Posts Tagged ‘chores’

Clean Little Hands are Good to See

Saturday, April 3rd, 2004

Obsessive-compulsives everywhere, rejoice! There is now a hand-scanning* device that detects germs that improper hand-washing fails to remove (”Quick! Someone open up a Tokyo office!”). The contraption will only be sold to hospitals and restaurants initially but once it’s available to the public I think I’ll get one. It’ll be nice to have around the kitchen. I’d better hide it from my three-year old though. He has developed an irrational preoccupation with cleanliness. He may totally overload it!

*Original CNN article is no longer availabel. Here’s an alternate one.

Tags: , , ,

Jobs & Sculley in 1984

Tuesday, March 16th, 2004

Look at what I unearthed while doing some spring cleaning in the garage several days ago: a BusinessWeek magazine dated November 26, 1984 with Steve Jobs and John Sculley on the cover.

Jobs & Sculley in BizWeek 1984 cover

A year and a half before this issue appeared in the newsstands Jobs lured Sculley from Pepsi to become the CEO of Apple with this line, “Do you want to spend the rest of your life selling sugared water, or do you want a chance to change the world?” A year after the issue came out, Jobs stepped down after a boardroom drama had ensued that left Sculley at the helm. Sculley eventually resigned from Apple in 1993 and Jobs, the prodigal son, came back in 1997. Ironically, Steve Jobs is now in partnership with Pepsi to promote Apple’s iTunes Music Store. Hmmm, is that a symbolic sea of “sugared water” behind Jobs and Sculley?

Tags: , , ,

Busy, Busy

Monday, January 19th, 2004

I’m not sure if this is the longest blogging dryspell I’ve had but the new year sure started busy. On top of regular work, there’s a couple of projects I’m juggling. At home the wife decides to rearrange the rooms, displacing a whole bunch of stuff. We have to sift through mounds of junk out in the living/dining room, picking out which things to throw out, donate or keep. I trust everything will look neat and be in its proper place afterwards though.

Although it’s been a little anemic blog-wise lately, I have no shortage of web traffic. This blog post here has been attracting a lot of attention. It’s currently ranked no. 9 in Google search results!*

(*I suppose it no longer is. It virtually dropped off in top ranking. This keyword combination brings it up to the top though. But I’m sure it won’t last. Oh well.)

Tags: ,

Aaahh. Domesticity.

Thursday, September 4th, 2003

Today (or rather yesterday - it’s one hour past midnight) was my son’s first day of school. He started 1st grade. I dropped him off at school and saw excited parents and their kids, some happy, some nervous. I recognized a parent. He was at a birthday party I attended last year. I spoke to him. His daughter is in my son’s class.

It was also garbage day. A few weeks ago we Fremont residents received a new recycling cart to replace the old recycling bins. In it was attached a covered kitchen pail. This pail is to be used for food scraps. The food scraps then need to be emptied into the “organics cart.” The organics cart was originally for yard waste only but with the addition of food scraps and food-soiled paper, high quality compost can be made out of the mix. According to the city newsletter, the following can be thrown into the organics cart: fruit, vegetables, cheese, meat, bones, poultry, seafood, bread, rice, pasta, coffee grounds, filters, and teabags.

This makes taking out the garbage a highly nauseating chore. Emptying the putrid contents of the kitchen pail into the organics cart never fails to test my gag reflex each time. It is not uncommon to see me in dry heaving fits as I walk from the trash cart outside all the way to the kitchen.

This actually reminds me of a form of food scrap collection back in the motherland. A guy would come around the neighborhood collecting food scraps from every home. He’d dump the stuff into two huge pails that hang at both ends of a bamboo pole which he then would balance on his shoulders. The stuff would reek from a block away. The guy would call out, “Kanin baboy!,” which literally means rice for the pig. Yes, the food he collected were fed to the pigs (it’s a third-world thang).

Tags: , , , , , , ,

Self-Serve Checkout Line

Monday, May 26th, 2003

Just came back from Home Depot to buy some weed killer. Home Depot now sports these new self-serve cash registers where you scan and bag your own merchandise and swipe your own debit/credit card. There was a lady behind a podium watching all four of these stations and keeping everyone honest.

Tags: ,