LOVE IT OR HATE IT, THE CAPS LOCK KEY IS A THING. AND IT’S DEFINITELY ONE OF MY THINGS! OR MAYBE ABOUT A HUNDRED OF MY THINGS…

THERE ARE PEOPLE OUT THERE WHO GET FULLY CHEESED OFF AT THE CAPS LOCK KEY, NESTLED NEATLY ON THEIR KEYBOARD’S HOME ROW BETWEEN THE TAB AND SHIFT KEYS.

THERE ARE ORGANIZATIONS DEVOTED TO THE KEY’S ERADICATION. GOOGLE EVEN BANNED IT FROM THEIR LINE OF CHROMEBOOK LAPTOPS, REPLACING THAT SPACE WITH (WHAT ELSE WOULD YOU EXPECT FROM, GOOGLE?) A SEARCH BUTTON.

BUT EVERY DISPUTE HAS TWO SIDES, AS SHOWN BY A SIMPLE GOOGLE SEARCH FOR “TURN CHROMEBOOK CAPS LOCK ON”, WHICH RETURNS 114,000 RESULTS.

TO ME, THE ANGER TOWARD THE CAPS LOCK IS REMINISCENT OF THE HATRED DIRECTED TOWARD THAT OTHER ICON OF EARLY PERSONAL COMPUTING: THE COMIC SANS TYPEFACE.

BUT THAT WASN’T ALWAYS THE CASE. BACK IN MY CONSULTING DAYS, EVERY NEW CLIENT PROJECT MEANT SETTING UP A NEW LAPTOP, AND THE FIRST THING I DID WAS REMOVE THE CAPS LOCK KEYCAP. AT THE TIME, HATING ON THE CAPS LOCK KEY WAS JUST ONE OF MY PERFORMATIVE WAYS OF GETTING ATTENTION.

BUT SINCE THOSE MACHINES WENT BACK TO THE CLIENT AT THE END OF EACH PROJECT, I HAD TO HANG ONTO THAT KEYCAP, PUTTING IT BACK IN PLACE WHEN THE LAPTOP WAS RETURNED TO THE CLIENT.

AROUND THAT TIME I ALSO USED TO HANG OUT IN THE I.T. SUPPORT OFFICE, AND ONE DAY SPIED THEIR BOX OF BROKEN KEYBOARDS. HAVING ALREADY ESTABLISHED THE HABIT OF POCKETING AND SAVING CAPS LOCK KEYCAPS, I STARTED LIFTING THEM FROM DEAD KEYBOARDS, FROM MY OWN HOME COMPUTERS, AND ANYWHERE ELSE I COULD REASONABLY GET AWAY WITH IT.

AND SO, A COLLECTION WAS BORN.

Array of CAPS LOCK keys

SINCE I STOPPED WORKING, I NO LONGER GET AS MANY OPPORTUNITIES TO GROW MY CAPS LOCK COLLECTION.

BUT PERHAPS MORE IMPORTANTLY, MY QUIET HOME LIFE DOESN’T NEED THE IDIOSYNCRATIC, PERFORMATIVE BEHAVIOR THAT I RELIED UPON FOR ATTENTION BACK WHEN I WAS WORKING DIRECTLY WITH OTHER PEOPLE.

IN FACT, AS I TYPE THIS POST, THERE ARE CAPS LOCK KEYCAPS STILL FIRMLY AFFIXED TO MY BOTH MY MACBOOK AND MY WIRELESS MECHANICAL KEYBOARD, WHERE THEY’RE LIKELY TO STAY…

… UNTIL I’M DONE WITH THOSE DEVICES, OF COURSE! ONCE THEY’RE NO LONGER BEING USED, THEIR CAPS LOCK KEYCAPS WILL JOIN THE SCORES OF OTHERS HOUSED IN MY PERMANENT COLLECTION.

The time has come – the Walrus said – to talk of many things… Specifically, my underwear.

I am, of course, referring to Ornoth’s well-documented Hexannual Universal Internal Vernal Underwear Interval (abbr. HUI-VUI, not VUI-HUI), wherein our protagonist spontaneously does an in toto purge of his undergarment inventory every six years, around the end of February.

When to buy a new pair? animation

Although this cyclical behavior is known to go back at least as far as 2001, it wasn’t discovered and documented until 2013, when it received its official nomenclature. Six years hence, science confirmed this theory when the subsequent purge took place in March 2019.

In that illuminating initial 2013 research paper, a prediction was made that reprises of the HUI-VUI phenomenon would transpire again in early 2019, 2025, and beyond. With the 24th anniversary of its first documented observation fast approaching, this had obvious implications for expectant pantspotters everywhere.

Happily, our on-location Brief Patrol has verified today’s arrival of our long-expected bundle of joy. And there was – as they say – much rejoicing.

