Photographing Tank Fish

One of our favorite restaurants is
Michi Sushi
(2220 Winchester Blvd, Campbell, CA). In addition to excellent food
and charming friendly staff, Michi’s has a big two-sided fish tank. Photographing
tank fish is harder than taking pictures of flowers. Flowers hold still and are
rarely surrounded by highly reflective surfaces. My only advice is – don’t use a
flash. It scares the fish and unless you are lucky, the light mostly bounces off
the tank. I take many pictures and hope for the best…

Shy Red Fish
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson Shy Red Fish
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson Blue stripe fish
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
puffer fish
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson puffer fish
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson puffer fish
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Yucca flower with bee

Yucca flower with bee
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Passion flower

Passion flower
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Cactus flower

Cactus flower
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson

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Build Your Network! Come to Arduino Night

This is an open invitation to Arduino
Night (buy a kit, build a kit, bring a board):
7:30pm-10:00pm, Thursday, 23 October 2008 at the
Sun’s Santa Clara Campus
historic Mansion (across the road from the Auditorium).
If you are in the area and open source or
Sun SPOTs
(Sun Small Programmable Object Technology) are your passion, this
is a great chance to expand your network.

More event information is available in
Alan DuBoff’s mail:

http://mail.opensolaris.org/pipermail/ug-svosug/2008-October/000093.html
.

Tiger Xylophone “XyloTiger”

Tiger Xylophone
photo: copyright 2008 John Plocher

This event is part of the Silicon Valley

OSUG
(OpenSolaris User Group)
meeting. There are 72 OpenSolaris User Groups all over the world. See:

OpenSolaris User Groups: Locations & Lists
for more.

For one example of a fun Arduino project, see my

1 August 2008
blog entry called
“OSCON and ServoBells”. Come on Thursday night to see my husband
John’s improved Arduino xylophone (built from a Toys’R’Us tiger),
plus his JMRI controlled portable
N-scale model train layout. More on John’s projects is on his website under

Category:Arduino
.

Image Copyright 2008 by John Plocher

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Black Box Landscaping

Sun customers who are in the market for a Sun Modular Datacenter
(aka a Black
Box
) are probably more concerned with adding cost-effective instant
data center capacity than with landscaping. Rightly so! However,
a Black Box has to go somewhere. As a dedicated gardener, for the last six
months I have been watching with interest the creation of a handsome
landscape setting for the new Black Box now inside of Sun’s Menlo
Park campus. “MPK” as we call the
Sun Menlo Park
campus includes one of Sun’s two award-winning
Executive Briefing Centers (“EBC”).
The new Black Box is in the EBC courtyard in MPK.

I have a particular interest in the Black Box because the
Technology Advisory Board
or TAB, which I manage went on a prototype tour
about six months before the product was announced in 2006. It has been exciting
to watch that prototype data center in a shipping container turn into a
real product.

From the 2006 announcement until April 2007, MPK sometimes got to see a
Black Box when its truck came by as part of the
Sun Tour.
In April 2007, an
April Fool
prank featured an empty Black Box appearing in the center of
MPK’s grass amphitheatre. It was set up as an executive playspace
for
CEO Jonathan Schwartz
and

CTO Greg Papadopoulos
. One of the display boards created for the prank
showed a faked photo of what MPK would look like with Black Boxes (including
windows) taking over the whole amphitheatre.

In March 2008, the MPK campus was being spruced up with new paint
and landscaping. It was clear from the size and space that was left open outside
of the EBC that a Black Box was coming our way, so I took some pictures.
Then, this summer, MPK finally got its own real Black Box. Photos:

Sun MPK from the air

Sun MPK from the air, February 2008
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
April Fools 2007, Fake Black Boxes

1 April 2008 Fake Photo of MPK with Black Boxes
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Mar 08: Space for Black Box

March 2008 - Black Box Sized Open Space, Menlo Park Campus
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
July 2008 – New MPK Black Box

July 2008 - New MPK Black Box
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
MPK Black Box

MPK Black Box
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Sep 08: SEEDs Visit Black Box

September 2008 SEEDs Visiting MPK Black Box
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson

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Bells Angels and Bagpipes

On
14 October
, I wrote about
St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church’s
annual Blessing of the Animals
service. St. Andrew’s has an amazing choir that sings every Sunday.
For special celebrations, St. Andrew’s sometimes presents
handbells or
bagpipes.

English handbell ringing started out around 1700 as a way for
change ringers to
practice music outside of the church tower. (You can read more about change
ringing in Dorothy Sayers’ superb mystery
The Nine Tailors,
with Lord Peter Wimsey.) St. Andrew’s handbell choir is called Bells Angels.
They play during the service several times a year, most recently two weeks ago.

St. Andrew’s hires the
Los Gatos – Monte Sereno Police Pipes and Drums
marching bagpipe band
for events such as the blessing of the tartans service
in March 2008. Because Andrew
is the patron saint to Scotland, bagpipes are an appropriate instrument in a church
named for him. Some photos:

English handbells

English handbells
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Bells Angels in action

Bells Angels in action, English handbell ringing
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
English handbells

English handbells
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
St. Andrew’s Banner

St. Andrew's Episcopal Church Parish Banner
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Bagpipes in Church

Bagpipes in Church, St. Andrew's Episcopal Church
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Marching band

St. Andrew's Episcopal Church Marching bagpipe band
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson

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Tshirt Design

My job includes managing Sun’s sponsorship of a few external-to-Sun
events, like the American Heart Association’s Silicon Valley

Heart Walk
(see my
September 21, 2008
blog entry), and the
Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing
(see my

October 14, 2008
blog entry).

