Archive for category Life

Land of the Rising Sun

I just got back from a conference held at Osaka University (Suita Campus) in Osaka, Japan. The conference was Advances in Neural Engineering and I thoroughly enjoyed participating and learning. I arrived in Osaka several days before the conference began so that I could adjust to the time and do some sight-seeing. I stayed in the Hotel Hankyu Expo Park which was a 10 minute monorail ride from the University and probably 30 minutes to 2 hours to get to most places around Osaka and Kyoto (nearby city with many temples). One of my hosts told me the text “Banpaku-kinen-koen” actually means Expo Park. It was the site of the 1970 international expo held in Osaka.

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Chapter 1: Osaka Castle

Osaka Castle WallsSo on to the sightseeing! The first day I went to Osaka Castle (main site, Wikipedia link), a huge fortress originally constructed in 1583 and modified over the years with the changing political landscape. The entire park is impressive. The castle itself is built on raised land supported by massive stone walls which you can see in this picture.  Some of the walls extend as high as 20 meters (more than 60 feet).  When you get up close to the walls, you can see how big the stones are.  Many of them are several feet on a side – I can’t imagine how heavy they are.

The castle grounds are divided into an outer and inner area, and of course, there was a moat (a must for any decent, self-respecting castle) protecting the inner walls.  A beautifully textured wooden bridge crossed the moat to the inner sanctum.  From here visitors start to get a real idea of the size of the castle!

Bridge to Osaka Castle

As big as it seemed from outside the castle walls or even just across the moat, it was much, much bigger in person.  It is fascinating to me that people built this castle without the modern conveniences of combustion engines or hydraulics!  If I remember correctly, there were 8 floors in the castle itself.  The inside has been completely modernized so that there is an elevator and stairs.  You can go the whole way to the upper pagoda where the view of the city is magnificent.

The museum inside the castle is very interesting and documents the history over the centuries as the castle changed hands and played a major role in the shaping of Japanese government.  Among the many artifacts were samurai outfits originally belonging to some of the rulers.  Their dress was intimidating!  Unfortunately we weren’t allowed to take pictures of the older pieces.

Ornate designs decorated much of the exterior of the castle, such as the gold tiger in the picture below.

Osaka CastleOsaka Castle tiger decoration

In the same inner area there was also a beautiful Japanese garden.  I was running out of time but walked through quickly.  The view of the castle was shaped quite well by the pond and garden elements.

Osaka Castle from the garden

Chapter 2: Osaka Kaiyukan Aquarium

Whale shark at Osaka Kaiyukan AquariumOn Saturday morning, I went to the Osaka Kaiyukan Aquarium at Osakako (the port).  Their claim to fame is a whale shark exhibit, which was appreciably large!  The fin of the shark was probably on the order of 5 feet tall.  The length must have been 10-15 feet.  It was a massive creature.

The theme of the aquarium focused on the variety of life around the Pacific Ring of Fire.  They had dophins, huge sea turtles, large crabs, manta rays, otters, and many other species.  Two of the exhibits I enjoyed the most (alongside the whale shark) were the penguins and the jellyfish.  The penguins were quite playful and would come right up to the glass to see the “human exhibit”.  This one in particular would come up to stare and play with some of the children holding their hands out.  The jellyfish were fiery orange and red against the blue lighting of the tanks – an exhibit I always love no matter the aquarium.

PenguinJellyfish at Osaka Kaiyukan Aquarium

One of the most interesting things I saw was a diver feeding the stingrays and other creatures in one of the really large central tanks.  The diver would take a small squid or octupus out of a tupperware container and literally put the food into the mouths of these stingrays.  Fish of all kinds swirled around him all through this process.  In the background you can see the whale shark, in another area of the tank separated by a net.

Diver at Osaka Kaiyukan Aquarium

Chapter 3: Kyoto

Japanese garden and temple in KyotoJapanese pagodaThe last major destination I visited for sightseeing was the city of Kyoto Sunday afternoon.  I went with the hosts of the conference and several other participants and had a great time.  The weather was quite dreary and very wet.  After spending some time trying to balance both the umbrella and the camera, I finally gave up with the umbrella and just got wet. :)

The gardens of the temple were incredible.  The preparation, design, and maintenance were clearly evident.  I could probably have spent much more time in Kyoto, and in fact if I return some day I will go to Kyoto to see more of the temples and gardens.  I saw only two of the twenty or so temples around the city.

