27 December 2009

where I have been

Posted by admin @ 13:20 pm    categories: tech/web

(The real answer to the question “Where have you been?” is “I’m in Miami, and I was briefly in Sanibel, on the beach; the weather is wonderful and I’m relaxing here when I’m not worrying about graduate school.” But I’m thinking about “Why have you been away from the internet?” really.)

So at some point when I got home, Google Chrome (my web browser) stopped working. I could not figure it out. I ran an anti-virus scan — nothing. I uninstalled and reinstalled — nothing. I restarted a few times. Nothing.

Now, in and of itself this wouldn’t be that big of a problem. I use Firefox most of the time; I just use Chrome for email and browsing when I don’t want to deal with Firefox. But I figured it had to be a sign of something being wrong. I scoured some forums, and ended up figuring out that, yes, my computer did in fact have a virus. I’m still unclear about how I got it — I don’t think it was from an email, but beyond that I’m unclear. A number of people talked about finding a virus called SDRA64 that was causing Google Chrome to not work. It would open, but no webpages would load. Disabling certain parts of the browser made it work, but that was more like proof of problem than solution.

I also noticed that my windows firewall was being disabled — a sure sign that there’s something wrong going on. When I re-enabled it, it thought it was working, but either way it was obvious that something was wrong. So I followed instructions I found online, going to my registry and finding HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon\userinit, a registry value. Now I don’t entirely understand the Windows registry, but suffice to say that it contains configuration settings for Windows and for all windows programs. When you edit your registry, you can really fuck things up. Many viruses install themselves in the registry, because users don’t usually understand it, and it means they’re working in the background.

Anyway, as the online instructions suggested, there was something there: the string value of userinit (as in, user-initiated processes, I think) was “C:\Windows\system32\userinit.exe, C:\Windows\system32\mskdud32.exe” — a different virus than the SDRA64, but hiding in the same place. Unfortunately, you can’t just remove the second value — it reinstates itself. Suffice to say that I ended up in command-line Safe Mode (press F8 as loading the computer), and from there was able to use the REG command to remove the mskdud32.exe line. I also deleted the file it points to. Now, what no one bothered to say was this: If you delete the userinit registry value — as in, if you don’t just delete the part that says C:\Windows\system32\mskdud32.exe — your computer won’t load. And, errr, I did that. So if for some reason someone ends up here at this site trying to figure things out: solution is to boot into command line Safe Mode, edit the registry so that the value of userinit is “C:\Windows\system32\userinit.exe” and nothing else, and then delete (rm) C:\Windows\system32\mskdud32.exe. Of course, I entirely deleted userinit.

So when I rebooted, I entered my password on the login screen, and found myself logged out immediately. And so forth. I actually realized immediately what the problem is, but it’s actually not an easy fix. I ended up finding a number of fixes that didn’t work (one that would’ve worked perfectly, except I realized it only worked for Windows 2000), and finally downloading a program (the Offline NT Password & Registry Editor) to edit the registry from CD, which I burned to a disc on my father’s computer, and then booted to. (You can boot to CD by pressing F12 as setup.) Eventually, I figured out this program, which is mostly intended for changing your password if you’ve forgotten it, but also works for editing the registry. What I needed to do was this:

Hit enter twice, loading to the list of registry options under HKLM. Type: SOFTWARE and hit enter. Enter 9 for registry editor. Enter: cd Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon and hit enter. (Capitalization matters. CD = change directory.) Type: nv 1 userinit and hit enter. (This tells the program: I want a new registry value, which will be a string, and is called userinit.) Edit the userinit value, and enter the value as C:\Windows\system32\userinit.exe. Then press q and enter, q and enter, y and enter, and then quit. (Quit, quit, yes I want to save, quit.) And restart with ctrl-alt-del.

Anyway, wonder of wonders, it worked. I appear to no longer have a virus. I’m not entirely trusting of that — and I think my computer is going to die sometime soon, especially considering that it overheated the other day and ruined the battery — but I’m pleased that I seem safe for the moment. Backup time!