The HUI-VUI’s next predicted episode will occur at the end of February, 2031. Be there, or be squarepants! 🙋‍♂️

I had this entry all ready to go last week, but I couldn’t help but defer it when I saw that Friday the Thirteenth was coming. So now that it’s here…

Imagine this scenario: you’re the parent of a child in seventh grade. In the evening, you casually ask them how school went, and are told that English class had featured some students doing book reports. Did any of them stand out as particularly interesting? Well, one kid gave a ten-minute presentation on a book called “The Satanic Bible by this guy Anton Szandor LaVey, the founder of The Church of Satan

Yeah, that was me at thirteen years of age. The same year that Mrs. Bernier read “The Hobbit” and “A Wrinkle in Time” to our English class, I was getting my kicks by introducing my impressionable prepubescent peer group to LaVeyan Satanism.

This was suburban Maine in 1976, so to this day, I’m still surprised that there were no repercussions… at least none known to me.

I clearly remember hanging out in Mr. Paperback on my way home from school one day, looking for anything that piqued my curiosity. And there’s not much that’d capture a twelve year old boy’s attention faster than a black book titled “The Satanic Bible”, with the inverted pentagram of Baphomet on the front and back cover, with the latter serving as background for a crimson portrait of its grim-looking, goateed, bald author with a piercing gaze. I hope my grammar school classmates enjoyed my book report!

The book – along with LaVey’s followup piece, “The Satanic Rituals” – continued to provide a unique conversation piece that followed me through high school, college, career, all the way to the present day. And it paved the way for several other infamous occult acquisitions, including Robert W. Chambers’ “The King in Yellow”, Aleister Crowley’s “The Book of Lies”, Clark Ashton Smith’s “The Monster of the Prophesy”, and the Simon “Necronomicon”.

As for our dear Anton, he provided a lasting final connection with me by passing away on my birthday.

Cue the “Twilight Zone” theme

Bookshelf with LaVey's Satanism books

Imagine a Smurf. Little blue guys in white pants and cap singing “La la, la-la la la…”

Now imagine a disease-infected Smurf with black skin, clenched fists, and angry red eyes, whose only actions are hopping around, shouting “Gnap!”, and biting other Smurfs on the ass (which then turns the victim into another Black Smurf).

That was actually the premise for a 1963 comic by the Smurfs’ creator, Peyo. In it, all the Smurfs wound up turning into Black Smurfs – even Papa Smurf, who was working on an antidote – but the world is saved when the Black Smurfs cause Papa Smurf’s lab to explode, scattering his in-progress antidote into the air, where it does its job of resetting the plot.

That story was also adapted in the 1981 Hanna-Barbera Smurfs cartoon, although they chose to depict the infected Smurfs as purple rather than black. Perhaps appropriately, the episode debuted on Halloween of that year.

I found this rare collectible Black Smurf figurine in 1982 in a tourist gift shop called The Smiling Cow in Camden, Maine, while on a date with my first girlfriend, Jean. I didn’t know its background at that time, but the uncharacteristically angry and Black Smurf figure (literally?) screamed to be purchased. It’s been a conversation piece and highlight of my memorabilia box ever since.

I’m pretty sure that the Black Smurf figurine was quickly recalled, or at least discontinued, making it something of a rarity and a collectible. Pretty interesting, if more than a little bit dubious.

Black Smurf figurine

If identity politics is your jam, you may find this post in poor taste. I’m sorry. I’m not here to criticize how you or anyone lives their life. But if you’re incapable of finding any humor in the situation, this probably isn’t suitable for you. And I admit that my stale humor’s probably ten years out of date. But having said that…

O.L. Reigns!

O.L. Reigns!

I find it interesting that folks have taken identity politics to the point where they are able to choose to alter something as objectively verifiable as their genetic race or sex and impose respect of that preference upon the population at large. Yes, I know I’m conflating sex and gender; it’s hard not to, given that most people present them as the same.

What’s interesting to me here isn’t the interplay of race/gender/sex and society, but the ability of an individual to override an attribute that is as seemingly inherent and immutable as one’s chromosomes: an attribute determined not by social convention but by the laws of nature. I’m not saying it’s wrong to do so; just that it’s an interesting development.

Which becomes the springboard for my own take on the matter. If an individual is allowed to alter something as seemingly fixed and measurable as their race or sex – and enforce that preference – then it should be considerably easier for an individual to change an attribute that’s an entirely man-made social construct. For example, our legal and corporate systems give full sanction when people change their names, or spouses, or families.

In that spirit, I’d like to announce a change in my own public identity. I am pleased to inform you that I now identify as nobility, rather than one of the common folk. You shall henceforth address us as “Lord Ornoth”.

This should be quite easy for you to adapt to. After all, we are merely taking a different place within an entirely man-made social convention: that of socioeconomic class.

And according to public discourse, it’s a minuscule step to go from a hetero middle class white male Boomer to traditional titled nobility. It’s hardly any change at all! Nowhere near the magnitude of changing something inborn such as one’s race or gender.

