Tag Archives: Sun Microsystems

Technology and Cactus Management

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A few years ago, when he was Sun Microsystems’ Chief Engineer, Mike Splain gave a talk about his job. (We at Sun often heard from our remarkable technical leaders – see one talk I caught on tape: Ivan Sutherland Speaking On Leadership.) On this occasion, I remember Mike asking us to imagine that he had a spray bottle in each hand: one contained fertilizer, and the other weed killer. His job as Chief Engineer was to know which bottle to use and how much to spray. That is, to know which technical projects to encourage and which to kill.

I was thinking of Mike and his job yesterday when my husband John and I took apart a huge prickly pear cactus (Opuntia). Long ago, there was a prickly pear farm in our area of Willow Glen (San Jose, California). There are still many of these massive spiny plants along the bank of the Guadalupe River where we live. Three had grown up next to John’s workshop and model train room. In fact, they grew so large and heavy that they damaged the roof and threatened anyone walking on that side of the building. John wanted them dead. He generously consented to allow me to save the parts furthest from the walkway.

My cactus management tools are three:

  • A long serrated bread knife
  • Barbecue tongs
  • A bow saw (for big branches)

Add to these good gloves and a big bucket and you too can deconstruct a cactus twice as big and older than you are.

Like a technical project, prickly pears have some tender shoots which can either be left or easily cut off with a bread knife (depending on what direction they are headed). There are also huge fibrous trunks, more than a hand-width wide – like projects that have been growing and gathering resources for years that need a sharp-toothed bow saw to cut them out. The tongs are to keep the cactus manager from being skewered too often by her work.

Taking one section at a time, John and I removed all of the cactus parts headed toward the house.  What remains can grow for a few years before needing further attention.  Several hundred pounds of prunings went down the bank where they will in time root and build up my cactus fence.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Moon Cakes and Dragon Boats

Traditional Moon Cakes . Hong Kong Moon Cakes

I am often asked how working for a Chinese company is different. Telecom giant Huawei has its US headquarters here in Santa Clara, California, in the middle of the Silicon Valley. In the last 16 months, I have found much is the same as working for any technical company.  Huawei’s cafeteria offers the same food categories as we had at Sun Microsystems: grill, Chinese, today’s special (usually Mexican), soup, salad, and sandwiches.

However, there are differences. Last week was the Mid-Autumn Festival – like Thanksgiving but with different traditions.  We Americans grow up with turkey, corn, and pumpkin stories involving Pilgrims and Native Americans. I figured there was a history for Mid-Autumn Festival moon cakes too.  So far, I have heard three different versions.  My favorite is the ancient tale about the overthrow of Mongol rule helped by secret messages smuggled in moon cakes.  There is also one about the round cake shape reflecting family togetherness, and a third story about shooting ten arrows at the sun.

I was recently invited to a party in a Huawei conference room – a special tasting of fancy frozen moon cakes, just arrived from Hong Kong. Later, everyone in the company was given their choice of up to three traditional baked moon cakes to eat or take home – take your pick free from open baskets in the cafeteria. Having been born and raised in San Francisco, I have always liked the red bean moon cakes but Date and Lotus Seed fillings are good too. Green Tea filling is my least favorite.

Last Saturday was the 16th annual San Francisco International Dragon Boat Festival. This was the first year that Huawei in Santa Clara entered a crew for the Treasure Island race. Huawei’s office in Texas also entered a crew into their local dragon boat race. I wrote earlier about Huawei’s passion for ping pong. So, some food, sports, and traditions are different but in many ways we are all geeks together.

Huawei Dragon Boat Race Poster

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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TechShop San Jose Opens

TechShop San Jose

Yesterday, John and Paul and I went to the crowded opening of the new TechShop in San Jose, California. We also joined as lifetime family members!

TechShop is a membership-based workshop that provides members with access to tools and equipment, instruction, and a community of creative and supportive people so they can build the things they have always wanted to make.

Location: 300 South 2nd Street San Jose, CA 95113
http://www.techshop.ws/ts_sanjose.html

We heard the opening talk by my former boss, Greg Papadopoulos, on the topic “Think Global, Innovate Local”. There were at least dozen ex-Sun-Microsystems Engineering staff there to cheer for Greg.

Being the owners of WP668 (backyard caboose), our family already has developed a basic workshop but having access to some of the larger TechShop equipment and the classes will help with a variety of home and hobby projects.  Some of the equipment I want to learn to use: FlowJet 4′ x 8′ CNC Water Jet Cutter, Epilog Helix 60-Watt Laser Cutters, Tin Lizzie Quilting Machine, Hand-Held Plasma Cutter, and the Computer Controlled Embroidery Sewing Machine.  Paul and I plan to take classes together in Autodesk Inventor, and Arduino 101 (Board Soldering) later this summer.

