Tablet UML News


News and commentary (and whatever else catches my eye)
from Martin L. Shoemaker, author of Tablet UML
and UML and Tablet PC instructor for The Richard Hale Shaw Group

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

With a little help for my friends
Since I know some people who maybe could use it, I thought I would share some info from my leads folder. I can't promise which of these have openings, but some of them will.

Kalamazoo Area Tech Job Resources





Battle Creek Area Tech Job Resources





I have other leads for other areas. Let me know if you need them.

Friday, June 8, 2007

Cheops' Law
Nothing ever gets built on schedule or within budget.

But if you're patient and hard working -- and maybe a little insane -- it gets built.

For the team at my current contract, today was that day. And a very good day it is.
Posted in Personal by Martin L. Shoemaker on Friday June 8, 2007 at 12:24pm. 0 Comments 0 Trackbacks

Monday, June 4, 2007

6 miles from my current contract?
I am so there!

"I've Got a Golden Ticket!" Update: "Because you were a member and supporter of the Michigan Space & Science Center in Jackson, I would like to extend an invitation for you to join us for the member's 'pre-opening' event at the new Michigan Space Science Center at the Air Zoo. This will be taking place 11:00 am to 7:00 pm on Firday, June 8th in the Air Zoo's East Campus building."

Monday, May 21, 2007

A punch in the gut
That's what this felt like to me:



I've never seen the Cutty Sark. Perhaps now I never will. But I've loved that ship for over 30 years. In middle school, I took a modeling class. I built a model of the Cutty Sark. Mom did the rigging. We did it together, and that makes it special.

If I look closely, I can see how crude my modeling and painting work was (and I doubt I'd do any better now). But if I look from across the room, I see the Sark, full sail, riding the waves. I hear the gulls, and the Captain shouting out orders. I smell the salt spray.

That's our ship, Mom's and mine. I've taken it with me wherever I've lived in all the years since. And I always wanted to see the real thing, but business never took me to London. Now, despite their optimism, I suspect it's gone for good.

But our Cutty Sark still sails.
Posted in News, Personal by Martin L. Shoemaker on Monday May 21, 2007 at 6:12am. 0 Comments 0 Trackbacks

Sunday, April 8, 2007

I'm dreaming of a White Easter...
White Easter

Happy Easter from Michigan!

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Where've you been, Martin?
Now somewhere out there, Epee Bill just fainted in amazement. After nearly a month of no posts, two posts in a row! And now three!

Well, Bill knows that I had a job change. I'm now working 30 miles from home instead of 150. That means I'm sleeping in my own bed in my own home with Sandy and the dogs now, instead of in a hotel three hours away. It also means I'm doing some incredibly fun .NET programming, and generally enjoying myself.

But it also means jumping straight into a crunch deadline, 50+ hours per week project (yeah, like I've seen 50 hours yet). And when I leave work for the night, I have a 30 minute commute, not five minutes. And when I get home, I'm faced with the dark side of life in our wonderful rural locale: dial up.

So blogging opportunities have been light. But I'm about to add a lot more posts...
Posted in Personal by Martin L. Shoemaker on Sunday March 18, 2007 at 1:03am. 1 Comments 0 Trackbacks

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Generosity above and beyond the call!
I am so, so very touched.

My good friend John Hopkins, current president of GANG, is as big a fan of the Apollo program as I am. We can trade Apollo stories all night. And John has been making me envious the last few meetings with tales of Virtual LM: A Pictorial Essay of the Engineering and Construction of the Apollo Lunar Module. I'm too pragmatic: I can never really picture myself as one of the Apollo astronauts. But the engineers of the program, those folks I can empathize with. My favorite episode of From the Earth to the Moon tells the story of the team who built the LMs. Well, this book is full of incredibly detailed design sketches and notes for the LM, as well as stories from the design and construction. And the bonus CD includes lots of photographs of LM test units, as well as operations manuals and checklists for the LM. It's a true delight.

Tonight, after my presentation at GANG, John gave me a copy of Virtual LM. So I wanted to take this opportunity to thank him publicly. This is truly a book I'll treasure.

I'll let you know when the slides and sample code for my presentation are up at the GANG site. I would post them on my site tonight; but I've got something else to occupy my time right now, thank you very much. (And thank John very much!)

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Job interview advice for programmers
When you explain to the interviewer at the new company that you're looking to work with new technology because the system at your current company is so well architected that there's just no reason for them to switch from the old technology, it always helps when the interviewer turns out to be the former architect for the current company.

It's a small world, after all...
It's a small world, after all...
It's a small world, after all...
It's a small, small world...

Monday, December 25, 2006

Homage
Note: I bumped this to the top, because I got the film from Sandy for Christmas. Merry Christmas, to all! And to all, a good night!

Whoa...

Wow...

Hahahaha...

Yes!!!

Yeehaaa!

Whoa...

Those are a few of the spur-of-the-moment thoughts I recall from the time I just spent watching Superman Returns in IMAX 3D.

And just in case I forgot: Whoa...

OK, this review is going to wander a bit. And there may be spoilers. Just so you can't say you weren't warned.

[Oh, no, Mommy. When Martin tells us he's gonna wander, that means it's gonna be real long. I know, dear. But if he wants to stay at Kinko's until after midnight writing a silly movie review, getting eaten up by mosquitos, how are we going to stop him? I'll bet if Superman were here, he could stop 'im. I don't know if even Superman's that powerful, dear. Once Martin starts making up conversations with imaginary characters, he's pretty much past the point of no return.]

