, and what kind of value they can confer their members, and this in turn means a loss of prevention as a strategy for reducing harm.”
      (from Shirky’s “Epilogue”)

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The Ada Lovelace Day Collection

I contributed two entries to
The Ada Lovelace Day Collection
of blogs in honor of yesterday’s
Ada Lovelace Day. About Ada:
Ada Lovelace was
born Augusta Ada Byron, she wrote the world’s first computer programs for
the
Analytical Engine
, a mechanical general-purpose computer designed by
Charles Babbage in 1837.

The Ada Lovelace Day Collection blog project
overachieved its goal of collecting a thousand blog posts to draw attention
to women excelling in technology. The total count now is 1119 posts in
honor of women famous and private. The reasoning behind this project created by
Suw Charman-Anderson was:

      “Women’s contributions often go unacknowledged, their innovations seldom mentioned, their faces rarely recognised. We want you to tell the world about these unsung heroines. Entrepreneurs, innovators, sysadmins, programmers, designers, games developers, hardware experts, tech journalists, tech consultants. The list of tech-related careers is endless.

      Recent research by psychologist Penelope Lockwood discovered that

      women need to see female role models
      more than men need to see male ones. That’s a relatively simple problem to begin to address. If women need female role models, let’s come together to highlight the women in technology that we look up to. Let’s create new role models and make sure that whenever the question ‘Who are the leading women in tech?’ is asked, that we all have a list of candidates on the tips of our tongues.”

The two entries I added to The Ada Lovelace Day Collection were

Savvy Geek Chix and Anita Borg
(24 March 2009) and

Jeanie Treichel
(13 March 2009).

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Savvy Geek Chix and Anita Borg

I just got home after attending the successful first

Savvy Geek Chix
event, put on by the
Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology
(ABI). On this celebration of Ada Lovelace Day,
it seems appropriate to have attended an event for women in computing.
There were 110 women present. I learned some, talked with old friends,
and met some very impressive new friends whom I look forward to knowing
better. It was a typical ABI event – interesting, well managed, and a
valuable use of my time.

Savvy Geek Chix, 24 March 2009, Palo Alto California, Anita Borg Institute
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

ABI was named in honor of
Dr. Anita Borg
(1949-2003), whom I had the honor to meet several times during
the last years of her life. Sun Microsystems was one of the companies which
provided Anita Borg with funding
to start the organization now known as ABI. In addition to starting ABI, Anita
also created the
Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing
conference and the Systers
email community of technical women in computing. With Anita’s example before me,
it is hard to say “it can’t be done”.

Image Copyright 2009 by Katy Dickinson

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SEED Mentor Matching Half Done

We started the mentor matching cycle on 11 March for the new
SEED worldwide Engineering
Established Staff term. In the first twelve days of this cycle, we
have matched half of the participants (23 out of 47). All participants
will be matched, most within the next few weeks. The SEED program will
re-match any mentee whose mentor leaves Sun within three months of their match.

Metrics

The 23 newly matched mentors include Distinguished Engineers, Directors, Vice
Presidents, and senior Engineering staff members. The geographical
pairings so far include:

    • Albuquerque, NM USA with Beijing, China
    • Brisbane, Australia with Beijing, China
    • Burlington, MA USA with Broomfield, CO USA
    • Camberley, United Kingdom with Oslo, Norway
    • Itasca, IL USA with Burlington, MA USA
    • Itasca, IL USA with Velizy, France
    • Leeds, United Kingdom with Hamburg, Germany
    • Menlo Park, CA USA with Austin, TX USA
    • Menlo Park, CA USA with Bangalore, India
    • Menlo Park, CA USA with Houston, TX USA
    • Menlo Park, CA USA with other San Francisco Bay Area locations
    • Montbonnot Saint Martin, France with Prague, Czech Republic
    • San Diego, CA USA with San Diego, CA USA
    • Santa Clara, CA USA with Beijing, China
    • Santa Clara, CA USA with Burlington, MA USA
    • Seattle, WA USA with Santa Clara, CA USA
    • Somerset, NJ USA with Universal City, CA USA
    • Walldorf, Germany with Menlo Park, CA USA

Next Terms

SEED runs seven terms a year. The next
terms will be for PreSEED and GSS SEED. Applications for PreSEED and GSS SEED
will be accepted starting at the end of March 2009 – the terms will run June-December 2009.
Those terms will be followed by an Established Staff term plus the year-long term
for Recent Hires (applications in June, terms to start in September 2009).

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“Your Cell Phone Law Sucks” Billboard Still Up

On 11 February, the attention-getting tactics of Highway 101
billboards in the Silicon Valley escalated in energy, if not in good taste.
For many years, these very large and expensive rental signs have competed
for drivers’ attention with increasingly bold bright graphics, 3D projections,
and provocative text.

Last month,
news sources
reported that Grant Paulson of Pleasanton spent $10,000 to buy
billboard space between University and Embarcadero on 101, posting a long message
to California Senator Joe Simitian,
criticizing him for his efforts to pass a cell phone ban for California drivers.
The Senator reportedly thought the critical billboard was funny.
The sign was supposed to come down by the end of February, but it was still up
this morning. Maybe the billboard company does not have anyone else who wants
to rent that space?

Grant Paulson Your Cell Phone Law Sucks Joe Simitian
photo: copyright 2009 Katy Dickinson

The 75-word hard-to-read sign says: “Senator Joe Simitian: Your cell phone law sucks. Amazing how 1 man’s bad idea can screw over & inconvenience millions of people in CA. Let’s overturn this law in the next election & protect what rights we still have left.”

By my own observations, many of my fellow 101 drivers ignore the new law and continue
to drive with cell phone to ear, supporting Grant Paulson’s sentiments in their own way.
That the billboard went up and stays up is a peculiar tribute to free speech.

Image Copyright 2009 by Katy Dickinson

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