Posts Tagged ‘Photos’

Labor Day


07 Sep

All excuses aside I’ve been finding it hard to blog lately.  So much of my past content has come from my life and now a lot of what I do needs to be private.  Posting about work would be hazardous at best for my professional career (it doesn’t take a genius to realize that if my email address for personal stuff is xyz@benmsmith.com, there must be at least some sort of page at benmsmith.com).  That means I need to look outward more rather than focus inward as I have.  I’ve got an idea to implement later this year to help with that, but for now, a bunch of Boston adventure related thoughts.

The strip mall near my apartment had a store I had never heard of, A.J. Wright.  I finally decided to see what it was.  You know how a copy of a copy looks a little grainier and isn’t as nice?  A.J Wright is like a TJ Maxx of a TJ Maxx.  There’s a decidedly urban demographic being marketed to with the clothing selection, but the housewares stuff was decent if erratic.  If I ever have little things I need where I don’t really care about quality, I might check them out again.  I will avoid the sale boxes outside, though.  It’s like a herd of chickens fighting over a piece of garbage.

There’s also a Blockbuster in the stripmall, although disappointingly not one of the locations that’s being closed.  I passed by one of the closing ones recently and decided to check it out for any deals.  It was the first time I’d been in a video rental store since college (before, even; I’m racking my brain to think of the last time I’d been in one and it’s at least since high school).  It was odd seeing one so empty, but over all it was lie a crappy garage sale; everything you’d want is already gone and what’s left sucks.  I have never seen so many crappy direct-to-dvd movies and incomplete boxsets.  sidenote: to the person that bought discs 3 and 4 but not discs 1, 2, 5, or 6 of Bones season 4, I hate you.  This goes doubly for the person who left only disc two of Mad Men season 1.

I’ve been twittering more often than I”ve been blogging.  I like the small format, as it allows for more spur-of-the-moment content (although I’m going to try more of that here as well).  A few highlights:

I guess I missed this entering the modern canon:
I guess I was unaware this had entered the modern canon: on Twitpic

No magnets at the Museum of Science (WTF), but there was this awesomeness (which is now taped to my fridge):
The Museum of Science didn't have any fridge magnets (wh... on Twitpic

And finally: food.  Cooking’s become a way to relieve stress and release tension after work.  Even if I leave the office feeling over my head (a feeling which becomes rarer with each day on the job).  Here’s a slideshow of what I’ve been making.  Although I tend to be fairly precise, I’ve suprised myself with the way I’ve been thinking like a cook rather than a baker in terms of flavor profiles and improvisation.  The salad with the roast beef was completely improvised from what was on hand (although I found a recipe for the viniagrette after deciding to make one), and I’ve already turned some of the sauce into a spread for sandwiches later this week.

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PENGUINS


25 Jul

I have been bad about posting my adventures in Boston.  I’m trying to re-do this site, but I’m not finding any themes I’ve liked (looking for something more like a Tumblr-style theme that still allows a decent amount of customization).  In the meantime: PENGUINS.

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http://www.thefunctionkey.com/2010/07/mullens-80-penguins-campaign

Say Hello / Wave Goodbye


29 May

It’s that time again.  The posters (and post-it notes, in one case) have come down, my life is in boxes again, and the school year is done.  I’m graduating.  I’m excited about it, but it’s not really showing externally.  I think I’m dealing with a sensory overload of sorts — there’s too much input, so I can’t process any output just yet.  Rather than feebly attempt to recap the last month freehand, let’s revisit the goals I set at the beginning of the year (and revised midway through) to see how I did.

Have a Kickass Senior Project

Mission Fucking Accomplished.  I couldn’t be prouder of the final product my team produced for our senior project client.  Our client was blown away by the work we did, out adviser was blown away that our client was blown away, and in the end we all got expensive steaks at a very nice restaurant in Terre Haute.  Did we get top senior project, as was my ultimate goal?  No, and while I don’t entirely agree with one of the projects that received the award, I think we got something better.  The week of final project presentations to the juniors, my project adviser (who I have as professor in another class), wouldn’t stop talking about how great my project went.  It came up at least once in every session that week.  I may not have gotten my team on the best project plaque, but I left an indelible mark in our adviser’s memory, and that’s just as good.  I can’t wait to see what’s done with our final product — we were 85% of the way to a professional iPhone app.  The extra 15% shouldn’t be hard to finish on their end.

Get a Job

When Liberty Mutual didn’t work out, I was bummed.  It was the closest I had gotten, but it didn’t go all the way.  I think I knew in the interview, though, that the job wasn’t entirely right for me.  Following up on a job I had applied to using the career center’s website, I got an interview for a QA position with Veson Nautical.  The interview was with a Rose alum, and while things seemed to go good, I had that same feeling of not quite fitting things.  I think my interviewer felt the same way, but he suggested another role at Veson they were hiring for.  I agreed to an interview — the position had the mix of software skills and technical documentation skills I was looking for.  I interviewed for that position a week later, and it went really well.  I knew coming out of the phone interview I was being flown out, and it was confirmed only a couple hours later.  I’ve never had things go that fast with a company.  In mid-April I flew out and interviewed for the position.  I ended up talking with about 1/3 of the company by the end of the day, and had a really good feeling that I had found the right place, even if it wasn’t Seattle like I had been working towards.  After about a week of waiting, I got an offer, which I accepted.  I have a job now!  In an exciting locale!  Everything is coming together and it feels great.  Now to find an apartment.