Besides: it’s nice being home. The psychology graduate process may be touched on in an entry someday soon.

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16 December 2009

on typical development

Posted by admin @ 15:38 pm    categories: Psychologyteaching

I’m watching Zombieland (thanks to Benoit, who posted about it), which is actually pretty funny, although it DOES make me uncomfortable. One of the characters is a 12-year-old, and one of the running jokes (it’s a comedy; it’s only “runnning” in that it comes up multiple times) is that she doesn’t know who anyone famous is — not singers nor actors nor politicians. And of course the answer is: “She’s twelve.” Of course she doesn’t know.

When I worked with Maria at FLENI in Argentina, with autistic kids (see: the beginning of this journal), she sometimes commented about how hard it was to remember what normal kids were like. Where should these kids be in their development? Because of course diagnosis comes based on how people differ from what is normal. A child who is language-delayed and can’t use sentences at age six is severely delayed — but not if every child does that, and then begin to speak normally by seven. Right? But you need to know the points of comparison before you can make these judgments.

So in some sense I’m thinking of this year teaching as me setting a yardstick of “what children should know.” Of course, it’s not really true (besides that I’m also doing some psych work on the side) — but at the same time, I’m definitely taking note of the wide variety in learning styles, of where these kids are developmentally. For example, my three-year-olds have a lot of trouble with even the simplest things. They don’t pay attention well, they have a lot of trouble learning more than one word at a time. Because they’re three. The five-year-olds, on the other hand, are almost ready to enter primary school; of course they’re able to repeat, even if they can’t really speak English. So with three-year-olds I speak a lot and get them to repeat sounds; I work on familiarizing them with English. With five-year-olds we can do some vocabulary, even if not all of it sticks. And sounds — it’s not as though they’re learning in the same way as, say, thirteen-year-olds.

But I notice things where I have to step back and say to myself, “Justin, they’re only ten.” Which is why I started as I did. I was telling two of the girls I give a lesson to about Chanukah (which is now — Happy Chanukah, folks), and asked them if they knew any Jews. Nope. So I explained to them that there weren’t many Jews in Spain because they were kicked out five hundred years ago; they understood that. But I explained also that many Jews came to the US after WWII. That, not so much. They had heard of WWII, but they didn’t really know what the Holocaust was, nor who Hitler was. Which surprised me until I reminded myself: they’re only ten. They’ve never studied history. Of course, I think many ten-year-olds do know what the Holocaust was — but it’s just not important to people here. When would it have come up? These girls are watching Twilight: New Moon, not Inglourious Basterds. So yeah: children learn history, they learn culture. It takes ‘em a while. Just as their brains mature as they grow, so they can learn more easily at an older age.

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13 December 2009

two more songs

Posted by admin @ 14:29 pm    categories: art

Two more songs I’m really into right now:

Los Colorados – Hot and Cold. Okay, complete awesome ridiculousness. This is a Ukrainian polka (?) band covering Katy Perry’s “Hot and Cold.” And it’s amazing. I heard it on NPR’s This American Life recently (the episode from two weeks ago, “Middle of the Night,” starts with a description of teenagers driving around late at night and they play this song; overall I wasn’t pleased with that episode, though; “Mind Games” was about three times as good) and had to go find it. And I did. It’s hilarious but actually quite good. (Watch the video.)

Bombadil – So Many Ways to Die. I just heard this the other day, but two blogs I read (Liz Turner’s being one, and the excellent Said the Gramophone being the other) had posted about Bombadil before. I know next to nothing about them, but their name seems obviously borrowed from J.R.R. Tolkein’s character Tom Bombadil, so it’s hard not to think they’re bound to be fun. Which they are. Although actually I always kind of hated his section. Anyway, here’s the video, which was posted on yet another blog. They’re pretty great. (And it looks like you can listen to the whole album here.)