Your obedience shall please us. With kindest regards,

Lord Ornoth

P.S. Oh and one final thing you might want to be aware of: I also now identify as a little teapot.

Duo Me

Jun. 9th, 2022 06:25 pm

With the help of the Duolingo app, I’ve been learning Japanese since December. Inspired by my example, Inna began refreshing her Hebrew in March.

So we’ve had a little time to hear one another’s practice as well as compare notes on what we’re being taught. And the results are more than a little bit interesting.

To amuse my captain, I’ve included a few screen shots of the everyday phrases we’re learning. Let’s start with my newly-acquired Japanese language skills:

I eat a lot.I sometimes drink alone.I drink alcohol every night.
   
We got divorced because my cat was too cute.What is her phone number?Today I will play with her.
   
She wears underwear.They wear white underwear.Are you a woman?

And now let’s compare my Japanese phrases to the vocabulary that Inna is picking up in Hebrew:

The victim speaks with his lawyer.Why do we need education?This girl is eating everything.
   
He drinks the seven beers in three minutes.The five ducks are drinking wine.This duck is illegal.
   
I am happy because my bunny is finally opening a bank account.My cat will be happy to see you bit I won’t.There is a possibility that your monkey is not a good secretary.
   
What is the influence of tomatoes on our population?Not everything has meaning.Everything ends.

I’m sure no further elaboration is necessary.

Oi Barone!

Aug. 22nd, 2019 11:43 am

It’s not every day one gets cited in the financial press (even if it’s only obliquely).

I have a long history as a data geek. As a high school kid, I spent hours researching and creating lists of physical and mental diseases as reference material for roleplaying games.

In college, I pored over lists and dictionaries en route to creating a 45,000-item database of words and phrases for a natural language insult generator I wrote.

And in my first professional job, I read through 13,000 medical diagnosis codes to find the oddest, such as “adverse effects of plague vaccine”, “atypical face pain”, “fall into hole”, “fall into other hole”, and dozens more you can read about here.

Fast forward to last week, when I was reading the daily market summary email from Barron’s financial newspaper.

In a section discussing the president’s deferring tariffs on imports from China for a specific list of products, the author included links to the full data for both List 4A (products being taxed in September) and List 4B (products where tax is deferred until December). The article talked about how outdated the lists were (37 subcategories related to VCRs?), and mentioned that “live asses” and “track suits” appeared on List 4B.

Being the kind of person I am, I went and took a look at those lists for my own entertainment. I subsequently emailed the author, saying “I'll be sure to finalize my purchases before the tariff on imported warships (List 4A subheading 8906.10.00) goes into effect per the original schedule.”

The author was sufficiently amused to (a) respond via email, and (b) include my observation in the weekly print issue of Barron’s.

I’ll take that as proof that I have a share-worthy sense of humor…

Barrons article

It’s *that* time again! Time for Orny’s Hexannual Universal Internal Vernal Underwear Interval!

Umm… what?

If you were with me back in 2013, you’d know that I discovered that I have an internal timer which universally goes off every six years in the springtime. This extremely precise biological clock provides me with absolutely vital information: i.e. it’s time to buy new underwear!

Woman with panties on her head cosplaying Ayame from the manga/anime Shimoneta

Woman with panties on her head cosplaying Ayame from the anime Shimoneta

When I discovered this longstanding HUI-VUI phenomenon back in March 2013, I published my shocking findings in a reputable scholarly journal (my blog). Toward the end of that peer-reviewed research paper, I confidently declared, “Now I can go and update my calendar and add ticklers for the next two decades of regularly-scheduled $100 underwear purchases: in March 2019, 2025, and 2031!”

Obv, now that the aforementioned and long-awaited March 2019 is now upon us, it’s time for your esteemed author to once again sally forth in new briefs!

… and there was much rejoicing.

See ya in 2025, peeps! 🙋‍♂️

I haven’t made a lot of noise about my mother’s death in January, and I don’t intend that to change. Everyone has their own method of dealing with loss, and I feel that making a big emotional scene is about the least respectful thing I could do in most cases.

I’m also not going to devote any more space in my blog to the hardships of five months away from home, enduring a very much unwanted Maine winter. There’s no need to discuss my role as caregiver during the ups and downs of her hospitalization, my tasks arranging the funeral, dealing with probate, selling her car and furniture, closing her apartment, and wrapping up her finances. I’ll even skip over seeing members of my family and a few long-lost high school friends I caught up with.

Happy family at camp
Forceps
I can't believe it's... butter

I’ll only briefly mention the powerful sense of relief once I had all those things behind me, and how very, very, very good it has been to finally be back home.

It sounds like I’ve ruled out just about everything I could possibly write, thus obviating any need for this post. But no, there is one thing I do want to share, and that’s a handful of laughs. One of that trip’s bigger realizations was how deeply important humor is to me, and its usefulness as a way to cope with even the most stressful times.

Amidst all the difficulties of the past four months, there were a handful of precious smiles worth remembering. Here’s a few.

