29 March 2006

Game of Tag

My ex-colleague nurse2be played a game of tag and invited others to join her. The goal is to list 4 things for each categories. I cannot help think of those web sites back in the early days of the web on which people make two lists - things they hate and thing they love. Here's my list:

Four Jobs I've Had in My Life:
  1. At a bagel shop in Jackson Heights, Queens, NYC. I was a cashier, I made bagels, delivered food to nearby bars. At $2 an hour, after a 7-hour day, I thought $14 was too much and refused to take it, but the manager on duty at the time, Sam, somewhat of a family friend, made me take it. I think that was my very first job.
  2. Busboy at a Thai restaurant in New York Chinatown. I think it was a summer job.
  3. Sales Rep for a "yellow page" company, New York, NY. I was supposed to sell advertisement slots in a directory of multimedia products - back in the late '90s, anything computer-related that emits sounds or plays video was considered multimedia and supposedly hot. I don't recall making any commission, so the company owner put me to help the secretary/data entry person with, well, data entry. I turned out to be a greater asset in the area and fell in love with the Macintosh computer and the database program FileMaker Pro (not the secretary...)
  4. Computer, 16 years and counting. Programmed in Clipper, dBASE, etc. network administration involving babysitting servers, and now network account administration.

Four Movies I Love
  1. The Princess Bride (Simple love story filled with heroic deeds.)
  2. Kung Fu Hustle (I only sat down to see this movie on DVD because my son liked the lollipop on the cover. I thought it was just another movie idolizing gamblers and gangsters. It turned out to be somewhat of an action movie, a love story, and some humorous elements thrown in.)
  3. Eternal Sunshine for the Spotless Mind (It was interesting to see Jim Carrey not as a clown that he usually portrays)
  4. The Matrix (I didn't know what the movie was about, so it was a pleasant surprise. Nice fighting sequence, especially the training session.)
Four Places I Have Lived
  1. Saigon, Vietnam
  2. Indonesia, various tiny islands serving as refugee camps for boat people
  3. Singapore, fresh from the backwaters of Indonesia, waiting for a flight to the U.S., we lived in an outdoor garage that only has a roof
  4. New York City
Four TV Shows I Love to Watch
  1. Whose Line Is It Anyway?
  2. NY1 Local News (Sadly, since switching to DirectTV, I no longer have NY1)
  3. Futurama
  4. Three's Company
Between keeping my son company, my wife hogging the TV with her Chinese shows/discs, spending time on the computer, and long commute to/from work, I have very little time left for TV. I only know about TV shows or movies when I need to incorporate them into my cartoons. That's when I have an idea to spoof them so I would do some Googling about the shows to see if they fit into the cartoon as I envisioned it.

Four Places I Have Been on Vacation
  1. San Francisco (nice weather, walkable and has decent public transportation, sorta like NYC)
  2. London
  3. Paris
  4. Hong Kong (kinda like NYC, just with everything cut down in half, otherwise they wouldn't fit on the tiny island)
Four Websites I Visit Regularly
  1. MacMinute
  2. CNet News (to see how the Windoze crowd deals with the latest viruses, security leaks, headaches, etc)
  3. Blogger (to hunt for splogs and report them to SplogReporter.com)
  4. PBSKids.org (my son loves to play games on the computer, might as well at least make him learn something useful in the process)
Four of My Favorite Foods
  1. Vietnamese
  2. Chinese
  3. American (burger, hotdogs, ice cream - yes, I am a junk food junkie)
  4. Italian (Pizza is considered Italian, right? Spaghetti with meatballs must be Italian, I'm pretty sure)

Four Places I Would Rather Be Right Now
  1. Grand Canyon
  2. At some public park with my son. We both need the exercise.
  3. Wandering in Manhattan, stopping here and there at bookstores, electronic outlets, etc.
  4. Running in the NYC Marathon.
Four Most Wonderful Places I've Ever Been
  1. My late maternal grandmother's fruit garden, Ca'i Ta\u Ha., Vietnam. I spent a few summers there in my younger years, playing with my cousins and pampered by grandma. Aaaah, those were the simpler days.
  2. San Francisco. I was on vacation there with my second older sister. We just went about visting museums, gardens, tourist traps, etc. No time was wasted at some outlet malls or gigantic shopping malls, I think that's what made the San Fran trip so special.
  3. New York City. For all its warts and such, it's still a great city to live in, as long as you have a job.
  4. Burhala Island, Indonesia. Not sure of the spelling. It was the third island that we stayed at during our refugee stint in Indonesia. It had beaches, palm trees, mountain that was not hard for climbing, a path that we could use to walk back to the bigger island nearby during certain time of the day. Of course we didn't have much money to spend and there was not much to spend on anyway.
Four Books I Have Read
  1. Star Wars: Rebel Dream
  2. The Rainmaker by John Grisham
  3. The New Origami by Steve and Megumi Biddle (it was in this book that I first learned how to make the cube that has become the base for many of my origami exploration)
  4. The Joy of Tech by Nitrozac and Snaggy (tech cartoons at their best, many with Mac slant)
Four Songs I Listen to Over and Over Again
  1. Wrapped Around Your Finger by The Police
  2. Pressure by Billy Joel (probably work-related)
  3. Brotherhood of the Sword by Lam (better known as Theme Song from Once Upon A Time In China II, a movie about legendary martial arts master Wong Fei Hong)
  4. Beautiful Boy by John Lennon
Four Reasons Why I Blog
  1. To keep track of my life
  2. To publicize my cartoons
  3. To gain fame
  4. To hone my writing skill
Four people I tag to do this
  1. Anyone who has the time to do so
  2. Anyone who knows those in #1
  3. Any Mac users
  4. Any one who draw cartoons

