Sunday, August 31, 2008

Framed


This week, Darling Homes started the home next to ours. They poured the concrete foundation on Monday and started framing the house towards the end of the week. In a couple of weeks it will have windows and a roof. The early stages of house construction go so fast.


Our neighborhood is filling up quickly, there's just one empty lot left in our street. Pretty soon the builders will have left.

Monday, August 11, 2008

The island at the center of the world



"Nadat de Kamer Amsterdam der West Indische Compagnie op 22 April 1625 last had
gegeven tot den aanleg van het Fort Amsterdam en tien bouweryen daarnevens heeft de koop van het Eiland Manhattan dien aanleg bevestigd welke de grondslag werd van de stad New-York"
This is the Dutch inscription on a monument in Battery Park memorizing the Dutch establishment on Manhattan.
I've been reading this great book by Russel Shorto called "The island at the center of the world". It's is a chronicle of the early years of Manhattan, when it was known as New Amsterdam in the relatively short-lived Dutch colony of New Netherlands. According to Shorto, this period in New York history is crucial to understanding the development and character of New York City and the United States. As the first "multi-ethnic, upwardly mobile society on America's shores ... Manhattan is where America began.


Shorto traces New Amsterdam's character, naturally, to Amsterdam and Dutch society. He points out that Dutch society was the most tolerant in Europe at the time, a place where dissidents and controversial thinkers could come to escape persecution. The book is filled with examples of this enlightened atmosphere, from philosophers like Descartes and Spinoza to the interesting fact that one-half of all books in Europe were published in the Netherlands. Fresh from the highly resented imperial rule of the Spanish, the Dutch were particularly sensitive to liberal notions of free-speech and self-determination. Furthermore, Shorto suggests that because New Amsterdam was a company town, and never intended to be a settlement colony, attitudes toward religious and national differences were put aside to a remarkable degree. Business is business, after all, and distractions were unwelcome in this market society.


New Amsterdam was not entirely a reflection of Dutch society, however. Indeed, Shorto points out that because Amsterdam was a pleasant place even for the poor, only the very lowest order of society could be convinced to populate the far-away outpost of New Amsterdam, and thus the city became populated with a particularly rough-and-tumble crowd. Through court records he brings to life some of these figures, and this time spent with various average residents is one of the more delightful aspects of the book. He recounts a lively atmosphere full of drunkenness, casual violence, and casual sex, all of which help to make the book entertaining to a popular audience. (courtesy of Michael Wescott's review on Amazon.com)

Liberty Island



Today we made the trip to the Statue of Liberty. It was a cool day with showers in the morning, but a bright and sunny afternoon. Liberty Island offers great views of New York harbor and Manhattan. Lady Liberty was happy to have her picture taken with us.

Saturday, August 09, 2008

Top of the rock




We're in New York for a couple of days. It's a great city with many things to see and to do. Sammy got a Mets shirt at the original Macy's store. And Greg felt like he walked the New York marathon.


At the end of the afternoon, we went to the observation deck on top of the Rockefeller Center. It's not as high as the Empire State Building, but it has a nicer observation deck, and has great views over Central Park and the Empire State Building itself.
On the subway ride back to the hotel, we enjoyed some guys drumming plastic buckets on the platform. Pretty cool, New York.

Live TV up in the air


We were all on a Delta Airlines flight from Atlanta to Newark yesterday. At 8:08 pm on 8/8/08 EDT we were probably right over Lynchburg, VA. Most passengers, like us, were watching NBC's broadcast of the opening of the Beijing Olympics on Delta's in-flight entertainment system. Isn't it great to be watching live Dish Network tv at 35,000 ft.?

But wait, NBC did not even show the opening live. It was at least 12 hours delayed until prime time in the US. And it was conveniently interrupted many times for commercials, without missing any of the action.

NBC was much criticized for their decision to delay broadcasting many of the Olympic events. And they even hold off streaming on their website until after it has aired on tv in all timezones. As a results, NBC found itself plugging holes in the Internet yesterday. Live streams of the Olympic Opening were leaking into the US from foreign websites.

To me, these delays don't matter. I rarely watch live tv anyway. I prefer to record and delay shows, so I can skip commercials. But I have to admit that it took away from my live TV on an airplane experience.

Sunday, August 03, 2008

Mason


Greg's best friend Mason is visiting from Georgia this week. He traveled all by himself on a direct flight from Atlanta. Greg had been looking forward to his visit so much, he was counting the days. They played X-Box 360, went swimming, saw movies, and caught up with everything.

Today, we played Monopoly. The Atlanta properties, Atlanta International Airport and Centennial Olympic Park, were in high demand. Sammy built a hotel at Texas Stadium, Mason had major real-estate at Pioneer's square in Seattle, and Gregory made a killing with the Golden Gate bridge in San Francisco.