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    <link href="http://www.richardhuff.com/rss.php?version=atom0.3" rel="service.feed" title="Richard Huff's Seattle Social Blog" type="application/x.atom+xml" />
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    <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Richard Huff's Seattle Social Blog</title>
    <tagline mode="escaped" type="text/html">An experiment in ideas and social networks.</tagline>
    <id>http://www.richardhuff.com/</id>
    <modified>2010-03-10T18:29:19Z</modified>
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.richardhuff.com/archives/143-Napa-Valley-Marathon-2010..html" rel="alternate" title="Napa Valley Marathon - 2010." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Richard D. Huff</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2010-03-10T04:25:13Z</issued>
        <created>2010-03-10T04:25:13Z</created>
        <modified>2010-03-10T18:29:19Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.richardhuff.com/wfwcomment.php?cid=143</wfw:comment>
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        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Napa Valley Marathon - 2010.</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.richardhuff.com/">
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                <p><!-- s9ymdb:208 --><img width=118 height=181 class="serendipity_image_right" style="border: 0px none ; float: right; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/nvm.jpg" />Melissa made a bet in October of last year (2009).&#160; She said that she would register me for the 2010 Napa Valley Marathon and pay the registration fee if I would actually run the race. Her wager was that I would owe her the entrance fee come <a title="32nd Annual Napa Valley Marathon" target="_blank" href="http://www.napavalleymarathon.org/">March 7th, 2010</a> when the start gun fired and I wasn't anywhere near the start line in Calistoga, California.&#160; (She may have stipulated that I not only run the race but that I also train for it -- I don't recall the exact terms of the bet.)&#160; Her willingness to enter into such a bet could stem from my having registered for the 2009 Napa Valley Marathon and not having run it; or, that I'm a notorious for &quot;running from the couch&quot; (which is a polite way of saying that I don't usually train).</p><p>In my defense, I didn't run the 2009 Napa Valley Marathon due to an illness.&#160; Not just mildly sick -- I had lost my voice and part of my hearing.&#160; The fact that I wouldn't have run the 2009 race simply due to the horrid weather Napa was experiencing in Spring of 2009 somehow counts against me in Melissa's book.&#160; (Have I mentioned that I'm a fair weather runner?)</p><p>Well,...this year was a different story.&#160; Not only did I get some actual training in prior to the race, but the weather was perfect come race day.&#160; Blue sky; not too hot.&#160; Melissa, Heidi, Lily, Teresa, Susan, Jim, and I got up early Sunday morning and started the 26.2 mile jaunt down the Silverado Trail from Calistoga to Napa with ~2,300 other people.&#160; While Melissa and Lily ran faster than lightening (3:37:15 and 3:40:49, respectively), Heidi pushed me to achieve a personal best time of <a title="2010 Napa Valley Marathon - Richard Frank-Huff" target="_blank" href="http://www.napavalleymarathon.org/race-information/results-indiv.asp?bibNum=619&amp;year2=2010">4:51:50</a>.<br /></p><p>I now have <a href="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/napa_valley_marathon.jpg" target="_blank" title="2010 Napa Valley Marathon - Finisher Medal">one more shiny medal</a> for my collection.<br /></p> 
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.richardhuff.com/archives/142-Apple-MacPro1,1-Running-64bit-Windows-7-Under-Boot-Camp..html" rel="alternate" title="Apple MacPro1,1 Running 64bit Windows 7 Under Boot Camp." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Richard D. Huff</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2010-02-22T21:12:47Z</issued>
        <created>2010-02-22T21:12:47Z</created>
        <modified>2010-02-23T02:33:49Z</modified>
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        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Apple MacPro1,1 Running 64bit Windows 7 Under Boot Camp.</title>
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                <p><!-- s9ymdb:206 --><img height=196 width=134 src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/macpro1-1.serendipityThumb.jpg" style="float: left; border-top-width: 0px; border-right-width: 0px; border-bottom-width: 0px; border-left-width: 0px; border-top-style: none; border-right-style: none; border-bottom-style: none; border-left-style: none; border-color: initial; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px; " class="serendipity_image_left" />Although not supported by Apple's latest Book Camp software (v3.0+), it is entirely possible to run 64 bit Windows 7 on an original MacPro (MacPro1,1).&#160; I'm running a MacPro1,1 with two 2.66GHz dual-core Intel Xeons, 8GBs of RAM, four 250GB SATA drives, a SuperDrive, and an SATA Blu-ray/HD-DVD drive.