Best wishes and a happy New Year, everyone! It’s hard to believe, but 2015 is here.


a weblog of whereabouts & interests, since 2010

There it is! .. the year that was, on its way out for us in the Westernmost parts of the world as well. I think I will celebrate the arrival of 2015 on the shores of the United States in New York City with the drop of the crystal ball in Times Square (that would be 9 pm Pacific Time), and then call it quits soon after that.
I have a little road trip to start on early Thursday morning, to friends in Oregon. There will be plenty of time to celebrate 2015. It is brand new and will stay for at least a little while !

Yes – 2014 is almost gone. I made it out to the gym today, but had to bundle up. It was sunny, but only a few degrees above freezing (38 °F/ 3 °C) here in Seattle this afternoon. The outdoor art is located in the open space across from the gym, the site where construction on the city’s new Denny Substation will start in 2015.

These days we find food from all over the world in our
grocery stores, but this Himalayan brick I spotted at my regular grocery store made me wonder : is it really from the Himalayas*? Is it something like Turkish delight? (A pink confection made of a gel of starch and sugar). The answers : yes, it is from the Himalayas; it is a pure salt brick; no, it is not manufactured; it may in fact have been formed millions of years ago ! It needs to be tempered (warmed up) before its first use, and it can be re-used many times after that for serving up food such as sushi, or finely sliced meats.
*Am I putting my ignorance about food on display here? I’m a pretty simple guy when it comes to food – but I would have the reader know my favorite kind of toast is one with Marmite and avocado, and my favorite veggies are Brussels sprouts and asparagus.
I couldn’t resist this ‘Sport Solar Analog Display Japanese Quartz Silver Watch’, and so I ordered it from Amazon on Sunday night. No, I do not really need another watch, but hey – it’s not expensive, and I love the bold, sporty 3, 6, 9 and 12.
So no fancy Swiss or French watch with a tourbillon* for me! It’s got to be a Seiko. I think my first watch ever was a Seiko and that’s where it comes from.
*From Wikipedia : In horology, a tourbillon (French: “whirlwind”) is an addition to the mechanics of a watch escapement. Developed around 1795 and patented by the French-Swiss watchmaker Abraham-Louis Breguet on June 26, 1801, a tourbillon aims to counter the effects of gravity by mounting the escapement and balance wheel in a rotating cage, to negate the effect of gravity when the timepiece (thus the escapement) is stuck in a certain position.
I was about to retire to bed on Saturday when the news came in of the missing AirAsia flight. The airline is a low-cost carrier based in Malaysia, and I have actually flown on it once, in 2010 : from Shenzhen to Bangkok and back, documented here. The map is from the New York Times newspaper’s on-line edition.

We headed back to the mainland on Friday, taking the ferry from Kingston to Edmonds this time. It’s a short crossing – only 30 minutes. The sun had come out by the time we set sail, but it was still very chilly on the upper deck !








Paul, Thomas and I set out for Paul’s ‘beach’ house in Hansville on Wednesday night. The wait at the Edmonds-Kingston ferry crossing was so long, that we drove the long way around south through Tacoma, and up north again to get to Hansville on the Hood Canal. Tacoma is sometimes called Seattle’s step sister-city, but she definitely has her charms : great views of the south Puget Sound and much more affordable living than Seattle.
It’s ‘sugar season’ here in
the United States around Christmas time, writes the New York Times (click for article), and most of us have a sugar addiction. The average American consumes anywhere from a quarter to a half pound of sugar a day. Yikes. Stay away from soda, from concentrated juices, from packaged food (cookies and snacks), and take it easy with sugar in tea and coffee.

I waited until Monday to run out the department stores here in downtown Seattle – not for Christmas shopping, really. Just stuff. What was on my shopping list? Two new pairs of dress pants for work, as well as a winter jacket. A new suitcase. And one never knows, whatever catches my fancy .. but no on-the-spot impulse buying of any one item more than $100 is allowed in the Willem shopping modus operandi (method of operating).
Alas, my experiences downtown and at the Northgate shopping mall were decidedly lacking. Nordstrom did not have my size ‘Bonobos’ (a brand name) dress pants in colors other than khaki. I have two pairs of khaki pants already. (I should just buy it on-line). Macy’s had no jackets that I really liked (and I have bought several jackets there over the years). Finally, when I got to the Bergman luggage store to buy a new black Samsonite 22″ suitcase for all my travels, no luck either. They had the ugliest set of new Samsonite suitcases! Ugg-ly! They now only make shiny hard-shell ‘spinners’ .. those suitcases with the four little wheels. I prefer the big two-wheeled design – with those you can run to the gate and not miss your flight, and they have more space inside.
Today marks the winter solstice (up here in the Northern hemi-sphere). As it turns out, we already had our earliest sunset : on December 11. (Check out the sunset in Fairbanks Alaska. One’s afternoon nap might as well turn into a loong full night’s sleep!). The reason is that there is a slight difference between the solar day (the time it takes for the sun to appear in the same position in the sky from one day to the next) and the calendar day. Here is the rest of the explanation from the Washington Post blog (hang in there): The Earth’s axis is tilted 23.5 degrees, and our orbit around the sun is elliptical (non-circular). In December, these two factors combine in such a way that our days are actually a few seconds longer than 24 hours – as seen by the amount of time it takes the sun to cross our local meridian (longitude) from one day to the next. In effect, this pushes the time of solar noon several minutes later during December, advancing both sunrise and sunset times even as the days continue to shorten until December 21.


