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About Ramblings of a Hopeless Khowaga

Welcome to my Web site. My name is Chris, and I’ll be your host. I live in Austin, Texas, with my partner, Ray, and our child dog, Mocha. You can read more about me, learn 100 random things about me, and if you’re wondering what the heck a khowaga is, click here. Feel free to browse, read, and leave comments!

Tag: ‘conferences’



Cuh-Cuh-Cuh-Clusterfuck

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Note: names have been changed to protect those in need of protecting from my foot up their ass.

Howdy, y’all!

I’m currently in a hotel room right underneath the flight pattern from the active takeoff runway at Houston Intercontinental Airport (Continental’s 777 bound for London went over a little while back — boy, was she noisy!).

Today was not a good day.  In fact, today was the sort of day that the term “clusterfuck” was invented to describe.  I’m over it now, but first … first I’m going to blog about it :twisted:

(more…)

“I Shall Go and Find the Door Handle”

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

I inadvertently took spring break off from blogging.  It wasn’t my intention, but I spent the latter half of the week at a conference back up in the northeast, and I just couldn’t bring myself to post more “don’t want to be here, conferences suck” type rants.  The conference was productive, although all of the productivity took place outside of the panels and in discussions over lunch, dinner, the hotel bar, while drinking copious amounts afterward at the bar, etc.  The former involved stuff you wouldn’t be interested in, and the latter involved discussions of circumcised pigs.  (Long story.)

Anyway.

While I was gone, Ray made the bold and decisive move that this weekend we were going to refurbish the front door, paint it blue, add hardware, etc.  Ray normally has visions of home improvement projects that are grandiose, and his singular choice of blue was almost unprecedented (when we pass from this earthly life and are buried, one of us will have an epitaph that says, “Where do you want to be buried?” and the other will say, “I don’t know, where do you want to be buried?”).

So, here is the “before” shot:

… and here is the “after” shot:

Not bad for a few hours’ work, if I do say so myself.  Which I do.  So there :)

Hope your weekend / spring break was fun and exciting, and full of kosher food from the house of Genghis Cohen!

Hey, ho, hum

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

I spent the last few days at a conference of my peers, and I probably should be more careful about what I’m going to say, but I don’t want to.

I have a busy month – I will be traveling or working part of every weekend between now and the first weekend in March, and this was the first salvo.  On Sunday, I flew up to an unnamed city in the north.  It doesn’t particularly matter which one it was: as usual, these meetings are held in suburban areas populated by office buildings and chain restaurants.  Except for the trip to and from the airport (which took exactly five minutes and that only because we missed all of the traffic lights), I didn’t go farther than two blocks from the hotel at any point on this trip.

Here’s the way these things work.  You arrive and are escorted to conference registration.  In this case, there was no pre-registration, so for two days we were all walking around with hand-written nametags in a myriad of fluorescent (and frequently unreadable) colors.  Someone in the sponsoring office, a federal agency not known for its sense of humor, had apparently decided to exhibit some personality by buying the pastel colored pack of Sharpie markers.  Note to anyone in the conference planning business: these colors don’t go so well on nametags.

One of the major north/south divides that I have recognized since I moved to Texas from DC has to do with formal attire.  I now chafe at the notion of having to wear a necktie like a ten year old boy in a clip-on.  Northern men love them.  Southern men?  Well, we like not wearing neckties when we can get away with it, and we’re all in favor of considering a nice pair of jeans “formal attire.”  Up north, that doesn’t go over so well. 

And so …

I am firmly of the belief — and in a moment of levity, I actually put this on the evaluation form — that there should be a minimal IQ requirement to attend conferences.  Perhaps that’s a bit extreme.  I think maybe the requirement should be there only if you actually plan to ask a question.

For example: it was revealed that — and, sit down folks, this one’s a shocker — Congress wants to determine whether the money it’s offering up in student aid for foreign language study is actually encouraging students to take jobs where they have to use the foreign language skills that they developed with that aid.  The way some people in the plenary session carried on about this, you’d have thought that Congress wanted to take a sample of each student’s DNA so that they could track their movements by satellite for the rest of their natural life:

*hand goes up*
“Um, so am I to understand that you want us to keep track of these students just because we give them a federally funded scholarship?  Have you considered the privacy violations?  I don’t know if, ethically, I want to be part of this,” said the concerned woman in the front row.

The rest of us rolled our eyes.  You see, what Congress wants is aggregate data: 45% of graduates found relevant employment, 55% did not, or something like that.  There’s no privacy violations in aggregate data.  And, furthermore, we all mumbled to each other, if she didn’t want to be part of it, the rest of us would be more than happy to sacrifice ourselves by taking the money she didn’t want anymore.

