Basketball / Seafood

Been a bit busy.  SXSW is in town, but to cranky old timers like me it just means more traffic and crowded restaurants.  Did catch the last UT home basketball game of the season.  Went out to Deckhand, a favorite seafood joint.  About the only place I will order raw oysters that isn’t on the coast.  They have the best crawfish of anyplace I have ever been (sorry New Orleans).  I am told it is a Asian / Houston thing that involves a final step in a saute pan.

Tesla Charger

Figured I could charge the ThunderCat at work, but it is really my wife’s car and it just wasn’t that convenient.  Was using the 110V adapter, but that got us like 5 miles of range per hour of charge.  Finally sprung for a Tesla charger in the garage.  About 45 miles of range per hour of charge.

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Thai Dinner

Been a little light on the postings lately.  Was a bit under the weather for a while. Figured it was just the colds and other wintertime bugs going around  Ended up at the doc and they tested me for mono, strep, flu and probably other stuff I don’t want to know about.  All normal.  Sent my blood to the CDC in Atlanta and it came back positive for a well known childhood illness that is now considered “very rare”.  And yes, I was vaccinated, as is everyone in my family.  I blame the anti-vaxxer crowd.

Enough of that.  Here is some nice Thai food from dinner.  Yum.

Everything Is More Complicated in New Orleans

When the ‘blackface’ controversy started I immediately thought of Zulu, probably the only place a person my age would have been likely to see actual people in blackface.  I always understood it to be a parody of a parody.  I do have mixed feelings here.  If someone is offended, I don’t think it should be ignored.  Of course, ultimately people offended by this spectacle can just not go to Zulu.

From the New York Times:

A Black Group Says Mardi Gras Blackface Honors Tradition. Others Call It ‘Disgusting.’

 

 

Harvey Cragon (1928 – 2018)

Got word that one of my old committee members at UT, Harvey Cragon, had passed away recently (obit).  He was a tough old guy who built some of Texas Instruments supercomputers like the Advanced Scientific Computer back in the 1960s and 1970s.  It was a pleasure to know and work under someone with his background and understanding of computer architecture.  In particular, he made some recommendations for my work that I disagreed with and tried to ignore.  He eventually insisted I pursure some of these ideas, and it ended up being one of the strongest pieces of what I did (and yes, I did tell him he was right and I was wrong, but of course, he already knew that).

Hawks

One of these guys has been hanging around our neighborhood for a long time.  Now there are two.  Snapped this with my phone while walking out to the car.  Had to zoom in a bit.  Maybe we will have some baby hawks soon.

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