Car smashes into New Hope Valley train

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My friend Bryan Johnson took his family for a ride on today’s excursion run of the New Hope Valley Railway and got some unexpected excitement. A station wagon smashed into the side of the train as the train approached the station.

As Bryan pointed out, the New Hope Valley is a big yellow train moving about 5 MPH across a crossing marked with bells and flashing red lights. We’re not talking about the Acela or Union Pacific Big Boy roaring out of nowhere at 80 MPH.

Check out picture one and picture two of the accident scene.

Update: 9 Jun 2009: Passenger Matt Cooley got a video of the crash. Thanks, Matt!

You name it, we did it this weekend

Whoa, where to start? Quiet evening at home Friday evening due to the rain. Saturday morning took the dog for a walk and had a nice chat with a neighbor before returning home to finish up preparations for Hallie’s birthday party. Got done right before the first guests arrived.

Had a great party for Hallie. I was in charge of kid festivities and had some playing soccer while others played on the playset or drew with the sidewalk chalk. Then my parents, my sister-in-law, and niece joined us for lunch at Moe’s. We got home and went bike riding and Rollerblading in the neighborhood before the kids went over to play with their Italian friends down the street, leaving Kelly and I an opportunity for a Saturday afternoon nap. Ah, what a luxury!
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Dave Matthews the actor

We just finished watching the 2005 movie Because of Winn-Dixie, based on the children’s book by the same name. It had its high points and low points but was a decent flick overall. The girl in the lead role could’ve been a better actor but did a passable job.

One character works in a pet shop and plays guitar. We’re watching him onscreen for the first time and I think, “wow, that guy looks like Dave Matthews.

Well, duh, it was Dave Matthews, and the truth is he’s a pretty good actor. He actually acted better than most anyone else in the movie. Who knew?

Tagged.com – a social media scam

I got a few emails today from the guy who rented us our beach condo last year. The subject was “Jim sent you photos on Tagged :)” and the body said:

Jim Nothisrealname
Jim Nothisrealname sent you photos on Tagged
Want to see the photos?

Click Yes if you want to see the photos, otherwise click No.
But you have to click!

Please respond or John may think you said no 🙁

Here’s what it looked like:
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The Carolina Mudcats and the messages in music

Last Sunday the family and I enjoyed a day at the ballpark, watching the Carolina Mudcats demolish the Tennessee Smokies 10-2. It seemed like a very family-friendly place, right down to the Mudcats letting all the kids round the bases after the game.

It was almost perfect except for one tiny detail. You see, there are a lot of short breaks in baseball that are routinely filled by music played played by folks in the stadium sound booth. Most of these songs were familiar 80s hits that put a smile on my face but there was one particular rap song that played over and over, making me more annoyed every time I heard it.
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Raleigh talks about car-sharing

After I just blogged about the need for a car-sharing program here in Raleigh, Triangle Transit announces a forum to discuss just that. Coincidence? I think not.

See the announcement below.

(h/t Urban Planet, by way of Bob Geary)

Triangle Transit, in cooperation with the City of Raleigh and the Downtown Raleigh Alliance, invite you to join us for an exploratory, interactive discussion about car-sharing potential in downtown Raleigh.

Thursday, June 18, 2009
1:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
At the Raleigh Urban Design Center
(light refreshments will be served)
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Apple and its new datacenter

So it seems the state government has successfully lured Apple into building a new $1B datacenter here in North Carolina.

I was thinking about where that datacenter might wind up and the impact those many thousands of servers would have on the local utility grid. Then I thought of the perfect place: Badin, NC. If Apple moved to Badin, it can plug into the Yadkin River hydroelectric plant that ALCOA may be losing. The state wouldn’t have to give Apple a dime in tax breaks if it would’ve let them tap into cheap electricity from the dam. Electricity, you see, is by far the biggest cost to such a massive datacenter.

The problem with this scenario is that the reason the state is opposing ALCOA’s permit renewal is that the thousands of jobs once provided by the aluminum smelting plant are long gone. Turning dam operations over to an admittedly flashy and high-tech Apple would seem to be a savvy move on the face of it but the meager 50 full-time jobs Apple brings makes it a bit hypocritical in the face of the state’s complaint against ALCOA.

On the other hand, in tiny Badin (population 1,154) 50 jobs is 4% of its population and 8% of its workforce. And it is a economically-depressed area, which is an area the state’s incentives were designed to boost. Add in the contractor jobs and the associated vendor businesses that an Apple facility may bring and a modest little high-tech oasis could be created.

Spanish treasure .. or Native American treasure?

This deep-water shipwreck exploration company, Odyssey Marine Exploration, finds a sunken ship filled with millions of gold and silver coins. Spain argues that the ship, the Spanish naval vessel Nuestra Senora de las Mercedes and its contents belongs to them, and a U.S. judge has agreed.

I know international law says Spain owns the vessel. But the gold? Wasn’t that looted from the goldmines of the Incan and Mayan people? Shouldn’t their decendants have a stronger claim?

And what about the British, which sunk the Mercedes in 1804? Since it was their cannons made a reef out of the Mercedes wouldn’t they also have a claim?

It seems to me that all of this is simply a bunch of thieves fighting over loot none of them legally own. Perhaps it belongs beneath the waves after all.

Twenty years ago

In addition to it being Hallie’s birthday, today is also the 20th anniversary of the curshing of the Tienanmen Square protest. At the time of the protests I was in the Navy. My ship was in drydock so I had plenty of time to watch the events on CNN. It was stunning to watch these people bravely ask for their right to choose their destiny. It was so sad to watch the carnage that ensued, but now the country is safe for Starbucks, Apple Computer, and the thousands of other Western companies that have set up shop there.

My 2007 visit to Tienanmen Square has been on my mind today, too.