I seldom celebrate anything in a big way these days. Â Why is it so? Â Perhaps novelty wears off after years of the same motion. Â Last Tuesday, attending our weekly Spanish class was a bunch of married people. Â The singles, we presumed, were out celebrating Valentine’s Days. Â I wanted to do something special. Â But work lately has been hectic. Â It zapped all my juice away. Â The best thing to do is to chill at home. Â Last evening, Cynthia asked if I wish to celebrate my Ex-O birthday in a big way (don’t ask what ex is!) Â Gee, no thanks. Â It will be on a Tuesday. Â If we have not given up learning Spanish by then, we would be celebrating my big Ex-O birthday with our Spanish classmates and teacher. Â That is a big if.
Learning Spanish has been a rough journey lately. Â To me, it is like scaling Mount Everest. Â The lack of coursework and the absence of an end-of-the-course examination seem to have put me onto an auto pilot mode. Â That means, doing nothing. Â Spanish grammar is confusing. Â Subjunctive ”“ a mood that expresses how one feels about the action ”“ brings me down to my knees. Â It is like taking the already confusing Spanish grammar ”“ indicative in different tenses ”“ and doubled it up. Â For every conjugation that exists in the mood of indicative, there is an evil twin that has the label called subjunctive. Â These distorted hideously beautiful aliens multiplies, and soon making me unlearned all that I have come to know. Â Oh dearest subjunctive, why must you be so mean?
Year 2012 turns out to be a golden year of video gaming. Â It is like having the top ten world renowned writers suddenly decide to publish a book this year. Â It may take you eight to twenty hours to read a book. Â Games these days may take up to 100 hours to consume. Â If I spend two hours a day playing video games, it would take fifty days to finish one game. Â Possibly seven games a year, top. Â For now, if my favorite games are to be released on time, I am likely to have Final Fantasy XIII-2, Kingdoms of Amalur, Mass Effect 3, Diablo 3, Guild War 2, another Blizzard game, and BioShock: Infinite to complete the top seven spots. Â Oh yes. I suppose I will see you next year instead.
What do a bunch of technologists talk about over a dinning table? Â Technology. Â Given a choice, I would rather talk about the latest Hollywood gossips. Â Or even better, the upcoming F1 season that is due to start in less than a month’s time. Â Or Japanese hornets raiding the honey bees. Â Or any bizarre videos I have viewed lately in YouTube. Â Even the new Nikon DSLR camera could be well qualified as a mouthwatering dinner topic among a bunch of business associates. Â No, we talked about software bugs. Â Now, before you yawn and dose off, that evening, there was something profound I have come to reflect upon. Â You see, I was once a Bug Whispererâ„¢. Â I have devoted the early part of my career in squishing bugs. Â I can see the bug’s roots like no other can. Â For the bugs that can be surgically removed, I weed them out without hesitation. Â For the bugs that are too entrenched into the scheme of work like tumor cells, I quarantine them and render them ineffective. Â Back then, I pictured myself as a surgeon, dealing with some of the ugliest things hidden underneath a file name. Â I took pride in what I did, believing that I was on a mission to make this world a better place.
My question is: Why do we see bugs as acceptable features? Â You buy a car and do not expect it to come with any defeats. Â You buy a kettle and expect it to boil water every time you press that button. Â It is almost impossible to see defeat free software application, or a bug free game. Â We have patches after patches to fix the problems. Â We have a big team of technicians solving issues and testing fixes. Â We build an economy whereby people’s livelihoods depend on the very existence of bugs. Â And hence contributing to the resilience of the bug nation. Â Software is unlike machinery. Â A bug free piece of code could last for eternity. Â Perhaps building bug free software is as impossible as crafting a machine that runs forever. Â It is time that wears down the latter; it is the lacking of that plagued the former.
The happiest moments of my day are two. Â I wake up seeing that someone is still sleeping; I travel to town and pick that someone up after work. Â My friend’s wife once commented that Cynthia is like my pet. Â Wherever I go, she is there. Â Whatever I do, she is also there. Â The more I think of it, the more I am convinced that I am her pet instead. Â That’s right. Â No dogs in the house please. Â I don’t want my role to be made redundant.
Kupo?
4 replies on “Distorted Hideously Beautiful Aliens”
Why then do we have the saying, “To Err is Human?”. We do expect humans to function properly don’t we? 😛
Mark – True, that is human nature. But imagine a company launches a new fizzy drink and on day one, everyone got sick because there is a human mistake in the drink’s formula. Then the company rolls out a 2nd batch that fixes the problem of the 1st batch only to introduce a dizzy feeling to a pocket of people. “To err is human” wouldn’t be a good excuse, would it? 🙂
No, I *am* your pet – in real life and in Azeroth. A pet cannot go anywhere or do anything without the owner – which is proven the case when you are on business trip.
My happiest moments everyday are two – seeing you after work and falling asleep being hugged.
Cynthia – Which one? The Oracle Hatchling or Wolvar a.k.a. Kekek?
🙂