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11 December 2009

amsterdam

Posted by admin @ 10:30 am    categories: arttraveling

Well I already discussed what I did in Amsterdam, but I hadn’t bothered with the photographs. Well, now I have; here are seven.

bell-tower
Some bell tower we ran into while wandering around to the east of the center.

house
We went to the Vondelpark, which was really near our hotel. Despite supposedly being gorgeous in the summer, it was just kind of dreary. Oh: I don’t think I’d mentioned this. It rained the entire time we were there. Dan says the Dutch must be amongst the few people who think the weather is better in London than it is at home.

heads-henri-dono
So, like I mentioned, we went to the Tropenmuseum, the Tropical Museum. We saw some cool stuff, but I photographed the weird things. There was an exhibition of works by Henri Dono; this is one example.

teletubbies
I have no words to explain this.


This is a replica of a woman, in a glass box. We didn’t read the things about the people in the boxes (I think they were just in Dutch, although a lot of the museum was in English, too), so I have no clue who she is or what she’s doing. The parts that are shiny and look over-exposed are glass or plastic. Why are her ear and hand plastic? I don’t know!

dan-in-neuwe-kerk
We went to the New Church, as mentioned. This is Dan. I really like the wooden pulpit behind him. There’s a name for those, right? I forget it, regardless.

door
And here’s a door I liked that I saw there.

And that’s it.

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some pictures of my travels

Posted by admin @ 8:16 am    categories: Spaintraveling

I’ve been really bad about this recently; I’ve been completely forgetting to upload photographs. So here are four photographs from Salamanca, a while ago:

group

three-girls

cathedral-ceiling

Rebecca

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food I have cooked recently

Posted by admin @ 8:07 am    categories: Food

biscotti

Yeah, yeah. Boring post, especially without good photos of most of it. Shrug. I took photos. They just were blurry.

1. One of my favourite recipes: Chocolate-almond biscotti. In Spanish, they call them cantuccini, which is also the word in italian. They burned very slightly (I don’t know why — bad pan?) but they were delicious anyway. I brought them into school and had almost every teacher at my school tell me they were delicious. Although they all thought of them as brownies. Weird.

2. Sandwich: freshly-sliced chorizo iberico, brie, and tomatoes. This is what I’m eating right now. It’s delicious. I kind of got sick of chorizo, but then I realized that the solution was to on occasion buy good chorizo and to avoid the cheaper supermarket-bought stuff. So I went today on my way home from work to the butcher, and got them to slice me some. It’s not cheap, but it’s quite a bit better. Less gross-and-fatty, for one thing. Not as spicy, though — probably I should ask for a spicier version next time. But yes, chorizo goes well with brie.

3. Dulce de leche. I used, as ever, a slight modification of thekitchn.com‘s recipe for dulce de leche. It’s quite good, by my standards. For whatever reasons, it doesn’t come out as well here — not using a good pot, since we only have a bad one, is my main excuse — it just never thickens all the way. Oh, also the fact that I don’t know how much baking soda I’m using, since I don’t have measuring spoons. (Should bring some back from the States with me…) But delicious nonetheless. Tasted right this time.

To redux the recipe (and misuse that word):

  • 1 quart of milk
  • 1 cup of sugar
  • 1/2 tsp. baking soda (dissolved in 1 Tbsp water)

You bring the milk & sugar to a simmer, add the sodium bicarbonate when the pan’s off the heat, and then simmer for an hour-and-a-half or so until it’s the right color and the right thickness. The baking soda thickens the mixture; the milk slowly browns (Maillard reaction!), and eventually it looks like caramel, and tastes even better. Yep.