One morning my brother and I were at her nursing home with my mother when she required emergency transport to the hospital. When the EMTs showed up, I briefed them on her condition, what medication she was on and when she had last taken each, the measures the nursing home had taken in response to her situation, and so forth. I was apparently so organized and on top of the medical lingo that—as I later found out—they actually thought I was the resident doctor!

During her emergency room trips, my brother and I sometimes hung out in the ER’s little kitchen area. Being me, I snooped through their cupboards and was surprised to find a gallon jug of molasses. Wondering what the heck they’d need so much molasses for, I consulted Google and immediately regretted it. Whatever you do, *DO* *NOT* google “emergency room molasses”!

At one point she was in the cardiac unit and a nurse and I were helping her walk. She fainted in our arms, and since the nurse was unable to reach a call button, she slapped a button pinned on her uniform. “CODE YELLOW, CCU ROOM 1! CODE YELLOW, CCU ROOM 1!” blared over the intercom and more than a dozen doctors and nurses ran into the room. Apparently “code yellow” is their shorthand for “patient out of control”, normally used for unruly or violent situations; kind of silly for an unconscious 90 year-old!

She was in and out of the hospital several times, occupying a dozen different rooms. However, after a two week stay in Room 118, her next readmission was coincidentally right back in to the same familiar room.

At one point, a prisoner from some local jail was in for treatment, with a policeman posted outside his room. His family brought a cat in with them for a visit, which is pretty surprising to begin with, in a hospital. But apparently the cat got loose in the middle of the night, resulting in a penitentiary-style lockdown of the ward and all the patient rooms until they recaptured it!

Whenever a newborn was delivered in obstetrics, they played a lullaby tune over the intercom. My mother enjoyed hearing it, although it felt very odd to hear it playing during two of my mother’s worse sessions.

The hospital allows visiting family to raid the small kitchens in the ward, so my brother and I started enjoying free ice creams during our occasional opportunities to step out of her room. I joked that I was doing my part to increase US healthcare costs.

One of the few things my mother would reliably eat was milkshakes, made with two cups of ice cream. So when the floor ran out of ice cream, my brother and I blamed her (even if we’d eaten more than our fair share)!

The doctors also ordered that the staff keep tabs on my mother’s blood sugar levels. We joked that it was because so much of their ice cream had disappeared…

It confused the hell out of me that I couldn’t buy a sugared cola drink anywhere in the entire facility: not on the floors, not in the ER, not in the cafeteria or coffee shop, nor in any of their vending machines. Apparently sugar is strictly verboten! But I couldn’t square that with all the free ice cream stocked on the floors for patients and family!

Ordering lunch one day from “Room Service” (when I worked there as a high school student, it was called “Dietary”), my mother wanted tomato soup. Asked if she wanted a bowl or a cup of soup, mom asked for a bowlful of tomato soup, but in a cup…

Auto-on, motion-detecting faucets… Great for keeping one’s hands sanitary, but a complete disaster when they’re placed in the only open section of countertop in the room. On multiple times someone would move mom’s dinner tray to the counter next to the sink, only to have the faucet helpfully spray the tray, the person, and entire room with water.

Although we came to know most of the hospital staff by name, one day a new nurse came in. Seeing two guests, she asked, “Husband and son, I presume?” Yeah, no. My brother might be aging, but he was still 22 years younger than my mother. I might better understand “Son and grandson”, since there’s nearly a full generation between he and I…

Her treatment included regular doses of morphine, which naturally zonked her out. Even at her worst, just before a new dose she would relate a list of things like medications that the nurse should know about and take care of before she “lost time” due to the effects of the morphine. My mother was always both very organized and very much a take-charge person.

She had been a lifelong nurse, so there were some things in life that were normal for us but which seem strange in retrospect. For example, most kitchens have a pair of tongs for grabbing hot items like baked potato or corn on the cob. We didn’t have that… Mom had several old pairs of stainless steel surgical forceps that she used for cooking!

And finally, the thing I think is ludicrous but which no one else seems to appreciate. Mom would naturally use empty cans or plastic containers to store stuff in. In cleaning out her freezer, I came across a couple plastic tubs that originally held a spread product called “I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter!”, which my mother used for storing… (wait for it…) butter! Doh!

These were the kinds of things that kept us on our toes and provided brief moments of much-needed levity during an incredibly stressful time. Looking back, some of them remind me that my mother was a normal person. Normal people have all kinds of quirks and idiosyncrasies, which you discover during the rare times when you have to pore over their belongings in detail.

Alpha-Bitch

Feb. 4th, 2017 07:48 am

Do you remember eating Post Alpha-Bits cereal when you were a kid? I certainly do.

One thing I distinctly remember was taking a ‘D’ or an ‘M’ or a ‘P’ and nibbling the serifs off. Mind you, this was a good quarter-century before I learned what a serif was. I must have been a typographer prodigy!

