Archive for the ‘Ithaca NY’ Category

Today’s bike ride

Monday, October 8th, 2007

Today I headed toward South Hill on my cyclocross bike. I spent some time on the rail trail, but it doesn’t show up on the map. I planned to climb Troy Rd but I was way too tired when I got there. I thought about getting off and walking a few times, but didn’t. Here’s the route:


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Today’s bike ride

Saturday, October 6th, 2007

I used my cyclocross bike with a low gear of 34 in the back and 38 in the front, and ended up walking up most of Connecticut hill road. It was fun though. I also made an excursion into the swamp along Cayuta Lake.


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Map of Lightlink hotspots in Ithaca

Tuesday, August 21st, 2007

With the help of google maps, I created a Lightlink hotspot map:


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Dance Concert April 28

Sunday, April 22nd, 2007

I am helping out for a dance concert Saturday, April 28, 2007 at 4:30pm at the Henry St John Gymnasium at the Corner of Clinton St and Geneva St, Ithaca NY.

See ya there.

Housing prices

Sunday, April 22nd, 2007

I am really eager to own a house. I would actually enjoy doing home improvement and gardening. It’s hard to get excited about doing these things with a rental. I am in the process of buying a house in Ithaca, NY and I will stay at least two years, possibly more.

I came across some articles on home prices — http://www.fdic.gov/bank/analytical/fyi/2005/021005fyi.html it appears that prices do not descend that much, and they tend to decline in large markets. I expect that the Ithaca market will stay flat at worst, since Ithaca is growing as a high-tech city.

Here’s some data on historical evidence of home price booms and busts: http://www.fdic.gov/bank/analytical/fyi/2005/021005fyi_table1.pdf

These downturns tend to follow years of stagnant or negative economic activity. http://www.fdic.gov/bank/analytical/fyi/2005/021005fyi_table2.pdf

Looking for large projects / full-time employment

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007

I have been consulting for a few months now, and have learned a lot of stuff. However, bills have to get paid and I want to buy a little house in Ithaca and stop working 80 hour weeks.

To wit, I am looking for a full time job.

I will consider work in the following areas:

  • Development of flash applications for creative agencies. I am experienced in ActionScript 3.0
  • Development of websites using modern tools, e.g. Ruby on Rails, PHP Cake or other mainstream PHP framework, WordPress, Java, Python, Bedework
  • Development of social networking applications. I am especially interested in public event calendars

At a minimum prospective employers should be using version control or willing to start using version control for all projects. Subversion is preferred; cvs is acceptable if there are strong reasons why the switch has not been made yet.

I do not want to work with: IIS, windows servers, ColdFusion, ASP. I will not work with MS Access on any significant project (sorry, the SQL dialect is too weak and there’s no defensible reason not to upgrade to SQL Server 2005 Express). (I am willing to work with C#, though, I quite like it). I will reluctantly work with MS SQL Server – in fact the little I know about its SQL dialect I like, though GO instead of ; makes me think of Visual Basic and I shudder inwardly. One final thing. I will not work with Visual Basic.

I am more interested in large programming projects than small projects. I am more interested in public internet projects than intranet projects.

I am willing to accept a quite reasonable salary. I would like to stay in Ithaca and am willing to telecommute.

Staying in Ithaca

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007

I have been criticized a lot for staying in Ithaca, and have received very little support for staying — except from people whose opinion I value very highly. My current plan is to stay around, buy a little house, and have a day job doing some interesting programming while I figure out what to do. I am considering becoming an english professor or a high school english teacher, and a few other things. I want to embark on meaningful work. That said, I am still programming like a maniac and would make a good employee in the interim.

Lightlink internet access

Thursday, March 22nd, 2007

In the innermost circle of my pet peeve inferno repose those unlucky souls who bemoaned the $5 per month to have wireless access through Lightlink at almost every coffeehouse, restaurant and bar in town (excepting Starbucks, of course, but that’s another story). If we didn’t have Lightlink, we would have a patchwork of more expensive and annoying services from big corporations; and these services wouldn’t have any free access time at all.

So pay the $5 per month, people, if you can afford it. It’s not much more than the cost of two lattes…

The lightlink supercomputer

Wednesday, March 21st, 2007

Due to my close industry connections, several months ago I heard that local Ithaca NY internet service provider Lightlink planned to purchase a supercomputer and rent out processing time. It appears that I can rip up my NDA, so to speak, since there’s an article in the Ithaca Times this week about this project.

It seems that it’s more of a cluster than a supercomputer, though. There’s a lot of talk about the number of CPU’s (1000 to start). It’s probably a Beowulf (wikipedia) cluster. (Geeks — feel free to weigh in with speculation on hardware, software and/or performance in tthe comment section). This approach is suited to applications that are parallelizable in in which each execution thread is mostly accessing a small set of local memory — I know of applications where the memory required would be in the order of tens of GB, and the execution thread would be accessing this in an unpredictable manner, so all of the memory needs to be fast.

Google’s servers are mostly clusters of commodity PC’s — but Google’s applications parallelize very well [The famous Google IEEE paper, now getting a bit out of date].

I was going to say something about the energy cost of 1000 CPU’s — using the numbers in the google paper, it might be something like $120,000 per year. But that paper is a few years to of date, and nowadays there are 2 or 4 CPU’s on a single chip that uses the same amount of energy, so perhaps it could be a factor of 5 lower — perhaps $24,000 per year.

Consulting Companies in Ithaca

Friday, March 2nd, 2007

Who’s doing web consulting in Ithaca? It’s sometimes not entirely clear. Here are some people I know:

Here’s a start: