Apple and Alamo Supply Free Summer Kid Fun

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May 312007
 

Now that school’s out, it’s time to find something to do with all of that free time. If you haven’t already booked your kid from morning to evening with activities, the two local Apple stores and Alamo Drafthouse have some free stuff for you.

Alamo South Lamar continues its Free Summer Kids Camp this year. The free films are Mon.-Thurs. at 11am. Admission is free and seats are first come first served, so you’ll want to get there a bit early. The series kicked off this week with Sky High. Here’s the list for the rest of the summer. See their site for details.

6/4 – 6/7 – Muppets Take Manhattan
6/11 – 6/14 – Monster House
6/18 – 6/21 – Zathura
6/25 – 6/28 – Wallace And Gromit
7/2 – 7/5 – March of the Penguins
7/9 – 7/12 – Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
7/16 – 7/19 – Iron Giant
7/23 – 7/26 – Holes
7/30 – 8/02 – Nanny McPhee
8/6 – 8/9 – Howl’s Moving Castle
8/13 – 8/16 – Heavyweights
8/20 – 8/23 – Harry and the Hendersons

Apple Barton Creek and Apple Domain are also sponsoring the Apple Camp again this year. You need to register through the site. The workshops are from 9-11:30am and are recommended for kids aged 8 -12.

7/9 and 7/17 – Podcast Workshop
7/10 and 7/19 – Garageband Workshop
7/11 and 7/16 – iMovie Workshop
7/12 and 7/18 – iWeb and iPhoto Workshop

 Posted by on May 31, 2007 at 5:20 pm

Cantina Laredo…more like Cantina Estupido

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May 302007
 

On Sunday night, The Wife and I were looking for somewhere new to try. The kids were out of town with the grandparents, so we were unencumbered and ready for adventure. Since we’ve visited most of the local mexican food establishments, we thought we’d give the relatively new Cantina Laredo location downtown a try.

I wasn’t expecting too much. It’s a chain and I’d been to the location in Dallas many years ago. The reviews on Yelp and Austin360 are pretty likewarm. I had heard that the tableside guacamole was worth experiencing and I was looking forward to a margarita.

We parked at the free City Hall parking (which ends in a few days on June 4th btw) and wallked over to 3rd and Colorado. The outside patio was mostly full, as was the restaurant when we walked in. There was no host/hostess at the stand when we entered. A woman behind the bar looked up and informed us that they were understaffed and that they were closing. It was 8:45pm on the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend. She lamely explained that Sundays are usually quiet. We turned around, extremely annoyed and passed the 8-10 other confused people who thought they were going to eat there. While I appreciate them not seating me and making me wait hours for my food, it’s colossally stupid to understaff on a holiday weekend.

We ended up at Malaga, who aren’t usually open on Sundays, but opened to take advantage of the increased business on a holiday weekend. Imagine that! They were, of course, packed. We’d been there once before and enjoyed. This time was also good. Despite the high volume, our server was attentive and one of the kitchen staff even brought out our last order to ensure we got it while it was still hot.

So, the moral of this story, kids, is to visit Malaga and avoid Cantina Laredo like the plague. They blew their chance to make a good impression on me.

 Posted by on May 30, 2007 at 3:20 pm
May 302007
 
 Posted by on May 30, 2007 at 11:15 am
May 292007
 

Ben Wear’s transportation column in the Statesman this weekend pointed out something that’s been annoying me for at least a year: Google’s map data for Austin is sorely outdated.

I realize that it takes some time to get updated satellite images and that they can’t possibly keep every location on earth up-to-date, but it’s been more than 3 years since they’ve updated the downtown satellite imagery. How do I know? Take a look at the Frost Bank Tower at the corner of 4th and Congress. It was completed by January of 2004 and construction began in November of 2001. In the Google Maps image, it’s clear that the top of the tower hasn’t been completed. This data is probably from 2003.

I guess that’s one benefit to a rapidly changing landscape due to new condo and building development. It’s easy to date satellite images.

 Posted by on May 29, 2007 at 4:10 pm
May 292007
 

In a press conference last week, Preznit Bush answered a question from David Gregory:

Q Mr. President, after the mistakes that have been made in this war, when you do as you did yesterday, where you raised two-year-old intelligence, talking about the threat posed by al Qaeda, it’s met with increasing skepticism. The majority in the public, a growing number of Republicans, appear not to trust you any longer to be able to carry out this policy successfully. Can you explain why you believe you’re still a credible messenger on the war?

THE PRESIDENT: I’m credible because I read the intelligence, David, and make it abundantly clear in plain terms that if we let up, we’ll be attacked. And I firmly believe that.

Look, this has been a long, difficult experience for the American people. I can assure you al Qaeda, who would like to attack us again, have got plenty of patience and persistence. And the question is, will we?

Yes, I talked about intelligence yesterday. I wanted to make sure the intelligence I laid out was credible, so we took our time. Somebody said, well, he’s trying to politicize the thing. If I was trying to politicize it, I’d have dropped it out before the 2006 elections. I believe I have an obligation to tell the truth to the American people as to the nature of the enemy. And it’s unpleasant for some. I fully recognize that after 9/11, in the calm here at home, relatively speaking, caused some to say, well, maybe we’re not at war. I know that’s a comfortable position to be in, but that’s not the truth.

