Archive for July, 2005

Mirage in the Desert

Heading back from a long weekend in Las Vegas with Indiana Jane. Had a great time of course, but our Vegas vacations are always a little different from most people’s idea of a debaucherous weekend in Sin City. Mainly, neither of us really gamble all that much these days; just doesn’t interest us that much. I don’t mind finding a low-limit table in the old downtown and shoot some dice around, but I’ve given up on pretending that I can win enough at any game to make it worthwhile. As Penn Jillette said at his show, “this is Vegas, which means that no one here is really good at math.”

Well, this weekend we decided to explore a new end of The Strip and try a new hotel, The Mirage. Our main priorities for Vegas hotels are primarily:

  1. The pool - we spend a lot of time hanging out in the sun during the day, a spacious and nice pool is must-have. So far my favorite is at the MGM Grand, huge complex, a lazy river, several waterfalls, and even a lap pool for morning constitutionals. The Mirage’s was pretty good, but felt a little crowded. Last time we were in town (for work) and stayed at the Hard Rock and Lex said that pool was nice, but pretty much a ridiculous scene.
  2. The food - plenty of good grub destinations all over the city, but invariably you’re going to eat at least a couple of meal at your hotel. This is where The Mirage really fell down. Their in-house cafe were not very tasty and way overpriced. The MGM again does very well here, a solid selection of cafes on the main floor as well as numerous fast food dives in the basement walkway for a quick fix in the mornings.
  3. Location - there’s a lot to do in every part of Vegas. Its worth trying one end of the strip and then the other and even off-strip for something completely different (Palms, Rio, Green Valley Ranch)
  4. Privacy - hotel rooms can vary widely in design. Another complaint I had with the Mirage was the noise you can hear from the hall in your room; slamming doors, singing neighbors, housekeeping, etc. Oh well, you can’t have peace and quiet everywhere, even in the middle of the desert!

Other hotels we’ve tried and our thoughts:

  • Monte Carlo - central location, nice rooms, poor pool and little food.
  • Bally’s - even more central location, nicely updated rooms, quite good food, and right on the monorail. Main drawback is the small square pool.
  • Luxor - rooms usually have no view, poor food and poor pool. I won’t even mention the Excalibur.
  • New York - solid on all counts, if not a smallish pool. I also love the roller-coaster.
  • Sahara - Getting a major update with the Monorail coming to the neighborhood. Crummy food and pool, but you can get suites with an attached room for real cheap. Works well for wedding parties.
  • Hard Rock - surprisingly nice rooms, far from the strip, merely OK food, and too small of a casino to house the “scene”.

Every time we go back I look for deals at the high-end places we want to stay: Mandalay (great pool), Bellagio (beautiful), Venetian (hearing a lot of good things), and of course the new Wynn. We checked out the Wynn this weekend and were very impressed with the architecture and the food.

Other fun things we did this weekend included seeing Penn & Teller at the Rio (great show), driving out to Green Valley Ranch for some excellent ribs at a local joint called Lucile’s and staying for a weekly club party out by their pool, and doing a bit of much-needed clothes shopping at the nearby Fashion Show Mall (having a car changes your horizons during the day quite a bit).

Hah, and as luck would have it a friend just sent me this link that agrees with a lot of the above:

http://www.reviewjournal.com/bestoflv/

Damn, now I really want to go back! Whoops, flight time…

Conan’s Commencement

Worth reading:

Conan O’Brien’s Commencement Speech At Harvard

Many of you are justifiably nervous about leaving the safe, comfortable world of Harvard Yard and hurling yourself headlong into the cold, harsh world of Harvard Grad School, a plum job at your father’s firm, or a year abroad with a gold Amex card and then a plum job in your father’s firm.

Another Homebrew .Mac Replacement

TNPI - Homemade (Do It Yourself) .mac using mod_dav and Apache

I want this mostly for the backup capabilities.

Steve Jobs Commencement Address

I just came across this transcript of Steve Jobs commencement address at Stanford this year. I think that Jobs is a very interesting person and this story sheds a little more on his background. Worth reading.

Long time no post

Seven weeks almost I think I’ve been silent (except for a random side-link here and there). What’s up? Nothing much, just enjoying surviving summer. Looking back at my calendar from June I see a slew of weddings, trips back home to Chico, visits from friends and new co-workers, and a trip to Hawaii for a wedding reception (always a good excuse). Since then I’ve been dodging BART strikes like everyone else in the Bay Area and flying out of town every other weekend to catch up with Alexis who is still down in the 120 degree weather in Barstow.

The last weekend in July we have trip to Vegas planned (can’t frickin’ wait), and then I start my MBA program at UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business. This of course kicks off with a full weekend of three-legged races, “networking”, and what I can only assume will be heavy drinking with my future inmates classmates.

In the meantime, pick-up a copy of this (last) week’s East Bay Express, and read the essays in there about how our crazy Bay Area lifestyles have destroyed the enjoyment of slow culture that people moved here for in the first place. As I sit on the train on my way to work, I have to say that many parts of it ring true for me. I’m just glad that I have the option to not be stuck driving a car for two hours a day.

OSX Dashboard BART Widget

WoodWare - BARTsmart BART Widget

BARTsmart shows BART train schedules at a glance, so you always know when the next trains depart and arrive. BARTsmart is perfect for everyone who rides BART, commuters and casual riders alike.

How to hire a Product Manager

Hey Norton! - Ken Norton’s blog - How to hire a product manager

Product management also combines elements of lots of other specialties - engineering, design, marketing, sales, business development. Product management is a weird discipline full of oddballs and rejects that never quite fit in anywhere else. For my part, I loved the technical challenges of engineering but despised the coding. I liked solving problems, but I hated having other people tell me what to do. I wanted to be a part of the strategic decisions, I wanted to own the product. Marketing appealed to my creativity, but I knew I’d dislike being too far away from the technology. Engineers respected me, but knew my heart was elsewhere and generally thought I was too “marketing-ish.” People like me naturally gravitate to product management.