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A prediction market you can influence!

A friend of mine who works for a non-profit in the education sector has turned me on to a prediction market that her organization has set up for demonstration purposes. This prediction market acts like a stock market, only the questions being bet on are much more interesting than the price of a company.

I recommend you visit it at http://markets.nitle.org/.

A brief update…

I’m going to try to write more, I promise.

We’ve been home for a week or two since our trip to Disney World. That trip kinda wore me out, and I’m sure my family is still trying to recover, like I am. We’ve (my work) has also been on spring break this week, so the campus has been dead.

But this weekend is Easter weekend, and we’re going to be traveling a bit. We get to have a wonderful “Easter” lunch on Saturday with my sister and her husband, and hopefully get to see quite a bit of our family. Sunday? Don’t know what we’ll be doing on Sunday, but the Easter Bunny will be stopping by.

Gotta finish reading books for my classes… <yawn>. Then I need to write two papers and a presentation.

What’s new…

Got the AppleTV up and running, complete with our set of videos that we put on there for the kids. Now all we need do is figure out what we’re doing with the rest of our library. No way it’ll all fit on there. But maybe…

Met tonight with a few newfound fellow bloggers who write with me on www.transitmiami.com. We’re looking at ways we’ll be able to help the cities and counties in the area figure out how to get development right, so that we can make the place more livable.

Still got stuff going on at work. More cuts are coming. I think it’s going to eat into the services we provide, though I’m not certain how. I hate meeting with the staff to talk about nebulous things such as “how much are we going to cut the budget,” “what’s going on with positions,” etc., when I don’t know how we’ll be affected.

Off to bed for me…

Enjoy your night.

Ahhhh… Vacation…

So, I’m on vacation with the family. Starting Monday, that might be debatable… we’ll be in the Orlando area at Walt Disney World resort. At the very least it’ll be fun. Photos can be found by browsing to my Flickr account at this link here.

Also, for those of you interested in Urban Planning, I have started writing for TransitMiami, a blog on Urban Planning issues in the Miami, Florida area.

Another nifty gadget…

We bought an Apple TV on Friday.

For about 18 months now, my wife and I have been trying an experiment using a Mac G4 Tower, to see if we could mimic what an Apple TV does inherently. Since we got our tax refund, we figured we would give it a go with the Apple TV.

What a time sink it is… especially the YouTube feature…

I spent most of Friday night watching videos of the Moscow Metro (don’t ask… it’s an illness I have) and Tokyo transportation system. Saturday I started converting the files I had saved for my use on the Mac G4 into M4V files that could be played on the Apple TV.

It’s sweet.

And very easy to use.

Let the hacking begin! :-D

Metro’s Greatest Hits…

When you’re driving in a city that has a streetcar system, and, especially when you’re driving on the street that has the streetcar, make sure you’re watching your back, not running lights, and, in general, paying attention.This, by the way, was in Houston, Texas…

The Bed In A Box…

My wife and I had been living in a perpetual State of the ’80s… I think we were the last people on the face of the planet to own a waterbed. Yes… it didn’t even have foam inserts - it was totally a free-wave, bladder-type waterbed.

Until this past Friday…

We purchased a canopy bed that reminds me of the insides of Disney’s Wilderness Lodge, which we got on sale for less than $500, and, to put on that bed we purchased a mattress from a company called “Bed In A Box”. They sell only “memory foam,” or visco-elastic foam mattresses. The one we got was their PacBamboo-Plus, queen size, for less than $700 (including shipping), which has a bamboo-fabric cover, but is otherwise very similar to a $3,400 model sold by Tempur-Pedic.

It’s taking some getting used to. We’re talking going from a bed that was very soft, with no support, to a bed that feels like I’m sleeping on a slab, but has sufficient-enough give to be comfortable.

I’ll let Tracy tell you about the installation of the mattress, since she was the one who (against my suggestion) went ahead and did it.

Went to Molly Grandpa and Grandma’s…

The kids and I went to my folks’ house in Sebastian. The trip served multiple purposes:

  1. To get the kids out of the house so that my lovely wife could do her “homework” for her on-line classes that she is taking.
  2. To get the kids up to their grandparents for a visit.
  3. To give the kids an opportunity to get used to the “in-flight” entertainment that is now available to them for such trips, and
  4. To give me an excuse to see my folks - something I want to do at least once a month this year.

The trip was a good one. We were able to go up and see my parents, who are doing fairly well. The boys had fun watching “Cars” on the small screen DVD player we’ve got in the new van. Something even better, though, was the fact that while they were able to watch, I was able to listen to my own radio programs in the front portion of the van.

Traffic on the way up and back was mixed, of course, with traffic on Florida’s Turnpike being manageable, and traffic on I-95 being barely so.

Great fun was had by all, and a good nap was had by dad.

The “new” minivan…

So, we had an accident in the car a couple weeks back. When my lovely (although draxzaster said “hot” while we were in Vegas, and i would tend to agree with him) wife failed to yield the right-of-way, she slightly crunched the back of another vehicle. Anyhow, we got the car repaired for $500 out-of-pocket, and all the while, we were thinking “why not just get another car?” So we did…

We bought a 2005 Chrysler Town and Country Touring-class minivan with 28k miles on it. New, this van would have cost the original owner $33,000. It is simply the most luxurious auto we’ve ever owned. Fully-appointed with leather, power seats, DVD player (for the kids). We got it at a steal at $17,000.

Since we tend to drive our cars into the ground, I’m hoping this one lasts us the five to seven years we’re planning on having it.

Union Station waiting room, Washington, DC (postcard)

I was doing my news readings when I came across this postcard of Washington’s Union Station. I thought it quite pertinent to share with my (limited) readership.

Union Station waiting room, Washington, DC (postcard):

One problem when somewhat disconnected organizations manage key cultural assets is that they don’t pay much attention to culture. Last year was the 100th anniversary of the opening of the station. No notice was taken of this whatsoever. There isn’t much in the way of interpretive signage in the station, and frankly, there needs to be a true visitor information center based there.