cellio: (western-wall)
a walk through Yemein Moshe ) speaker, havdalah ) other bits )

Next up: SCA event, Yad l'Kashish, the old city, and more -- but not tonight, because the wake-up call tomorrow is at 6:00 (!) so we can get on the road by 7:30. Tomorrow we head north.

cellio: (star)
service geeking )
cellio: (western-wall)
I'll return to chronological order later. Today we visited the wall, and that deserves an entry of its own.

Read more... )

Friday

Dec. 24th, 2006 12:03 am
cellio: (western-wall)
Read more... )
cellio: (avatar-face)
Read more... )
cellio: (don't panic)
Government 12 days of Christmas, from [livejournal.com profile] mortuus. Yup, sounds right.

Bruce Schneier observes that "password" is no longer the most common password; it's "password1". Who says users can't be trained? (Link from [livejournal.com profile] goldsquare, I think.)

Hebrew question: the word "lamdeini" means "teach us". Adding the suffix ("ni") seems to have changed "lameid" to "lamdei"; why? Why isn't this "lameidni"? Just because that sounds awkward, or for a grammatical reason I haven't yet met?

Packing report: if I were just going on the trip and there was nothing special about it, everything would fit in one checked bag and my backpack (small carryon). But if I want the option to bring anything back, that would be a bad idea. So, two checked bags, one small. (I've used the small one as a carryon, actually, but as long as I have to check anything, why shlep it through airports?)

Yay! In about 28 hours I'll be in Jerusalem! I'll miss Dani and the cats, but boy is this going to be fun!

There will be no time when it would be in compliance with both Jewish and federal laws for me to light the channukiah for the seventh night (tomorrow night). How peculiar. (We leave Newark at 3:50PM and it'll be morning when we get off the plane.)

cellio: (star)
We're going to be in Jerusalem for two Shabbatot. For the first we're going to the wall (Friday) and HUC (Saturday). For the second, I forget what the Friday plans are and there's another congregation Saturday morning. My rabbi said he'll take whoever wants to go there -- but for me, he said, he has a different suggestion, an egalitarian Orthodox congregation. This sounds similar to a congregation [livejournal.com profile] magid described in Boston. This sounds nifty!

Yeah, I'm going. I want to see what this is like, and I'd like to meet more members of the traditional community who think women have a role in worship.

cellio: (sca)
Not only am I going to Israel (yay!), but it happens to work out that I'll be in Jerusalem the same night as the local SCA group's next event, and it's a 20-minute walk from my hotel, and the travel itinerary says "evening on your own". Well, that's an easy decision. When the Shire of Ma'ale Giborim formed and the founders invited me to be an honorary member of the group, I never imagined that I'd have the chance to actually show up at something. :-)

(We will have other nights in Jerusalem, so I'm not missing out on my only chance to see the city or anything like that.)
cellio: (lj-procrastination)
This morning the parkway was uncharacteristically slow, which I discovered only once I was well down the ramp. As I was crawling along I spotted a signboard ahead. Oh good, I thought; it might say what's going on. It said "congestion ahead". Well duh. Would it have been so difficult to say how much farther ahead? (Didn't affect me; I was getting off at the next exit anyway. It could have helped others, though.

I'd sure like to know why, semi-randomly, no browser installed on my home PC will render the ThinkGeek site. The only deterministic aspect so far is that once it fails, it apparently won't work until a reboot. I even tried clearing the cache, turning the firewall off, and trying the site -- zip. (Yes, of course I immediately turned the firewall back on.) Maybe I'll pull out the laptop later.

For what I assure you is a perfectly good reason, tonight I was trying to find DVDs of the Star Wars movies in the Italian language. Searching got a little more productive once I switched to the term "guerre stellari", but it's still bringing me no joy. Looks like even if I could find them, and find them in NTSC, they'd be region 2. Oh well. But it wasn't a completely wasted effort; back-translation supplied the following titles: "Vendetta of the Sith", "The Ghost Threat", "The Empire Still Hits", and "Stellar Wars YOU - The Return of the Jedi".

Last night I learned that my former boss (the most recent ex-boss) is going on the Israel trip. He doesn't live in this city any more, so I didn't expect that. Nifty! More people I actually know in the group. (I already know less than half the group, so far.)

From [livejournal.com profile] passionateusers: The zone of expendability: how management feels about you.

[livejournal.com profile] osewalrus has an excellent post about why "stealing" wireless isn't stealing but trespassing.

On a different subject, [livejournal.com profile] osewalrus also had an interesting entry recently looking at legal aspects of marriage, custody, and consent a little differently.

Scott Adams on Bill Gates for president. There are worse ideas.

cellio: (avatar)
Dear LazyWeb,

I am travelling to Israel and want to take some of my US electronics with me. I've found "international power converters" that claim to cover "just about everybody" but when they list countries/regions, Israel is never on the list. What kind of power do they use? What are the magic keywords that will let me not fry my laptop? As far as plugs are concerned, is "if it fits it's right" a safe approach, or dangerous?

