Posts tagged update
Colour Burst
Aug 2nd
More fireworks photos! While in Vancouver, I was lucky enough to be able to attend two of the four “celebration of lights” fireworks competition displays. It was fantastic. I got several good fireworks photos and I’ll post over the next few days.
I’ve got a *ton* of photos that will be coming in the next little while. I’m gonna try and get one up a day, but we’ll see if that actually happens. I just got back today from my trip to Vancouver. Sorry about the lack of updates, but I’ll make up for it, I promise!
Edit: This is an updated photo: I didn’t like what happened with my modifications so I decided to upload the unedited version. Looks prettier imo.
Holidays!
Jul 29th
Thursday was the last day of the conference. I went to a couple talks, but other than that sat around and caught up on updating the man-machine web page. If you see anything that’s missing on the page, let me know because I really should fix it up. I’m on holidays right now, but will be able to get to it later this week after I return.
Anyways. On Thursday night, Diane’s plane arrived in Vancouver. She took the airporter to join Darse, Alexandra and I at the Hyatt where we walked her bags back to the condo. Then we wandered back to the Hyatt to play some games with Johnny, Jeff, Andrew, and Alborz. It was pretty fun. Of course, that meant that Diane and I didn’t return to the condo until 2:00am, where we promptly went to bed.
When we got up that morning, slightly groggy from the lack of sleep, we enjoyed some rather yummy coleslaw that Alexandra made — it had feta cheese in it! I need to remember to do that the next time I make coleslaw. This was the first day of our holiday and we had decided to spend it with Darse and Alexandra on their last day in Vancouver before they headed off to Victoria. So when we were all ready to go, we walked down to the seabus and took it across to north Vancouver towards the Capilano suspension bridge. The seabus is rather cool — I’m glad I got a chance to ride it. It’s pretty speedy, and certainly a distinctive way to travel (coming from a boy growing up in land-locked Alberta).
The suspension bridge is kind of cool, but I’m not sure it’s worth the price of admission. Diane and I got in as students though, so that reduced the hit of the admission. At the ticket booth, we found out that our credit card suddenly didn’t work anymore. Odd … so worried, I called the credit card company on my cell phone and found out that when the credit card charge Diane made on her card when she caught the shuttle bus in Edmonton, the credit card company thought it was suspicious. Never mind that we had two separate cards and one was used to take a shuttle to the airport … and it was used again in Vancouver for the airporter. Hmm… I think they need to work on their security check. I’m all happy for good security on my credit card, but please make sure that the activity on the card is actually suspicious!
Anyways, we wandered around the suspension bridge park for awhile. It was rather nice, though there were a few too many people around for my liking. Still, it was nice to see some rather tall trees, and the bridge itself was an experience. It’d probably be better to just take one of the many hikes throughout the rockies though.
Afterwards, we went back to the seabus terminal, but stopped off at the market to buy some yummy fresh fruit before we headed back to the condo. Diane and I picked up some nectarines, raspberries, cherries and grapefruit. Mmmm … fresh fruit. Alexandra added some blackberries and fresh figs to that (I’d never had fresh figs before — they were pretty interesting). After our shopping, we returned to the condo via seabus and a brisk walk. Then we walked to Bin 941 which I wanted to return to and try some of the other stuff on their menu … plus it was good to use the excuse that I needed to introduce Darse and Alexandra to it! We ordered several items, all of which tasted wonderful. I highly recommend checking out this restaurant if you’re in Vancouver — it’s pretty fantastic.
Anyways, we wandered back to the condo and this time I got a little more sleep. First night in several that I’d get some sleep. The next morning, the group of of us packed up and headed out. We said our goodbyes to Darse and Alexandra as they headed off to take the ferry to Victoria. For our part, Diane and I needed to get to our B&B. Our attempt to take a bus failed … we waited at a bus stop and the bus came — but passed our stop! The bus driver waved at us, but we misunderstood and started walking down the street to chase after us. A moment later, a second bus that was completely empty followed along after it! We missed that one since we weren’t at a stop, and it didn’t really occur to me to wave it down. So instead, Diane and I walked to the B&B. It was a pretty long walk, but I’m kind of glad we did. It’s nice to walk around in a foreign city … it helps get you oriented, and lets you see some of the stuff you might not ordinarily see. Still, I’m not too sure my feet agree with that assessment.