Just so you know where I'm coming from here: Superman is my fav'rit. (And if you don't get the reference there, then you just haven't been reading enough Superman.) Oh, I've been teased away by lots of other, newer superheroes over the years; and I enjoy them all: Batman, Spider-Man, Captain Marvel (the original, please), Metamorpho, Green Lantern (every one of them, even Kyle), Aquaman, Wonder Woman, Supergirl, the Legion of Super-Heroes, Infinity Inc., Blue Devil, 'Mazing Man (for the truly discerning comics fan), the Flash, the Fantastic Four, the New Gods, the Phantom Stranger, the Outsiders, Black Lightning, Luke Cage... Plain and simple, I love mainstream superhero comics. I know, it's corny and old fashioned. I know, anime or indies are what all the cool kids read. (Actually, I like a lot of indies, too. Anime? Eh.) I know, grown ups aren't supposed to read comic books. And I just. Don't. Care. Make fun of me all you want. I'm sure I would find your hobbies to be just hilarious, too, but I'm too polite to point that out.

But of them all, Superman is the one I've read most consistently. While I can't say for certain, I'm guessing I read my first Superman comic roughly 40 years ago. Well, OK, 39 years ago: with the help of indulgent parents and big brothers, I taught myself to read at age 4; and I gotta believe one of the first things I read was a Superman comic. See, one of those brothers bought lots of comics, and so they were always there at hand. And for not being a big comic fan today, he bought some amazing classics: the first issues of Kirby's New Gods and Forever People, half of the Kirby Jimmy Olsen issues, the last three issues of O'Neill/Adams's Green Lantern/Green Arrow (the phrase "Send me a bill" still sends a chill up my spine), "Spider-Man: No More", and a good chunk of the "Kryptonite: No More"/Sandman Superman saga. Brother Joe, if you had kept those in mint condition, they would be worth some money today. But instead, you let little brother and later little sister read them. Thank you. And again: thank you.

[Mommy, is Martin ever going to write about the movie? Shh. Be patient, dear. He thinks he is writing about the movie.]

And so I've been reading Superman all my life; but in a sense, I've been reading him nearly twice that long. Over the years, I've gotten to read a lot of the historical Superman tales. I'm keeping up with the modern Superman tales. And I've also watched the Superman cartoons, from the Fleischer classics to the 70s not-so-classics to the Super-Friends to the modern cartoons. I've also watched Lois & Clark. Thanks to Sandy, I'm getting to see the old George Reeves episodes that they never seemed to rerun in our area when I was growing up.

But for me, the Superman will always be the Superman of the 70s. Part Kirby, part O'Neill, to be sure; but in larger part, the Superman of the 70s was the work of two gentlemen. Carey Bates was one. But the other, and my fav'rit, was Elliot S! Maggin. (The "S!" is because comics scripters of the day tended to go overboard with exclamation points, so Mr. Maggin felt it was an obligation.) But what made me recognize his name was not his comics. At the time, I was fairly ignorant of who was creating the comics. No, I became his fan after reading his first Superman novel, Superman: Last Son of Krypton. And I became a permanent fan with his next book, Superman: Miracle Monday. No, they're not in print any more. (If you ask nicely, Mr. Maggin may explain why. Wear a spittle shield.) Yes, as a matter of fact, I do own two copies of each. No, you may not have my spare copies. Those are for loaning out to close friends and cherished family members, so that if perchance the borrower loses them, I'll still have my originals.

Those two books, published as tie-ins to the first two Chistopher Reeve movies, are in my opinion the two best Superman stories ever. Period. (The third best happens to be Kingdom Come, the novelization of Mark Waid's ground-breaking story of Earth after Superman gave up The Never-Ending Struggle. When Mr. Waid knew a novelization was planned, he knew just who he wanted to write it; and when his chosen author balked, he decided to sway the author by hook or by crook. And so, the very last page of the comic series has this note: "Dedicated to Elliott S! Maggin." So mayhaps I'm not the only one who thinks Mr. Maggin is his fav'rit.)

[Mommy, I was really bad today. Could you send me to my room? Not yet, dear. I think there's a point coming soon.]

And what made these books so much the definition of the character was a bit of Kryptonian philosophy Mr. Maggin dreamed up: There is a right and a wrong in the universe, and the distinction is not very hard to make. And that right there defines Superman at his best. It defines his biggest weakness: no, not kryptonite, but rather a moral blindspot that makes him simply unable to imagine that anyone would do anything but the right thing, and just as much as they are able. He cannot see the world from a criminal's perspective, because it just isn't in him to do so, so criminals can often surprise him. And this philosophy also defines his greatest strength: by always doing what's right no matter what the cost to himself, he inspires the rest of us to try just a little harder. It's not the Super that counts, it's the Man. (We can argue later about whether that Kryptonian philosophy is just a little too simplistic. In the real world, sometimes the best you can do is to choose the least wrong.)

And the fourth and fifth-best Superman stories ever, in my opinion, were the first two Christopher Reeve films. I have never heard a theater crowd explode like they did at "General. Would you care to step outside?" I'm still getting the chills here, just typing that line. Yes, I would have much preferred if they had filmed Mr. Maggin's books instead; but honestly, those were just a little too steeped in DC Universe lore to make good movies for the general public, I think. Even with the too-gimmicky ending in Superman II (come on, where did those powers come from?), those two films were simply the best Superman stories put to film. (Note: were.)

And before you go see Superman Returns, I stongly recommend that you go rent Superman I and II. Let's just ignore III and IV for this discussion, OK? And especially Supergirl. For the purposes of this film, those don't exist. But this film is very much a sequel to Superman II. Not juat "inspired by": it follows directly on the events of the second film.

But beyond sequel, it's an homage to the Christopher Reeve Superman films. And somewhere along the way, I started to see it as an homage to Elliot S! Maggin as well. And without giving too much away, it's an homage to fathers as well.

