lunes, 16 de marzo de 2009

Nice weekend...





This weekend something new... I tried "american" food at the end! Those pierogies are not bad!!








And a good play for desserts!

domingo, 8 de marzo de 2009

Paella





I have to say that I cannot complain about anything in my life in Pittsburgh...

But sometimes I miss Spain... I've heard that space is relative, and things cannot travel faster than light. But maybe in Malaga space is bigger and light is brighter :)

So those days in which I find myself thinking about Spain I cook... and it works!! It makes me feel closer to the Mediterranean...

Today I cooked a paella. It wasn't bad considering how difficult it is to find good ingredients :)

One music recommendation for today: Weather with you. Enjoy the Sunday!

sábado, 28 de febrero de 2009

The adventure starts.... again

Well, this is my first post after a while...

Many things've happened in the meantime. Too many to tell now :)

The result is I'm back in the USA, this time as a worker in here (it's not bad to work after 30 years studying, right? :) ). Pittsburgh, the IRON city. Plenty of excitement, challenges... and dreams!

I'll let you know all the new things around here. But, by the moment, here there is a couple of books that helped me in this part of my live trip:
  • The last lecture... How much possitive energy in just one person. Thanks Pausch for teaching us what a true professor does.
  • A cien millas de Manhattan. Never underestimate what a open-minded person willing to talk with people and curious about a new culture can manage to do. I never read a better description of the pleasure in discovering a different world than yours. Thanks, to this Gomaespuma man again (even if the gomaspuenglish lessons weren't very helpful :D).
I also have to say that I continue missing my friends an family!! :)

See you here soon!

EDITED: Happy Día de Andalucía to everybody!

sábado, 7 de abril de 2007

Still here :-)

Today I realized that it has been more than one month since I don't send any post to my blog. Time goes too far!! I've spent more than 1/3 of the time I'm gonna be in Pittsburgh...

Lot of things happened in this period of time. For example, Saint Patrick's day, the most known Irish party, also here. I went to a Irish pub, with live Celtic music... and a lot of guiness! :-) I also visited the Heinz Theatre to listen to a concert called "Viva España" (funny, I had to came USA to listen El Concierto de Aranjuez -among other Spanish music- interpreted by a guitar player from Malaga) The theatre is amazing, I'd like to go again...

But now time to work arrived... I've a deadline next Friday. It's for an important conference and... it's gonna be in Rio de Janeiro! It would be nice to go there, isn't it? But I don't now if I'll be on time. The new stuff I'm working on here still needs some improvements.

So... sorry for not writing a lot... I'll get more free time soon to tell you all my adventures in this city, the one with the most strange weather I've ever seen :o) We got a 25 celcius degrees drop in one day this week (sunny into snowing...in April!)

Hope it was a great Holly Week (Easter) for everybody there.

domingo, 4 de marzo de 2007

Weekend!

Just because in my last posts I was talking to much about books, maths and other non-important stuff, I don't want my friends/family to think I'm getting ill, old or something like that...

So here they are some notes about my activities this weekend...

First, let me talk about the W. Penn Tavern . It has been our meeting point for the spanish guys since I arrived. Here you can have a beer (I prefer yuengling by the moment :-)) , have dinner or spend your time in an interesting conversation with some natives :-)














You can easily recognize spanish people in the photos: they are not watching basketball on TVs. Thanks to Xavi and Nuria, they were the only posing for the photo.

Later we went to ... the firehouse! A disco where to dance a lot and recover energy for the next week. It's a nice place (but I still prefer some places in Malaga). The ride was thanks to a Pitt friend (whose name I can't spell yet) He is one the nice persons we met here, who knows more about spanish soccer and painters than me. Like an european born in USA, he has a volkswagen. In the photo, he is thinking the police is coming after seing the flash... But no, we didn't finish in jail. Anyway I'm not going to publish photos of what the spanish squad did in the disco later :-) Good parties remain secret...