After plopping our stuff in our fancy B&B room, we set out for a trip to Stanley Park and the aquarium. Of course, I forgot it was Saturday and when we arrived, the aquarium lineup was probably 50 people deep. Whoops. We quickly reverted our decision to visit the aquarium, vowing instead to come back on Monday when there would presumably be a few less people there. Instead, we spent the afternoon wandering around Stanley Park taking photos and admiring the flowers and wildlife. In one amusing encounter, we stopped to look at some paintings in the painters circle where the lady there was clearly crazy. She was quite willing to explain all the names of her child-like paintings and after each name she would giggle in a high pitched voice. I was a little creeped out, but wasn’t really sure what to say. Diane and I got ourselves away halfway through the paintings she was naming. Whew!
Stanley Park is beautiful. Lots of wonderfully magnificent trees, and many photo opportunities. I filled up one 2GB flash card, and started on a second one (that I had picked up at best buy on the way to the B&B).
Around 5:00, hunger started to set in so we consulted a list of restaurant recommendations Shayna was kind enough to forward to us, and found a nearby restaurant called Musashi (Japanese sushi restaurant). The food there was fantastic. Diane and I ate some lovely salmon rolls along with some tempura and even tried some scallop rolls, octopus, and sweet shrimp sushi. All of it was extremely good and we left there with full stomachs and only down $25 for the two of us, including tax and tip. Wow, I’m still surprised at how cheap that was!
After dinner we wandered down the the beach where we staked out an area to sit and wait for the fireworks. It took three hours, but by then we really needed to sit down and relax. So sitting down to wait for the fireworks suited us just fine. When we got there, the beach was already crawling with people and it was tough to find a spot, but we did. 3 hours of watching people and taking photos of the various things was pretty fun, but I kind of wished I had brought my book. Oh wells.
The fireworks were awesome. They were all done to a variety of jazz tunes, which was pretty cool. I liked seeing the fireworks drumrolls, for instance. Fun times! Unfortunately, I had forgotten my tripod at the B&B, which meant that I was doing handheld shots. It didn’t work very well, but still surprisingly well. Being that close to the fireworks certainly helped since you didn’t need to hold the shutter open too long.
After the fireworks, Diane and I walked back to the bus stop we had waited at earlier that morning. This time we caught the bus and jumped on it to get close to the B&B. We walked the rest of the way and fell into bed rather satisfied with a rather full day.
I’ll have to cover today’s activities later. I’m pretty tired and need to collapse and get some sleep so I have some energy tomorrow! G’nite all!
Heraldk
Reflection
Jul 28th
I’m sorry for my lack of updates. I’ve got a ton of pictures so far during my trip to Vancouver. I need to sort through them all when I get home, so updates will continue to be sparse until I return on the 1st. But this one was a pretty good shot that didn’t require editing, so I figured I’d get one post up anyways. The building on the right is the Hotel Vancouver, and I think the road is West Georgia street.
The man-machine event went really well, though our program lost. We’re hoping to do it again soon. I’m not sure how long that’ll be before we do do it again.
Match Day 1
Jul 24th
I got up relatively early this morning. I had had trouble sleeping due to being excited about today’s match! After getting up and ready to go, we wandered over to the hotel to finish setting stuff up. Our match started at noon today with Ali Eslami taking the first match in the public room and Phil Laak in the private hotel room. After getting everything setup, the match began with a bunch of fanfare from Jonathan Schaeffer. For the blow by blow details, check out the official home page for the blog that I worked on throughout the two sessions in the public room. To make a long story short, we drew the first session and won the second session by a large margin. We won! Wow, that was an incredible feeling.