Japanese garden in Kyoto

Chapter 4: Odds and Ends

After the conference ended on Tuesday we all went to a traditional Japanese restaurant in downtown Osaka.  The food was marvelous there as it was everywhere I ate.  In these restaurants, patrons remove their shoes before going to a secluded eating area, often upstairs from the main entrance.  We would approach these restuarants from sometimes very narrow (but brightly decorated!) alleyways, and walk through bright cloth banners in the entrance.  Dishes were always beautifully prepared as well as very tasty.

Place setting at the restaurant

Japan: A Wonderful Experience

I spent only a week in Japan but I found the people warm and accepting, the culture fascinating, and the scenery breathtaking.  I spent a lot of time on subway trains; every so often, the train would stop service in the middle of a line.  I assume this fact was announced over the loudspeaker but I could never be certain because it was only in Japanese, so I sat happily in my seat while everybody else on the whole train got off.  Every time that happened (kind of funny that it happened more than once right?  you’d think I’d start to notice a pattern), a grandmotherly woman would smile and gesture anxiously at me through the window from the platform, or elderly man would shake his hand on my shoulder and motion to get off.  This experience was typical of all my interactions with people.  The hosts of the conference were especially gracious.  The students I met were as eager to learn about my culture as I was to learn about theirs.

I was also amazed at the volume of people!  At the Osaka/Umeda station in downtown Osaka, there is an underground shopping area that must extend for miles (not an exaggeration), all lined with department stores and vendors of all kinds.  This shopping center connects hotels, subway stations, and train stations, so at times there was a veritable sea of people moving in both directions (walking on the left, not the right!) and you could really only go with the swell.  Times like these it was easy to feel somewhat lost in the cadence of footsteps and blur of faces, although being tall and red-haired I probably was anything but an invisible face in the crowd.

Today, with the effects of travel beginning to wear off and sleep returning to a more normal schedule, I downloaded all 1000+ photos and started poring over them, revisiting all the places I saw and people I met.  It was a wonderful experience!  I think I will have many warm memories of Japan.

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The Brazil Experience: Chapter 1

Almost two months ago now I went to a conference (VLSI-SoC 2009) in Florianópolis, Santa Catarina, Brazil.  Florianópolis is an island just off the mainland, about 430 miles south of São Paulo and 700 miles south of Rio de Janeiro.  Wikipedia has more information; check out Google Maps below for how the island is laid out.

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I flew out Friday morning at about 10am from SLC and arrived in Floripa the next day, Saturday, at about 5pm with stops in JFK and São Paulo.  According to Delta’s Skymiles program, I traveled 6,734 miles in approximately 31 hours, or about 217 miles per hour average!

Jurere Beach VillageWe stayed at the Jurere Beach Village, which is literally right on the beach as you can see.  If you zoom in on the map, you’ll find Jurere at the north end of the island which is more the tourist area.  My room was on the top floor looking out into the center court.  I fell asleep at nights to a cool ocean breeze ruffling the curtains and the rhythm of the incoming waves.  I woke up in the morning to sunlight streaming through the same curtains with the same breeze and waves.  Breakfast every morning was a buffet with fresh fruits, juices, breads, pastries, eggs, sausage… you name it.

I didn’t do much Saturday evening or Sunday.  Monday night I took off with some friends to downtown Floripa.  We walked along the avenue toward the bridge to the mainland for a while at sunset (pictures below) before hitting up the Churrascaria Ataliba for dinner.

Limeade at the churrascariaDinner was amazing. We were the first ones in the door and the Maître d’ let us go back to see the furnace and the chef. They had cards illustrating where the meat was from on the cow, and there must have been 30 different cuts of meat from beef alone, plus chicken, pork, and lamb. If you’ve ever been to a Rodizio’s or a Tucano’s, this was that same idea. They just keep bringing the meat until you say no. I got a limeade that was tart and sweet to the point of turning my mouth inside out.

After dinner we took a taxi to the nightlife area of the island called Lagoa da Conceição (a lagoon around the center-west of the island). Caught some live music from a local band for an hour or two then started to head back home. On the way home we decided to find a local taxi cause the hotel’s taxi service was ripping us off. Amlan, one of my labmates from India, decided we wouldn’t pay more than R$50 to get back to the hotel (it would have cost more like R$75-100 from the other taxi).  We flagged a guy in a little 5-seat hatchback and Amlan talked him down like a pro till he finally gave in.  I think there are some aspects of the world cultural experience I may have missed in middle-class America!

