Wednesday/ Andy Warhol’s Queen of Swaziland

I made my way back to Seattle on Wednesday morning, starting out in Pittsburgh’s airport.  This print of Queen Ntombi Twala of Swaziland*, is one of a series of four ‘Reigning Queens’ made by Andy Warhol in 1985.  The prints are in concourse C of the airport.  The other three queens are Queen Elizabeth II, Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands and Queen Margrethe of Denmark. Warhol once said ‘I want to be as famous as the Queen of England’.

*Swaziland is a tiny kingdom, land-locked by South Africa and Mozambique. I have to confess I did not know about the Queen of Swaziland’s existence while I grew up in South Africa.  The Queen has since been succeeded by her son, King Mswati III.  Check out http://www.gov.sz/

A screen print on Lenox museum board, of Andy Warhol’s Queen Ntombi Twala of Swaziland, made in 1985. (There is a yellow light reflection in the top left that I could not avoid when I took the picture).
This is an Andy Warhol print of Queen Elizabeth II, one of a series of four of Elizabeth II in different colors, that the Queen’s trust bought for the Royal Collection just this year (reportedly for several £100,000).

 

Tuesday/ dinner at the Great Eagle

The Great Eagle is a grocery store here in Cranberry township north of Pittsburgh, and what a bargain its hot food buffet is!  Get exactly what you want, without waiting for your meal in a restaurant after a long day of meetings.   The store also has an amazing collection of beers for sale from all over the world.

Here’s my comfort food : Brussels sprouts, carved turkey (got to warm up for Thanksgiving, no?) and mac-and-cheese.
A keg of beer from a microbrewery set up inside a restored Roman Catholic church (!) here in the Pittsburgh area.. check out http://www.churchbrew.com/ for photos of the church.
Here is the Kasteel Triple Ale from Belgium (not to be confused with South Africa’s award-winning Castle Lager).
And can you see the hidden-in-plain-sight lettering that says this is a white ale from Kiuchi brewery in Japan? Look again!

 

Monday/ Pennsylvania politics

We don’t see any Tea Party political ads in Washington State – we’re a blue state and an Republican hoping to win office had better position himself more or less in the middle (left is liberal and right is conservative in American politics).   But here in Pennsylvania’s Senate race, incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Bob Casey, Jr. is running for re-election to a second term against Republican nominee Tom Smith.  Tom Smith is for (see http://tomsmithforsenate.com/): a flat tax code with no loopholes, for reducing annual spending to 20% of GDP (that is a massive reduction, given that the US is almost at 40% of GDP), for ‘ending oppressive regulation that suffocates growth and kills jobs, for energizing our future (mostly by producing more oil and using coal) and for reducing health care (repeal Obamacare) and Social Security.

Republican/ Tea Party candidate Tom Smith in a TV commercial running on local television. Balanced budget amendment is a reference to change the US Constitution, so that the country stops running deficits. He is also for a flat tax with no loopholes.
Here’s a teacup with Tom Smith on it, from a political TV ad from Senator Bob Casey.

 

Sunday/ in Chicago, Pittsburgh bound

It takes all Sunday to get from Seattle to Pittsburgh : there are no direct flights!  (Boo! to the airlines). So I got up early this morning for an 8.15 am flight and have made it into Chicago’s O’Hare airport.  It’s another hour or so before I will go on to Pittsburgh and I will arrive there at 7.30pm.   Pittsburgh is on East coast time, so the time zone change moves the clock forward by three hours.

O’Hare airport is northwest of the city of Chicago.

 

This is the underground pedestrian tunnel connecting my arrival concourse (C) with concourse B for my flight to Pittsburgh.
And here is the industrial-style skylights of terminal B. Have you spotted the dinosaur, or its skeleton, then? It’s a Brachiosaurus altithorax. This one lived 150 million years ago in what is today Utah and Colorado.

 

 

 

 

Saturday/ dishwasher guts and glory

I am not much of a handyman, but I am lucky enough to have a friend who is !  – Bryan :). So we thought we’d take a crack at it with a Google search for ‘asko dishwasher D1760’ and see if someone out there had run into a problem similar to what I have.   The dishwasher fills up and starts washing, but then fails to complete the wash cycles and does not get to the rinse cycle.  To make a long story short, a combination of the symptoms and taking a look at what’s going on underneath the washer pointed to a valve and controller that failed.   I ordered the part on-line.  It arrived after a few days, we put it in, and voila! it fixed the problem.

Here’s the offending part. It had a much cheaper price on one website compared to another ($66 vs $168). I ordered the $66 part .. looks like it’s been used already, which explained the price difference. But hey, it works.
Here’s the valve-and-controller part installed. The water from the house’s plumbing comes in through the tubing covered with the silver coat (on the right), goes through the valve and goes out at the back into the dishwasher.

