Post Barcamp Charleston 3

Another successful Barcamp Charleston is over and done with.

Feeling somewhat emboldened after this year’s Dragon*Con I decided to wear my Star Trek robe to BarcampCHS this year. I figured it would be a fun thing to do, and if nothing else would probably make everybody’s Barcamp experience just a little more memorable. I think that mission was accomplished.

My friend and fellow photographer Joe Nienstedt took this photo of me in my robe yesterday. The toque (hat) I’m wearing is an awesome Barcamp hat that Vera knitted for the organizers.

BarCampCHS

Joe also did a great job of people wrangling and got a cool group photo after lunch yesterday.

BarCampCHS Group Photo

BFS made it out for its third Barcamp and survived another event

BFS

There were a pretty good number of sessions pitched, although not as many as last year. Voting was done using stickers although there was plenty of room for sessions.

Session voting

Everywhere I went, there were groups of people chatting, networking, sharing tidbits of information and getting to know other people they might not otherwise have met. It’s what Barcamp is all about.

Hanging out between sessions

I think this year’s Barcamp was a little bit smaller than the last couple, although I haven’t seen any attendance numbers yet. There were definitely fewer sessions this year, and a lot of techie/programming related topics this year. It was still a pretty good time. I offered up a couple of session this year, CT Scanners: How do they work and an Ask a Medical Physicist Q&A type session. They went well, but didn’t get as many people as I expected. The Google Q&A (which has a tendency to suck people away from all the other sessions) was at the same time as my CT talk and my Q&A session was in the last time slot of the day. Still had a few people come by for that and had a nice little discussion about the kinds of things that I do for my real job.

Heading up the stairs to the after party on the outside patio at Mellow Mushroom, I heard a bunch of people yelling and shouting. I was wondering what the heck everybody was yelling about, and as I got closer I realized they were shouting “ROBE GUY!” at me.

Epic. Yep, definitely made Barcamp more memorable for people. Unfortunately I had forgotten to put my robe back on before heading out to the party. Having my robe would have made for more epicness.

Thoughts for next year:

  • try to get more of the creative community out. Even though they already have a lot of other outlets (like Pecha Kucha and other similar events) I think there can be a lot of potential for collaboration between the two
  • Bacon camp and last year’s Homebrew 101 were pretty popular sessions in previous Barcamps. It might be cool to to have food related sessions.
  • Maybe Google Q&A needs to be given its own dedicated time slot. The involvement by the local Google data center staff is great and BarcampCHS is very lucky to have their support. Even though they end up getting a lot of questions that can’t be answered (either because it’s not in their area or they’re just not allowed to say), it always seems to be a popular session and it gives people a chance to find out a little bit about the facility. It does tend to drain people away from other sessions though.
  • although I was only watching the planning from the sidelines this time, it seemed a lot of effort was spent trying to get around the requirement of having lunch provided by the company that provides CofC’s food services. Maybe it would be better to do away with providing lunch and direct people over to some of the many nearby restaurants instead. It would also remove a large expense from the budget.
  • Registration seemed to flow much better using the classroom rather than having it out in the lobby of Maybank.
  • The first session of the day offered up to user groups as a meet-and-greet/meeting type thing was a good idea. I got to find out about Makelab Charleston and find out the kinds of things they have and are planning on.

Overall, BarcampCHS was still a great time and I’m looking forward to doing it again next year. Maybe this year’s robe wearing will start a trend and other people will do something costume-y next year. I certainly had a lot of fun with it.

Need more science-y type stuff

I think I need to add more geeky science type stuff to my blog.

I’ve become pretty well known for the food photos in the blog, which is all fine and dandy. It doesn’t really reflect what I do though, and I think I’d like my blog to do more of that.

My ‘Journal Club‘ entries were an attempt to add more of what I’m interested in and to get me to read more articles. I think I’ll try to pick that up again. I’m getting to the phase of my PhD where I need to start putting together my proposal for my thesis and qualifier exam.

I’ve already started gathering literature and papers, so that’s probably where I’ll start content wise.

Charleston Eats: Vickery’s Bar and Grill

Jerk chicken sandwich with fries and gravy.

Jerk chicken sandwich from Vickery's

Sandwich was ok. Note quite the jerk flavour I was expecting. The plantains were good. Loved the fries and gravy. It’s been a long time since I’ve had fries and gravy. Will have to go back more often now that I know I can get my fix there.