4. Ginger snaps. I used a recipe from the Homesick Texan, another foodblog I really like, but honestly wasn’t so impressed. I mean, I like her recipes; I’ve used her quite often actually. But I dunno. I found these kind of boring. Also, mine were ginger snaps even though they weren’t supposed to be. I guess I can blame that on the oven, again. I think I’m going to give Clotilde Dusoulier’s recipe a try this weekend, I think. I even bought candied ginger for that purpose, although I’ve found that it’s fucking delicious on its own, and I want to try making it myself.

5. Finally an perhaps most excitingly, I made the recipe from Mark Bittman’s Minimalist column: Pasta with mushrooms, risotto-style. It’s a really good recipe. I altered it quite a bit, as he suggests; I used oyster mushrooms (because that was what I could find — I’m not actually a big fan of them; they’re too spongy) and no chicken, and added in frozen spinach at the last minute. I was going to use some raisins, too, but decided I didn’t want to. I definitely do recommend using the white wine, though: it makes it smell amazing. Then again, cheap white wine is really cheap here. Anyway, I was a big fan. I had it for dinner for two nights, and for one day’s lunch.

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8 December 2009

some thoughts on Dutch food

Posted by admin @ 10:09 am    categories: Foodtraveling

Amsterdam-canal

So this weekend was a long weekend here in Spain, because today is the Feast of the Immaculate Conception. I know; I’d never really heard of it either. But apparently it’s a national holiday here. (To be fair, a lot of the kids at my school knew they got the day off but didn’t know what for.) Anyway, I went to Amsterdam to visit my friend Dan, from Haverford, who’s doing a Fulbright research project in a small town called Groningen in the northern Netherlands.

(Netherlands side-note: Nether-land, low-lands — that’s what we call the country today. They call it Nederland, which I assume means the same thing. In French and Spanish, it’s the same idea; Pays Bas, Paises Bajos. Except not really, in Spanish. I mean, they can say that, but they tend to just call it Holanda and call the language there (Dutch, in English) Holandés or even Flamenco (Flemish). Which seems odd to me since neither is really correct — the language is correctly Neerlandés. Then again, we still sometimes say Holland to describe the country, which is not quite correct, since Holland is only part of the country. (The west-and-south.) It includes most of the big cities, though.)

Anyway, yes. Dutch is a weird language — a little like German, which I also don’t speak, but unique nonetheless. Interestingly, I can hear conversations in Dutch and think for a few moments that it’s English — similar intonations, I guess? But it does sound different, of course: consider the name of Dan’s city. It’s not pronounced Grow-nin-gen, not the way we would say it. Dan explained that when he first got here he would ask English-speakers something about it, and they wouldn’t know what he was talking about. The pronunciation can be heard here. The g is a soft-k, maybe, and the r is very slightly rolled. Not really sounds we have in English. Of course, most of the Dutch speak fluent English. I definitely met a number of people in stores and the like who spoke perfect English — most of them with an American accent — that could’ve convinced me they were foreigners except for their speaking Dutch with their co-workers. Even the people with bad English speak it in a way that’s easy to understand, for the most part, I think since the sounds of the languages are quite similar.

Right, so we’re three paragraphs in and I have yet to mention food. Well. I was in Amsterdam for three full days. In that time, I managed to eat some Dutch food, and a lot of Asian food. We also managed to get good Belgian beer (oh man, a fantastic Tripel ale, a Gouden Carolus — at a cool bar called Gollem, Raamsteeg 4), and see several museums: the Van Gogh museum (the gh in Gogh is pronounced with that soft k, again, which I did know), which wasn’t amazing but wasn’t bad; the Rijksmuseum, which was kind of not as impressive as I would’ve liked (it’s been undergoing rennovations for a long while now, although honestly I think I was just expecting some amazing portraiture and some cool landscapes; there were landscapes but I mean, all the good Bosch paintings are elsewhere, and I mean the Brueghel clan are almost unilaterally displayed elsewhere), although it has some nice Rembrandts and a Vermeer (Girl with a Pearl Earring is in the Hague, though); the Tropenmuseum, or Museum of the Tropics, essentially a cultural anthropology museum with collections of things from old Dutch colonies, and a kind of intriguing exhibit about Surinam and the “Maroons” there, which I knew very little about, as well as this modern art exhibition of work by this guy Henri Dono; the Heinekein “museum”, which was essentially a tour of an old Heinekein factory that gave us free beer but honestly wasn’t really worth it; and finally the church — De Neuwe Kerk, which had an exhibition about Oman and was also just a kind of cool no-longer-used-as-a-church. We also walked around a lot, explored most of the interlocking landmasses that make up the center city of Amsterdam. Saw this beautiful old ship-related building, wandered through the Red Light District and saw the Old Church there, walked through two markets.