Cook at least once a month

This wasn’t a goal so much as a reminder to keep being awesome even when CS’s cooking got me down.  I made awesome tacos, shepherd’s pie, chicken soup, and all sorts of other wonderful recipes.  Going to keep this up as I start living on my own, probably with even more frequency.  I should start taking more photos of what I make, though.  That’s a good new goal: more food photos.

Be More Social/Go Out More

I’m still working on this.  SNL Saturdays are good, but as I move to a city where I’m unfamiliar with most people, I need to start doing more to meet people.  Here’s to another year of going outside my comfort zone.

And that’s it, for now.  More blogging when I’m less consumed by packing and moving.  And graduation.

Never Forget You:
The Noisettes Live at the Varsity Theater


07 Aug

I had the best headache ever last night.  It wasn’t a particularly strong one, but enough of one that I knew that it was a headache.  The reason it was so awesome?  The source was the Noisettes concert I had just left.

While my love for the Noisettes has already been mentioned on this blog before (as well as on my old blog), I didn’t think they’d stop in Minneapolis on their US tour, much less decide to do a free show to get the word out.  They were amazing.  I’m still smiling from the thought of the show.  I didn’t bring my camera along (after having to stow it in my date’s car for the KT Tunstall show after being stopped at the door with it), but I used my cameraphone to capture a few (really shoddy) shots from the show.  This venue was more lax on cameras–I should have gone with my instinct and brought it, but such is life.

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We got to the venue around 6, an hour before the doors opened.  I hadn’t realized that I actually know Dinkytown (the college-y area just outside of the U of Mn Twin Cities campus) better than I thought, although I hadn’t been there since a class trip to the U of MN library in 10th grade History class.  We weren’t the first ones there, but we couldn’t have been more than the 15th or 20th in line.  Patiently my dad (who’s a fan of the group as well) and I waited along with everyone else, excited for things to start.  The drummer for the band walked across the street into the venue, which was exciting.  Wristbands were distributed to those over 21 and then we were let in.

While we were near the front of the line, we weren’t fast enough to get some of the nicer seating at the venue (club chairs and couches).  All the remaining available ones were roped off for guests of the band, which sort of sucked, but we found a large table near the edge of the seating area and stood by it for a little bit before sitting on the edge of the seating area’s platform.

The Varsity Theater doesn’t look like much from the outside, but once you get into the building, it’s gorgeous.  My mom knew it as the movie theater closest to campus when she went to college, but it’s since been converted, keeping the red curtains of the old moviehouse as well as an area where a screen used to be where the bands perform.  It’s definately a cool space for performers to play in (the band themselves said it was one of the most beautiful venues they’d played).  People slowly filled in the rest of the large area for standing and waited for the opening act.

The opening act was awful, to say the least.  I’m not even going to give a link to them (Google “Dearling Physique” if you’re brave). Experimental ambient electronica is better left to the studio rather than live performances, I hate to say.  My dad had no idea what to think of the performer.  We had a discussion while checking our respective clocks and waiting for the performance to end:

Him: How are we going to explain this to your mom?

Me: Probably the standard Minnesotan “Well, it was different

After they were done, we waited for around 45 minutes for the Noisettes to set up and start.  The guitarist apologized for the group being “tardy” and then launched into a slower opening version of “Wild Young Hearts” while the lead singer slowly made her way to the stage.  Here’s a video from an earlier US gig that sort of illustrates it (I’ll try and use some of these wherever possible to supplement my own poor-quality photos)

What follows is a hybrid setlist/notes from the show

  1. Wild Young Hearts
  2. Never Forget You — Shingai said she had a question for us (“What Ya Drinkin, Rum or Whiskey?’” is the first line of the song)
  3. 24 Hours — This song sounded even better live
  4. Saturday Night
  5. Sometimes — This was acoustic with the drummer on a box drum–amazing
  6. Don’t Give Up–The band switched quickly from acoustic to rocking the house with this track from their first album.  I could physically feel this song in the back of the room against my chest
  7. Every Now and Then
  8. Don’t Upset the Rhythm–This one got more than a couple people in the crowd dancing
  9. Atticus — Shingai attempted to reach and perform from the bar for this one, but didn’t quite have enough microphone cord.  She settled instead for the soundboard platform, where she did acrobatics from the metal bars surrounding the area.  This was the second closest I was from one of the band members all night, the first being when she walked backstage before the opening act, brushing by my dad and I; I only recognized it was her when I saw her from the back and realized that the distinctive hairstly could only belong to one person.
  10. Sister Rosetta (Capture the Spirit) — another rocking wailer to close out the night

Unfortunately, because they were running late, the band had to catch a bus to Chicago immediately, but I still got one of the many free Noisettes posters that were around the room.  This is the best live show I’ve seen.  The group was so full of energy and had the whole room smiling the entire night.  Hopefully I get another chance to see them, even if it’s never as intimately as this time was.

As a final link, the band performed on the local public radio station that plays modern music (we also have an MPR news and an MPR classical) and their conversation/performances are here

House on the Rock — Photos


26 Jul

I’ll get a full writeup done later, but for now, here’s the shots I took yesterday at The House on the Rock.  I recommend clicking thefullscreen video and “show info” for the full experience.

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Ben M. Smith

Software Engineer. Music Enthusiast. Person.