Saturday, April 26, 2008

Spring Break Monkeyshines

Sorry so delenquent on this post - stuff happens. Since I'm so late with this post, I'm just going to caption it.


We added a new member to our family - Baby the fish - who now resides in a bowl on the kitchen table - kind of a living centerpiece.
We also took a subway trip to the Prospect Park Zoo where we made many new friends.
The weather was unbelievably beautiful all week so we spent a lot of time at the park - it was even warm enough for icecream!
We also spent some time just hanging out.
The kids learned how to fly a kite - one of Daddy's favorite passtimes.


We raided the piggy bank and took a trip to Toys "R" Us, where we bought some Polly Pockets and more GeoTrax.
Zachy worked on his math flashcards.
We had our bagels and muffins each morning.
Finally, we created fabulous works of art - Zach did all the gluing and button placing himself!





















Thursday, April 17, 2008

Science Night Redux

I know some of you were curious to find out what happened to our dinosaur in our little science experiment (see 4/10/08 post), so here is the "after" picture.
Cool huh?!?

Friday, April 11, 2008

More Web Stuff

Here are a couple of new websites that are either useful or worth checking out. The first two are courtesy of Nathan - one of my web gurus. The third is just something I stumbled upon, but is... interesting:



http://quotably.com/

Quotably allows you to follow Twitter users without being logged into a Twitter account. It also allows you to follow the conversations as they occur. To follow me just go to Quotably and type in "zmmiller"

http://tinyurl.com/

Tinyurl is useful for texting or posting links that are sometimes quite huge in terms of character length - especially useful for Twitterers.

http://www.heyokamagazine.com/

I still haven't figured out what to think about this webzine, but perhaps some of you can help and provide some feedback.

Peaceandlove.

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Wednesday Night = Science Night

Now that I have the kids every Wednesday night, I have been trying to do something fun and educational on each occasion. Of course if the weather is nice we go to the park, but afterwards we go to Daddy's house for snack time and some food for thought.

Last night we decided to experiment with an amazing colored growing beasty. Miranda selected the dinosaur and Zach and I measured it with our ruler to find out how big it was. We put it in water and set it on our shelf so that it could grow. Next week we will see what happened. Stay tuned!

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Monkeys Monkeys Everywhere






















We (the kids and Daddy) had yet another great weekend together last weekend, even though Daddy did not do such a great job of capturing the fun and frivolity on camera - oops, my bad!
Nevertheless, we did a lot of our usual things: we went to the Sensory Gym on Saturday morning and while Zach was busy running, jumping and climbing, Miranda and Daddy went to our cookie meeting to hear the message and see all of our friends.

Saturday afternoon we went to a party at our friend Yvonne's house and played with her kitties and made sculptures out of Playdoh and colorful fuzzy pipe cleaners - what fun! We even played some card games (Daddy won $3).
We had some yummy snacks and even watched some of our new favorite shows on TV. Zach curled up on a big comfy chair when he needed a break from all of the excitement.





































On Sunday we went to the horseback riding place for Zachy's session, which went great - he got right up on the horse and talked happily the whole time. Miranda got her usual lollipop (the kind that is bigger than her head) and a good time was had by all.

Not much more to add - just counting down the days until our next installment of Monkeyshines.

Monday, April 07, 2008

Just Another Technology Harangue

So I was sitting in front of the boob-tube the other night (that's the "telly" to some of you) - you know - just kind of flipping around through the 1000 or so levels of Hell that Time Warner provides for me, and I couldn't help but notice what I'll call an unfortunate theme: technology as the solution to all problems. Before I proceed, I should explain a little something about my viewing and content selection habits. I tend to watch a lot of science fiction and fantasy because I am interested in "the human condition" and I find that these shows, movies or programs often provide the best commentary on what it is to be human. Perhaps this is because, once the "normal" milieu has been stripped away, and the characters are in another time, space, dimension and/or reality, the only familiar point of reference that remains is the human. Oh yeah - I also watch because there are almost always incredibly hot alien babes in spandex - a nice bonus.

