Monday, November 30, 2015

The TARDIS Christmas Tree - Revisited

Ok, so how cool is this? My friend Rob posted this on Facebook, sharing it with me & my wife.

As near as I can figure, someone who visited the Methuen Festival of Trees posted a picture of our TARDIS Tree on REDDIT.



Finally, I think, the Doctor Who Hub on Facebook found and posted it, where, I think, Rob found it. Kind of a roundabout path to fame, but satisfying just the same!

Oh yeah, here's a link to my own blog entry about the TARDIS Tree. I have more pictures than they do!

Merry Christmas, everyone!

The TARDIS Christmas Tree: Methuen Festival of Trees 2015

 

For a bunch of years now, we've been decorating Christmas trees for the Methuen Festival of Trees. By "we" I mean  my family and my wife's best friend, Karen. The festival is a fundraiser supporting historic preservation in the Merrimack Valley (located in beautiful Northeastern Massachusetts). It's been going on for 22 years, and attracts over 25,000 visitors each year. There are over 200 trees every year, with a wide variety of different themes. And - this is really cool - the trees are raffled off at the end of the festival; if you see one you really love, you can buy raffle tickets and try to win it!

This year, as you can see from the photos, we chose a Dr. Who theme. We named our tree, "A Timey-Wimey Christmas." True Dr. Who fans (like my daughter) will automatically recite the complete quote:


Construction was fairly straightforward, using 3/4" plywood for the top and bottom with the corner posts made from 1" x 3" x 6' pine and 3/4" quarter-round molding. And lots of Oxford Blue paint! We added some depth and shape to the roof with 1" foam sheet, and added an off-the-shelf white strobe with a translucent cover.

The TARDIS disassembles into several flat pieces by removing a handful of screws - essential, considering it's 40" wide,while the doors of my house are only 36" wide!

The tree has some decorations every bit as cool as the TARDIS itself. In addition to some white lights, it's also got color-changing LED lights that cycle between white and blue. We've got a 17 foot long scarf straight from Doctor #4's closet as a garland. And we've got lots of ornaments: There are Dalek and TARDIS paper dolls; photos of all the various Doctors; famous Doctor quotes; even some Cybermen and K-9.

The following video is a tour of the tree and the TARDIS.

Did you notice the double red heartbeat in the tree? No? Well, go back and watch the video again. Or better yet, check out this one:


Timelords have two hearts, and the heartbeat was my daughter's awesome idea. I used an Arduino Pro Mini and a pair of red LEDs inside ping-pong balls to pull that off. She was very disappointed, though, that I didn't make the tree spin!

We won 3rd place in the Best Use of Theme category - woo hoo! Last year, our Steampunk Tree won 1st place in the Most Creative / Unique category. I figure we should aim for 2nd place next year, so we get a complete set!

DIY Timelord Heartbeat
It's super-simple, but if anyone wants the schematic & code for the double heartbeat, just post a comment and ask for it. I'd be happy to post it!

Monday, November 16, 2015

Peace for Paris


I could go on a tirade about senseless violence and the cowards that perpetrate it, but that would be contrary to the upbeat and positive nature of my blog that I try to maintain.

Instead, I offer my deepest condolences to the people of Paris, and all of France, for your loss. I speak for no one but myself, of course, but I'm certain many people across the globe echo my sentiment when I say, "I'm with you."

Stand Strong. Stand Together.
Never Stop.

Thursday, October 15, 2015

When You Get Good Advice, Take It!

I've been friends with 'Z' for a long time - since we were 18 years old, in fact, and freshmen in college.

'Z' is short for 'Z. Allora' which is actually the pseudonym under which she writes. Because this is a family-friendly blog, I won't go into any detail about what she writes (Google her and see for yourself), but she's very good at it and has a lot more experience with managing an online presence than I do. So, in my quest to improve my own online presence, starting with this blog, I asked her to check it out and offer some advice.


A few of the tidbits she offered up (in no particular order):

1. Write regularly. Make a writing schedule and stick to it.
I set aside a 1-hour block of time every Tuesday night to write. Even if it's not ready to publish, I'll at least work on it. Having done that, I promptly missed my very first writing session this past Tuesday. Well, I can only improve!

2. Put up a real picture of myself, not a caricature.
I haven't done this yet, but I will. I guess. I can't imagine people want to see the real me, but Z is smarter than I am, so I'll trust her on this.

3. Tag/label your posts.
I hadn't done this - never even thought about it. I went back and tagged my last few posts. Eventually, people may start running across my stuff when they search.

