Memories of days gone by
Archive for October, 2011

A few Disneyland/DCA photos
Oct 20th
I spent a day at the DL Resort with my mom (who now lives in Southern California), to show her all the new stuff! The only new thing I got to see was The Little Mermaid which, while well done, seemed a bit rushed in the story department. At least the line is short!
Otherwise it was a very crowded Monday (year round schools were apparently on break), and fairly hot too. In other words, we didn’t get a lot done.
Here are my photos from the day, taken with the Sony NEX-7.
- Traditional entrance photo
- DL is all decked out for halloween, as usual
- Traditional castle shot
- Tomorrowland entrance
- Moonliner
- We rode Star Tours 2.0 twice and had nearly the same sequence both times! Argh!
- Matterhorn
- Thunder Mountain
- Peter Pan
- The only Disney ride where you end up in hell
- Onboard the jungle cruise
- Dangerous hippos
- Little do these zebras know that one of their cousins is being eaten nearby
- The eighth wonder of the world: the backside of water
- Haunted Mansion holiday
- Changing paintings in the first hallway after the “stretching room”
- Another changing painting
- Inside Splash Mountain!
- New California Adventure entrance!
- Carthay Circle Theater is coming along
- First ride on the Little Mermaid attraction
- Boarding area
- Our storyteller
- “Under the Sea”
- He plays the clams
- Local musician
- Very impressive animatronic
- “Kiss the Girl”
- Suddenly everyone’s celebrating
- And they lived happily ever after
- Requisite World of Color photo to close things out

Thank you, Steve
Oct 6th
Steve Jobs was responsible for much more than just the various Apple gadgets I’ve had in my life. My dad bought a Mac 512ke (pictured above) in 1986, for an outrageous amount of money. That really sparked my interest in computers, and got me into running a BBS and eventually several websites. Two of my websites took different paths. PowerWatch, dedicated to Power Computing’s “Mac clones”, would not have been possible if the Mac did not exist. That said, it was essentially put out of business by Mr. Jobs himself, when he ended licensing of the Mac OS. I remember writing him a letter asking him to reconsider, since he was putting me out of business. Not surprisingly, I did not get a response.
During the time I was running PowerWatch, I started playing around with a new gadget known as a digital camera. Specifically, an Apple QuickTake. The QuickTake showed me how digital cameras was going to change photography forever, and in 1997, I started a little website called the Digital Camera Resource Page. While Apple’s digital camera adventure did not last long, my website is still alive and kicking. I may not take photos on an Apple camera anymore, but I edit them in Aperture on a Mac Pro, view my photos and movies downstairs on my Apple TV, and take my pictures wherever I go with my iPad.
I’ve lusted after new Apple products my whole life. Early in my teenage years, I wrote a letter to my parents, telling them that a new Mac LC would bring a smile to the face of a shy child. It worked, and we got our first color Mac (with a 12″ RGB display, no less). I remember going to ComputerWare in Palo Alto, drooling over the Mac IIci and especially the IIfx, which cost thousands and thousands of dollars at the time. Over the years that followed, I owned PowerMacs, PowerBooks, iMacs, Macbook Pros, and Mac Pros. I’m pretty sure that I converted at least a few people over to the Mac side during that time, as well.
So thank you Steve, for giving me the inspiration for two of my jobs (even if you took one of them away later), for bringing a smile to a child’s face, and for designing the tools with which I can share my memories. It’s a shame that the most revolutionary people in the world seem to live such short lives. RIP.
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