Falcon Ridge 2013 Part 1 - The Pretty Girl Game #FRFF
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 08/05/2013 - 06:37May I suggest
Friday night at the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival Main stage; Red Molly is covering Susan Werner's song, with Susan weaving in additional harmony. The rain has stopped, but I am tired, wet and cold.
Miranda is sitting next to me bubbling over with little giggles of joy. She has had a very good day.
May I suggest to you
This is my first night at Falcon Ridge since my mother died. A week ago, Mairead left for Japan. During Dar Williams set, I Skyped her in.
May I suggest this is the best part of your life.
Dar started her set with "The Babysitter's Here".
She says do me a favor don't go with a guy who would make you choose and
Mairead has chosen Japan. She has moved halt the world away to teach English and be nearer her girlfriend. Dar ends her set, like she usually does at Falcon Ridge singing "Iowa". The whole hillside holds up their flashlights, glowsticks, cellphones, or any other source of light, turning the whole hill into a human glowworm grotto, revealing the contours of the otherwise dark cloud. I wonder how many people come to Falcon Ridge specifically for that moment. I wonder what role it plays in bringing Dar back to Falcon Ridge.
And we walk in the world of safe people, and at night we walk into our houses and burn.
Earlier in the day, Miranda stepped out onto the workshop stage at Falcon Ridge. She had volunteered to work that stage as a great opportunity to learn more stage craft while listening to great music. The big set on the workshop stage on Friday was Vance Gilbert giving a critique of various performers. Vance is a great performer and can give scathing, yet productive critiques in a humorous way, slewing as many sacred cows along the way as possible.
He asked performers to get up and play a song that they are having trouble with. Miranda got up and performed her latest song. She had played it in public the first time, the night before at The Front Porch, one of the many song circles that cover the hillside late at night when there aren't performances at the main stage. She told Vance she didn't think it went all that well and was trying to figure out what to do with it.
Miranda has a strong stage presence. She approached the mic with confidence and started her song, not showing any trepidation about Vance saying "Freeze", and then illustrating to the gathered crowd what she was doing wrong. When Vance did stop her, it was with words of praise and Miranda continued on her song, with various interruptions and suggestions from Vance, and some great play between the two of them and the person doing the sign language interpretation at the edge of the stage.
Afterwords others approached Miranda. They told her she had done great the night before and asked her to play her song again. Later, she was asked to perform at a small stage for volunteers. It was in the middle of Dar Williams set, but she was willing to miss even Dar for a chance to work on her performance. She played a twenty minute set and was followed by Vance Gilbert. Afterwards the stage manager told her, "You just got to open for Vance Gilbert!"
And that's how she won the pretty girl game.
During Dar's set, she spoke about how we are all interconnected. She may not have known how interconnected that moment was, Miranda briefly telling Mairead about her experience and then all of us listening to Dar on a hillside in New York and somewhere in Japan, tied together via technology.
This is the best part of your life.
Pray Without Ceasing
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 07/28/2013 - 15:17Our Rector at Grace and St. Peter's is out on maternity leave, and various members of the congregation are filling in as guest preachers. Today was my turn. For my text, I used the Gospel lesson of the day, Luke 11:1-13, where Jesus give the disciples The Lord's Prayer. Below is the sermon I preached.
Miranda and The Delayed Play
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 07/26/2013 - 06:00Fiona, my youngest daughter, has been fighting some sort of summer cold. The night before last, she had a nightmare, and crawled into bed next to me. My wife Kim often has problems sleeping, so I acted as a buffer between the agitated child and the exhausted mother. They both ended up sleeping well and I was the one to go without sleep.
As a result, I went to bed early last night and slept soundly, until about five o'clock in the morning, when I awoke in the middle of a curious dream. I don't often remember my dreams, and when I do, all that remains seem like fragments of an epic imagist poem. This morning's dream was different.
I was at some out doors festival, sort like Falcon Ridge Folk Festival, but the space was smaller, more intimate and more wooded and shady. There was an air of a Renaissance festival to it. I set up my tent, ran into a friend from work, whom I talked about the festival with and then sat down to watch some play. The audience gathered. A little after the play was to begin, an older bearded and rotund man came out on the play and announce that there was some difficulty. The audience waited and started to grow impatient. My daughter Miranda was next to me, a details I hadn't noticed prior to this. She read through the program and drew on a piece of paper she had.
A member of the audience got up to leave and Miranda sprang into action. She leapt onto the stage and proclaimed herself Miranda the Bunny. It was a children's play, with children in the cast, so this was completely fitting with the play. She held up her drawing, which was of a rabbit's face and which she used as a mask. She asked the person about to leave where he thought he was going. He mumbled something about being upset that the play hadn't started and he was going to go find something else to do.
Miranda countered that the play had already begun, and was going on around us all the time. The rotund man came out onto the stage, mostly in costume and character, with a quizzical look. He observed what was going on and started improvising with Miranda. Kids in the play slowly made it onto the stage.