Alpha-Bits cereal

Oddly, some Alpha-Bits letters come with serifs, and others do not. So is the cereal really a serif set or a sans serif? It’s unclear; or perhaps I’m expecting too much precision from Cold War era corn slurry extruding machinery.

One would hope that technological improvements over the past sixty years would allow greater precision in cereal production. We can send a man to the moon, land a probe on a comet, and ride around in automobiles that drive themselves and don’t consume gasoline; so why can’t we get Alpha-Bits in serif *or* sans serif?

Or more ambitious yet, in specific typefaces? What if Post were savvy enough to market Alpha-Bits in a Caslon edition, or a Garamond, or Futura? If they made a Helvetica cereal, would people love it or hate it? Could they introduce a fruit-flavored Frutiger? Would they be able to produce hairline strokes for a Bodoni?

But why stop there? Could we improve penmanship by feeding our kids Copperplate script? Or create a generation of refined aesthetes raised on a steady diet of Chancery and Trajan? Would kids fed Comic Sans and Exocet become a collection of morons? And let’s not forget to eat our Zapf Dingbats: a delicious part of this nutritious breakfast!

Alpha-Bits typeface editions: imagine the Impact that might have (pun very much intended)!

On the other hand, we don’t want to go too far. I suspect even Post Foods’ marketing team might shy away from trying to sell “Alpha-Bits: Akzidenz-Grotesk”.

So let me make sure I’ve got this right:

Batman? Sox fan.

When this country was founded, New Englanders called themselves Yankees, and our greatest enemies were people who wore Red Coats.

Today, our heroes wear Red Sox, and our greatest enemy is the Yankees.

Huh. Plus ça change.

Begemot the cat found a packing peanut and kinda went to town on it. Fun, but we don’t want him injesting chunks of polystyrene. So I looked online to see if we could obtain any packing material that was kitteh-safe.

However, when I entered “edible packing material” into Amazon’s search bar, the results weren’t *quite* what I had envisioned.

Here are the sixteen “matches” from the first results page:

Top result? Silica gel. Silica gel? Doesn't that shit have "DO NOT INGEST!" printed all over it?
Saran Wrap. Well, I guess you could use it as packing material, but it sure ain't edible!
Wait... Decorative muffin tins? How? What? Huh?
A leather messenger bag. That's not packing material...
Apples! Well, a photo of apples, anyways. On a mousepad. Didn't those go the way of rotary phones?
A cold pack. Again, isn't that expressly marked "DO NOT INGEST!"?
Oh! Another leather messenger bag. Still not packing material, tho.
Dollar bill paper tissues? What the fuck?
Oh. An ice cream cone maker! Just what I was looking for! Now how much would you pay? But wait! There's more...
A V-thong. Are those edible?
I always protect my fragile items by packing them inside this virtual Wedding Dessert Chef Android app.
Nasturtium seeds! Just what I would use to protect my laptop from damage.
Kung Fu Panda cake topper! I guess Dreamworks must be pretty hard up for cash if they're selling these as packing material...
I had to look this one up. It's an exfoliating scrubber sponge. Might actually pass for expensive packing material. Don't think Begemot would be very interested, tho.
An airbrush! Oh fuck it, I can't even. These search results are stupider and funnier than any caption I can make up.
Somewhere, a woefully self-important online marketer staked his career on making sure that "Gucosamine for Dogs" appeared on page one of these search results.

On April 8th, Inna and I adopted our first joint-custody cat, an 18 month old longhair tuxedo whom the shelter had christened “Trent”.

The biggest problem we’ve had with him has been choosing a suitable new moniker, since “Trent” did nothing for any of us.

I brainstormed a list of 55 names I’ve suggested, and I’m sure Inna’s list was equally long; the problem being that we each hated the other’s.

The ones we came closest to agreeing on included: Begemot

And then there were some awesome ones that I offered which were summarily rejected, like:

Ultimately Inna came up with something that we could both appreciate, being unique, humorous, and utterly surreal. The little guy will forevermore be known as:

Бегемот

Yes, that’s Cyrillic, because it’s a Russian name (in case you don’t know, Inna’s a first-generation transplant from Ukraine). For those readers who don’t read/speak Russian, you can approximate the pronunciation via the English mnemonic: “Big-Emote” (which apparently horrifies my live-in native speaker). Or, if you have the technology, you can play Google Translate’s pronunciation here.

Okay, I get it: Big-Emote. What’s it mean?

Here’s where things get interesting, because Begemot has *lots* of meanings.

Let’s start with the most basic. Begemot. The Russian word comes from a Hebrew word “behemah”, from which also derives the English word “behemoth”. Hence “behemoth”: a huge or monstrous creature. Good name for a cat, even if our little guy isn’t even ten pounds yet. Although given the size of his ridiculous outrigger paw-pontoons, he might just grow into the name…

As a proper noun, Behemoth is also a specific Biblical monster, the land-borne equivalent of the ocean-borne Leviathan. The Book of Job identifies him as “the first of the works of God”, a grass-eater who shelters in the reeds and marsh. Interpreters seeking a real-world manifestation of the passage have most often associated Behemoth with the hippopotamus, and sometimes as an elephant, rhinoceros, or buffalo. So Begemot is an official Old Testament Hebrew name, too!

