Shorts at Work

At AIVIA, the dress code has never been well defined. I mean, sure, I can generally gather what’s acceptable and what’s not, just from observing (and that's what I have done). However, it would be convenient that have that kind of thing in writing.

For instance, as the weather here gets warmer, I was pondering whether I could wear shorts to work. I mean, coworkers and I already wear jeans, t-shirts, and sneakers, so I figured that shorts wouldn’t be too much of a stretch. All the same, I didn’t want to just try it and be on the wrong side of a guess ;).

Luckily, someone happened to answer my question today: Chris (an ASP developer here) wore shorts today. So, that's a good sign. And, if more people than just Chris wear shorts, then maybe I'll give it a try ;). After all, it can get up to 77-78 degrees at my desk in the afternoon (according to the digital thermometer on my desk), so it’d be rather nice to be able to code in shorts.

Also on the subject of shorts, we had some clients over in the office today for some all-day meetings. And, between meetings there were intermissions (is that the right term?), so I met some of them. And, one guy was wearing shorts but with a long-sleeved t-shirt. And.. it just looked odd to me. Of course, tradition is that the middle-step between long-sleeves-and-long-pants and short-sleeves-and-shorts is short-sleeves-and-long-pants. So, it just looked odd to me, as if someone chose to wear mittens on his feet, or something.

After some thought, though, I just couldn’t put my finger on what aspect of his attire was specifically out of place. I mean, from a physics point of view, it makes sense to insulate the vital organs (long sleeves) and go for less leg-clothing than to go straight to short-sleeves while retaining long pants. Still, though, other than the tradition-aspect of it, I can’t really give a rational reason as to why I don’t like long-sleeves-and-shorts. Hmm, maybe it's just me.

X-Men 2 to be Less Boring

According to this week’s Sci-Fi News Wire, Patrick Steward says that X-Men 2 will be less boring:

Professor Charles Xavier's extended exposition in the first movie bored Stewart. “Yes, indeed,“ he said. “That was tedious. But I had a couple of nice scenes with Sir Ian [McKellen, who played Magneto], which bookended the film. I’m happy to say that this screenplay now assumes that everyone knows what’s going on and who we are.

And, maybe I’m in the minority on this one, but I didn't enjoy the first X-Men all that much. Of course, I should have known that it wouldn’t have much action, being that it was only PG-13 :-/.

Also from that issue, Warner Brothers has shifted the release date of The Matrix Reloaded to May 15, 2003, from May 23, 2003. Cool, I wasn't even aware of the original release date ;). At any rate, The Matrix Reloaded currently stands as my most-anticipated movie-release of 2003!

Fried Twinkies

Via this thread on MetaFilter, Christopher Sell was trained as a French chef and has managed a chain of London sushi restaurants, but he’s now earning his acclaim for his fried twinkies.

They actually taste very good. The white vanilla filling inside the Hostess treat infuses into the golden spongecake and lends a surprisingly delicate, banana-like flavor. On the outside, the batter Sell dips the Twinkies in becomes crispy while the inside becomes soft and somewhere between fluffy and pudding-like.

“They come out with a souffle-like quality,” Sell said. [...]

Yeah, that's just about a heart-attack on a plate right there, but maybe a delicious heart-attack on a plate ;).