St. Barthelemy: The Return

We last visited St. Barthelemy in December 2000/January 2001, when Jeet had just bought the property on Gouverneur Bay and threw a big New Year’s Eve party which reassembled most of the folks from the previous year’s Millenium Party in France. There wasn’t room for everyone at his place, so we fanned out across the island. I chose the cheapest hotel I could find, and that was still well out of my usual price range.

Before about 1997, I had never given much thought to an island vacation. My ideal holiday was to travel someplace such as India, where I had lots to see and/or old friends to meet. As an adult, I’m not a beachy type, though much of my childhood in Thailand was spent in the pool or the Gulf of Siam. Nowadays I don’t like swimming because I can’t see without my glasses, and I’ve learned that it’s not wise to let my fair skin burn.

But sometime during the dot-com boom, when I had been traveling from Italy to California four times a year for work, a lying-on-the-beach kind of vacation began to look appealing. Our first stab at it was Martinique, where we found plenty to do, but also spent a lot of time lounging and being served rum drinks, watching Ross splash in the pool with some French kids her age (who christened her “the Italian mermaid”).

We next went to Saint Maarten, where there was even less to do (though lots of good food to eat), and we enjoyed not doing it.

We spent Christmas of 2000 in Saint Maarten again, this time staying at the nudist beach, on our way to St. Barth’s. Liv Tyler and Puff Daddy tried and failed to crash the party, but it was thrown open to the public for the second set of music by the Afro-Cuban All Stars, and it seemed that the entire population of the island arrived, causing a historic traffic jam.

Since then, I hadn’t had opportunity nor great interest in returning to the Caribbean, but Jeet’s invitation came at exactly the right moment. I’d been planning to spend Thanksgiving in Austin with Ross, knowing I’d be exhausted after a very intense month of work for Sun. An island vacation isn’t quite the extravagance it seems when all you have to pay is the airfare – we were invited to stay at Gouverneur Bay. Along with as many other people as will fit; Jeet likes to surround himself with friends. (So do I, for that matter, though I don’t have quite as tempting a place to invite them to.)

It’s taking me some time to wind down (especially with a large layoff at Sun looming on the horizon), but this place is amazing. I hope eventually to remember how to relax. Let’s see, 11:48 am… a little early to get into the vanilla rum…

Sun’s SC08 Student Party

The SuperComputing conference every year attracts computer science students from all over the world who participate in various ways: as volunteers, as competitors in things like the Cluster Challenge, as part of SC’s Education Program, and in a Broader Engagement initiative, run by Livermore Labs’ Computing Applications & Research Department. It’s a large and fascinating group, comprising students and educators from all over the world: China, India, Nigeria, Italy…

We wanted to give these students – current and future HPC developers – an introduction to Sun and our OpenSolaris HPC software developers’ stack. But they’re already working hard this week, so we didn’t want to lecture them. Instead, we threw a party!

The Glamorous Life

I’ve been told that some of my colleagues envy my job. I admit that it’s a lot of fun – and, when asked what I do, I focus on the positives – but right now I’m mostly tired. This month is  the most intense I’ve yet had with Sun. Here’s what it’s looked like so far:

Oct 23: Flew to Minneapolis.

Oct 24, 27, 28: Filmed interviews with the SAM-QFS team at Sun’s Eagan, MN office.

Oct 29: Flew back to Denver, straight into meetings and more office time.

Nov 1-6: Filmed parts of Sun’s Data Management Ambassadors’ conference, fortunately being held near my “home base” office in Broomfield. Especially fortunate because I still had a lot to do organizing the SC08 Student party. Worked long office hours when I wasn’t behind a camera in a hotel conference room. (At least this particular conference room had huge windows, so I didn’t feel like I was in a cave all day.) When I was behind the camera, I was also usually doing something on my laptop, such as running the October stats on blogs and community websites.

Nov 8: Flew to San Diego.

Nov 9: Much-needed day off (it was a Sunday!), went to the zoo. Spent much of the evening on email, trying to finalize details for a blogging contest to be held around an important product launch the next day. Having received no word on a decision by 10:30 pm, I went to sleep.

Nov 10: Woke up and checked email again at 12:30 am, nothing. 5:30 am, still nothing, so I went ahead and mailed it, because the contest began at 6 am Pacific Time. Woke up at 7 to film an all-day ZFS Workshop at LISA.

Nov 11: Flew to Las Vegas for Sun’s Customer Engineering Conference. Lunch with Barton, toured the CEC show floor, hung out and had dinner with my OpenSolaris buds, declined to go to a late show with them, went back to my hotel room, watched House.

Nov 12: Filmed an HPC track that took most of the day, plus one other presentation. In the evening, participated in a Birds-of-a-Feather session on blogging. Disagreement was, er, lively.

Nov 13: After a very bad night’s sleep (my room at Caesar’s was right on top of a disco), got up at 4 am to catch a 6:22 am flight to San Francisco. Lynn picked me up, already dialed in to a staff meeting. In the afternoon, moderated the chat as Lynn’s presentation to Forum 2.0 was streamed online. Had a few ideas about how to do the moderator’s job better, will be writing about those later. In the evening Lynn and I had a meeting with Meena, then went back to our hotel for dinner. Had an extremely hot bath – the cold water didn’t work. At least the bed was very comfortable.

Nov 14: Up early again, interesting news on my iPhone. Hurried to get to Sun’s Menlo Park campus for Lynn’s second Forum presentation, then a dash to the airport for our flight to Austin. Arrived a little before 5, Diana about the same time from Denver, then ran into Matthew at baggage claim. Everyone’s coming to town for SC08. Got our cars, I went to Spankyville, where Ross was preparing dinner for a gang of us.

Nov 15: Up at 8 to catch up on emails and run some party-related errands, then on to film at Sun’s HPC Consortium all afternoon. Ended the day filming an interview with Dr. Jim Leylek. Had a quiet dinner with Dominic, went home and to sleep.

Nov 16: Up early again for the Consortium – first speaker of the day was Andy Bechtolsheim, so sleeping in was not an option! Left early (Peter took over the camera) so I could go help set up the venue for the party. More running around to pick up a tank of helium for the balloons and move our student helpers to the venue. Busy with preparations and then the party (which I think we can count as a success) until about midnight, went home and collapsed.

Nov 17: Woke up at 6:30, my brain immediately whirring madly through all the things I needed to do, though my body emphatically did not want to get out of bed. Made it back to the Consortium by 10 am to continue filming. Left again at 1:30 to go see Ross’ new home, have lunch, return the helium tank, and dash out again to film the opening of the SC08 show floor.

I hope to survive until Saturday, when I leave for warmer climes and something resembling a vacation. I should note that this month has been equally intense for practically everybody at Sun. We’re all looking and feeling a little ragged around the edges by now.

above: I did get to sit down long enough to have a caricature drawn at the OpenStorage Summit

Deirdré Straughan on Italy, India, the Internet, the world, and now Australia