4. Better Titles.
I struggle with this. Coming up with a title that's both succinct and invites people to read the entry is an art form unto itself, I think. She also suggested that if the title is a bit vague (A Glowing Display! is the example she used) then put a picture right under it to grab the attention. Great idea! I added a picture right under the title for that post, and will definitely keep it in mind in the future.

5. Blog Description
I had a long blurb about what my blog is about, almost like a mission statement. I shortened it up a bit, made it a bit less stuffy and formal (I hope!). I need to ask her what she thinks about it....

Thank You, Z, for your good advice! I'm sure my blog will be better for it - now I just need to write, write, write!

Monday, October 5, 2015

A Tribute to a Good Man

Usually, I work in my office. But for about a year, I worked on a project that had me in a lab with two other software engineers almost every day. We had some good times, some stressful times, and everything in between. We chatted about movies, food, family, whatever. That's when I got hooked on Game of Thrones.
 
We had a young guy with us, in his 20's, and optimistic as only a kid can be. I was the middle-of-the-road guy, even though I was the oldest by a few years (I *gasp* just turned 49 in July). Then we had the other guy. Let's call him JW (well, because those are his initials, after all). JW is a good guy, a wicked smart guy, but kinda like Eeyore sometimes, convinced of his (and our) insignificance in the grand scheme of things. Sometimes I think he'd say stuff just to make the conversations more interesting. I couldn't imagine someone actually believing some of the stuff he tossed around!
 
One day, he said something to the effect of, "An ordinary person can't change the world." I couldn't help it; I took the bait, and a lengthy debate ensued. Nobody wins such a debate, of course, it's more for the sport of it than anything else. Still, I couldn't disagree more. Sure, we could argue from a chaos theory perspective, the whole Butterfly Effect thing. We could argue from a physical perspective, that even a person that hides under a rock still consumes resources and therefore changes the world. Even metaphysical arguments were fair game, though those make my head hurt like calculus never did.
 
For me, though, I know the truth of it. I know that an ordinary person can change the world. I've seen it. And now we come to the real reason for this post.
 
My dad died in November of 1978, when I was 12. My older sister was 15, and my younger brother 9. My brother was probably closer to my dad than any of us, and while we were all devastated, he took it hardest, I think.
 
Though we weren't well off by any stretch of the imagination, my mom did manage to scrape up enough money that we could still spend our summers at Salisbury Beach, MA. At the time, the 3-mile long beach had lifeguard posts along its entire length, manned by some of the best guards in the state. An amazing athlete even back then, my brother loved hanging around the lifeguards, working out with them, and becoming a sort of mascot. They kept an eye on him.
 
Things could have gone badly for my brother that summer after our dad died. Without the daily structure and discipline of school, he could have made any number of bad decisions, gone down any number of wrong paths, were he left to his own devices. I'm not trying to imply that he was a bad kid - he wasn't. But losing your dad, especially as a kid, leaves a void that just has to be filled.
   

Enter Salisbury Beach Lifeguard Craig Weir. I'm not sure if he was the head lifeguard at this point (if not, he soon would be). He took my little brother under his wing, not so much as father figure, I think, but more like a big brother / cool uncle sort of influence. Craig was only 22 or 23 at the time. While other guys might have been solely interested in chasing women or partying or whatever it is that twenty-somethings do (I can hardly remember), he instead guided my brother through a tough time. Year-round they'd hang out, do stuff (Craig was an avid outdoorsman and excellent athlete), talk on the phone, whatever.
 

The story of their friendship is one that my brother ought to tell; I couldn't possibly do it justice. All I know is what I saw from the outside. And anyway, that's not the point of this story. As a lifeguard, I don't know how many people Craig saved. I doubt he kept count. But I believe, deep in my heart, that he saved my brother. And he influenced my brother in the most positive of ways.
 
 
My brother became a lifeguard himself, one of the best. He became a personal trainer and motivational speaker, helping people find the best in themselves, whether they are ordinary or elite. He wants to be the next Jack LaLanne, and I believe he can do it.
 
 
An ordinary man changes the world by making his little corner of it better than he found it. That's the pebble he tosses in the pond, and the ripples spread out. 

But then again, perhaps JW is correct. Perhaps an ordinary man can't change the world. But if that's true, then clearly, Craig Weir was no ordinary man.


Craig Weir died of pancreatic cancer on September 16, 2015 just a couple months shy of his 60th birthday. He left behind his mom, his wife of 31 years, Karin, daughters Kendall and Brittany, and many other loved ones, both family and friends. If heaven has a beach, then I expect that he's on it. And he's probably keeping an eye out for anyone in trouble, because that's the way he is.