Failure in Iraq will cause generations to suffer, in my judgment. Al Qaeda will be emboldened. They will say, yes, once again, we’ve driven the great soft America out of a part of the region. It will cause them to be able to recruit more. It will give them safe haven. They are a direct threat to the United States.

And I’m going to keep talking about it. That’s my job as the President, is to tell people the threats we face and what we’re doing about it. And what we’ve done about it is we’ve strengthened our homeland defenses, we’ve got new techniques that we use that enable us to better determine their motives and their plans and plots. We’re working with nations around the world to deal with these radicals and extremists. But they’re dangerous, and I can’t put it any more plainly they’re dangerous. And I can’t put it any more plainly to the American people and to them, we will stay on the offense.

It’s better to fight them there than here. And this concept about, well, maybe let’s just kind of just leave them alone and maybe they’ll be all right is naive. These people attacked us before we were in Iraq. They viciously attacked us before we were in Iraq, and they’ve been attacking ever since. They are a threat to your children, David, and whoever is in that Oval Office better understand it and take measures necessary to protect the American people.

Oh, where to start? First of all, yes, Al Qaeda is a threat to the U.S. . It is inevitable that someone claiming affiliation with them (whether it’s true or not) will succeed in pulling off another attack on U.S. soil and it doesn’t matter who’s the President when it happens. It’ll happen anyway. Whether or not I blame an administration for it kind of depends on the circumstances and magnitude of the attack and if I believe that we reasonably did all that we could to prevent it.

However, the argument that we’re fighting them over there so we don’t have to fight them here is a load of horseshit. On top of that, nobody is advocating that we leave Al Qaeda or any other terrorists who intend to attack us alone. To insinuate that anyone is advocating that is offensive, petty and wrong. The majority of the violence is sectarian violence that we unleashed by attacking a country that didn’t have any credible ties to Al Qaeda.

Here’s a few good links from over the weekend:

I’m currently reading The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11, the 2007 NonFiction Pulitzer Prize winner from Austin-based author, Lawrence Wright. It’s reinforced for me even more that giving up the moral high ground with incidents like Abu Ghraib, Jose Padilla, etc. is one of the biggest mistakes we’ve made over the last 7 years. We’ve given Bin Laden way more power than he ever actually had and it’s the fear mongering of the Bush administration and it’s propaganda machine, Fox News, that’s to blame.

 Posted by on May 29, 2007 at 3:09 pm
May 252007
 

I can’t let today pass without acknowledging it, since, like so many of my contemporaries, the premiere of Star Wars was a defining moment of my childhood.

When Star Wars was released on May 25th, 1977, I was 5 and a half years old. I can’t remember if we saw it opening day, but it was definitely in the first few weeks. I do distinctly remember sitting in the back of my next door neighbor Glen’s mom’s car, a white late-60’s model Mustang (his last name was Ford, oddly enough), and telling them that I was going to see a space movie as we came back from the water slide park. Even though I had no idea what I was in for, I was clearly looking forward to it. I remember that it was playing at the huge (for 1977) Northpark Mall theater in Dallas. I remember the theater being packed. I think I remember waiting in line, although that may have blurred with waiting in line for Empire Strikes Back.

The most vivid memory, however, was the opening crawl that gave the back story of the movie, followed by the opening scene of what seemed to be the largest ship in the universe to me at the time, that nearly interminable passing of the Star Destroyer across the screen was the most awesome and thrilling thing that I’d ever seen. It was massive. My 5-year-old brain could hardly take it all in. I still remember the wonder of how BIG that thing must be (only to have it shattered later when they tried to imply how much bigger Darth Vader’s flagship, The Executioner, was in the next film).

The whole film was an amazing ride and I remained transfixed throughout. I remember re-enacting whole scenes over and over again with my friends: the ending throne room scene, complete with fake medals; the assault on the Death Star with my bunk beds as two X-wings; molesting Princess Leia (wait, that’s later). I remember all the crazy speculation afterwards of what happened to Darth Vader as he careened off into space on his own after being knocked away from the Death Star by his own wing men (courtesy of Han Solo and the Milennium Falcon). As I mentioned in a old post, Joe Gross from the Austin-American Statesman pointed out (archive.org link b/c of the Statesman’s shitty policy on keeping old articles accessible) when Attack of the Clones was released 5 years ago, the original was great precisely because it left so much to our own imaginations and let us fill in the details before and after. I ordered the first promotional pack of figures through the mail as soon as they were available.

Regardless of how badly George Lucas has screwed up the memory of the original, it’s that wonder of first viewing that allows him to sucker so many of us in time and time again. It’s why many of our own kids sleep on Star Wars sheets and pore over Star Wars Encyclopedias or watch the films on DVD.

BTW, when I was 5, we had to go back to the theater to see it again or wait for them to re-release it in the theater, which I remember them doing more than once. We didn’t have VCRs or DVDs for that matter. It took them FOREVER to release the VHS versions even after everybody and their dog had a VCR. If memory serves, we didn’t get legitimate retail copies until 1989 or so. Now get off my lawn, you kids!

Here’s a few links that also commemorate the occasion.

 Posted by on May 25, 2007 at 2:59 pm