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Paul's Journal

paul
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03/16/2011 15:30 #53849

Lime Green New Phoenix Theater
Category: architecture
I first notice this lime green building on Johnson Park from the top of City Hall. It really stands out in the overhead view if the west side. When we got down the stairs we walked over to check it out. Its located at 95 Johnson Park in Buffalo, NY.

I like the bright green a lot. besidrs bright orange it is my favorite color. That being said I am not as big a fan of the accent green, especially on the door.

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tinypliny - 03/16/11 16:09
That is so strange that we like the same colors... I like Linux Mint partially because their combo is that green and black.. And that green on the door and that door itself reminds me of the mosques in India. Dark bottle green would have been so much cooler.

03/16/2011 15:24 #53848

Pink houses in Buffalo, NY
Category: architecture
There are a lot of them. Here are a few I saw the other day walking back from City Hall.

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heidi - 03/17/11 22:37
Cool! I love catalogs of stuff like this. Sometimes I wish I integrated more stuff on panoramio.com
leetee - 03/17/11 14:01
I remember seeing the one that is second from the bottom when we visiting Buffalo, driving around. I thought it was so damn cute, even though i am not a fan of pink, and wanted to live there...
libertad - 03/16/11 19:40
The first one is really cute.
metalpeter - 03/16/11 17:22
Those last two on Elmwood are Pretty well known but not the other ones...

03/16/2011 01:54 #53845

The blue house at 55 Cottage street
Category: architecture
The blue house near (e:Heidi)'s is awesome. Its about the size of my house. Maybe even a little bigger.

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While it is large itself, it will always be so overshadowed by the massive house next to it.
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The large house next door is the Coatsworth House. It is one of the largest homes in the city. The owner, Thomas Coatsworth, had it built for his bride electra 1869 according to (e:matthew) says there were other large homes of this style that used to be on Delaware but were knocked down to make way for the knox mansion, red cross, etc and later for modern buildings. Too bad because this style is pretty awesome.

According to that article it also says, Thomas Coatsworth built that blue house for his daughter in 1899.

It also says he had a giant retreat on grand island. Wonder what that looks like today.
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metalpeter - 03/16/11 17:20
I've seen that big house before and thought wow but can't remember to where or from where I was going........
tinypliny - 03/16/11 10:34
The back story is very interesting... These houses formed the fabric of the "American dream". People didn't just buy houses that they couldn't afford and faced foreclosures and other misery. I wonder if credit card concepts existed then... Did these millionaires of Buffalo ever take out mortgages?

03/15/2011 20:50 #53836

This afternoon I was thinking about Japan
Category: japan
And I started to wonder what would have happened if instead of big nuclear plants they had small nuclear power facilities all over. I typed "home nuclear power" into google and guess what, there is such a thing

Apparently, toshiba was working on such a device in 2007 and they planned to distribute them in Japan and Europe. In that article it costs 5 cents per kilowatt.

In this later article they say it will costs 10 cents per kilowatt and are made by an American Firm called hyperion

Apparently, they bury them underground, have no weapons grade material, and are encased in concrete. If it wasn't for large natural disasters like earthquakes and tsunami, it would sound like a good idea. But imagine if there were tons of little nuclear messes all over the place.

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tinypliny - 03/16/11 17:26
In fact, they may be a substantially lesser risk than the mass-production of nuclear energy.
tinypliny - 03/16/11 17:25
I think smaller reactors would be less of a hazard and slightly less likely to emit massive radiation dangerous to the population. You need a critical mass to be able to transform into an out-and-out nuclear fission explosion and leakage and the smaller reactors may never reach that threatening level at all.
metalpeter - 03/16/11 16:59
Interesting I would think that homes that had them and got hit by this would still be in danger.... I also wonder how tough it would be for things like clean up and making sure everyone has bio suits on? Since I doubt there would be any real way to know what houses have them and what ones don't it could make things worse?

03/15/2011 11:59 #53831

What would I have done for a living in an alternate universe?
Category: work
I saw (e:Tinypliny) added a new topic to the topic suggester. I would have been a botanist if everything went as planned.

I went to college for Botany originally. In high school biology was my focus. I was so into it, I wanted to be a scientist going all the way back to my first microscope kit. I got a 5 on my AP bio exam. I did my internship at the Botanical Gardens and then the Botany department at UB. They were doing this interesting study trying to figure out what chemicals in smoke get some native dessert cotton plan to bloom. Apparently, it only bloomed after fire.

If I had really had my way I would have gone to Davis in CA for viticulture. Unfortunately, I was not able to afford it. Around the same time my uncle had a heart attack and we went down to SC. While there I applied to Winthrop and get a full scholarship.

So Winthrop didn't have a botany program so I ended up in general Biology which included zoology and dissection. This was a big issue for me as I was vegan at the time. I ended up finding a teacher who was botanist/anthropologist and got involved in her project of collecting editable plants from former slave housing areas on plantations. The idea was that their rations list only included corn mash and bacon which is not enough to survive so they wanted to determine what else they were eating. We found lots of editable plants near their former dwellings and I sketched them out and pressed them. I really enjoyed that.

At the same time I continued taking German. The German teacher I had was an exchange teacher from Flensburg, Germany. She told me the school there had a botany program and was looking for exchange students. So I applied and got in. I ever got a stipend to live there. It was perhaps the greatest year of my life. While there, I studied Naturheilkuende (Natural Healing) which was all about humans using herbs for food and medicine. I love it but I really liked speaking german too. The classes with the teacher there were the most interesting I have ever taken.

Unfortunately, when I got back to SC, they had canceled their German program. My friend Amy who studied with me at Winthrop went to school at Northern Arizona University. So I took some time off working lame temp jobs in Buffalo (that was the worst time of my life.) Then I headed of to AZ for school where I also met (e:terry). I met up with a german professor who was very interested in computers and language acquisition software, got a job in his lab and started computer programming. I mean I had been programming my whole life but never for any sort of purpose and we all know where that lead. At this point I had so many German credits. Most of my botany credits would not count toward an american biology degree but they did end up counting as german classes.

I decided it was time to end college and went for a degree in German. I applied for the NAU exchange program and once again I was over in Germany, this time with (e:terry) in Jena, Thuergingen for a year - another great time.

I went back to taking more Botany classes and a few local history/language classes. At that point I was probably not so good at botany in english but I was pretty good at it in German, lol. The one thing I regret is that the Botany professor I interned for at UB, where the whole interest started, was in Jena at one point - but I never met up with him. I wonder if that could have changed my direction.

After that I had no real way to apply german+botany to anything so I went all computers and went grad school for Media Studies which lead the the next 10 years of non-stop programming and my fairly boring life now that involves little to no nature. In the end my school loans for grad school were so expensive, I almost wish I had just taken out the crazy loans for undergraduate in viticulture at Davis.

metalpeter - 03/16/11 17:00
I knew some Germany and Terry in AZ but Had no idea why I guess I assumed programing............
tinypliny - 03/15/11 20:05
I would have been a starving artist or an obese cook if I had gone down the paths I wanted to...
tinypliny - 03/15/11 20:04
That is a FASCINATING story! I had no idea you had such an insane past!!! Everything I have ever done is so boring by comparison. I always thought you were a programmer to start with and never wondered about the German connection!! You know you could combine your botanical and computing together in bioinformatics to decipher genomics of plants now...
jbeatty - 03/15/11 19:30
Wow, that is a terribly interesting and winding path. I knew you lived in Germany for a bit but never knew the back story to it.

Who knows if Botany had worked out you may have always wondered if there was something else that you should have done. At least that's how my brain works.