I’m particularly glad to be enjoying my continued existence post-Brazilian-taxi.  That guy drove his little hatchback like it was a Formula 1 match.  I held out hope that he was at least marginally sane.  In the end, he got us back home in little enough time that it was indeed only R$50. :)

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Phew!

Well, it’s been a while. I went to Brazil, then to Chicago, then to Detroit (more on that trip later) and it was a blast! I was gone a long time, and getting back into the swing of things has taken a little while. I’m finally catching up on the web front and I’ll be plowing through comments and questions about RSSPhoto and a few other things – many apologies if you’ve asked a question and it has taken a while to get back to you. Hoping to get some pictures and posts up soon!

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Good-bye to an Era

spencerkellis-net-screenshot

R.I.P. spencerkellis.net

Update: If you’re interested in viewing an internet relic, check out old.spencerkellis.net (no guarantees that everything works!)

You’ve probably noticed by now a bit of strange behaviour on the part of me and my websites.  (BTW, thanks to the English for the elegant ‘iour’ in behaviour, and while we’re at it also for the optional long ‘i’ in missile).  Strange blog posts with perl and linux and TinyMCE and syntax highlighting that don’t matter to WordPress and have no relevance to my current Adobe-based digital workflow.  You may also notice a change at www.spencerkellis.net.  What can be happening?

Well, it’s the end of an era.  I’ve officially retired the original spencerkellis.net and in its place I’ve copied over what has been masquerading as photography.spencerkellis.net.  I copied over a few of the articles that got hits regularly on Google (hence the spate of blog postings this evening).  I just want to document a few of the features of my old website before it disappears forever into the warm southerly beaches of internet retirement.

  • Designed from scratch using PHP/MySQL/CSS/JavaScript and related technologies
  • Database driven; each page in the site was made up of “snippets” and each page’s configuration was stored in a database table (also included backend management interface, see below)
  • Close to 50,000 lines of PHP code, more than 2,000 lines of JavaScript, and nearly 2,000 lines of CSS (estimates calculated with linux wc -l command)
  • User-based AJAX commenting system with TinyMCE integrated and custom security (never hacked or spammed once completed, and of course that’s not because of low traffice :)
  • Flexible tagging system that spanned articles and photographs
  • Search designed from scratch to return results from all site elements including tags, articles, and photographs
  • AJAX- and jQuery-based photo browsing in sidebars
  • Fully custom admin section:
    • Comment management system designed from scratch
    • TinyMCE article adding and editing with integrated Google Syntax Highlighter
    • Automatic image uploads with Adobe keyword extraction, automatic thumbnail generation, and tracking of ratings and views
    • Fully customizable site organization: user interface to manage what GET variables corresponding to what page(s)
    • AJAX-based interface to completely specify site pages as collections of site “snippets”
    • “snippet” management engine
    • Selection of Photoblog images and “favorite” images

In the end, feature creep doomed the site.  There were a lot of really cool and somewhat novel ideas (note similarities between my snippets and WordPress Widgets), but they required too much for one person with actual life responsibility to fully address.  It was too complex to maintain, and it was too complex to navigate.

When I designed the first revision of the site in 2004,

  • I was 24 years old working at Intel as a summer intern
  • I had never heard of AJAX or jQuery
  • I had very sparse knowledge of CSS and Javascript
  • I had never used PHP before
  • My first digital SLR was just “a twinkle in my eye”
  • I had never used Photoshop
  • The world was somehow more innocent

Adieu, mon website.  We grew up together in so many ways.  You will be remembered.

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Joining Prodigious in the Whirl of Identity Crisis

Here’s the deal. I’ve got four websites right now: www.spencerkellis.net, blog.spencerkellis.net, gallery.spencerkellis.net, and photography.spencerkellis.net. That’s really just too many websites for one person–I mean, who are we kidding here?  How many ways are there to upload photos to a website? A thousand spencer’s on a thousand typewriters… How many PhD students does it take to… and the list goes on.

Is this narcissism at its finest or what?

I like and plan to keep the blog and the photography site (photograpy.spencerkellis.net). What do you all think about the gallery and the www.spencerkellis.net? And don’t worry about my feelings, fragile though they may be. It’s not like I spent 5 years of my life working on www.spencerkellis.net.

BTW, I’ve been making an attempt to post photos more regularly to the photography website.  The last 6 are from our vacation to Oregon if you want to check them out.

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