I’m frazzled right now, so I need to head for bed. Let me quickly give some other hilights from today before I run. I didn’t really get a chance to eat lunch before the match started so I was starving by the time the first session was done. When a group of four of us (Neil, Nolan, Josh and I) descended to the lobby to go find food we ran into Phil, Ali and Ali’s girlfriend Ana who were about to pursue food themselves. So they asked us if we wanted to join them and we said … YES of course! So we went to a restaurant called Cactus Luv Cafe and got to chat it up with these poker pros (all three are pros: Ana plays limits of $100/$200), and talk about technology, and research, and life. It was awesome. All three of them are incredibly nice people and I’m so glad I’ve gotten a chance to meet them and talk to them about stuff that interests me.
After the match I had to make some updates to the website and finish off the liveblogs for the day. I then ran DIVAT analysis on the matches, and those graphs will hit the webpages when I get the chance to do it. Ali seemed incredibly interested in the DIVAT analysis and where they went wrong. It’ll be interesting to see how they adjust tomorrow.
Anyways, I’m off to bed. This is incredibly exciting, but I’m totally beat and I’ve got another long day of blogging ahead of me. Woohoo! G’nite all!
Heraldk
Mad Preparation
Jul 17th
By this time next week we’ll be halfway through the man-machine poker match against Phil Laak and Ali Eslami. It should be a fun time. I’m excited to meet these pros in real life and get a chance to chat with them for a bit. I also hope our bot beats them!
We’re getting ready for the match in many ways. We’re making sure all the technical details are ready to go, and the bot is getting played against a wide variety of competition to make sure it is the best that it can be. It is super exciting, and we think we’ve definitely got a shot at winning. Lots of work to do before I hop on a plane on Saturday though!
Apparently I’m going to be in charge of live-blogging the event. Hopefully I can give you something interesting to read during the match. I’ll be updating the official match page with the live updates during the matches. If you can’t come to the event itself, you should check out the blog to see how we’re doing!
Heraldk
Poker Bankroll Updated
Jul 12th
I haven’t been playing nearly as much as I used to, but I have played a couple of PSO promos since the neteller fiasco. Just before neteller closed its doors to Canadians for online gambling transactions, I cashed out all of my money from online poker rooms. Since that time, I’ve done the new PSO promotions for Pokerstars and Gnuf poker, each worth a $120 bonus from PSO. The Pokerstars one was okay, I lost about $40 at the tables, but since the Pokerstars deposit bonus was $50, I ended up ahead at the site so the PSO bonus was pure profit on top of that.
Gnuf poker was pretty interesting. I deposited $500 to max out the deposit bonus only to discover that points are extremely hard to accumulate. It took me almost a month and a half to get through the PSO required 400 points, and the $500 bonus required more than 3000 more points. Screw that. But I did very well at the tables scoring more than $600. Add that to my PSO bonus of $120 and I was quite happy with that outcome. There’s been a little bit of nervousness on my part as I tried to get my money out. They finally added another cashout option that looks like it’ll work for me, so hopefully everything will all be sorted out soon.
My poker bankroll page has been updated to reflect my latest winnings.
So I’m pretty happy with the last couple of months. I might get into poker a little more once the man-machine match is over and done with. Until then, I think I’ll be pretty busy!
Heraldk
Update
Jun 27th
Boy, I’ve been slacking with this blog. It always seems that there’s something more important to do. So I don’t end up posting more than the odd bit of news. So what have I been up to? Well aside from working on the technology behind our bot in the upcoming man-machine poker match, I’ve been trying to spend some time with Diane planning out our wedding next June, and planning stuff to do in Vancouver after AAAI is over. If anyone has any suggestions for what we should do in Vancouver, we’d appreciate it. We’ve got about 6 days or so after AAAI is over to spend doing various touristy things.