[From Wikipedia] A galaxy is a massive, gravitationally-bound system consisting of stars, stellar remnants, an interstellar medium of gas and dust, and dark matter, an important but poorly understood component. (Our solar system’s galaxy is the Milky Way).
Guardians of the Galaxy is a 2014 super-hero film based on the Marvel comic books with the same name. Watching it Saturday night, I tried to hang with the plot, the best part of which is the ‘Infinity Stone’ that can destroy an entire galaxy (but it’s not clear which galaxy the movie refers to, actually). The movie is not quite Star Trek-ky (maybe more like Star Wars?) but anyway : I could not quite warm up to it. The music in it is a throwback to the 70’s when cassette tapes were used to play the likes of BJ Thomas’s hit ‘Hooked on a Feeling’ – which I liked a lot when I played a little of it on iTunes. But I disagree with the 90% or 4 stars out of 5 the reviewers give the flick. I give it a 6 or a 7 out of 10.

Toyota has started selling its first commercial hydrogen fuel-cell vehicle in Japan. These cars are not cheap (est. price $62,000) and only slated for late 2015 availability in the USA. Outside of California and Washington State, lots of hydrogen gas stations will still have to be constructed. Also, says Bloomberg Businessweek : ‘The auto industry has already sunk serious money into hybrids, plug-in electrics, and advanced batteries in the expectation that these technologies will dominate in the post-gasoline era, whenever that may be’.

Thursday comes quickly when you are busy, and we were very busy this week, trying to squeeze in a last few hours of work before bidding each other a nice holiday on Thursday as we headed out to the airport. It would be Monday January 5 before the project team convenes again and take up our challenges. First, it is time to go home and take a break.

We have had on and off rain here since Monday. I read on-line that San Francisco has received 8.43 inches this month, the most for a December since December 1950 ! Hmm. And it definitely feels a little like Seattle here this week.

This is our last week on site for 2014 here at the project, and the Project Manager wants all – or he will settle for ‘most of’ – the specifications done – D.O.N.E. – by Friday. Are you done yet, with yours? he asked me today. Well .. define ‘done’, I hedged. (Done could mean it’s complete but not reviewed, or it could have been reviewed but the review comments still need to be incorporated, or it could have been reviewed with comments already incorporated, and approved). It’s always a challenge : is the specification complete enough and defined enough so that the developers can go ahead and code the conversion program, or the custom function that we want to create to extend the standard SAP functionality.

The airport was surprisingly full of travelers on Monday morning – that did not know what to do, or where to go (so they were infrequent travelers, and in a way I envy them). Maybe some of them were in Seattle for the Seahawks-San Francisco 49ers football game (the Seahawks beat the 49ers again). My flight was delayed again, and by the time we were in the air it was almost 10.00 am. There was fog and rainy weather in San Francisco, and they had to close one of the runways.


As we approach the winter solstice the days are getting ever shorter here in the North. The sun now sets at 4.18 pm already .. so it was completely dark when I went for a walk.
My neighborhood of Capitol Hill does not go overboard with Christmas decorations, but I would say one in three or one in four houses has some lights up on the house, or on the fence, or in the garden. Does my porch light count? (No, I would say not!). That’s all I have. I put ‘icicles’ on my front gutter one year, but that was several years ago.
Bryan, Gary and I watched an episode of ‘Rome’ last night (an HBO TV series that aired some time ago, and is now available on Amazon Prime as streaming video). We were not too wild about it, but it prompted us to check refresh our history knowledge : over which years did the Roman Empire exist? We know of course, that the Romans were around at the birth of Jesus Christ in the year 0. And certainly, before that, the Romans did not refer to the years as 100 BC, since they could not peer into the future. It turns out the Roman empire was at its height in 117 AD. So, after the birth of Christ. Anno Domini means ‘In the Year of our Lord’. There is no year 0 between the years designated as 1 BC and 1 AD. The Roman Calendar was made over by Julius Caesar and became the Julian Calendar, and several centuries later the Gregorian Calendar came about.
Check out these cool maps of the Roman Empire that I found on-line, at this link.