Miranda spends her time storytelling and teaching kids, and she interacted with the kids, who had problems, given the turn of events staying in character. Some tried to be in character as they interacted with Miranda others were out of character, and took up roles closer to that of narrators of the play. Miranda started interacting with the kids in the audience. Soon the problem that had delayed the start of the play was resolved, and the play began in earnest. The rotund man who had appeared frustrated, at first, with the problems his troupe had been facing, complicated by a disgruntled audience and an interloper on the stage, finally saw what Miranda had been able to do, and welcomed her into the play, which being full of children, had some room for adaptation, if done in such a way that the youngest of actors could still get their cues and deliver their lines.
As sleep faded and I looked over at the alarm clock, I realized that I was now awake enough, and it was close enough to my regular time to get up that it would be just as good if I got out of bed and started my morning rituals.
Yesterday was a trying time at work for myself and several people that I work with, but as they say in show business, the show must go on, and there are times you need to ad lib. Perhaps life is like that as well. It made me think of Jaques in As You Like It, intoning "All the world's a stage".
Miranda's presence on the stage also made me think of Cyrano when he challenged Montfleury, yet the setting was different. There is tension when an interloper takes to the stage, and it takes a Jodelet to bring humor to the tense setting and to prepare for tomorrow's farce.
But now, the clock has struck six and I need to start my daily chores.
Additional Glass PHP Development Notes
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 07/24/2013 - 19:48A few days ago, I wrote a blog post about My First Google Glass App in PHP. Since then, I've continued to enhance it, talk with people who have been testing it, and offer suggestions to others trying to get started. Here are some of things I've been telling people.
The first place to start changing code is in index.php. What I did was I read through the various operations to send cards to the timeline. I started making a few changes here and there, and then started getting bolder in my changes. One important tip, especially if you're developing code and sending lots of test cards to your timeline. Add the DELETE action to each card so you can delete them when your testing is over.
$menu_item = new Google_MenuItem();
$menu_item->setAction("DELETE");
array_push($menu_items, $menu_item);
$new_timeline_item->setMenuItems($menu_items);
While you're at it, you may want to add functionality to PIN or UNPIN a timeline item. This is the same as the above code for adding the DELETE action, but use use TOGGLE_PINNED. (It took me a little while to find the action.
Another minor glitch in the sample PHP code. It makes reference to $service_base_url. But that isn't set anywhere. You should change it to $base_url or set $service_base_url = $base_url. If you do this, some of the images start working.
An issue that another person ran into is that the code is written to use SQLite2. If you have SQLite3 but not SQLite2, the PHP code doesn't work. Fortunately, I have both. There is a comment on the SQLite3 page that talks about how to migrate from SQLite2 to SQLite3. I haven't tried that, because I wanted to migrate to MySQL.
Another thing to keep in mind: If you have different projects, make sure that you set up the config.php to point to different databases for each project, otherwise, you can run into various issues with the credentials.
One person asked about how to make bundled cards. I didn't find any good documentation about this, so I hacked around until I figured it out. To add bundled cards to a timeline item you need to use the setHtmlPages method, passing it an array of strings containing HTML. e.g.
$new_timeline_item->setHtmlPages($html_pages);
To get a good idea at the possible html code, take a look at the Google Mirror API Playground. It has lots of good examples, and I used this to tweak my application.
To put a map in a timeline card, you should read the section of the location documentation, Rendering maps on timeline cards.
The next thing to look at is the util.php code. This is the code which stores credential information in the SQLite2 database. I changed the code around to use MySQL instead. There were a few error conditions that I didn't properly handle, which prevented some people from accessing the app. However, once that was fixed, I started adding the code to save decks of timeline cards. The first part of that is completed. Now, I just need to add code so people can save multiple decks, optionally share them, and retrieve them.
One person suggested that some of this would probably be better done in Drupal. I like working in Drupal and I've thought about using this as a framework for my application. However, I wanted to get past the mirror API complexity first.
To see the latest version of my app, check out Glassdeck. If you want the MySQL util.php code or have questions, contact me via Google+
More soon...
Being Still
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 07/21/2013 - 19:54It is Sunday evening. Kim is off at the barn with friends. Fiona is in the shower. Mairead is meeting with another JET program participant and Miranda should be on her way back to Boston.
I am sitting in my chair in the living room. There is so much going on in my mind right now. The Google Glass development is proceeding nicely. I've shared the early version of my app with other Glass users and have lots of ideas about things to work on.
In a week and a half, it will be the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival. I have looked at the list of Emerging Artists for this year's show case and set up a playlist on Spotify. I need to listen to the performers.
A church, our rector is on maternity leave. Different people are filling in, in different ways, and next Sunday, I will deliver the sermon. I've been thinking out what I will say and will spend some time this week writing it out.
This weeks sermon was based on the story of Mary and Martha. With all these things that I'm thinking about, I feel a bit like Martha. Yet one of the biggest things going on right now is that Mairead will leave for Japan next Saturday. She is going for a year, and then we will see what she decides to do next.
Mairead has been to Japan before, but never for so long. There is a pang in my heart as I think of not seeing my beloved eldest daughter for perhaps as long as a year, or maybe even long. I am excited for her, but anticipating missing her as well. There were big hugs as she left the house.
Yet my way is to sit quietly, to reflect, perhaps a little bit of Mary in the midst of Martha's business.