I hope all of you are OK in Spain... Family, I know it was a hard week; I miss you. Take care :-)

Squaring the circle

(NOTICE: This is a hard reading blog entry, written after some days of few sleeping. Maybe you should jump to next one :-) )

Have you ever think about the motivations for doing something? I found myself some nights ago thinking why I choosed my job, the activity I spend most the time in my life. It's not a easy question, specially taking into account that one week ago I realized that I have an 15% salary drop starting this year! I don't believe this the best way to motivate a worker considering it's the result of a contract improvement (now I'm a formal University employee)... but anyway, let continue with the topic of this post.

Probably it's a sequence of coincidences what made me to follow this way. But one thing I'm sure is that I've been always interested in exact sciences and engineering. Why? I really don't know. I guest it should be because of the need all people have of finding something absolute, any truth. As Einstein said: "Our situation on this earth seems strange. Every one of us appears here, involuntarily and uninvited, for a short stay, without knowing the why and the wherefore."
It doesn't mean I don't like humanities. "In our daily lives we feel only that man is here for the sake of others, for those whom we love and for many other beings whose fate is connected with our own" is the second part of Einstein's paragraph I also agree with. But given that I don't have any religion or any hardcoded belief, I think I was biased toward exact sciences. Maybe it's just curiosity or maybe is the need of understanding what we are and which are the ultimate laws behind the universe (and ourselves as part of it). And engineering is the practical part of this, covering the need of doing things and leaving our small personal mark.

I think this is a common question for human beings. As said, probably many people solves this by means of the religion; in this way, they get an absolute reference, a fundamental truth which is the reason and the goal of their lifes. But other persons had tried to get this truth by their own means.

What the hell is the relation between pi and all of this stuff?!!, you may be wondering :-)

I think pi is a perfect example of this, a "small" truth (meaning just a number) that is there and that many good scientists have been trying to analyze since men are men. "If you divide the circumference of a circle between its diameter you get a constant number". As cutting as many of the geometrical laws. This constant was not denoted by the symbol pi until the 18th century, but it has been there forever and you cannot avoid it. But why 3.14159265358979323846...? Which kind of number is pi? Even Babylonians and the Egyptians knew more about pi that is mere existence.

"An history of pi" is an interesting book because is a different approach to mathematics and science, different from the unrelated views I had for maths concepts in the several courses I received. It's a history about thinkers, builders, navigators and madmen looking for an absolute concept they needed.

And it also was interesting to read many of the historical comments by the author, Petr Beckmann. He was born in Prague, but in 1963 he came to the United States and he has stay here since them. As a person just arrived here is interesting to know part of the cultural vision of people at this size of the Atlantic ocean. This is the part related to humanities:-) There are some ideas of his vision for the Roman Empire I'd like to discuss with my friend Francis, a classical history hobbist (and also capable of running the marathon :-) )

By the way... new activities for next week... I bought sport shoes yesterday... you could probably find me running by Shadyside some day :-)

Reading

As part of my "mind refreshment" here in Pittsburgh I promised myself that I was going to read a lot. I actually read a lot at work but this time I mean reading true literature, not just scientific papers. It's a good habit which I've been losing probably in the last years.

And I think my first book choice was a good one. I read "An history of pi" last weekend. Yes...pi, the number. You must say: "well, man, you've completely lost your sense of having fun in America reading math stuff after work" :-) Maybe it's true but keep on reading...

When I was 16 1/2 I read a clever small book called "The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 3/4" (wikipedia reference). It a funny diary of a boy who is discovering the world. Adrian's life was a disaster, a quite strange teen life, including, of course, an impossible love for his classmate Pandora or problems with the school thug. So he decided to change everything and became an ‘misunderstood intellectual’ and tortured poet :-) The most interesting parts of the novel are the continuous references to the books Adrian is reading. Comic situations are originated when Adrian is objectively describing what he doesn't understand but that the reader grasps, oftenly through these books he is reading. An example: "Finished Animal Farm (...). From now on I shall treat pigs with the contempt they deserve". Most of then are related to political satire or the changes he is seeing in his family.

Said that, think about me as an older Adrian Mole still trying to understand the world. So what has "An history of pi" has to say about me? Coming in the next post :-)