Thanks.

17 Tamuz

Jul. 13th, 2006 10:21 pm
cellio: (mars)
On the 17th of Tamuz in the year 70 CE, the Romans, bent on destroying Israel, breeched the walls of Jerusalem. Three weeks later they destroyed the temple.

On the 17th day of Tamuz in 2006, Hezbollah, bent on destroying Israel and apparently backed by Lebanon and Syria, attacked Haifa and Carmiel.

I'm not superstitious, but the coincidence was not lost on me.

This cannot end well, so I hope it at least ends quickly.
cellio: (lilac)
For his birthday I got Dani (among things) a USB-powered cup warmer for his coffee. So far the packaging is providing as much entertainment as the device itself. Sample: "Do not use the plastic or paper cup." And the temperature ranges from (whatever) at "the boarder" to (higher whatever) at the center. I wonder what language this stuff was translated from, and by whom.

We have two programmable thermostats in our house, one for the furnace and one for the AC. (Yeah, so it's up to us to make sure only one is engaged. This is not hard.) The one for the AC is on daylight savings time (sic), and the one for the furnace is not. As I was thinking about this and determining that there's no need to reset the latter, it struck me that "standard" time will soon be only 4.5 months of the year. That doesn't sound like much of a standard to me. A "standard" transmission in a car isn't standard any more either. What other things are still called "standard" even when that's no longer true?

On the edge of an aphorism by [livejournal.com profile] metahacker rings true to me.

Iron Chef Programmer by [livejournal.com profile] merle_ made me laugh even though I've never seen the TV show.

A service that could be useful to some of my readers: DynDNS gives you a domain name that you can then point anywhere else, for free. It's not as good as a full vanity domain, but the price is right and sometimes you just want a path that's better than "obscure.isp.com/users/my_arcane_account_number/public" or the like.

Shavuot is tomorrow night and Friday. This is one of the three festivals, equal in importance to Pesach and Sukkot, though it seems to be less prominent in many people's eyes. (It's one day instead of a week, which is part of it.) A holiday celebrating the giving of the torah is special for me, though, and I'm looking forward to late-night torah study with my rabbi tomorrow night.

I have paid the deposit to go on my rabbi's trip to Israel in December. There's a meeting next week for people interested in the trip; ironically, it conflicts with one session of the ulpan (intensive Hebrew class). Oops. :-) (It sounds like missing the meeting will not be problematic.)

cellio: (moon-shadow)
This year the URJ Kallah, five days of study, worship, and community, looks quite good. (It often has not in the past, though the program in general gets good reviews.) The chance to spend several class sessions with Rabbi Mark Washofsky (who is very good) talking about Reform Judaism and mitzvot and obligation (an interersting and challenging topic) is not to be lightly set aside. But, I want to go to Israel with my rabbi this year, and I can only afford to do one of them. There will be future Israel trips, but probably not for another 12-18 months and the next one could end up being kid-focused like the last one was.

With my luck, all I have to do to cause next year's Kallah to be boring is to not go this year. :-)

Still, I think I'm going to Israel.
cellio: (sleepy-cat)
I wonder how subcutaneous fluids are processed. If my cat isn't eating/drinking enough I can give him fluids, which don't enter through the mouth, but they exit the normal way -- which means somewhere inside the cat they enter the GI tract. My vet probably already thinks I'm weird, so I may as well ask her. :-) (What actually prompted this is the observation that, it appears, a dose of fluids can stimulate his appetite, almost as if the fluids were clearing out some blockage or something -- but how could they? And anyway, there shouldn't be any blockages; he had a blocked bile duct a few months ago and they both cleared it out and installed a much-larger bypass.)

We have an invitation for seder for the first night, from a fellow congregant. This is good; Dani knows the family, so he won't be among strangers, and they like to sing, and they're the sort of people who don't race through the haggadah to get to the meal. So everyone's happy -- yay! Second night is odd: as a Reform Jew I don't see the need for two-day yomim tovim, and Dani is secular, but he's used to two nights from his family (necessity of parental divorce) and I don't mind, so I may yet try to find us something. (I said "well, there's always Chabad" and he said "let me know how that goes for you", so I guess not that since the point would be to do something for him.) He's still opposed to just holding one ourselves.

My rabbi will be leading a trip to Israel at the end of this year. I'm thinking seriously of going. I'd like to see some of the place, and I'd love to do it with my rabbi -- so there'll be, y'know, some religious content, as opposed to just being a tourist. I'll have enough vacation time to do it, since most of the fall holidays have the decency to land on weekends this year, and a bonus I'll be getting at work removes any doubt about being able to afford it. It sounds like this will be a family-friendly but not family-obsessed trip; i.e., I won't feel like e fifth wheel. So I don't see a down-side here, and I think it would be an exciting experience.

Short takes:

This comic reminded me of some cats I've known...

Hold my beer, a look at washroom multitasking (not safe for work), from [livejournal.com profile] brokengoose.

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