&#160; In addition to running Snow Leopard, I want to run the 64 bit version of Windows 7 -- rather than the 32 bit version -- so that I can take advantage of all 8GBs of RAM.&#160; Enabling access to the SATA Blu-ray/HD-DVD drive and the three additional, internal SATA hard drives is a challenge under any version of Windows on a MacPro.&#160; There are a few tricks you need to know to make everything work, but you're going to run Windows on a Mac -- why should extra work be a surprise?</p><p>This post isn't intended to be a step-by-step tutorial.&#160; Instead, I'm writing it to offer the necessary hints for a successful build.&#160; Knowing that it is possible is more than half the battle.<br /></p><p>First, the 64 bit Windows 7 installer DVD will not boot on a MacPro1,1.&#160; You'll need to create a new installer that will boot on a MacPro1,1.&#160; See: <a title="Jowie: Select CD-ROM Boot Type" target="_blank" href="http://jowie.com/blog/post/2008/02/24/Select-CD-ROM-Boot-Type-prompt-while-trying-to-boot-from-Vista-x64-DVD-burnt-from-iso-file.aspx">Jowie's Blog</a> post for details on how to do this.&#160; The new installer will work as you expect a modern Windows operating system installer should work.&#160; Difficulty Rating: 3 of 10.<br /></p><p>Second, Apple's Boot Camp 3.0+ installer for Windows will not install its drivers on a MacPro1,1.&#160; Again, I'll spare you the various technical and conspiratorial reasons given for why Apple doesn't support 64 bit Windows 7 on a MacPro1,1.&#160; Suffice to say that it's still possible to install the drivers without very much difficulty.&#160; See: <a title="John Robbins: 64 bit Windows 7 Boot Camp Drivers v3.0+" target="_blank" href="http://www.wintellect.com/CS/blogs/jrobbins/archive/2009/11/02/8767.aspx">John Robbins' Blog</a> post for details on how to do this.&#160; Difficulty Rating: 1 of 10.</p><p>Third, with the 64 bit version of Windows 7 and Apple's 64 bit Boot Camp drivers installed, you may start to experience the Windows Blue Screen of Death (a.k.a., BSOD).&#160; I haven't run across a technical explanation for why this occurs, but I know how to remedy it (as long as you're willing to give up access to your Macintosh partition[s] when booted into Windows).&#160; All you have to do is rename C:/Windows/System32/drivers/AppleHFS.sys and C:/Windows/System32/drivers/AppleMNT.sys.&#160; I do this by adding &quot;-rm&quot; after the name and before the dot-extension (i.e., &quot;AppleHFS-rm.sys&quot; and &quot;AppleMNT-rm.sys&quot;).&#160; Doing this will keep them from loading after your next reboot -- which you will want to do immediately. &#160;Keep in mind that each update to the Boot Camp software (i.e., v3.0 to v3.1) will likely undo that renaming. &#160;You'll need to remember to go back and rename those two files if you want to avoid the return of BSODs after updates. &#160;Difficulty Rating: 1 of 10.<br /></p><p>At this point you should have a perfectly functional MacPro running both Snow Leopard and the 64 bit version of Windows 7.&#160; You should be happy with this outcome -- there are plenty who will tell you that it isn't even possible.&#160; You probably should be satisfied that you got this far.&#160; The next step would be labeled &quot;Here There Be Monsters&quot; if it were on an ancient map.&#160; Be warned.&#160; I think I spent three full days getting it to work.&#160; It WILL work but you might just end up starting over from scratch several times if one of the steps goes wrong[1].&#160; So, why would anybody want to tackle the next step?&#160; Because they bought an SATA Blu-ray/HD-DVD drive that works under Snow Leopard but can't be seen by Windows.&#160; Because they have additional, internal SATA HDDs that work under Snow Leopard but can't be seen by Windows.&#160; The cause for both is the same: lack of support for Advanced Host Controller Interface (AHCI) when booting into Windows.&#160; So, the final step in my checklist is to enable AHCI support.&#160; We'll pick up where we left off:</p><p>Fourth, your MacPro defaults to a legacy controller mode when installing/booting Windows.&#160; Not only does this result in your drive controller running at 100MB/s (instead of its 1.5GB/s capability), it also keeps Windows from seeing any devices connected to the other five on-board SATA ports.&#160; After trying several different step-by-step instructions without success, I finally came across the instructions posted on the <a href="http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=760482" target="_blank" title="MacPro1,1 AHCI">MacRumors Forums</a>.&#160; All you'll give up after successfully completing this final step is the use of the Boot Camp Control Panel under Windows.&#160; Booting into Snow Leopard will require rebooting your MacPro while holding down the option key so that you can select the boot OS. Difficulty Rating: 8 of 10.&#160;<br /></p><p>That's it!&#160; You've tricked out your first generation MacPro with Snow Leopard and 64 bit Windows 7.<br /></p><p>[1] I'm not kidding about this.&#160; By &quot;scratch&quot; I mean all the way back to wiping the boot drive and installing Snow Leopard.<br /></p> 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.richardhuff.com/archives/141-Best-Umbrella-Made..html" rel="alternate" title="Best Umbrella Made." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Richard D. Huff</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2010-01-14T17:03:25Z</issued>