And one more thing: while it's truly respectful of the Christopher Reeve films, it's better. I expected a lot of things from this film; but I didn't expect to be drying my eyes as I left the theater.

[Yay! He's finally writing about the movie! Hush, dear. You might distract him, just when he's found the point.]

This film starts before it starts: an opening text frame tells how Superman learned that astronomers had found remnants of Krypton, and he left Earth to investigate. This all took place shortly after Superman II. Five years have elapsed. We never really learn much about what he found out there, other than that Krypton really is gone.

But what he finds when he comes back, now there's the story! His mother is still alive, and welcomes him back. (His father died near the start of Superman I.) The Daily Planet is mostly unchanged, except for one vital difference: Lois Lane. She has changed dramatically. She's engaged to Perry White's nephew (Richard), she's a single mother of a rather weak and asthmatic son (Jason), and she has won a Pulitzer — for an editorial entitled, "Why Earth Doesn't Need a Superman". She seems to have moved on; and with that one change, everything in Superman's life is changed, even though nothing else has.

Yes, folks, this is a relationship movie. Oh, it's a superhero movie — and a very cool one at that, especially with the IMAX 3D (selected scenes are in 3D, and they flash glasses on the screen to let you know when to put yours on) — but it's really about Superman's two most important relationships: with Lois, and with his birth father, Jor-El. Even though Jor-El barely puts in an appearance, Superman spends most of the movie trying to live up to his father's legacy. And in the end, he finds that legacy has some mighty big shoes to fill, shoes he never expected. (I won't spoil the ending, even though the "surprise" actually happens about two-thirds of the way through the film. And it wasn't much of a surprise to me, since I guessed it six months before I saw the film.) When he's not trying to live up to the legacy, he's trying to understand how Lois was so hurt by his leaving, and to get her to understand why he had no choice: if he had tried to tell her goodbye, he could never have left. But she's too bitter, for some reason, she can't seem to forgive him.

But while Superman struggles to live up to Jor-El's legacy, Lex Luthor corrupts it. Yes, ol' Lex is back, and meaner than ever; and he uses what he learned about Kryptonian technology in Superman II for his latest scheme: to create a new, Kryptonian continent, so that he can get rich as its owner — while he just happens to drown most of the Americas in the process.

And that's just one example where this film is an homage to the first two. In those two films, Lex's grand schemes always revolved around mega land grabs. In this one, he finally succeeds. Well, for a while. We all know Superman will stop him in the end. (And kudos to the filmmakers: I just now realized just how ironic Lex's final scene is.) Here are some other ways in which this film pays homage to the earlier films:

[Mommy, what's an "omaj"? It means "tribute", dear. Remembering someone in a very nice way. Martin's just being pretentious again, because some of his favorite comics are from a company called "Homage Comics".]


  • The opening credits are just about exactly the same design. It was eerie, like I just fell back in time 25 years.

  • While newcomer Brandon Routh doesn't exactly look like Christopher Reeve, he certainly sounds like him. In fact, he sounds like him twice. Mr. Reeve affected two different voices for Superman and for Clark Kent. Mr. Routh nails both of them close enough to make you comfortable that you're watching the same characters. (Noboy else consciously imitates their predecessors; but Superman.Clark was the one who counted.)

  • Physically, Mr. Routh does very well what Mr. Reeve did so perfectly: play Clark Kent in such a way thatyou really believe no one would notice he's Superman.

  • The whole production and art direction is completely modeled on the first two films — especially the Kryptonian technology. The Fortress, the ship, and the all-important crystal are all old friends here.

  • The music is a very nice update of the classic John Williams score.

  • A running sight gag in the first two films was Luthor's baldness and his various wigs. Well, the gag continues in this film. One very tense but funny scene was when Lois and Jason stumble into an unknown bedroom, and Jason laughs at all the wigs. Lois looks at them, and instantly all the other pieces of the puzzle fall into place (but too late).

  • In the first film, Luthor tracks down his first Kryptonite metorite in Addis Abbaba, a city in Ethiopia. In this film, when a meteorite is mysteriously stolen from the museum, the smashed display case includes a sign saying that it came from, yes, Addis Abbaba.

  • And the lines. Ah, classic little lines from the first two films show up here. Only now, they're loaded with additional emotional meaning. "I'm always around, Lois."



And there's a lot more. And then, just in case you missed the homage, there's a line in the end credits: "Dedicated with love to Christopher Reeve and Dana Reeve." For those who didn't hear, after seeing her husband through the years of his paralysis and doing what she could for his legacy after his death, Dana Reeve died this year from cancer. And the filmmakers paid their homage to both of them.

But that's not the only homage in this film. We also got two guest stars from the old Adventures of Superman series: Noel Neill (who played Lois Lane) and Jack Larson (who played Jimmy Olsen). Their parts here were small, but it was still a nice nod to them and their fans.

OK, OK, so it's an homage; but how is it better? Oh, in oh so many ways:


  • The special effects are 30 years better. Superman I was truly ground-breaking for its day. Today, most personal computers can do better effects. Even though everything looks the same in some ways — the Fortress, especially — it all looks better. One tiny example: the explosion of Krypton in Superman I was actually a microscope recording of a histamine cell exploding. In this film, it's a wonderfully detailed CGI rendering. (In 3D, at IMAX theaters!)

  • And wow! What special effects. Now I've said more times than I can recall that special effects in movies aren't that important to me. And as a general rule, they aren't. But come on! This is a superhero film! It has to have larger-than-life action! And this film delivers. The airplane rescue is stupendous. The New Krypton scenes are really creepy. And the crushing of Metropolis — well, I have to save that discussion for just a little bit.