There has also been a fair amount of social activity over the past several days. Curtis’ free beer was Monday night — it was good times! My dad’s work golf tournament was on Saturday so I went with him to that. Company golf tournaments are a lot of fun. You get a golf cart to go wheeling around in and afterwards you get steak dinner (erm… lunch). After 18 holes though, I was pretty beat. Nonetheless, I ventured over to Curtis’ place where we played some board games.
Last Sunday was Father’s day, so I took the fam out for dinner. My dad chose a new Chinese restaurant that opened up that weekend. The name of the place was, no joke, Wok and Roll. Yup, I can hear your groans too. It sounds even funnier if you say it in a Chinese accent and turn Roll into Woll. Say it to yourself … yup, pure gold.
So that’s a little review of some of the stuff I’ve been up to. I’m really sorry I haven’t been posting here quite so regularly — hopefully I can do a whole lot better now. You can definitely look forward to my blog posts from Vancouver!
Heraldk
Stomach Update
Apr 24th
You may recall that I posted about having some stomach problems a few months ago. I’m still having issues with my ability to eat certain foods – so after a few months of waiting for various doctor appointments I went in for a gastroscopy on Friday afternoon. For those who aren’t in the know, that means they put me to sleep and stick a tube down my throat so they can take a look at what’s going on in my tummy. It wasn’t a painful procedure or anything — though it certainly isn’t comfortable. I believe I wasn’t totally asleep during parts of the procedure and I have a hazy recollection of the tube being removed and someone saying they found something. However, the results haven’t been told to me yet. It sounds like they took some samples to run a biopsy on. So the results should be in on Monday and maybe I’ll finally find out what’s going on. It’d be really nice to know what it is — and hopefully it is treatable, whatever this is.
Heraldk
Mar 21st
Wow, I can’t believe I’ve found a social networking site I actually don’t hate. I can’t stand myspace — most pages are garish and poorly presented. Orkut became meaningless when people lost interest with it in the first couple months. So I never really considered joining facebook since I assumed it would be another waste of time. Eventually though, I heard enough people talking about it that I decided I needed to give it a try. Boy was a surprised.
The first thing that struck me is that the site is well-organized and easy to browse. It is very much a web2.0 style done right. Just enough AJAX (I’m assuming) to make the elements of the page interactive to the right degree. Everything feels very easy, but the lack of full customization means that viewing other people’s profiles is actually pleasant (unlike myspace … *shudder*). So all in all it is an impressive piece of software.
The other big thing that struck me right away is just how many of my former schoolmates were on facebook already. I suppose mileage might vary depending on whether facebook has hit critical mass for the people you know. Definitely, however, a large number of people I went to high school, junior high, and even elementary school with are already on facebook. What that meant was within a few days of creating a facebook account, I already had more than 50 people on my friends list. Insane.
The last thing that I think facebook does amazingly well, is it gives you a big reason to login on a regular basis. When you login, you get a list of ‘news items’ for the people on your friends list. This means that whenever you login you are notified whenever someone adds a new person to their friends list, or when they update their profile, or … all kinds of stuff. This means you can see what’s going on with other people’s friends networks and update your own if you see someone you know get added to someone else’s list.
So, I have now fallen to facebook and it appears to be another good time waster. Just what I needed.
Heraldk
Updates
Mar 9th
I’m continuing the improvements to this blog more slowly now, but I still intend on fixing stuff up. Today’s update includes the re-introduction of Pages — which will be used to show content that doesn’t really fit into the blog style. Most importantly, these are pages that will contain data that people might be more interested in at a static moment in time. So I’ll use these pages for stuff like: longer articles that might be of interest longer than a blog entry, as well as stuff like my resume and my list of publications. Hopefully these can grow as I continue to contribute to this blog!
The menu to the upper right that displays the pages actually took me a frustratingly long time to make, and it still doesn’t display properly in IE 7. Ugh. However, it does work in the browsers I have to test with, so hopefully it looks okay. Let me know if you have problems with it. It isn’t perfect, but I’ll try tweaking it later when I’m less frustrated with it!
Heraldk



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