The team usually designs a tshirt as part of event preparation.
Tshirts are good advertising and a popular giveaway, plus they make us
easy to find in a crowd.

In a big company, some decisions are easy. We don’t need to go looking
for a tshirt manufacturer because Sun has a preferred vendor. This means that
vendor selection, terms, payment, and method of shipment are already sorted out. The
event team can focus on other questions like shirt quantity, quality, cost, and
design. My event budget tells me how much I can spend. The number of event
participants tells me the rough quantity of shirts to order. There are some
tradeoffs I can make, such as raising shirt quality in exchange for fewer
shirts overall. That leaves mostly decisions about design.

Below are pictures of two sets of Sun tshirts that were very popular. (I know we have
a winner when people offer to buy the shirt from our backs!) In both cases,
we reused most of the 2007 design for 2008. The 2007 Hopper shirt took months to
create because Tanya Jankot and I asked Sun Engineering staff around the world to
help us translate and find the fonts to write “Sun Women in Engineering”
in English, Hindi, Spanish, Mandarin, Czech, and Russian (the languages of
Sun’s biggest Engineering centers). I think Sun’s 2008 Heart Walk shirt was a hit
just because teal is a flattering color for most people.

Some of the tshirt decisions we made in 2008:

    • Sun’s 2008 Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing shirt:
      • Kept the black fabric color.
      • Provided different base shirts for women and men. Picked a softer fabric and
        more form-fitting shape for the women’s shirts. (We tested several samples
        until we found the best.) Used standard T-shape men’s shirts.
      • Updated the OpenSolaris logo and colors (from grey and orange to blues and
        greens).
      • Kept one text/image design and printing size for both women’s and men’s shirts –
        significant cost savings from this decision allowed us to make more shirts.
      • Picked the brightest colors (lime green and baby blue) from the OpenSolaris
        “bubbles” logo for the text on the back. The photo below does not show how
        very bright the printing ink colors are.
      • Put the chest logo higher up – more flattering for a woman.
    • Sun’s 2008 Heart Walk shirt:
      • Changed fabric color from baby blue to teal.
      • Added a new event logo (designed by Sheri Kaneshiro) on the chest:
        the Sun logo next to a white heart contining the words “Heart Walk”.
      • Changed ink color from green to white.
      • Kept one design and printing size for all size shirts.

Some ordering tips:

    • Ask the vendor to for unprinted sample shirts to feel and try on. This will
      tell you whether the sizes run small or large. Two of the
      common comments at the Hopper conference about Sun’s shirt were: “Cool design!”
      and (after we gave the person a shirt): “Oooo, soooft!”
    • Always request a pre-production printed physical sample (in both smallest
      women’s size and largest men’s size) from the vendor. We have seen the wrong logo
      used, crooked printing, too-small printing, text too high or too low, and other
      problems. An electronic image is good for basic design decisions but do request
      a physical sample before approving production.
    • Consider your event population before deciding how many shirts of each
      size to buy. At Hopper, we need 90% women’s sizes. The Heart Walk has more
      men participating but also little kids, so we order 35% men’s large and extra-large
      and the rest smaller.
    • Using one text/image design and printing size for all shirt sizes can yield
      significant cost savings.
    • Once the pre-production sample is right, ask to ship the shirts directly from
      production to the event.
2007 Grace Hopper

2007 Grace Hopper Celebration Tshirt
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Tanya in 2007 Grace Hopper Tshirt

Tanya Jankot in 2007 Grace Hopper Tshirt
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
2008 Grace Hopper

2008 Grace Hopper Celebration Tshirt
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Heart Walk 2007

Sun t-shirt as dress, Heart Walkers 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Sheri Kaneshiro
Greg, Danny at Heart Walk 2008

Greg, Danny, Heart Walk Heart Walk 2008 Tshirt
photo: copyright 2008 Sheri Kaneshiro
Paul, Sheri, Pat at Heart Walk 2008

Paul, Sheri, and Pat in Sun Heart Walk 2008 tshirts
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2007 – 2008 by Katy Dickinson and Sheri Kaneshiro

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1st MAGIC Mentee Meeting

Ira Pramanick (of Google),
Kristin Yvonne Rozier
(of NASA), and I visited Girls’ Middle
School
yesterday to kick off the MAGIC mentoring pilot term. Ira, Kristin,
and I are three of the five member
MAGIC core team
. We have been working this last year to set up the
MAGIC program and test it out in the GMS pilot.

Yesterday, we met with the first ten GMS girls to sign up as MAGIC mentees.
We distributed MAGIC pencils and business cards and played a game to
introduce ourselves. The girls are a mixed group, between 6th, 7th, and 8th grades.
This was their first chance to ask questions and for us to meet them together.
The girls will start meeting with their new mentors next month.

Here is MAGIC’s core team:

Dr Ira Pramanick

Dr. Ira Pramanick
Katy Dickinson

Katy Dickinson
Foz Saeed

Foz Saeed
Dr Kristin Rozier

Dr Kristin Yvonne Rozier
Meenakshi Kaul-Basu

Meenakshi Kaul-Basu

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Caboose Railings

We are still working on the stair railings for
WP668, our backyard caboose.
Chris Gremich (CG Designs in San Jose, CA, phone: 408-313-3706)
has made the part of the bannisters. He needs to finish those
and then attach them to the balusters.
Balusters have to be less than 4″ apart for safety. WP668
still has the temporary railing John put in last year.

Those who have been to Sun Microsystems’ Menlo Park, CA, campus have
probably seen where we got our bannister design.

WP668 today

WP668 today
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
WP668 Bannisters so far

WP668 Bannisters so far
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson
Sun Bannister

Sun Stair Bannister
photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2008 by Katy Dickinson

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