  • The whole thing just looks better. Street scenes in the first two films had the feel of soundstages, even when they weren't. Here, you just know you can actually walk around Metropolis.

  • No offense to Margot Kidder, but Kate Bosworth just looks more like Lois Lane. Also, she got much more mature dialog to work with.

  • And that maturity. That's probably the biggest difference. The first two films had just a touch of camp about them. This film plays it straight.

  • And where this film particularly plays it straight is with Lex Luthor. I love Gene Hackman; but his Lex Luthor had a lot of the buffoon about him. (Rather surprising for Mr. Hackman, really.) Even though Kevin Spacey's Lex Luthor surrounds himself with buffoons, he's really, really scary. And when he tries to be funny, he's even scarier. Think the Joker, and you won't be far off: if he's trying to be funny, it's to distract you from his trying to kill you, or to gloat over having already killed you.

  • And yet there is humor in the film; but it's more subtle, more gentle than in the first two films. Some of it's in-jokes, like the Addis Abbaba meteorite. Some of it's very subtle, like the name of Luthor's ship (you've got to look fast for that one). And some of it's pretty clever, like when a kid with a cell phone gets better shots of Superman than Jimmy can get with his expensive camera. (Don't worry, Jimmy fans, he makes up for it eventually.) None of it's laugh-out-loud funny (although I laughed at the Addis Abbaba sign, as did the similar-in-age guy next to me); but none of it's camp, either. It fits the story more naturally.



OK, OK, OK. You liked it. But how is it an homage to Mr. Maggin?

Well, it may not be. That may just be me reading into it. But I really felt like there was, if not a Maggin homage, then a definite Maggin influence, in at least five ways:


  • First, there's that whole crushing of Metropolis scene. I won't tell you the details, because that would spoil it. But one of Mr. Maggin's specialties in his novels is what I think of as the "Superman is everywhere" chapter. Some criminal plot or some menace comes up, and it has lots of ramifications in lots of places all at once. This is a job for Superman! See, among his many powers, Superman is just a wee bit faster than a speeding bullet. Faster than that, even. So Mr. Maggin tells the story at Superman's rate of perception as he zips from crisis to crisis and handles each in the most appropriate way: disarming a villain here, crashing two villain-laden hang gliders together there, all while using super ventrilloquism to convince another villain that the plan has been called off. Pages and pages of detailed action, all at a leisurely pace for Superman, and all in under 12 seconds for the villains. Prior to this film, I would've called such a scene unfilmable. In fact, I would've predicted exactly what bugged me about some of the fight scenes in Batman Begins: to make the action believably fast, they would have to make it too fast for the viewer to follow. Well, somehow, director Brian Singer defied my expectations. While the crushing of Metropolis isn't quite as involved as one of Mr. Maggin's "Superman is everywhere" chapters, it's pretty involved. There are a lot of menaces in a lot of places, and Superman manages to be everywhere at once, dealing with them. The scene where Superman flies through the city streets but then rolls leisurely over onto his back, so he can look back and vaporize a whole street full of falling debris — priceless! I just looked at that whole section and said, "Wow! That's worthy of Maggin!"

  • In Superman: Miracle Monday, Mr. Maggin has a very poignant scene in which Superman turns up his superhearing and listens — really listens — to the whole Earth at once. And eventually, he hears a kind of symphony; and he hears that he has a part in it. In this film, Superman tells Lois that despite her article on why no one needs a Superman, he can hear all over, and he just keeps hearing people calling for help. It wasn't exactly an echo of Mr. Maggin's scene, but it made me think of that scene.

  • There's a definite element of "There is a right and a wrong..." here. This is a Superman who just has to do what's right, no matter what. To be blunt, Superman gets the stuffing kicked out of him in this film, far more than in Superman II; and yet he just keeps trying, no matter what. It's simply what he has to do.

  • Mr. Maggin had another recurring theme. In fact, he originally wrote it for a writing class; and when he got a lousy grade, he sent it to DC instead, and they bought the script, and they hired him from there. (And now he's teaching writing. Kids, don't give up just because someone tells you you can't succeed, even if it's a teacher. Sometimes teachers are wrong, too. Did you ever see Superman give up? Huh? Huh?) That story, "Must There Be A Superman?" dealt with the possibility that by solving all of our problems, Superman was stunting our growth and making us dependent on him. He learned to let us solve our own problems, stumbling along the way and picking ourselves up and learning in the process; and he just gave a helping hand when the problems were too big for us. Well, that theme came up in this film, in a briefly remembered bit of advice from Jor-El; and in fact, it's Lois and Richard who end up saving Superman at one point. And Superman also steps back at one point to let people solve their own problems. This is straight from Mr. Maggin.



And the last bit of Maggin influence — Well, I want to close with that. So let me just say that this film, while very good, isn't perfect. It's a bit long. The end, especially, drags a bit, and could've been trimmed at least five minutes. And the director relied a little too heavily on slow motion in a couple of places (although one slow-mo scene that I thought dragged on a bit too long was justified in the end with a wince-inducing special effect that was actually kinda cool, if you're not squeamish about eyes). But those are minor quibbles. In most films, I can come up with a dozen quibbles more than that. None of that stopped me from saying toward the end, "OK, when's World's Finest coming?" (For the non-comic fans: World's Finest was a long-running Superman/Batman team-up book. After Batman Begins and this film, it's time for a World's Finest film.)