Also, we’ve been required to track this stuff for the past fifty years.

Anyway.  I flew back late last night straight into office drama — my favorite.  I had that sort of strange energy today where I was kind of hoping that problem child would engage me directly (all of the drama took place over e-mail), but alas.  The problem child didn’t try to engage me.  I had to be all diplomatic and stuff.  Jeez.

I hope your week is going well!

Eaux Canada

Sunday, November 18th, 2007

Well, I’m in Montreal, the capital of all things French Canadian and the Home of Celine Dion–something they don’t seem to realize they should be ashamed of. Indeed, the Quebequois actually seem to be proud of their hometown girl up here.

That’s an aside. I’ve been out of touch because … laugh with me here … I can’t find an Internet access point. I tried in vain for hours to get online at the hotel, but it kept insisting that it couldn’t verify my information and wouldn’t let me on. Not that I mind with a daily charge of $12.95 (not sure if it’s Canadian or American dollars, but with the current exchange rate it really doesn’t matter). Several people told me that the connection from the hotel is slower than molasses on the streets of Montreal, so I stopped trying.

I’m currently sitting in the lobby of the Palais de congrés de Montréal, which is where the conference that I am up here to attend is taking place, and their slow internet connection is at least free so I’m taking advantage of it to sit here and finish my espresso before I go up to bankrupt the university at the book exhibit.

Natalie had told me before I came up here that they take French extremely seriously in Quebec, and I now understand what she means. I’m a little unused to a) being in a place where the primary language is one I don’t understand that well and b) being in a place where people are bilingual and can give each other certain signals to establish the language of dialogue. For example, when you go to the coffee store and the woman behind the counter says, “Bonjour,” my response is to say “Bonjour,” not “Good morning,” but apparently that’s what I should do if I want to conduct the transaction in English.

Also, the voice mail system at the hotel is in French, and there appears to be no option to switch it in to English at any point. I listened very carefully for “Pour anglais, poussez-vous a deux,” or some such, but alas it was not to be. Hence, I have no idea what time our new executive assistant called last night to see if anyone was doing anything because, well, the time stamp on the message was in French.

I spent part of yesterday before My Big Meeting wandering around Vieux Montreal, which is lovely, but somehow I managed to really injure my right foot. I have no idea how, but it hurts like the Dickens to walk on it, and so I’m limping around the city from hotel to conference and back again. Guess where my ibuprofen is? I need to find a pharmacie and get some pain killers because I can only imagine what it’s like to watch me limp around muttering “ow … ow … ow … ”

Enough of that. I’m not stupid enough to try to upload photos on this connection, so I shall bid everyone adieu and promise to fill in some of the blanks when I get back to Austin on Tuesday.

Á bientot!

Have ticket, will …

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2007

Couple of minor notes from my world.

The landscapers showed up to start installing the sprinkler sorry, “lawn irrigation system” yesterday and the house is a complete mess. Ray was nearly despondent thinking about how long it’s going to take the grass to grow back over the trenches in the front yard (maybe not as long now that we can water the entire lawn daily without having to think about it?). On the other hand, they cleared out a good chunk of the front flower bed, which is overgrown by ivy, weeds, and the agave plants that are trying to take over everything, so that’s less work for me when I eventually get around to re-doing it.

$250 and half an hour later, I have a new windshield. It even has that über-80′s blue tint streak at the top – I love it! (Seriously. My car has the smallest sunshades in existence and I’ve wanted some sort of tinting up there to block out the afternoon sun.) I need to get my windows tinted, too. Actually, what I need to do is get my oil changed but … well, maybe that’ll be a weekend project.

Natalie and I got our notice this morning that our session has been accepted to the Big Annual Conference in November in San Diego. Yay! We were convinced that our past acceptance rate had to do with the crap-tacular location of the Big Annual Conference and that when it was in a cool location we didn’t have a shot in hell. They even put a little note in the acceptance saying that we had one of the top reviewed proposals and that the overall acceptance rate was less than 40% … I ought to check with some people I know to see if they all say that. But still, San Diego should be fun. I haven’t been there since I was, like, 10.

In the same vein, it turns out that I also get to go to Kilgore, Texas, in a couple of weeks. I’m less excited about that, but it’ll just be an overnight trip. I’m looking forward to the drive, since East Texas is pretty to drive through, and I’m pleased at the opportunity to head out into that part of the state for work since it’s pretty much the definition of “under-served.”

Other than that, it’s a typical Wednesday. Lisa and I have to go to a bogus “Campus Safety Meeting” this morning which should instruct us in absolutely nothing new, but at least it will get me away from the office for a couple of hours …

 

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