 

Friday/ are the job numbers red or blue?

.. the surprising 7.8% September unemployment rate for the USA, that is.  Scarcely were they out, or ex-General Electric CEO Jack Welch (and very obviously a Republican) accuses the Obama Administration of interfering with the Bureau of Labor Statistics!  Quite outrageous, his claim, and dismissed by just about everyone.

Jack Welch’s tweet cam out just 5 minutes after the September job numbers were released.  While interviewed by Chris Matthews from MSNBC, he admitted he had absolutely no evidence of any interference from the Administration with the Bureau of Labor Statistics. (That would be a scandal of epic proportions).
‘Grandpa Simpson’ says the numbers are fake, too. From the website quickmeme.com at http://www.quickmeme.com/meme/3r7rdd/
From the New York Times : here is the way Republicans have viewed the unemployment numbers, and will no doubt continue to view it.
Also from the New York Times : the way Democrats view the unemployment numbers. So .. are you wearing blue glasses, or red ones?

 

Thursday/ clash of the database titans

It is not only statements from the Presidential debate last night that are getting fact-checked.   Oracle CEO Larry Ellison has made some contentious statements at the Oracle OpenWorld 2012 conference this week, disparaging SAP ‘s latest technology called SAP HANA (High-Performance Analytic Appliance).

From Vishal Sikka’s blog at http://www.experiencesaphana.com/community/blogs/blog/2012/10/02/setting-the-record-straight–sap-hana-v-exadata-x3  :  ‘The statement Mr Ellison made about HANA, when talking about the release of a new Exadata machine, that has 4TB of DRAM and 22TB of SSD, is false.  He referred to HANA being “a small machine” with 0.5TB of memory. He said his machine has 26TB of memory, which is also wrong (SSD is not DRAM and does not count as memory, HANA servers also use SSDs for persistence)..

.. the largest HANA system deployed so far is the 100-node system built earlier this year with Intel and IBM.  It has 100TB of DRAM and 4000 CPU cores.  Mr. Ellison is welcome to come to Santa Clara and see the system working himself, with workloads from several customers’.

SAP’s full-page ad that appeared in the Wall Street Journal this week, firing back at Oracle’s claim that SAP has a ‘small’ in-memory database (compared to Oracle).

 

Wednesday/ the first 2012 Presidential debate

I watched most of the first of three Presidential debates tonight with friends over beers and pizza.  We were a little dismayed that the consensus among the political pundits (and a poll conducted by CNN) was that Romney ‘won’ the debate, even though there were no obvious zingers or knock-out punches.  CNN summed it up in one line as ‘The Republican candidate says the president’s vision is one of big government, while Obama challenged his rival’s plans as unworkable’.

A graphic from MSNBC TV channel here in the USA that covered the first 2012 Presidential debate.

 

Tuesday/ ‘complete plant’

I like this sign across from the grocery store two blocks from my house for two reasons.  1. It has a vintage neon sign that looks really nice when it gets dark.  2. The ‘complete plant’ in the building (see it on the right?) actually points in a way to the 21st century where new buildings may very well have their own complete (power) plants.  As power generation becomes more common from rooftop solar and wind generators, or diesel or natural gas generators inside buildings, the differences between distribution and transmission grids will continue to blur.

I like the vintage neon sign of Superb Cleaners on 15th Ave in Seattle’s Capitol Hill.

 

Monday/ it’s October

It’s the start of Halloween month, the start of the final 2012 quarter (will the Dow Jones crack or not?) and we’re into the final stretch of the 2012 US General Election (will President Obama prevail?).  The sun is still shining brightly almost every day here in Seattle.  I have all but given up expectations for any rain at all to fall down on Rain City this year (I’m joking, but that’s how it feels).

Street art that I found outside the gate of the Ghost Gallery on Summit/ Olive Way on Capitol Hill.   Is that a Halloween incarnation of Mickey Mouse being scared by the pterodactyl?

Sunday/ Uwajimaya

Uwajimaya is a grocery store chain here in Seattle’s International District that carries Asian food and other specialty items. I happened to drive by and wanted to take a picture of the dragon on the lamp post – and ended up in the store’s parking lot.  Oh well, might as well go inside and buy a few items, I thought.

Here’s the dragon on the lamp post.
And another dragon inside with the store’s name.
I checked out the saké but did not buy any. I see Nigori means ‘unfiltered’ and ‘Genshu’ means undiluted, so this is a little more potent than wine (20% alcohol).
Fresh quail eggs from California? I didn’t buy any – had some of these in China (boiled as part of a ‘hot pot’ dinner) and they really tasted not much different from chicken eggs.

 

I learned in Hong Kong that Japan makes wonderful baumkucken (German layer cake – how did that come about, I wonder?) .. and lo and behold, I can buy some right here in Seattle.