Back to that last bit of Maggin influence — and again, I'll concede this may be me reading into it. Maybe it's just a coincidence that the theme is so strong in Mr. Maggin's books and in this film, since it is kinda central to the whole Superman mythos. It has to do with fathers. A big element of Mr. Maggin's books was just how much Jor-El loved his son, and how hard he worked to protect him and guide him even though he would be long dead before his son grew up. He left lessons, and he chose protectors, and he chose the best, safest environment he could find for his son. He saw his responsibility to his son as his last, most important duty. And that's pretty much how this film opens; and in subtle ways, that comes up in places throughout the film. And it's how the film ends, as Superman finally fully appreciates just how important those sacrifices were to his father. (And I tried to be oblique, but I probably just ruined the ending for you. Serves you right for being so smart.)

And when I left the theater, I felt — Whoa... I felt — Wow... I felt Hahahaha, and Yes!!! And Yeehaaa! I felt like I was 18 again, seeing this film just after Superman II. I felt awed. I felt invigorated. And a reaction I never expected from a silly superhero film: I miss my fav'rit. I miss my Dad.

[Mommy, Martin sounds sad. Didn't he like the movie? Yes, dear. I think he liked it very, very much. Now goodnight. Sleep tight. Don't let the bedbugs bite.]




Update: Bryce Zabel makes many of the same points. But he uses, like, one-tenth as many words. Bet you wish I'd told you that at the start of the review, huh?

Update 2: Ken Lammers has a very different reaction. (Warning! Major spoilers!) That's OK. I respect that. I don't agree with it, but I respect it. (But, um, dude, if you're going to say that that first action is out of character, then you're going to have to say that the action that led to that action back in Superman II was out of character. It's the same action, really, just cause and effect. And it would never happen in the comics. Movie audiences these days kinda expect it. We can debate the goodness of that expectation, but there it is.)

Update 3: James Hudnall liked it, too, though he thinks there was more room to cut at the end. For those who don't know James, he's a comics writer who has actually written in the Superman series, so I kinda think his opinion has some merit. James also wrote Harsh Realm, which was adapted into a TV series by Chris Carter of X-Files fame. And his book The Psyhco is working its way toward a film version. I first learned of James through his incredible Espers series. And he's a software geek who knows UML. So he's kinda like me, but, umm, cool and all that.

Sunday, December 17, 2006

Hamburger Michigan: The answer, at last!
Way back when, I asked:


So I'm at a loss. Is this what they mean by Hamburger Michigan? I guess I'll have to go back to Montreal to find out. Why have I lived 43 years in Michigan and never even heard of it before now? And why is it called that? That may be one of those rare answers that just isn't to be found on the Web.


Well, I think I've finally found the answer, courtesy of Wikipedia:


A Michigan hot dog or, "Michigan", is a steamed hot dog on a steamed bun topped with a meaty sauce, generally referred to as "Michigan Sauce". The sauce may or may not be tomato-based, depending on where the Michigan is purchased. Michigans can be served with or without chopped onions. If served with onions, the onions can either be buried under the sauce or sprinkled on top of the sauce.

Michigans are a particular favorite in the North Country of New York State, and have been so for many decades. In fact, one of the earliest known advertisements for Michigans appeared in the Friday, May 27, 1927, Plattsburgh Daily Republican [1].

Michigans are also very popular in Montréal and other parts of Québec, where the sauce that is put on them is invariably tomato-based and is often simpy referred to as "spaghetti sauce". Lafleur Restaurants, a Québec fast food chain, is known for its Michigans and poutine.

Oddly enough, "Michigan hot dogs", are never referred to as "Michigans" in Michigan itself, nor anywhere else in the Midwest. A similar food item, the "coney" or "Coney Island dog", is a hot dog topped with onions and either chili or a meatless chili called coney sauce. Conversely, the "Coney Island" is not called as such on Coney Island, or anywhere else in New York State; it's called either a "Michigan" or a "Red Hot." Finally, in southeast Michigan, a "Coney Island" is also a type of fast-food restaurant that primarily sells hot dogs and french fries.


OK, got it: a Michigan dog is called a Coney in Michigan, or a Michigan in Coney. Makes perfect sense:


Although there are many different varieties of Michigan sauce[2] available today, the original Michigan sauce was created by Mr. George Todoroff in Jackson, Michigan. The sauce was originally created to be used as chile sauce. In 1914, Mr. Todoroff took his recipe to Coney Island in Brooklyn New York and opened his first restaurant. However, the hot dog hadn’t arrived on the scene when he first opened his restaurant, so he had to wait until 1916 to make his first famous "Jackson Coney Island" hot dog.

...

According to the second, and more likely story, a couple (Mr. Jack Rabin and his wife) from Plattsburgh went to Coney Island on vacation. They, like everyone else at Coney Island, ate a Jackson Coney Island Hot Dog and fell in love with it. When they came home to Plattsburgh, they recreated the sauce and decided to put it to work. They opened a "Michigan Hot Dog" stand, named Nitzi’s, on Route 9 just outside the city. The name came about because they couldn’t call their sandwich a Jackson Coney Island so they gave it the name of the state from where it was born.


So I think that settles it. Of course, everything in that article discusses Michigan sauce on hot dogs, never on hamburgers. But I think "Hamburger Michigan" may refer to the hamburger in the sauce, not what it's spread on. To wit, here's an ad for Bison Gourmet Meat Sauce from Shop the Adirondacks:


Your healthy replacement for high fat "Hamburger Michigan Sauce"

MADE WITH BISON - NOT HAMBURGER


And note in the picture that the sauce is spread on, yes, a hot dog. So I suspect that, if I ever get back to Montreal and order a Hamburger Michigan, I'm going to find it looks an awful lot like a hot dog.

