Reunion

Well there’s nothing quite like a ten year high school reunion to trigger some reflection.

Most of my conversations on Saturday night would start with where I live, San Francisco, how long I’ve been there, three years, and what I’m doing now, web development at a startup. Living outside of Texas I felt was an accomplishment in and of itself, as the majority of my former classmates (hallmates really, in a graduating class of 500 I was only ever in class with a fraction of them) still reside in and around Austin. Of that I’m told roughly 160 had RSVPed. Several people had made it out of Texas but eventually came back. A few were living in a few major cities around the country (NY, LA, SF), though I’m sure that number was under-represented, as that’s precisely the subgroup least likely to return. Naturally I was there to buck that trend.

What has led me to where I am now, over the last ten years?

I keep thinking about this question. It’s the essential part of knowing someone that was obviously missing from all of the conversations I had that night.

Over the last ten years, I’ve had zero contact with any of the people that were there (other than Casey). The amazing thing about the human brain is that I recognized at least 90% of people. Afterwards it kind of made me nauseous to think about, as if I were living through a strange psychology experiment, having severed all ties with everyone I knew at age 18, only to meet up with all of them in a bar ten years later. And then walking out of that bar at midnight, knowing full well that I’ll probably never see any of those people again.

When I graduated from high school in 1998, no one had cellphones, and very few of my classmates had email addresses or knew about the web. I had an AOL account, which I quickly abandoned when I received my college email address (along with every other entering freshman). So none of the primary means one now has to stay in loose contact existed then.

When I left for college, not only did I go far away and by myself, I went completely. I never left Chapel Hill during the summer, so I never bumped into old friends doing the same. In college, I didn’t really find my groove until senior year, so I ended up tacking on two more years of grad school (which felt more like an extended undergrad). Then I stayed another year as a full time employee working at the same the job I’d had since the summer after my sophomore year.

That’s one of my internal paradoxes. I feel like I’ve really only been independent, out of school, and out on my own for the last three years (when I moved to California). But on the other hand, I’ve been working continuously for the last nine.

Social networking got really big in 2002 (some time between undergrad and grad school) but I thought it was limited (and annoying) compared to the blog I’d started around the same time, so I never joined up. And that decision alone probably shielded (or spared?) me from wave after wave of mini-reunions as old friends from high school started looking each other up, first on Friendster, and later MySpace and Facebook.

In the last few years, I’ve met back up with two people from high school, but neither of them came last weekend. I’m not sure why. I haven’t looked over my yearbook, but I can think of at least one or two other people I was really curious to see again, but they didn’t show up either. Maybe I should have made more of an effort to track them down? I probably spent most of my time that night talking to five or so people. There was at least one person I was genuinely happy to see again—it felt like no time had passed at all.

Several of the people who were couples in high school are now married. At the time they had been the model couples, the perfect couples, the supercouples. Seeing them still together really surprised me. At first glance it seemed totally natural, but at the same time it was kind of eerie. Like nothing had changed at all.

I will say this: everyone looked really good. Maybe the reunion-attending audience self-selects for people who clean up well, but you never know. The people who came could have been the ones who had hung around Pflugerville, gotten fat, gotten trashy, and aged beyond their years. But I saw none of that. Most everyone still looked youthful—just more polished, happy, and more or less comfortable. It was a reunion after all. In June. In Texas.

Barbecue grill at the airport

Only in Texas
Barbecue grill at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport
Though technically speaking, this is a bbq pit (or a smoker).

Federated Media code_swarm

A neat visualization of the work that the Federated Media Tech team (including me) has done over the last 14 months:

I put this together this afternoon using code_swarm. Andy uploaded it to Vimeo so the world can see: FM has tech!

Here’s a little explanation of what you are seeing:

This visualization, called code_swarm, shows the history of commits in a software project. A commit happens when a developer makes changes to the code or documents and transfers them into the central project repository. Both developers and files are represented as moving elements. When a developer commits a file, it lights up and flies towards that developer. Files are colored according to their purpose, such as whether they are source code or a document. If files or developers have not been active for a while, they will fade away. A histogram at the bottom keeps a reminder of what has come before.

In our case, red dots are PHP files, blue dots are HTML, CSS, and JS files, and turquoise dots are media files.

What a crappy time to have started investing in the stock market

I know, I know you’re not supposed to check on your long term investments, but where’s the fun in that? I started investing money in the stock market (outside of my Roth IRA) last October, primarily in an index fund that tracks the S&P 500, but also in a bond market index, and as of May, an international large cap index. Since last October the market has only descended, almost 17% so far, which makes the numbers in my brokerage account all red and unhappy.

SWPIX performance from October 2007 to June 2008

Thanks to bimonthly dollar-cost averaging, I haven’t lost that much. Overall I’m “only” down about 5% which is unsettling when compared to the 2.01% I’m getting on my checking account. But at the same time I’ll admit it’s pretty cool, because it’s like my money takes on a life of its own. It’s much more dynamic than money just percolating in a savings account. Even though my investments are a small drop in the global pool of money, it’s neat to think they’re indirectly making it possible for businesses here and abroad to do their thing.

Mt. Tam’s Panoramic Coastal Trail

On Sunday Stephanie and I escaped the fog of the city and headed for the golden hills of Mt. Tamalpais State Park. We were joined by Leona (recent Bay Area retransplant) and her lovely friends Rachel and David for a hike along the Coastal Trail which you can see is cut into the occasionally steep hillside along the coast.

Mt Tamalpais' coastal trail

Note: I fired up hugin the other day to see if I could transform some otherwise pedestrian shots of Monaco into a more compelling panorama. It worked flawlessly (after some less than satisfactory attempts several months and possibly a version ago), so you may be seeing a few more uncropped panoramas around these parts.

Hills Bros Coffee

Sometime in August I’m told this will become Federated Media’s new San Francisco Headquarters. Not the whole building, just the 6th floor—the set-back part you can see peeking out from beneath the giant Hills Bros Coffee sign.
Hills Bros Coffee building

As you can imagine, most everyone is ecstatic. For me this will be the first time that I’m both living and working in the city, which is one of the primary reasons people live in cities in the first place. My awesome 8 mile commute over the Golden Gate Bridge every day will become an even awesomer 2 mile commute through downtown SF toward the Ferry Building.

And oh, by the way, yesterday marked my second anniversary at Federated Media. Something that really struck me about this is that FM also turned 3 in June—which means I’ve worked here for 2 of the 3 years it’s existed. I’m like part of the old guard or something. When I started there were less than 15 employees. Now I don’t even know how many of us there are, 60? 70? And growing…

How France sees California

Killafornia Fashion Store, Nice France Photo snapped along the Masséna zone piétonne in Nice, France

Car brands that you can’t buy in the US

There are others of course, but these are the ones I saw (again and again) in the course of two weeks in France. I don’t know why they stood out so much to me, I’m not exactly a car-guy, but it really amazed me how many different brands there are don’t exist in the US market.

You can sign me up for a Fiat 500 or a Daihatsu Trevis any day.

Daihatsu Trevis

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