Guus Bosman

software engineering director


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dailylife

Weekend & OCR

It was a busy week at work; nice that it's weekend. Sasha traveled to Durham so we left for the airport early on Thursday, and she came back home yesterday evening late. By coincidence one of her professors from the Netherlands was in Durham Thursday also so they met up.

I'm working on a project for 'the other website' that involves scanning a lot of old documents into PDF files. It's pretty cool that Adobe Acrobat Reader has built-in OCR, and that OCR works so well these days. I haven't tried OCR in a long time; the previous time must have been when I lived with my parents some 15 years ago. OCR means Optical Character Recognition: the conversion of scanned images into text. The algorithms and technology has come a long way since 15 years ago, it's really a solved problem now.

No big plans for this weekend, perhaps we'll visit Rutgers, a local university in Somerset, which has a big cultural event today. Someone we know is participating and it would be fun to say hello.

movies

Full Frame 2010

We had a wonderful time at Full Frame 2010 two weeks ago. We saw more than 20 movies including some absolutely brilliant ones.

It really felt like a mini-vacation. On Saturday the first movie we saw started at 10.00 am and the last one ended around midnight.

John and Jane
Man Push Cart -- not a bad film, but very annoying that a fiction film made it into the programming. Sure, it says in the booklet but it has no place on Full Frame.

Here's a list of movies we saw on Saturday:

  • Born Sweet -- a 15-year boy with arsenic poisoning which finds joy in karoake singing and becomes famous through his hobby.
  • Today is Better than Two Tomorrows -- two boys in Laos are good friends. One of them is sent to become a monk and the two split up. Sweet movie.
  • Book of Miri -- a short documentary about a girl in Sweden who was adopted and is looking for her identity. I wasn't crazy about it; Sasha loved it and apparently so did the jury because it won an award.
  • In the Matter of Cha Jung Hee -- a second movie about adoption. Forty years ago Cha Jung Hee, the filmmaker, was adopted from South Korea. Everybody called her Cha Jung Hee, but she knew that that wasn't her real name. A social worked had swapped the girl. The movie maker goes to South Korea to find the real Cha Jung Hee. Wonderful movie.
  • Stonewall Uprising -- description and reconstruction of the riots around the Stonewall bar in New York City, which started the gay rights movement in 1969. Interesting.
  • 12th & Delaware -- on an intersection in Florida an abortion clinic and a pro-live pregnancy center are located on opposite sides of the street. Very intense documentary.
  • The Sixth Section -- fun, short movie about Mexican immigrants in New York City who fund projects in their hometown.
  • H-2 Worker -- older documentary about guests workers from Jamaica in Florida. Not bad, but we would have preferred to watch a more recent documentary instead.

On Sunday we saw 5 short documentaries, which was great:

After the winners were announced we went to see two of them:

The festival was well organized, as always. Last year the economic situation impacted the festival, but sales this year were strong, according to the executive director. The only downside was that the curated series wasn't very good. We saw several of the curated selections and didn't really enjoy them, except for The Sixth Section.

dailylife

No flights

Jaap is stuck in Scotland. He was supposed to travel back home today but because of the volcano he won't make it.

A co-worker was planning to leave back to Europe yesterday, but he'll have to stay here the weekend.

A strange event, a volcano eruption.

movies

Kings of Pastry

Full Frame Festival 2010 started today and we just came back from the first three movies. The opening movie of the festival was phenomenal: "16 chefs, 3 days, 1 chance" -- Kings of Pastry.

This documentary showed the intense examination in France to become a M.O.F. in pastry making. Very funny, beautifully made -- absolutely recommended.

dailylife

Cooking on the balcony

Cooking.The weather here is just outstanding. Sunny, very warm -- it's summer. Not spring, summer.

A few weeks ago I bought an extra electrical burner and I finally got to use it. The burner allows me to cook on our small balcony. It's great!

I made an Dutch Indonesian meal with krupuk and telor ketjap (stir fried boiled eggs) -- wonderful dishes but very smelly. I cooked it all outdoors and it worked perfectly. The meal was well received.

dailylife

Spring in NC

It was beautiful weather in Somerset yesterday, but when I arrived in North Carolina it was as if summer has started. Bright sun, temperature in the low 80's (28 degrees Celsius) -- you can't beat the weather in the South!

It's great to be back home; I'm staying here for two weekends.

dailylife

A long day

Yesterday we left for the airport at 5.00 am, and even when I drove back there was hardly any traffic. I was in the office around 6.20 am and had plenty of time to go through my e-mail and work on a presentation.

Meetings started at 9.00 am, and really didn't stop until 6.00 pm -- one of those days! Still, it's a lot of fun and the projects are going well.

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