Which brings us back to Russian, because in the mid-1700s, Russian language speakers dropped the word “gippopotam” in favor of “begemot” for the hippo. Hence a second interpretation that points toward the hippopotamus! Maybe not the best name for a cat, but certainly unique!

Begemot

And finally we come around to the literary referent. Begemot is the name of a character in a very prominent and well-known Russian novel: “The Master and Margarita” by Mikhail Bulgakov. While I haven’t read it, it sounds like something of a dreamlike surrealist description of Christianity and atheism in pre-WW2 Soviet USSR.

In the novel, Begemot isn’t just your average character. His Wikipedia entry describes him thus:

He is an enormous (said to be as large as a hog) demonic black cat who speaks, walks on two legs, and can even transform to human shape for brief periods. He has a penchant for chess, vodka, pistols, and obnoxious sarcasm. He is evidently the least-respected member of Woland’s [Satan’s] entourage; Margarita [the heroine] boldly takes to slapping Behemoth on the head after one of his many ill-timed jokes, without the fear of retribution. His Russian name Begemot means hippopotamus, but also refers to the legendary Biblical monster. He is known for his jokes which he never stops telling.

So there we have it. Begemot: a huge creature, an Old Testament monstrosity, who is twice-over associated with hippopotamuses, and simultaneously an enormous anthropomorphic talking black cat who is Satan’s pageboy.

With all that going for it, it was hard to resist adopting that name. So now we have our own little Begemot running around the house. Let’s hope he doesn’t start showing any of his namesake’s attributes!

“Kinda bored on a Wednesday morning, I guess I’ll go see what’s shown up in the ol’ RSS reader. Ah, the Humor folder. Really nothing in there but LOLcats from the I Can Has Cheezburger site, but I like cats, and the captions are often worth a smile… Delete… Delete… WAIT A FREAKIN’ MINUTE THAT’S GRADY!

So that was my morning surprise. Yup, someone took one of my photos of my cat, posted it on ICHC, and over a dozen people have added LOLesque captions. And for whatever reason, one of them was posted to ICHC’s RSS feed and thus straight to my mailbox.

Although unintentional, that caption was particularly apt, too: Praying? No… Imagining this around your throat… Yes!

You can see them below and click for bigness, or just go to the photo’s index page on ICHC.

How do I know that’s Grady? Well, aside from knowing my own cat, I’m also a photographer and know my own pictures. The original was posted to Flickr here back in 2008. For more words and pictures about Grady, read my post after he died last year.

Interestingly, this isn’t the first time a photo of mine showed up on ICHC. Back in 2009, a coworker uploaded an embarrassing photo of an eagle that I’d taken on my trip to Scotland in 2002. You can see the resulting LOLpix and read my reaction in this blogpost. It provided a very handy template for this posting!

What I said then about the eagle pictures applies equally well to the LOLcats people have made of Grady: it’s a little slice of notoriety that I find amusing, and it’s interesting to see what captions other people have added to it.

I kinda wish he was here to see them…

Original Grady photo
Grady LOLcat Grady LOLcat Grady LOLcat
Grady LOLcat Grady LOLcat Grady LOLcat
Grady LOLcat Grady LOLcat Grady LOLcat
Grady LOLcat Grady LOLcat Grady LOLcat
Grady LOLcat Grady LOLcat

As part of this whole move thing, I’ve begun looking into UX job opportunities in Pittsburgh. Naturally, I’m gonna start by looking into things I know work here in Boston: tech meetups, events, and local branches of national groups.

Among the most successful branch groups here is something called Refresh Boston. Here’s how they describe themselves on their website:

About Refresh Boston

Naturally, I wanted to see if they had an equally active branch operating in my future home. Here’s the number one result when searching on “Refresh Pittsburgh”. The contrast is pretty damn telling, don’t you think?

About Refresh Pittsburgh

If you *concentrate* really, really hard, you might be able to figure out why I think this is one of the more amusing ingredient lists I’ve ever read.

Once you realize that juice from concentrate includes juice concentrate, the obvious next question becomes what filtered water contains…

juice label

Two months ago, I wrote a blogpost about the puerile employment listings I came across during last year’s job hunt. A number of people were surprised that employers continue to look for coding “ninjas”, “jedis”, “wizards”, and so forth.

By way of response, I started logging the more effusive job titles that passed through my RSS feed.

I thought you might be interested in seeing the kinds of people the tech industry is looking for. Needless to say, there’s plenty of hyperbole here to be critical of.