Greg Papadopoulos TechShop San Jose . TechShop San Jose

Images Copyright 2011 by Katy Dickinson

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TechWomen Mentor Training

TechWomen documents

I was one of the teachers for the first TechWomen Mentor Workshop today. HP Labs in Palo Alto generously hosted the event. We were joined by most of the 38 Technical Mentors and more than a dozen Cultural Mentors from over 40 Silicon Valley companies.  These impressive professional women will coach the 38 Mentees from 6 countries and territories who will be arriving in June from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). It was a day full of good questions, excitement, and anticipation.

TechWomen is funded by the U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA), managed by the Institute of International Education (IIE), and implemented in partnership with the Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology (ABI).  I have been the Mentoring Process Architect for TechWomen since September 2010, working with ABI.  It is a joy to see the program finally starting!

Among many topics, we discussed schedules and expectations, technical and business competencies, vocabulary, learning goals, mentoring and community resources. The TechWomen program team put together a Mentor Guide which included many of these materials. Additional community resources which came out in discussion:

Some elements of the TechWomen program were inspired by the SEED mentoring program I created and managed for Sun Microsystems for 10 years. Details on SEED are available in the free Sun Labs Technical Report “Sun Mentoring: 1996-2009” (published in 2009).

HP Labs Palo Alto . Katy Dickinson TechWomen Huawei badge

Images Copyright 2011 Katy Dickinson

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Blog Housekeeping, Autumn, Haircuts

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It is a lovely autumn here in the Silicon Valley. Like any good geek (even one who is a technology minimalist, like myself), I spend most of my time indoors with my computer, only rarely enjoying the intoxicating colors of the season. I have been blogging more-or-less regularly for over five years – this is my 1,065th entry. In that time, things have changed. I am now working for Huawei instead of Sun, both of my kids are in college, pets have died and we have adopted new pets.

When I moved my blog entries from http://blogs.sun.com/katysblog/ here to https://katysblog.wordpress.com/, formatting and image references were lost or corrupted. As the topics I write about naturally evolve, the tags I use for my blog entries also change. From time-to-time, I go back and update old blog entries – fixing broken links and formatting that has rotted and adding or updating tags. Unless there is a spelling or punctuation error, I do not change old blog content, although I might put a forward reference if I have written significantly more on that topic since the original post. This is like getting a getting a haircut – tidying up the mess but not making any essential changes.

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Images Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson

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OpenSolaris Governing Board Elections

My husband, John Plocher was just re-elected to his third term on the OpenSolaris Governing Board or OGB. Interestingly, only one elected member of the new OGB works for Oracle, which owns OpenSolaris as a software product (that’s also OGB’s only female member, Teresa Giacomini). The OGB is the managing body of the OpenSolaris Community, which “…is a world wide open source community dedicated to fostering collaborative development, innovation and adoption of the OpenSolaris operating system and related applications and distributions.” (quoted from the Preamble to the newly-approved and revised OpenSolaris Constitution).

The new OGB members are:

Dennis Clarke

Blastwave

Moinak Ghosh

Goldman Sachs

Teresa Giacomini

Oracle

Simon Phipps

None

John Plocher

None

Joerg Schilling

Project BerliOS

Peter Tribble

ProQuest

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The OGB election itself was a magnificent example of extreme Geek in Action.  From 25 February through 22 March, the nominations and voting went on.  The Meek Single Transferable Vote system was used, managed with OpenSTV open-source software. It took 31 rounds for all seven members to be elected from among the 16 candidates even though four of them (including John and Teresa) were elected on the first round.  305 ballots were submitted. You can see all of the details on Poll 5: Board Election 2010/Change Constitution.

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1,001 Post, Diabetes Society Camp Registration

This is my 1,001 blog post since 2005!

Last week, I started working as the Camp Registrar for the Diabetes Society in Willow Glen, California.  My friend Kat Carpenter (who at 20-ish is also an officer of the newly-chartered Willow Glen Lions Club) is the Camp Director.  I decided to take this position as a contractor not because of the glamor or great pay but because it is a job that needs doing and it will help get me thinking new thoughts and making new contacts.  After 26 years working for Sun Microsystems, I think a change in perspective will help me in transitioning to a new regular job.

The Diabetes Society has been through some serious financial troubles recently.  However, they are now reorganized and offering their summer camps for kids and teens with Type 1 Diabetes. Three of the camps are already full with waiting lists.  Usually camp registration starts in January but this year it opened in March. I have been getting the records set up, sorting out the checks and credit card payments, updating web pages, answering the Camp Department phone, and generally helping out. John has been supporting me and helping with the Diabetes Society’s IT infrastructure. My knowledge of Microsoft Excel and Word Mail Merge is increasing daily!

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