Which actually brings me finally to the original point: Dan’s not a big Dutch-speaker, but he’s been into exploring Dutch foods, at least to the point that he knew what was going on when we went to the open-air street markets. Now, street markets in Madrid aren’t really food places, and even in Argentina most of the food sold in them was prepared foods, but street markets in the Netherlands seem to be about half food and half other-things. So besides prepared foods, they have vegetable stands, butcher’s stands, poultry stands, fish stands, and so forth. Some have significantly different prices, it seems. We went to two, although the second was almost entirely closed by the time we got there — one was the Albert Cuypmarkt, and the other was the Dappermarkt, both in the South. Things we ate at the markets:

1. Fresh stroopwafel, sort of like the cones of dulce de leche they sell in Argentina, but more like caramel and less sweet.
2. Hollandse Nieuwe, or soused herring, a sandwhich (so technically Broodje Haring) with cold stewed herring, onions, and pickels. Very strange, and with this weird gelatinous texture, but not bad at all.
3. A pastry filled with almond paste, which was possibly called Banketstaaf (according to google, that might be it). Interesting but not wonderful.
4. Apple pastries. No clue what they’re called, although surely the word is appel in dutch. But they were basic, delicious sweet pastries filled with apples and goo.
5. We bought fresh whole mackerel, and fried it in a pan at our hostel, with rice and asparagus on the side, and some store-bought garlic-pepper sauce. It was actually very good. Dan did the mackerel, I did the sides. Weird for me to eat from a whole fish, but still.

All of those things are typical Dutch foods, understand. We also had Dutch pancakes, called Pannekoeken, which honestly are more like a cross between pancakes and crepes than either one. See? Those we got in a restaurant on Sunday afternoon, for lunch — mine came with bacon and apple slices. I was interested by the fact that both the apples here and those in the pastries are cored and then sliced down the center, rather than quartered first — you end up with apple rings, yes?

Anyway, we also ate some good Asian food:

1. Indonesian. On Friday night, we went out to eat at this place called Coffee & Jazz (Utrechtsestraat 113), which our guide book claimed was cheap. It wasn’t, not really, but we ate a full meal that was mighty delicious. There were five tables, and one cook/waiter/owner, who clearly loved the fact that he’s labeled as eccentric (he had print-outs of reviews that called him such, on the table) and made us saté, and then two chicken dishes with veggies and served on quite good rice with toasted coconut. Definitely the best meal we had.
2. Surinamese. Okay, sort of. It was a Surinamese/Chinese/(Indonesian) restaurant (Kam Yin, Warmoestraat 8) in the north of the Red Light District, before it really starts, and it was super-cheap and pretty good — I had Surinamese roti, which I quite liked. I know Surinam isn’t in Asia (it’s next to Guinea), but for whatever reason the food was pretty damn Asian. As it says on wikipedia, “In Suriname roti refers mainly to roti dahlpuri or roti aloopuri. It is most often eaten with chicken curry. Roti can also refer to a dish of stuffed and spiced roti wraps. Due to mass emigration of Surinam Hindustani in the 1970s, roti became a popular take-out dish in The Netherlands. It usually includes chicken curry, potatoes, boiled eggs and various vegetables, most notably the kousenband or yardlong bean. Another variation includes shrimp and aubergine. It is custom to eat the dish by hand.”