Such as…

  • Agile Tester and Support Enthusiast - 100% Remote! at ORCAS, Inc. (Eugene, OR)
  • Android wonderchild at Appstrakt (Antwerpen, Belgie)
  • Astounding ColdFusion/Node.js developer at Clevertech (New York, NY)
  • Awesome Dev Ops Wanted -100% Remote at Roch Systems (Reston, VA)
  • Back-end Developer to rule the world with APP (iOS, Android & Webapp) at MIWI (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
  • Black Belt / Scrum Master - Global Advanced Analytics - Location Frankfurt at ING (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
  • Data-Obsessed Engineer at Periscope (San Francisco, CA)
  • Director of Apple Awesomeness (iOS Lead Developer) at ChartSpan Medical Technologies (Greenville, SC)
  • Expert iOS Engineer (Medium-Senior level) at the binary family & The Beautiful Weather Corporation (Berlin, Germany)
  • Extraordinary Angular / Hybrid Mobile Developer at Clevertech (New York, NY)
  • GUI Expert on a trading platform-Senior/Lead Technologist | Full Stack | Java | at Fortis Capital Management (New York, NY)
  • Incredible node.js Leader at Clevertech (New York, NY)
  • iOS ninja to work with the hotest tech startup in London at S(u)ave (London, UK)
  • Looking for Ninja SQL Server Engineer to revolutionize mobile payments at Merchant Warehouse (Boston, MA)
  • Looking for Top-Notch PHP / Yii Framework developers for Remote Work at Plexisoft Inc. (Boston, MA)
  • MSSQL Database Developer and Web Analytics Guru at Scholarly iQ (Helotes, TX)
  • PHP Web Developer (Middleweight) at BREAD (London, UK)
  • PHP / Symfony2 developing genius at Appstrakt (Antwerpen, Belgie)
  • Passionate Ruby Developer at Clevertech (New York, NY)
  • Python Hero Makes Families' Lives Better @ Well Funded Startup at Slide (London, UK)
  • SUPERSTAR .NET DEVELOPER - (C#, MVC, Agile) - Talented Team at viagogo Group (London, UK)
  • Seeking passionate UI developers at BLT+ (Los Angeles, CA)
  • Senior Front-End Guru - Angular expert needed. Work by the beach! at Mavice (Santa Monica, CA)
  • Talented Software Engineer at Amazon (Detroit, MI)
  • The Wizard of Ruby at White Inc. (Dubai, United Arab Emirates)
  • Unique Role Available for a Human Senior C# ASP.Net Software Engineer at Screenfeed (Saint Louis Park, MN)
  • WANTED: Android Developer to Rule the World at MIWI (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
  • WANTED: Back-end Developer to Rule the World (iOS, Android & Webapp) at MIWI (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
  • Windows 8 guru at Appstrakt (Antwerpen, Belgie)

And now, just to be a complete contrarian, I present some frontend-tech-oriented “your mama” jokes. We assure you that no mamas were hurt while composing this entry.

HTML-oriented:

  • Your mama’s got a really big <body>.
  • Your mama’s got no <head>!
  • Your mama’s just an <object>.
  • Your mama’s a <sub>.
  • Your mama’s got no parent element.
  • Your mama’s value attribute is set to zero.

CSS-oriented:

  • Your mama’s got no style.
  • Your mama’s got no class!
  • Your mama’s width is 110%!
  • Your mama exceeds her max-width!
  • Your mama’s got too much bottom-padding...
  • Your mama’s got her overflow: visible.
  • Your mama’s so easy she’s got a negative z-index!

Other tech-oriented:

  • Your mama’s got such a regular expression.
  • Your mama’s got an out of date plugin.
  • Your mama’s a vector shape, and she looks like somebody’s been draggin’ her handles…

And yes, your mama floats right, too!

Every time I venture into the job market, I’m shocked and more than a little insulted by the job titles on offer.

Let’s be clear. I am a professional software engineer focusing on user interface design and development.

I am not a Ninja or a Jedi. Nor am I a Rockstar or a Guru or a Wizard. I am neither an Animal, a Unicorn, nor a Unicorn Tamer.

And yet, those are words I’ve seen employers choose when posting job openings in my field.

“Sure”, you say, “but those are just metaphors. What they really want are the best coders they can get.”

By way of reply, I ask you to consider the primary attribute of a person who would respond to such an ad. While confidence is usually considered a positive trait, someone who thinks of themselves as a ninjajedirockstarguruwizard clearly lacks the perspective and balance that comes with an equal portion of humility. Whatever the term, employers who use such superlatives are communicating that the primary trait they are looking for is arrogance.

“They’re just looking for energetic, motivated, go-getter types,” you counter. “And is arrogance really a bad trait for a coder?”

Absolutely!

First, let’s dispel the myth that arrogance (or even confidence) is correlated with competence; it isn’t. That’s a simple association fallacy. While confidence can be the outcome of competence, confidence can just as easily be a symptom of delusions of grandeur. And I know plenty of workers who, despite their obvious competence, struggle with their self-confidence.