Of course, as the truly discriminating Michigan hot dog eater knows, there's really only one name for this kind of dog: Yesterdog. (No, they don't have their own web site, as far as I can find. They don't need one. Maybe if business ever drops off, they'll need a web site to drum up more; but as I can't recall a lunch or dinner time when the line wasn't out the door, I don't see that happening yet.)

Saturday, December 9, 2006

Reply hazy, try again
Still exploring. Updates soon, I hope.

Sunday, December 3, 2006

I was wrong...
...in pretty much every detail.

But I loved it!

TNT's showing it again right away, so I'm going to watch again. Review after, if I have time.

Saturday, December 2, 2006

Help me help someone
As some of you may know, I have been named an MVP for Visual Development (C#) by Microsoft. The MVP program is an effort by Microsoft to recognize people in the community who help other people to learn and use Microsoft's technologies. They give us advance information and other perks because they know we're enthusiastic supporters of their products. They hope that their supporting us will help us to build the community of satisfied Microsoft users.

As part of that growth effort, early this year they sent us each three coupons for MSDN Premium Subscriptions, with the instruction that we were to use them to help the community. They gave us no rules or guidelines beyond that. MSDN Premium is a developer suite consisting of pretty much every development tool Microsoft has, plus developer licenses for Office, SQL Server, and every operating system Microsoft publishes. There's lots of other stuff as well. It's everything a developer needs to develop for the MS platforms.

I'm trying to take seriously the commission to use these coupons for the good of the community. I gave my first coupon to a friend of a friend who was out of work, and who wanted to upgrade his skill set. I figured that was a good cause. I gave my second coupon to the West Michigan .NET User Group where I was speaking, so that they could offer it as a door prize to help promote the group. Good .NET groups are a great way to spread .NET programming knowledge.

But I'm still trying to find a home for the final MSDN Premium Subscription before year end; and I really want to make this one count. I would like it to go to a good cause; but I'm not sure what that cause should be, so I'm asking for your help. Maybe you know a way I can use this to help a good cause. Maybe you know a good charity that could use it, or maybe a really deserving person who could use it to get into a development job. When I give this one away, I want to feel like Microsoft and I made a difference in some way.

So if you have a suggestion for a way to put this coupon to good use, please let me know. Either leave a comment, or send an email to MSDN*at*TabletUML*dot*com (address obscured to cut down on spam — you can figure it out). I'll take all suggestions from now until next Friday. Then I'll review them, decide which looks like the best (as judged by me and some trusted friends), and announce the results in the following week.

A lot of people would like this for the free stuff. I understand that. If you're going to suggest I give it to you, I won't ask you not to; but please consider if you're doing so for the free stuff, or because you really have a need for it. I'll listen to your justification; but the coupon will go where I think it will do the most good.

I really hope you can help me here. Thanks!

Sunday, November 12, 2006

Not that there's anything wrong with twins!
In no way should anything in this post be construed as a criticism of twins in general; and by no means do I wish to imply that twins are evil, as a rule. In fact, twins are some of the most delightful people around, especially if the twin in question happens to be the most lovely and patient and understanding and beautiful wife on the planet.


Related Posts (on one page):

  1. Not that there's anything wrong with twins!
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I'm eagerly awaiting this one!
TNT has announced that The Librarian: Return to King Solomon's Mines premiers on Dec. 3 at 8:00 p.m. I loved the first Librarian film, so I've added this one to my appointment calendar.

As a bonus, they've also announced the graphic novel adaptation. Frankly, though, I doubt that any graphic novel can do justice to Noah Wyle's and Bob Newhart's comic genius.

UPDATE: "Don't miss the further adventures of Flynn Carsen, whose latest quest uncovers ancient secrets and those of his own family’s past." Well, that preview makes my prediction a little less prescient (if I'm right); but I'm going to make the prediction anyway, just so I'm on record if I'm right. In the first film, Flynn's mother was a bit on the flighty side, and his father was never seen nor scarcely mentioned. He had been out of the picture for a long time. So my prediction: in the new film, we'll find that she actually knows an awful lot about the Library, because Flynn's absent father was himself a Librarian -- Judson. Bonus prediction: she was in fact Judson's bodyguard; and we'll get to see Olympia Dukakis (or her stunt double) kicking the stuffing out of some baddies.

If I'm wrong, oh, well. But if I'm right, you read it here first!

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Where I've been hanging out
Corridor

The sign says it's the longest continuous corridor in the State of Michigan. I don't know how they would know that; and it's a rather unusual thing to boast about, as tourist attractions go. But this has been my home-during-the-week. (No, not the corridor; one of the rooms off the corridor.)
Random Star Trek observation
So once the salt vampire was on the Enterprise, why did it have to keep killing people? Couldn't it get all the salt it needed from the replicators? Or the food dispensers? Or the blooming kitchen?

Monday, October 9, 2006

My dinner with Andrea
So I was headed back across the state; and I stopped at Wendy's for some dinner. (Their Ultimate Chicken Grill is my favorite there.) And I decided to take a break for a bit, and actually pull over to eat. So I rolled down the windows — it's still nice enough weather to do that in Michigan tonight — pulled out a book, and started to read.

But suddenly, out of the corner of my eye, I saw movement. She ran into the brush when a truck pulled up, but came back when they left:

Andrea

The look on her face said as clear as day: "You gonna finish that chicken sandwich?" So I tore off a chunk of chicken, and tossed it to her. She dug in:

Dig in!

And then I tossed her more, and more.

Keep it coming!

I was going to call her Andre, after the film; but seeing as she's calico, the odds are 3000 to 1 that she's an Andrea.

But eventually, the chicken was gone.

No more?

I tried tossing her some baked potato, but...

If I look offended, I KNOW you'll find more chicken!

Miracle of miracles, she didn't hop in the car and come home with me. But then, I won't be heading home until Friday...