Photo gallery upgrade

Finally got around to installing the latest version of Gallery 3 to replace the older Gallery 2. Links to the old gallery should redirect to the new one, but I haven’t had a chance to rigorously test it yet.

Everything is still OOtB (out of the box) Gallery so it looks pretty vanilla. I’ll see what neat new themes I can put up to make it look pretty. So far everything seems to work ok, although importing the photos from Gallery 2 turned out to be kind of a slow process.

So far I’m liking the new version of Gallery. Some of the tasks that were a bit of a chore in 2.x are a lot easier now in 3.x.

Some interesting pocket change

My old Netcom home page has been around since the late 90s and has been largely neglected for the better part of the last decade. I keep it around for posterity, but there’s a lot of linkrot there. I had moved some pages over to my blog, but not others. This is one of the last few remaining pages that haven’t been migrated over. The last time this page was touched was back in 2003 for some minor link editing, but most of the content dates back to around 1995 or 1996

Ok, so you’ve been out shopping or running errands all day. If you’re anything like me, you’ve managed to accumulate a pocket full of change from spending money you shouldn’t have. What do you do with it? Well, if you’re like most other people, you dig it all out, dump it into the change jar and don’t give it a second thought. My change jar happens to be a yellow piggy bank.

But, if you look closely, you’ll be surprised at what you can find in loose pocket change. Here are some of the coins I’ve found in mine. The unusualness mileage may vary for you, but for around here these are fairly unique. Well, for me anyway. I’ve buffed them up a bit so they look nice and shiny for you.

Coins are not shown at their actual or relative sizes

Coins from other places

Barbados headsBarbados tailsHere’s one from Barbados. This was one of my first acquisitions. I discovered it quite by accident when I was cleaning out my pig and rolling coins to take to the bank.
Netherlands headsNetherlands tailsA 10 cent piece from the Netherlands. I stumbled onto this one as I was rummaging for quarters for laundry. It’s a pretty small coin too, 1.5 cm in diameter (0.59 inches for you non-metric people). The date on the coin is 1957, so I would imagine they might look a bit different now. According to Psylocke_, I might be able to get a stick of gum with this…
Denmark headsDenmark tailsA small 25 øre piece from Denmark. Found it while I was dumping the change out of my pocket.
Susan B Anthony headsSusan B Anthony tailsHere’s a real live Susan B Anthony dollar coin that I acquired
on a recent trip to NYC. This was in the change that I got from a machine when I was purchasing a ticket for the Long Island Railroad. I can see why nobody likes them…they’re a lot like quarters.
Unknown1 headsUnknown1 tailsThis is a coin that I found while rummaging through my pocket looking for change to pay for a muffin at work. I’ve been told that it comes from England.
Germany headsGermany tailsThis coin is my first find since moving to the US 3 years ago. Stumbled upon this one while counting and rolling the contents of my change jar to take to the bank.

Canadian coins

This is a series of quarters that was minted to celebrate the 125th anniversary of Canada as a country. Each of the 10 provinces and 2 territories had their own coin. Each coin depicts a small scene which represents the culture and land in each province/territory. On the loonie are a some people in front of the Peace Tower, located at the Parliament buildings in Ottawa.

When they first came out, people would buy rolls and rolls of quarters and hoard them, so nowadays it’s pretty rare to find one in your pocket. I’ve only managed to acquire 9 of the 12 province coins, plus a couple of loonies ($1 coins for those of you not in the know). I’ve also included links to the closest thing I could find for a home page for each province, just in case you wanted to do some touring.

British ColumbiaSaskatchewanOntarioNova ScotiaNew Brunswick
Britsh ColumbiaSaskatchewanOntarioNova ScotiaNew Brunswick
Prince Edward IslandNewfoundlandNorthwest TerritoriesThe Yukon
Prince Edward IslandNewfoundlandNorthwest TerritoriesYukon

and the loonie.
Loonie,

RCMP quarterThis one is the RCMP quarter, minted to celebrate 100 years of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. It’s kind of an old coin, minted back in 1973 I think.

Miscellaneous coins

Subway token,The other sideThis one is a subway token for the New York City subway system. I just happened to have one left over from a trip I made to New York in June 94.
Arcade token This goes waaay back (entirely too far back) to my days as a mall rat and arcade junkie. It’s an arcade token from somewhere. I forget where it came from.