        <created>2010-01-14T17:03:25Z</created>
        <modified>2010-01-16T04:57:39Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.richardhuff.com/wfwcomment.php?cid=141</wfw:comment>
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        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Best Umbrella Made.</title>
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                <p><!-- s9ymdb:205 --><!-- s9ymdb:205 --><img height="251" width="320" class="serendipity_image_right" style="border: 0px none ; float: right; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/blunt_umbrella.serendipityThumb.JPG" />While in New Zealand I ran across a company that makes, arguably, the best umbrella on the market.&#160; I'm not saying that lightly.&#160; As a resident of Seattle, <a title="Seattle Woman Drowns During Rain Storm" target="_blank" href="http://www.kirotv.com/news/10544900/detail.html">I have to give rain more respect</a> than the average American.&#160; There are days when it rains so hard that just the splash-back will soak your clothes to the middle of your thighs.&#160; I've been through hundreds of umbrellas that performed more like a disposable trinket than a shield.&#160; Moderate wind would turn them inside out as if that were their natural state.&#160; The fabric detached from the ribs and the ribs crumpled like dry grass.&#160; Generally useless.&#160; The whole lot of them.&#160; Small, compact, golf-sized -- they all were designed with the lowest common denominator as a goal.</p><p>But then I read about the <a title="Blunt Umbrellas" target="_blank" href="http://www.bluntumbrellas.com">Blunt Umbrella</a> in a magazine on my flight back to Los Angeles.&#160; Blunt appeared to have solved all of the failure points typical in existing umbrella designs.&#160; They attached the canopy to a set of ribs with expanding anchors inside of sown pockets -- not just a single thread snaking through tiny eyelet.&#160; The ribs are several times the diameter of those on a typical umbrella, and I can't imagine that they would buckle under any wind force still within a person's ability to keep hold of the umbrella.&#160; To top all that off, the Blunt Umbrellas are aesthetically pleasing.</p><p>I've been using one of the Blunt Umbrellas since late October 2009, and I couldn't be happier.&#160; Don't let the NZ$110 (~US$77) price tag frighten you away -- this will be the last umbrella you'll ever need to buy.</p><p>[Full disclosure: Although I've never received any monetary compensation for my product endorsements, Blunt gave me a second umbrella for free after I ordered and paid for the first one.&#160; The second, free umbrella was an unexpected gift for the help I provided them in debugging a foreign payment problem with their online storefront.]<br /></p> 
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    </entry>
    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.richardhuff.com/archives/140-Pure-Magic-a-WiFi-enabled-Bathroom-Scale..html" rel="alternate" title="Pure Magic: a WiFi enabled Bathroom Scale." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Richard D. Huff</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2010-01-14T04:13:35Z</issued>
        <created>2010-01-14T04:13:35Z</created>
        <modified>2010-01-14T04:13:35Z</modified>
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        <id>http://www.richardhuff.com/archives/140-guid.html</id>
        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Pure Magic: a WiFi enabled Bathroom Scale.</title>
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                <p><!-- s9ymdb:204 --><img width=320 height=213 src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/withings_wifi_scale.jpg" style="border: 0px none ; float: left; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" class="serendipity_image_left" />We've all heard the predictions that one day our refrigerators and microwaves will be connected to the Internet.&#160; I've always been a little skeptical about the benefits in those particular cases, but the smart people over at <a title="Withings - The WiFi Scale" target="_blank" href="http://www.withings.com/">Withings</a> created an Internet-enabled bathroom scale that I really, really love.&#160; I've been using it for the past couple days, since UPS so kindly delivered it from <a title="Amazon: Withings Wifi Scale" target="_blank" href="http://www.amazon.com/Withings-WiFi-Body-Scale-Measures/dp/B002JE2PSA/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=hpc&amp;qid=1263443826&amp;sr=8-1">Amazon</a>.&#160; Once configured, you use it like you would any other bathroom scale.&#160; The pure magic happens when -- in addition to displaying the data on its built-in LCD screen -- it automatically senses which of the family members is stepping on it at that very moment and transmits (via WiFi) all of the readings (weight and body composition) to Withings' Internet service.