Sunday, October 8, 2006

Sheri and Matt - October 7, 2006
This weekend, we attended the wedding of our niece Sheri and Matt. To keep this blog page loading quickly and so as not to bore non-family readers, I've posted the pictures here.

It was a very nice wedding, except for the fact that Sandy had a horrendous sinus headache and had me take her home before the reception. I always enjoy a reception more with her.

As uncle of the bride, I got handed a most important job: go to her house and let out her dog, who had been home alone all day. Twice. With five dogs at home, I'm practically a professional. It's just too bad that Sandy had that sinus headache. She would've loved that puppy.
Posted in Personal by Martin L. Shoemaker on Sunday October 8, 2006 at 8:55pm. 0 Comments 0 Trackbacks
Pandering to the llama crowd
Here's a llama...

There's a llama...

And another little llama...

Llama, llama, duck.

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Wednesday, October 4, 2006

Congratulations to Josh Holmes!
My good buddy Josh Holmes announced some major news this week: he's joining Microsoft as an Architect Evangelist.

As someone whome he hit up for a reference, I've been waiting a long time to say: Congratulations, Josh!

Update: Revised Josh's URL.

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

Roberta Bernstein Heber
Sorry this is late. Busy day. Work, travel, and fencing. As the cliche goes: life goes on.

But for my Duelist brother and sister Stuart and Amy, whom we miss... For little Rachel, whom we've never gotten to meet; but unlike her grandmother, some day we may... And for the family who made me feel welcome at my first experience with a Jewish wedding (one of the most festive affairs I've ever attended)... I want to remember Roberta Bernstein Heber. Unlike her family, I knew her only for an evening, as the gracious, beaming mother at the reception. But I know her son, and that says the world about her. When the terrorists took her, they struck at the heart of a good family, and of a good friend.

And so this year, I say what I say every year, what I saw on a billboard in the spring of 2002:


Never give up.
Never give in.
Never forget.
Never again.

Saturday, September 9, 2006

Finding your niche
I'm way overdue posting this. Apologies to Geoff.

The world's an imperfect place. You do the best you can. And I think if you take too romanticized a view of the world, you're setting yourself up for disappointment.

But I also believe that, if they're persistent and flexible and willing to work, most people can find their niche: a place where they can do more and be more; and in doing more and being more, be more satisfied with life.

Not everyone has the energy or desire to persist. Not everyone has the flexibility: family or other obligations may be more important than finding that niche. I understand. It's important that you do what you think is right. (For those who aren't willing to work to find their niche, though, I have no sympathy.)

But sometimes, you really find that niche. And this summer, my fellow Duelist Geoff Nostrant reminded me of that.

Geoff has had a rough life, with a lot of ups and downs — and for much of the time I've known him, there were more downs than ups. I know only little bits of his story, and it's not my story to tell. But it always seemed like Geoff was getting knocked down; and though I admired him for getting back up, he never signed up to be a life lesson for the rest of us. And from what little I could see, his troubles weren't self-inflicted, for the most part. Oh, he made his naive, youthful mistakes now and then, and had to deal with them, just like the rest of us. But it seemed like a lot of people who had say in his life were big disappointments.

But there was one way in which I thought Geoff contributed to his own problems: he's a nomad. He doesn't like to tie himself to any place. And to me, Mr. Stability, that seemed like a mistake. Well, we'll see...

Oh, and I should add: what I've admired most about Geoff is his impressive musical talent and skill. And I mean that: talent and skill. He's good, but he works hard to be better. (Personally, I love his classical guitar work, because that's one of my favorite styles; but he leans more toward the electronica.) But even the music seemed to let him down: though he and some friends self-released a couple of fine albums, those were just two in a sea of indie albums. They had their fans, but the music never went as far as they dreamed.

Well, a few years back, Geoff left us on his biggest wanderjahr yet: he got an opportunity to travel to South Korea to teach English. I never knew how he got this opportunity. I understood the appeal: young and free, with an affinity for Asian ladies, and without much keeping him in Michigan. But we worried that he might be going too far away, and get lost.

How wrong we were. Geoff has been back a couple of times, usually for bad family news; but he has also made time for his Duelist friends. And what we've learned is: Geoff has found his niche.

First, he went looking for a job for some spare income. I don't know how it happened, but he got hooked up with Korean TV production. There's a Korean show called "Surprise!" It's a dramatic crime recreation show; and they had a need for someone to play American "heavies". Well, Geoff can do that: although he's a pleasant enough looking fellow, he can furrow his brows, glare, and look kinda menacing. He's also tall, and fit. So he fit the part. And apparently, Korean TV shows don't mind reusing actors (kinda like the same guest stars kept reappearing in different roles way back when on All in the Family).

So next thing you know, Geoff's a Korean TV star. Oh, not a top name, because (like most cultures) their biggest stars are natives; but he has a following. It's hard for his American friends to see; but in Korea, he's foreign and exotic. He's kinda cool, even, especially with all that hair.

And then on top of that, his star status makes him a popular teacher. And also popular with those Asian ladies he likes so much.

And as music technology gets better and cheaper, he can do more and more of his own production. And so he's very popular on the download scene. You can find some of his music here. I know there's a lot more out there, because I downloaded it; but my apologies, I can't figure out how to find it right now. It's well worth looking for. His work is more polished now, and a lot more mature. Check it out. Just don't offer to pay him for it. His music is his art and his release, and he never wants it to become his job.

And one more thing: he's still adrift. Only now I'm recognizing that for him, that's a good thing. I can't share his view, but I see now how important that is to him. He tried to explain how he's never satisfied tying himself to a place, to roots. That's just about the antithesis of my ideal life. But I think I caught a glimpse of what makes Geoff tick, in a quote I found in Volume 5 of The Books of Magic from DC:


"Everywhere...