Back to the point: I was watching Stargate Atlantis (this is the one without MacGyver, though he sometimes makes a cameo) and the plot was the usual fare: a bunch of roving meanies from another galaxy show up like a bounced check, bent on domination or destruction or the like, and the heroic humans have to manipulate the available technology in such a way as to solve the problem, usually driving the bad guys into a collapsing black hole or other convenient astrophysical phenomenon - always just in the nick of time. The metaphor that is used for technology is what caused the audible "click" in my brain - the "click" that resulted in the formation of a hypothesis, which resulted in some research (channel-surfing), which in turn resulted in this post. The metaphor was that of the ubiquitous Dell laptop computer (I know they're Dells by the shape of the logo, even though they removed the lettering for the show).

As I watched, our heroes plugged their laptops into a 10,000 year old piece of alien hardware, activated it, and saved the day - hmmn? It was a good thing that these aliens were using standard USB ports 10,000 years ago, a good thing that the powercells still held a charge (unlike my relatively new cell phone), a good thing that these aliens were using a mathematical system based on 10's, 120 volt electrical systems, and Microsoft compatible operating systems. A good thing that these aliens spoke English. The list goes on. I mean Jeeeez! Most people can't even get their hardware to work if they go to Europe, much less the Pegasus Galaxy. But the most perplexing thing was that the heroes did not have to really "do" anything. They didn't have to run, jump or climb anything. They didn't have to brave harsh environmental conditions. They didn't have to question their beliefs or sacrifice the lives any of their comrades. Heck, they didn't even miss breakfast or dirty their spiffy matching uniforms.

So I flipped the channel, still considering what I had seen, and found myself watching CSI Boise (I wasn't really paying attention to what city it was, and didn't really much care - they all kind of look the same to me). In this drama, the laptops were plugged into microscopes, spectrometers, coffee makers, etc. And again, the heroes didn't really have to do anything, save hitting a few keys on their laptops to cross-index a DNA sample with a pollen grain from a dendroseris neriifolia with the tread print from a pair of 1970's era Adidas sneakers (originally sold in Red China). No doughnuts, no stakeouts, no exhausting rounds of interviewing witnesses. Just an impossibly clean laboratory full of exotic (but largely useless) glassware, lasers (there have to be lasers - right?) and of course plenty of laptop computers. I flipped on.

I found an "end of the world" movie in which a gigantic earthquake spelled doom for us all and, of course, a team of impossibly attractive scientists sat in front of their laptops in a mission-control type room, advising the President on exactly where the atomic bombs would have to be detonated to save the world.
Two asides here: 1) are atom bombs now a good thing and should we be grateful that we have them? and 2) how come (Barack Obama and Hillary notwithstanding) there is always a black guy or a woman president in the White House, when a giant meteor is about to hit New York?
I wondered who writes the software that these laptops are running - Adobe Earthquake 3.0? Sun Mirosystems Nuke-O-Matic 2.7? Oracle Plate Tectonics Wizzard (still in Beta)? It's pretty absurd when you really think about it. I mean, I'm all for suspending disbelief and all, but it is everywhere in our culture! When we look at schools for Zach, the tour-givers always brag about the fact that there is a computer in each classroom, or that they have a computer lab - as if that means that he will get a "real" education there, or that these machines will somehow cure his autism. Window dressing - nothing more.

I wont bore you with the rest of my surfing (research) but be assured I encountered plenty more of the same. It would have seemed that my initial hypothesis had been confirmed... until I got around to Battlestar Galactica - let me elaborate. The refreshing thing about this show is that nothing works! The Galactica is a totally out of date, barely space-worthy ship that was being turned into a museum when the Cylons (the bad guys) attacked. The paint is peeling, it is filthy and rusted (inside and out), the lights don't work so well, they actually use big f@cking old-school phones (with cords) to talk to other parts of the ship, the bathrooms are small, cramped and kind of disgusting, the food sucks, and people die ignoble deaths - everything is broken! It is all very human. Yeah there are some computers, but most of the time a human has to go and physically do what ever needs to be done. The plot is about humans - humans facing their fears, dealing with their flaws and defects, overcoming their prejudices, helping each other through hard times and clinging to hope and their faith under impossible conditions. Humans: no laptops required.