Apple reflections

The web is full of tributes to Steve Jobs since his death October 5. I can’t say I met him, although I would have liked to. Like most others, my encounters with Jobs came through the products he helped create.

I first met the two Steves (Jobs and Wozniak) through the Apple ][+. The computer lab in my junior high school was still a relatively new concept, and stocked with around 20 (then) state of the art Apple ][+ with 64kB RAM, 5.25″ floppy disk drives and 10″ monitors. The first thing everybody in the computer class had to do was become proficient in touch typing, so Typing Tutor occupied most of the class time. There was also a lot of game playing and I remember a game based on the Olympics was particularly popular. I still hear the echoes of frantic key mashing in my head.

When I was in high school, dad surprised us by bringing home an Apple //e with the green screen monitor. Using money I made from delivering papers, I augmented it over time with an 80 column/128kB RAM expansion card, printer, joystick and a second 5.25″ floppy drive. I put my touch typing skills to work entering in programs from Nibble magazine. I never really became much of a programmer (I could do it, just not well) but I did learn how to read assembly language. I did a lot of game playing too, with Ultima and Wizardry occupying much of my time.

My high school computer lab was equipped with a bunch of Apple //gs’ and eventually Macintoshes, although I never got a chance to play with them much. I enjoyed playing on computers and going through code to see how programs worked, but I was never as into them as some of my other computer friends were.

My next encounter with Jobs came in my last year of undergrad. It came in the form of seeing a NeXT Cube. It was love at first sight. After working in the IBM and MS DOS world for the past few years, the NeXT Cube and NeXTSTEP was nothing short of a revelation. The next few years saw me administering a network of NeXTstations (grayscale and colour) and eventually NeXTSTEP running on Intel machines. To me, NeXTSTEP was the absolute pinnacle of computer operating systems and GUIs. MS Windows was a sad third rate product and the Macintosh OS looked old and primitive by comparison.

After Jobs’ return to Apple, and the disappearance of NeXTSTEP (which was eventually reincarnated as MacOS X) into the bowels of Apple, we parted ways. Since then my encounters with Jobs via Apple products have been few and far between, usually limited to handling other people’s Apple products. It’s not that I ever had anything against them. I’ve always admired the beauty and ingenuity of post-Jobs Apple 2.0 products. I even came pretty close to replacing my old PC with a 27″ iMac (which I still mildly lust after).

For me, Steve Jobs will always be associated with the original Apple, the Apple ][ line and NeXT/NeXTSTEP. To me, that is where his true genius lay. Not Apple 2.0, or the i* products that everybody else has associated with him but with the cutting edge products he helped develop. He was truly visionary with the Apple ][ and NeXT. They were all ahead of their time, but eventually grew into or morphed into huge successes.

That’s the Steve Jobs I remember.

Interval work on the track

Legs are still sore from Monday’s leg workout. Was going to take another day off from running, but after walking a lap around the track the legs felt like they wanted to run. I decided to try some interval work. One lap at a fast 6-7 minute/mile pace and one lap walking. Did that for about a total of 2 miles.

It’s been a long long time since I’ve done any interval work (probably since my high school track days) but it felt good to stretch the legs out and run fast, even thought I can’t keep it up for very long.

What do you see

Sitting by the river
watching the water flow by
Swirls and eddies drifting past
pushed by the current
Islands of calm floating by
like floes of ice

Do you see bubbles of water
pushed up from below?
The currents of water
colliding with the flow?

Spinning whirlpools bumping against each other
and then disappearing,
merging into the current

Equations that describe the flow and turbulence
Numbers and symbols superimposed on the swirls
Like having double vision

What do you see?

Plymouth Park out and back

Went out for a long(-ish) run. It’s actually a relatively short out and back from my house to Plymouth Park, just over 5km round trip.

Not wanting to push too hard, and since it’s such a nice place to rest and hang out, I ended up sitting by the river enjoying the water flowing by for about an hour before deciding it was time to make the jog back.

My Tracks tells me I did the run back from the park (~2.7 km) at just over 10 km/h. Not terribly fast, but fast enough.

Felt pretty good endurance wise. If I did the whole distance without stopping, I think I’d be looking at a 5km time of just over 30 minutes.

Not bad for having not done any running for at least a couple of years, I think.

It was a pretty good run and the new shoes felt pretty good.

Day off tomorrow to recover. Probably do some walking on the track at the Wellness Center.

Back to running

A few weeks ago I put running (well, slow jogging) back into my workout routine, replacing the 30 minutes of elliptical work. With the weather cooling down, I’ve been able to move the running to the outside rooftop track. It’s nice to be able to run outside again.

I’ve made attempts in the past to get back into running, but always ended up stopping because of inevitable knee issues. Now, almost 25 pounds lighter, running has become a lot easier than it was and the knees don’t bother me nearly as much as they used to.

Before DragonCon, I was up to doing 6 laps (1 mile) on the track at a pretty comfortable and leisurely 10 minute mile pace, pushing it up to a 9 minute mile if I was feeling good. This week (after not doing anything for about 3 weeks due to post-DragonCon catching up) and with my new shoes, I’m up to 9 laps (1.5 miles) at the same pace.

Not pushing myself too hard yet. I need to build up my endurance. It’s been a long time since I did any running on a regular basis. I find myself enjoying it a lot more now than I did in my previous attempts to get back into running. Hopefully this new found desire to run continues. Not having to lug around the extra weight has really helped.

Maybe I’ll be able to take on the bridge run next year.