"You can WANT everywhere, but you can't have it. You have to choose.

"It wasn't EASY, choosing. I should never have asked Kenny which places HE liked best.

"No, I take that back. I wouldn't have missed the stuff he said for anything. I've never HEARD anyone talk about places the way he did. Like they were PEOPLE. People he LOVED.

"Now I know why he never stops moving. It doesn't matter how much he likes where he is. Wherever he is, he's still always missing somewhere else."


And so by traveling half way around the world, Geoff has found a new somewhere else. That's his niche: somewhere else. If he found his niche, that gives me hope that more people can do it.

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

A summer tradition
Once or twice a summer, we get a colorful visitor in the area:

Do NOT start humming that song!

Today was that day. Enjoy!
A stray thought
We are the sum of what we were. We stand at the intersection of where we've been and where we can go.

(Inspired by Scott Kirwin.)

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Random observations from the wedding
Good timing! A week earlier, and the guests would've melted down in the parking lot.




Mostly I don't notice the passage of years. But sometimes, it's unavoidable. Such as when you look at the groom and think, "Hey, this is a much nicer ceremony than his parents had..."




Ladies, I would never try to tell you not to get a tattoo. While I may find it foolish, it's your choice. But when you do, you should start shopping for your wedding dress at the same time, so you can make sure they look good together.




It was good to see the mother of the groom dancing with her ex-husband (the father of the groom) to the same song they danced to at their wedding.

It would even have been kinda sweet, if it hadn't been Van Halen's Running with the Devil.




School librarians and teachers are people, too. They just never show it when you're in school.




Some family trees are way too complicated for me to follow. And I was there watching much of the complication happen, and it's still too complicated for me to follow.




All DJ services are not created equal.




All wedding reception meals are not created equal.

(And if I can find the recipe for that cornbread casserole...)




All weddings are disasters. As long as the bride and groom never notice, you win.




Some people do grow up, but they take a little longer than usual.




I've known the groom since birth, so I was happy to give up a night of gaming to be there for him.

And I was only a little envious of the husband who wasn't there because he was at GenCon instead.




When the doctor says she won't live to see five, ten and thriving is good. Ten and bouncing around on the dance floor with all the other kids is a miracle.




We need a list of wedding reception songs that should simply be retired. I'll start:


  • The Hokey Pokey

  • The Chicken Dance

  • Love Shack

  • The Macarena, and all similar group dance routines






Hey, Mr. DJ, you're not nearly as funny as you think you are. (But the person paying you thinks you are, so that's what counts.)

And what's with all the dopey hats?




Bowing to the inevitable: little metal bells at every table. Much classier than banging the glassware (or the table) with the silverware; and you get to take them home as a memento.




When the librarian says, "You got older, but she didn't," the smart husband answers, "You're right."

And when the wife responds, "It's all makeup. Just add more every year," the smart husband adds, "Don't believe it. She never spends more than 30 seconds on it."

Saturday, August 12, 2006

Best line of THIS week...
...comes from what is rapidly becoming the second-best show on TV:

INTERIM POLICE CHIEF KAREN VICK: Detective O'Hara. Eh, lose the hoop skirt before you hurt someone. Read 'em their rights, and book them.

This comes on right after the best show on TV and right before another instant classic

DR. HOUSE: Yeah. Except in this universe, effect follows cause. I've complained about it, but...

I'll let USA's ad speak for me:


"Friday nights on USA are gotta see TV!" raves TV Guide.

Friday, August 11, 2006

Another beverage review
So following up on this and this, I figure it's a good time to mention the new beverage I just discovered: Bolthouse Farms® Prickly Pear Cactus Lemonade.

Now I love just about any citrus flavor; and lemonade especially suits my tastes. And I was already a fan of Bolthouse's Mango Lemonade. But I wasn't sure about this one: prickly pear cactus? Still, Bolthouse has never let me down, so I decided to try it.

Not to worry. I don't know how prickly pear tastes on its own; but mixed with lemonade, it adds only a slightly sweet and vaguely exotic flavor. It almost reminds me of melon. And the overall result is a somewhat milder taste than the Mango Lemonade, which is good but packs quite a tang. The Mango Lemonade doesn't sit well with me late at night, because it's so strong (and because I can't resist drinking the whole thing regardless). I don't expect that to be a problem with the Prickly Pear Cactus Lemonade.

My judgment: another winner from Bolthouse Farms!

I should mention that I've tried their other two new flavors as well. Cranberry Lemonade is as good as Mango Lemonade; but it's a flavor combination I've had before, so it didn't seem anywhere near as novel as Prickly Pear Cactus Lemonade.

And Perfectly Protein Mocha Cappuccino? Well, it's almost as good as Perfectly Protein Vanilla Chai; and that's saying a lot! If (like me) you like the odor of coffee but can't stand the bitter taste, then Perfectly Protein Mocha Cappuccino is for you. There's no bitter here, and it tastes like coffee smells, only with cocoa and vanilla blended in.

Those Bolthouse Farms folks sure know their juices!

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Yip-yip-yip-aroooooooooo!
I've been hearing for years that we have coyotes in Michigan; and while I don't disbelieve it, I've never seen one. They're pretty rare and reclusive.

But two nights ago, I think I heard some. I was out walking the dogs; and across the street, I heard a strange howling. Yip-yip-yip-aroooooooooo! Yip-yip-yip-aroooooooooo! Drove the dogs nuts, lemme tell ya. But it was kinda cool.

And yes, the moon was clear and bright and full.