Right, so there we go. My trip to Amsterdam, as though it were a food vacation. I need to do some more food-explorations of Madrid. Jeez.

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1 December 2009

story-telling

Posted by admin @ 16:13 pm    categories: Spainteachingwriting

So as some of you may now, I am really into story-telling. By which I don’t just mean that I like to tell stories. My junior year, I led a seminar on folklore and story-telling; I wrote about it for my English thesis. (My psychology thesis wasn’t about it at all. I think narrative identity theories are interesting, but they’re not where my research interests lie — yea?)

So the other day my friend Rebecca mentioned that she’d been doing story-telling things with her students (here in Madrid), and she talked about it a bit more in an email to me. Now, her students are a lot more advanced than mine, and she’s doubtless a better teacher than I am, but I nonetheless decided that bringing stories into classes was probably something I could do.

Last week, I did basic (fake) mad libs with them. It was actually hard — not because they couldn’t understand the story, but because they didn’t get the task. I think I’ll give it another try in a bit, and see how it goes. (By “didn’t get it,” I mean that they picked easy words, instead of fun/funny words — mad libs don’t work with “table,” “walk,” and “tall” nearly so well as they work with “space ship,” “punch,” and “flabbergasted.” Obviously the vocabulary of these kids is a limiting factor, but still.)

This week, however, I had some of my kids write stories. I did a super-basic brainstorming activity — they picked ten or so “interesting” words and then had to write a story using three of them. In one class, for example, this was their word-list: lightning, alien, wolf, bear, beer, bus, bowling alley, skating, orange, jupiter, glove. Now, this was fifth-graders, mostly. And these kids don’t have a very high level of English. I can’t really place any of these kids at a level — sometimes they seem to understand perfectly, and sometimes not at all — but I think they’re probably around where I was in fifth grade, with Spanish. Which is to say: pretty bad. A lot of their problems stemmed not even from language, though, but from just being lazy — most of the stories they wrote didn’t make any sense because they just tried to cram the words together instead of telling a story.

Here’s one of the best stories, by a kid named Guillermo. I’ve corrected his grammatical and spelling mistakes.

The Magic Bowling Alley.

I am in the bowling alley and I see a magic bowling pin. I am amazed. This is a magic pin! I run to there. Oh no! It is very fast. And soon it disappears. I try to follow it. But I lose track of it. One day, I will catch the magic pin.

Even here, the story is ridiculous and nonsensical. But it’s creative and kind of fun. Here’s one of the ones that makes almost no sense:

The alien is orange. It comes to the city, rides the bus, sees a bear, and drinks a beer in its space ship. It arrives at Jupiter.

Even that is better than this (again, as before, I’ve corrected mistakes where I can):

Suddenly I. Between lightning. Suddenly aliens and I ride a bus. Suddenly orange aliens appear, and burst (?) to everyone and travel to Jupiter.

(I think this kid wasn’t listening when I explained what “suddenly” meant.)

I also did this exercise with some of my older students, who are between 14 and 17, I’d say. They had less fun with it, maybe, but they seemed to enjoy it somewhat nonetheless, and some of them wrote stories that, while still short, were kind of fun. (Their word list also began with lightning — that was my word — and was almost entirely made up of words I gave them, because they don’t like to talk.) Here’s one I thought was funny (by Victor):

One day, wild lightning attacked a house. Inside there was a young man, smoking and drinking vodka. He wasn’t paying attention and he burned himself. He tried to escape the lightning to ask for help, but no one saw him, so he died. The end.

I’m interested by how writing tasks some of these students a lot more than others — for some of them, they write a few words in English and it takes forever. For others, they can write a lot — not necessarily well — and just keep on doing so. None of them really had a good story, or even the start to one. Maybe we’ll work on this.

Anyway, I had fun with these. I think I’ll do it again. I have lots of writing exercises sitting somewhere in my head.

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