26 March 2006

Moving Into The Danger Zone

We are in for another move. Many people will be affected. A move is usually known as a restack, but for this particular move it's more like a swirl, because the moves involve people going to new desks on the same floor.

One rumor that's floating about is that the people who will be fired shortly will be re-located to a particular quadrant of the floor. One of these people is a neighbor of mine - this cartoon is for her. She thinks her time will come any time soon. A few days after the cartoon was drawn, she attended the meeting about the move and it turned out she didn't have to move to the danger zone, so the 'toon is kinda lost its target, but there are other people moving there so all is not lost.

Every now and then I play international chess in the office and have wanted to draw something chess-related. Now the chance has finally arrived. I wanted to show the King or Queen say to the poor Pawn, "It is never up to you" but there is no room for it.

24 March 2006

Overtime Overload

It's been a busy week. My colleague D.N. officially announced his resignation. He already told me last week. Deep down I suspect he was serious, but on the surface I had this lingering hope that perhaps come Monday he'll laugh out loud and say it's all just a joke. My group cover many networks but there are a handful of network only D.N. and I can properly handle. Lots of time when other admins try to work on these troublesome networks, something would go wrong and us two would end up fixing the problems. D.N. had to take the rest of the week off to do something so I had been stuck doing his work while juggling my projects, etc. I put in some overtime so only today I'm almost caught up with the overload.

21 March 2006

Qaptain Qwerty on Flickr

I've been maintaining my "gallery" of cartoons via iPhoto and Galerie. I am not happy with iPhoto's default template and want to add a little note but it has become such a pain to add those notes. Next I switched to Galerie but it too involves a painful process of uploading all the photos in one shot. I probably need to sit down and learn more about Galerie - there must be a way to upload only new photos. Until that time comes, for now I'll switch to Flickr - just only because it seems to be a decent place to share "photos". Places like KodakGallery, ShutterFly, or SnapFish appear too eager to offer their printing service. I'm not exactly thrilled with Flickr's default setting of one long column, but it's the best there is right now. I already keep all my photos in iPhoto, so Flickr's various iPhoto plug-in options are great convenience.

I don't have all the cartoons coupled with remarks but I uploaded them anyway. As I add remarks I'll just copy-and-paste them remarks into Flickr.

Because of upload quota, I think I may have spent all my quota this month. April isn't that far away, I'll upload some more when the new month roll into town.

10 March 2006

Scrabble Squabble

"The oe blows the ai into the qat." What the heck is that? An oe is supposedly some kind of whirlwind the Faeroe Islands, wherever those islands are. An ai is a three-toe sloth - sure, you must have seen them on that Animals Planet feature last week. Lastly, a qat (a variation of kat) is an evergreen shrub. Say what? Yup, those are acceptable words in a given Scrabble game. Useful if you want to win points on the Scrabble board, but outside of it there is no value to these "Scrabble" words. Originally I thought since I love words I can learn some more useful ones by playing Scrabble. What a disappointment. The game involves only numbing memorization of words that are useless everywhere else except in the game. I've checked many dictionaries and I still don't see how the word "qua" comes into use. All I think of "qua" is when the teachers or adults in Peanuts cartoons talk. "Qua qua, qua qua", said the teacher. "Yes, m'am, I will tell her not to call me 'sir' anymore", said Peppermint Patty.

06 March 2006

Bookworm Deluxe for Mac 1.0.0

I first played the online version of Bookworm and was easily hooked on it. I tried the Windows offline version but it was under Virtual PC Windows emulation so it was horrible. Not having any decent Windows machines at home (and not ever wanting one), I patiently waited for the Mac version to become available. During the wait, I played the PDA version on my black & white Visor Deluxe. The tiles don't look good at all and it's sometimes hard to see the burning tiles, so gameplay wasn't quite what it should be.

As soon as I knew about the Mac version of Bookworm Deluxe being released, I jumped at the demo. I would register soon anyway but it helped that the demo was only good for an hour. I've wasted so many hours with it since I first played a few days ago. Supposedly there's a way to upload one's high score to the web, but it appears there's no way to do that with the Mac version. Probably a Windows-only feature. So here's my high score so far. Maybe version 2 or later of the Mac version will include the feature...