With arrogance comes a disdain for others which easily hardens to contempt. With arrogance comes technical hubris and the belief that anything done by other employees (and certainly other companies) is inherently flawed and inferior. If you’ve been around the software industry for any time at all, you will have seen countless examples of NIH Syndrome (Not Invented Here). Arrogance is the most pervasive threat to any business process that is based on teamwork, knowledge sharing, and mutual respect.

When I see a developer exhibit arrogant behavior, it’s usually because they lack the perspective that comes from real-world experience; they haven’t been in the industry long enough to be confronted with their own mistakes and realize their fallibility, nor to appreciate the ingenuity and expertise of other practitioners. If I’m really looking for the best coder I can find, I’m going to hire someone who has made their share of mistakes, acknowledged them, and been willing to learn from them and improve their skills by asking questions of others.

As you might imagine, I don’t consider myself a ninjajedirockstarguruwizard. Having successfully derived my livelihood from software engineering for the past thirty years, I have a pretty accurate understanding of my strengths, weaknesses, and the value I can add in any given situation. I do not hold the arrogant self-opinion these employers are looking for, nor do I want to work with colleagues who do; so as soon as I see such superlatives in a job listing, I simply delete it, unread, and move on.

There are additional reasons why I immediately reject such listings. By putting so much emphasis on the search for ninjajedirockstarguruwizards, employers are revealing some ugly things about their internal culture.

First, the company is exhibiting as much arrogance as the people they hope to hire. They believe that the company will (of course!) be compellingly attractive to the best coders in the industry. They think the best and brightest will be satisfied with the corporate culture, working environment, compensation, and growth opportunities that they provide. Ironically, once you look behind the curtain, you’ll find such companies rarely live up to their inflated self-opinion.

Second, the company devalues women. Immature titles like Ninja, Jedi, Rockstar, Wizard, and Guru generally don’t appeal very much to educated, professional women, who have struggled to be taken seriously even within their field. The few women who do interview probably won’t manifest the kind of arrogance that the company associates with “quality”. One further wonders what Asian expatriates must think of the casual use of culturally-appropriated terms like “ninjas” and “gurus”.

It’s unassailably clear that all those super-heroic job titles are designed to appeal specifically to adolescent boys. By emphasizing those terms in job listings, a company is telling me that their managers generally think of their development teams as a bunch of immature adolescents, and that I can expect to be treated in a correspondingly condescending fashion.

Sure, perhaps I’m being a bit humorless, but that’s just insulting, and not an experience I want to subject myself to. So I don’t.

Finally, I just want to confirm that the “Overly Zealous” and “Cookie Manipulator” in the title of this post did indeed appear as titles in job listings I’ve recently seen, along with “Enthusiastic”, “Audacious”, “Visionary Game-Changer”, “Badass” and “Programmer Extraordinaire”.

And one job specially asked for an engineer “with more cowbell!” (their exclamation point). Plus, believe it or not, one company sought a “Ruby Eating Python-o-saurus Rex”. What! The! Fuck! Yeah, that really shows that you will take me, my career, and the contribution I make to your company seriously.

And final (dis-) honorable mention goes to the listing for a “Principle Systems Engineer” (sic). I’m absolutely agog imagining what duties that might involve…

Update: My followup post contains a list of the more effusive job titles I saw during the two months subsequent to this article.

Say you’re a happy little introvert, spending most of your time alone. Sometimes you might feel a little isolated and wonder whether the nice, safe life you’ve built is worth enduring the occasional bout of loneliness, or whether you should reach out and try to bring a loving relationship into your life.

Self-styled “normal” humans have probably accosted you with threatening phrases like “open up to love” as encouragement to change. But if it were that simple, no one would choose loneliness over love, would they? I’m here to tell you the truth.

When you leave the safety of your home, the first thing you find out is that—no matter how open you are to it—love is not guaranteed. Love is capricious, unpredictable, and unforeseeable. Whether you have success or not is largely out of your control. So at best, what all those well-intended friends are actually telling you is to open up to the mere *possibility* of love.

And because love is so rare and fickle, it’s pretty likely that you’ll waste your time and energy (and emotional vulnerability) and still come up empty-handed at the end of the day.

So realistically, what you’re actually being asked to open up to is the likelihood of rejection and heartbreak. And if you’re like most men, you’ll experience a whole lot of rejection and heartbreak before you ever find someone who will love you.

And trust me: experiencing a little loneliness once in a while is a walk in the park when compared to the pain of a broken heart.

So when your friends push you to “choose love”, remind them that it’s not a choice between loneliness and love, but between loneliness and the likelihood of repeated rejections and heartbreak, which are vastly more painful. Maybe then they’ll understand that avoiding romantic entanglements might seem like a sensible course of action to some of us.

And when they talk about dating being a growth experience, you should remind them that a growth is something painful that has to be surgically removed and excised before it kills you!

Frequent topics