&#160; The data is instantly available through an account at Withings and through an iPhone application (WiScale).</p><p>Why would anybody want such a device?&#160; If you're like me and you're working to regain some of the fitness lost after years of working behind a desk in the technology industry, the scale is a godsend.&#160; Trending data is extremely valuable and the only alternative is hand documenting each weigh-in.&#160; Plus, the data is now available for other Internet applications, such as <a title="Google Health and Withings WiFi Scale" target="_blank" href="http://www.google.com/health">Google Health</a> and <a title="RunKeeper and Withings WiFi Scale" target="_blank" href="http://www.runkeeper.com/">RunKeeper</a>.&#160; Who only knows what future applications could use the data in life improving ways.<br /></p> 
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.richardhuff.com/archives/139-Royal-Victoria-Marathon-2009..html" rel="alternate" title="Royal Victoria Marathon - 2009." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Richard D. Huff</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2010-01-14T03:45:02Z</issued>
        <created>2010-01-14T03:45:02Z</created>
        <modified>2010-01-14T03:45:02Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.richardhuff.com/wfwcomment.php?cid=139</wfw:comment>
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        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Royal Victoria Marathon - 2009.</title>
        <content type="application/xhtml+xml" xml:base="http://www.richardhuff.com/">
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                <p><!-- s9ymdb:202 --><!-- s9ymdb:203 --><img width=320 height=240 src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/rmv-2009.jpg" style="border: 0px none ; float: right; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" class="serendipity_image_right" />I've been remiss in my posts about races.&#160; Excuse: the 2009 Royal Victoria Marathon occurred shortly after the wedding and just before a three-week honeymoon in New Zealand.&#160; None-the-less, 2009 was my sixth metal for the Royal Victoria race: five half-marathons and one full-marathon.&#160; It is my favorite race -- there's just no question about it.&#160; As I have <a title="Royal Victoria Marathon - RVM" target="_blank" href="http://www.richardhuff.com/archives/116-Royal-Victoria-Marathon-2008..html">posted in the past</a>, we make a weekend of the race event.&#160; At least six of the running crew went this last year.&#160; It's a time for the creation of found memories.</p><p>The other reason I felt the need to post about RVM is that a bunch of us are running another race this next weekend.&#160; I'd hate to end up with a log jam of race metals. ;)&#160; In all seriousness, congratulations to everyone who ran the RVM in 2009!&#160; I hope to see you all later this year (October 10th) in Victoria for Dim Sum, Lululemon shopping, carbo-loading at Il Torrazo, and the race.</p><p>Pick your poison now: 13.1 or 26.2.<br /></p> 
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.richardhuff.com/archives/138-Career-Analysis..html" rel="alternate" title="Career Analysis." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Richard D. Huff</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2010-01-13T23:00:12Z</issued>
        <created>2010-01-13T23:00:12Z</created>
        <modified>2010-01-14T03:36:25Z</modified>
        <wfw:comment>http://www.richardhuff.com/wfwcomment.php?cid=138</wfw:comment>
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        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Career Analysis.</title>
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                <p>It's the beginning of 2010.&#160; I'm approaching the beginning of middle age.&#160; It's a good time to evaluate many aspects of my life, especially career.&#160; But what's the best approach?&#160; Do I buy the latest edition of <em>What Color Is Your Parachute</em>?&#160; Should I meet with my mentors to ask for their wisdom and insight?&#160; What can be learned from looking back at the jobs I've held over the past two decades?&#160; I don't have a fully formed plan, but I can start by giving some critical thought to what my past jobs may have to say about future career opportunities.<br /></p><p>Below is a collection of all the business cards from my various roles since college in the early 1990's.&#160; They make it look like I've had a lot of different jobs, right?&#160; The fact is that there are far fewer roles than the business cards and company names may suggest.&#160; For example, Pacific Rim Network was acquired by VERIO (which did result in a title change from President &amp; CEO to General Manager).&#160; The design division at Media Access was shuttered during the dotcom crash, but Peak Systems picked up the hosting division and I transitioned from a President &amp; CEO to a Director of a division.&#160; Geckowerx was a company I ran while also getting a Sociology degree at the University of Washington.&#160; Following receipt of that degree, I joined an analytics group at Atlas almost to the day that they were acquired by Microsoft.