Greenland: A First Glimpse of Life Above the Circle
We landed in Greenland’s biggest airport, in Kangerlussuaq, above the Arctic circle, and stepped onto the tarmac. Inside the small airport, four youths stood in a row, as if waiting for us, they had features of eskimoes, the high cheekbones and Asian eyes. We had a late dinner of reindeer, […]
Welch Brings Something More to the Corner Office
Waiting in the terminal for our Air Greenland flight, a charter today but next May will be a twice-weekly regular service from Baltimore. I had time to read the NY Time’s profile of Jack Welch and his wife Suzy. Busy busy, they say, doing speeches for $150,000 a pop. But […]
Greenland Bound–What Do I Pack?
I hit the road in about 90 minutes. Last minute packing, don’t forget the Ipod, recharge the batteries on the camera, bring more socks. Then go downstairs and put in more laundry in case I didn’t bring enough…but how do you pack for a trip to GREENLAND? This is one […]
What? Another TV News Appearance for the Cafe
What a life! I am so excited at the pace of what happens to me and the people around me! I went on the radio yesterday and a photographer called me, she has photos of Oaxaca and wants to show them in the cafe. Then today, as I await my […]
Tagging Takes a Bit But Helps Fellow Bloggers
Tagging. I love the concept. The idea is to identify who tagged you on his or her blog (that would be my associate editor Stephen Hartshorne). Then say eight things about yourself. Here goes * I once used to work from 11 pm until 7 am in a toothbrush factory. […]
Cloudware is the New New in Computing
George Gilder is a big thinker, he wrote a very long piece in the recent issue of Wired about Cloudware, or the use of remote datacenters, instead of desktops, on which to store data and where software is net-based instead of on hard drives. We get a glimpse of massive data centers that Google […]
MySpace Filters Music to Purge Copyright Stealers
Music is an incredibly integral part of the MySpace experience, and a high percentage of profile pages feature popular songs. Digital Music News reported today about the site’s new effort in getting rid of copyright problems. “Most of those tracks are copyrighted, and streamed without permission. Tackling the thorny issue, […]
What WILL You Be?
Today is Halloween. There was a time in my life when that was terrifically important, it was such a big deal with the kids and our friends who would trick or treat with us, and all of the hoopla and mystery over the question: What Will You Be? I remember […]
Talk Radio in Northampton today at 9:30 am
Up early today for a busy day. I called editor Tom Vannah of the Valley Advocate yesterday. While I was focused on getting him the photos he needed for a feature story about Eastern Turkey, his mind was on the radio. He’s hosting Bill Dwight’s show on WHMP-AM, weekday mornings, and […]
Empty Wal-Mart Hulks Attract Vagrants and Vandals
Al Norman is a rabblerouser who Wal-Mart hates. He cataloged some interesting information about the world’s largest retailer on his “Sprawl-busters” blog. “As of February 1, 2002, Wal-Mart had 3,190 stores in the United States, including discount stores, supercenters, warehouse clubs, and neighborhood markets. But that’s not the whole inventory. […]
A Men’s Weekend
This was a Men’s Weekend, and my Monday Morning Recap looks back fondly. I began on Friday night with my pal Joe, we took a tour of his new radio station offices and then skipped over to Sierra Grille, on Pearl St. in Northampton. The proprietor, O’Brien, has a menu […]
Air Greenland’s Proud Steed
It’s true…there really is an Air Greenland, and they’re taking us to the world’s biggest island next Thursday. I got this photo in the mail, I think this might be their only plane. But a noble A330 it is, and I can’t wait to join my pal Shoul in this […]
The Rail Trail in the News: Beaver Bummer
As the rain pours down I am sitting in the cafe window seat, enjoying the tunes of James Hunter and reading Nick Grabbe’s story in the Daily Hampshire Gazette about the Norwottuck rail trail and beavers. These furry rodents are destroying the path, their dams are causing water to flood […]
It’s the Last Month that Costs the Most
So many interesting and intelligent people are regulars at the cafe. It is a pleasure to know them and to provide them with their sustaining coffee and bagels. Today one of our regular customers, Greg, stopped by and we began to chat about his life. He said he used to […]
A Sales Seminar on the Street
We had another visit from our friend Helen, who sells High Lawn Farms milk. I’ve become quite a fan of this gentle and friendly woman, and I have passed along many leads to her, other businesses whom I think might want to sell her milk. I love helping her because […]
The Piano Player is Ten in Costco
I shot down to Costco this afternoon to get some supplies for the cafe. Inside the store, there was a display model electric grand piano, and on its bench sat a young man in a navy blue sweater. He cocked his head to one side, and then began to play. […]
Marina HAS to be Our Intern
We’ve got another new intern as a result of the fair we attended yesterday at the UMass Fine Arts Center. There were many companies represented, though most of them were small software or other computer-related businesses without the appeal of travel, writing and the web. In that way we stood […]
Interns at GoNOMAD Leave with Good Feelings
I am getting ready to man a booth at an internship fair at UMass on Tuesday night, organized by the folks at Hidden Tech. This is a great group of people who mostly work at home, “hidden” in their home offices, and this fair at the University is a way […]