&#160; So, the last four business cards are technically the same company with some variation in roles as I advanced.</p><table cellspacing=1 cellpadding=1 border=0 style="width: 100%;"><tbody><tr><td style="vertical-align: top;"><img width=253 height=143 src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/pacificrim.jpg" style="border: 0px none ; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" class="serendipity_image_center" /></td><td style="vertical-align: top;"><img width=253 height=143 class="serendipity_image_center" style="border: 0px none ; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/verio.jpg" /></td><td style="vertical-align: top;"><img width=253 height=143 class="serendipity_image_center" style="border: 0px none ; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/mediaaccess.jpg" /></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align: top;" colspan=3><br /></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align: top;"><img width=253 height=143 src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/peak.jpg" style="border: 0px none ; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" class="serendipity_image_center" /></td><td style="vertical-align: top;"><img width=253 height=143 class="serendipity_image_center" style="border: 0px none ; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/geckowerx.jpg" /></td><td style="vertical-align: top;"><img width=253 height=143 class="serendipity_image_center" style="border: 0px none ; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/atlas.jpg" /></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align: top;" colspan=3><br /></td></tr><tr><td style="vertical-align: top;"><img width=253 height=143 class="serendipity_image_center" style="border: 0px none ; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/microsoft1.jpg" /></td><td style="vertical-align: top;"><img width=253 height=143 src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/microsoft2.jpg" style="border: 0px none ; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" class="serendipity_image_center" /></td><td style="vertical-align: top;"><img width=253 height=143 src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/microsoft3.jpg" style="border: 0px none ; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" class="serendipity_image_center" /></td></tr></tbody></table><p>In reality, there isn't a great deal of variation over the past twenty years.&#160; In fact, a case could be made that there has only been two real roles over that period: business leader with deep technical involvement and researcher with medium technical involvement.</p><p>Another quality that all the roles share is that they are entirely dependent on the existence of the Internet.&#160; The Internet wasn't publicly available when I entered college in 1990 and, yet, all of my jobs have been Internet jobs.&#160; Sure, there was business management and research disciplines before I started -- they just weren't associated with this &quot;new economy&quot; that was enable by the advent of public access to a global computer network.</p><p>What else can be divined from the cards?&#160; Well,...most of the roles have been entrepreneurial.&#160; I was a founder at Pacific Rim Network, Media Access, and Geckowerx.&#160; Only my latest role has required that I be a little more of a passenger than a driver (which hasn't always been easy).&#160; Luckily, I've had the good fortune to work in that latest role under somebody who commands my utmost admiration.&#160; Unluckily (for me), that person has recently moved on.<br /></p><p>If the past is any indication of the future and my job choices any indication of my preferences, I will be working in some leadership capacity with an Internet-related business.&#160; I guess I just need to translate that into the terminology hiring managers use when writing and posting job descriptions. Or, I need to start a new business.<br /></p> 
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.richardhuff.com/archives/137-Wedding-Slide-Show..html" rel="alternate" title="Wedding Slide Show." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Richard D. Huff</name>
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        <issued>2009-12-13T17:49:35Z</issued>
        <created>2009-12-13T17:49:35Z</created>
        <modified>2009-12-13T17:49:35Z</modified>
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        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Wedding Slide Show.</title>
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                <table cellspacing=1 cellpadding=1 border=0 align=left style="width: 100%;"><tbody><tr><td style="width: 100%; vertical-align: top;"><br />Our wedding photographer -- <a href="http://www.davidbarssphotographer.com/" target="_blank" title="David A. Barss - Photographer">David A. Barss</a> -- recently made the first batch of our wedding photos available for review.&#160; We couldn't be happier with his work!&#160; I took some of the photos and made the slide show seen here in Apple's iPhoto, synchronized to the song (Pink Martini's &quot;Let's Never Stop Falling in Love&quot;) we used for our first dance.</td><td style="width: 480px; vertical-align: top;"><p id='preview3'>The video player should show in this space.</p><script type='text/javascript' src='http://www.richardhuff.com/misc/swfobject.js'></script><script type='text/javascript'>var s3 = new SWFObject('http://www.richardhuff.com/misc/player.swf','player','480','360','9');s3.addParam('allowfullscreen','true');s3.addParam('allowscriptaccess','always');s3.addParam('flashvars','file=http://www.richardhuff.com/misc/weddingslideshow.mp4&image=http://www.richardhuff.com/misc/slideshowmarquee.jpg');s3.write('preview3');</script></td></tr></tbody></table><br />
 
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    <entry>
        <link href="http://www.richardhuff.com/archives/135-Letterpress-Holiday-Card..html" rel="alternate" title="Letterpress Holiday Card." type="text/html" />
        <author>
            <name>Richard D. Huff</name>
                    </author>
    
        <issued>2009-12-12T17:44:49Z</issued>
        <created>2009-12-12T17:44:49Z</created>
        <modified>2009-12-12T20:18:17Z</modified>
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        <title mode="escaped" type="text/html">Letterpress Holiday Card.</title>
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                <p><a href="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/IMG_1377.jpg" class="serendipity_image_link"><!-- s9ymdb:187 --><img width="240" height="320" src="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/IMG_1377.serendipityThumb.jpg" style="border: 0px none ; float: left; padding-left: 5px; padding-right: 5px;" class="serendipity_image_left" /></a>This year's Holiday card is ready to be addressed, stamped, and mailed.&#160; We designed the card ourselves and had <a href="http://www.owossographic.com/" target="_blank" title="Owosso Graphic Arts">Owosso Graphic Arts</a> make the magnesium dies for printing.&#160; The letterpress printing was done at <a href="http://www.pratt.org" target="_blank" title="Pratt Fine Arts Center - Letterpress">Pratt Fine Arts Center</a> on one of their antique platen presses -- the one named &quot;Franklin&quot; to be exact.&#160; Three ink colors (Red, Green, and Black), six dies, and three lines of hand set type required a total of five passes through the press.&#160; I may not have to go to the gym next week after the amount of exercise Franklin gave me over the past two days.<br /></p><p>The Santa Claus artwork was purchased from ClipArt.com (#<a href="http://www.clipart.com/en/close-up?o=485174&amp;memlevel=C&amp;a=a&amp;q=998915&amp;k_mode=all&amp;s=1&amp;e=1&amp;show=&amp;c=&amp;cid=&amp;findincat=&amp;g=&amp;cc=&amp;page=&amp;k_exc=&amp;pubid=" target="_blank" title="Santa Claus - ClipArt.com">998915</a>).&#160; ClipArt.com is a surprisingly good place to find black and white imagery for use in letterpress printing.&#160; Since the image only had four of the eight reindeer mentioned in Clement Clarke Moore's[1] &quot;The Night Before Christmas&quot; poem, we decided to only refer to four of the reindeer on the front of the card: Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, and Vixen.&#160; <br /></p><p>The typeface used throughout the card -- except the three lines of hand set type on the back -- is American Scribe™, purchased from <a href="http://www.oldfonts.com/americanscribe.html" target="_blank" title="American Scribe - OldFonts.com">OldFonts.com</a>.&#160; American Scribe™ provided a critical piece of the vintage holiday aesthetic we were trying to achieve in the design.&#160; Script typefaces look exceptional on the Crane Lettra™ paper we used[2], which is still my favorite letterpress paper even though Crane screwed up one of my paper orders so bad that I almost swore off ever using it again.</p> <br />
<p>The <a title="Card Interior - Full Sized Photo" target="_blank" href="http://www.richardhuff.com/uploads/IMG_1378.jpg">card's inside</a> contains the message &quot;A Merry Christmas And A Happy New Year To You&quot; -- the same message printed on the very <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Callcott_Horsley" target="_blank" title="First Christmas Card - John Callcott Horsley">first commercial Christmas card</a> (circa 1843).&#160; A separate block of text for our names, the month, and the year are printed in green. Not only did that approach cost less to craft the magnesium dies, it also enabled the flexibility to change out the year if we decided to use the design during future holidays.<br /></p><p>[1] There is a controversy over who actually authored the poem.&#160; It's possible that Clement Clarke Moore took credit for a poem that was actually authored by Henry Livingston several years earlier. See: <a href="http://www.iment.com/maida/familytree/henry/xmas/livingstonmoore/index.htm#author" target="_blank" title="Livingston and Moore">http://www.iment.com/maida/familytree/henry/xmas/livingstonmoore/index.htm#author</a>.</p><p>[2] We used the Crane Lettra™ 110lbs Pearl White for our wedding stationary. The Holiday card was made with Crane's 110lbs Fluorescent White Lettra™.&#160; Lettra™ is readily available and has matching envelopes. <br /> </p> 
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