03 March 2006

Backup

I often lecture my friends and family about the importance of backing up one's computer data... but I myself haven't backed up any of my computers for a while. Enough with not preaching what I teach!

Some time ago I backed up a major portion of my iMac using Apple Backup 1.x or 2.x. One big annoyance with backing up while logged in is that certain files cannot be accessed and the backup job pause with the error.

Yesterday, I booted up the iMac in target mode. That means holding down the letter T while booting up. The iMac became just a device on the FireWire link. Hook up the FireWire cable to the PowerBook Aluminum and I could see the iMac as just an external hard drive. Even my LaCie external hard drive was mounted on the PB Al desktop. Launched Apple Backup 3.1 and off went the backup job - 100+ CDs or 12 DVDs to hold all that data. I went the DVD route of course. Each disc took some time to burn and I had to leave the job running over night for disc #10 - it was just that it was already near 1 a.m. This morning I started disc #11 but had to go to work. When I came home, it was time for #12 to get started. How nice of computers, they just sat there and wait without any complaining.

Now I have a set of 12 backup discs. Should anything happen to the iMac, I have the whole computer on backup. There was some errors in Backup log but I suspect it is related to volatile files, such as temporary files in the var directory. I should learn more about Unix file system...

Next thing to do is to backup the PB Al the same way. I am even thinking about making a copy of the whole set for the PB and send it to my sister in St. Louis. Hey, no point of keeping a backup only in the same house.

Some day if I feel rich I may give those double-layered DVDs a shot. Wow, 8 GB of space to spare. But then again, they cost dang too much. Isn't it something like $5 a pop?

27 February 2006

Eternal Sunshine for the Spotless Mind

A few nights ago, I watched the movie Eternal Sunshine for the Spotless Mind on DVD. The movie stars Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet. Carrey's character, Joel, met and fell in love with Winslet's Clementine, but then Clem dumped Joel. Sounds typical so far? Well, the dumping part is very different. Clem is an impulsive person and doesn't just dump Joel but instead goes to a doctor whose specializes in selectively wiping people's memories. Using the latest computer technology, Dr. Mierzwiak can map out one's brain and remove a particular person, say, an ex-lover. Overnight, Clem doesn't know who Joel is any more. Naturally, Joel wants to take revenge by wiping Clem from his memory too. Near the end of the process, Joel came across some memories too fond to part with and changed his mind. Much of the movie happened in Joel's imagination and the movie timeline is even out of sequence. Luckily, it's just a movie so it wasn't hard to grasp. I still cringe when I think of William Faulkner's As I Lay Dying. I read it in high school for some English class and absolutely hate it - still do. Different points of view in a jumble of sequences. Back to Eternal Sunshine, supposedly it was done with very little computer special effects. Very nicely done. One of my favorite scene is where Joel and Clem were first seen laying on the frozen Charles River, but then it became something like Grand Central Terminal, and suddenly, as The Erasers (Dr. Mierzwiak's henchmen) got to Clem, she was seen disappearing into the background. I imagine they probably had Winslet on a rug and pulled her away on it. Jim Carrey wasn't his usual eccentric self - definitely not the Jim Carrey you know from Liar, Liar, The Mask, or the Ace Ventura series. The movie basically boils down to the theory that we need all of our experiences, whether they are painful or happy. The different types of experience are what made us unique individuals.

26 February 2006

Intelligence Failure

That goof that I had with T. and my relation to her turned out to be worse. All along I only knew that my wife calls her father a 叔叔 (shu shu in pinyin, for those of you whose web browser or OS cannot handle Unicode Chinese). I knew that he and my father-in-law are not blood brothers, so I assumed that they are cousins. Today, I found out from my wife's second older sister that T.'s father is really my father-in-law's uncle! So technically I'm a nephew to T. We chatted not too long ago and I told her that and she gladly noted that it doesn't matter. I suppose she would not want to be known as a grandaunt to my son.

24 February 2006

Older But Not Wiser


I don't know where my mind was when I wrote the last post. S. is not a niece on my wife's side - she's a cousin! And I don't know where I got the name S. from. It's supposed to be the first initial of the girl's name, except that it should really be T. Doh! Older yes, wiser, no.

To refresh my memory of the trip I took eleven years ago, I dug out a few old albums and came across the displayed photo. Back then in my wife's old village, there was no running water. Instead, water had to be pumped. I recalled having a crave for a cold soda so I got a bucket of cold water from the pump and kept a bottle of the local soda in the bucket. It wasn't quite the same but it was still good.

23 February 2006

Ch-Ch-Changes

A few nights ago I had an online chat with S., a niece on my wife's side. In 1995 or thereabout, my then-girlfriend/future-wife and I visited S.'s parents in the girlfriend's hometown in rural China. S.'s father is a cousin of my wife's father. He inherited the house that my wife's family used to live in after they moved to the U.S. One thing I remembered the most about the visit was my visit to the local post office to mail a letter. I had to cross rice paddies to get to the building. To affix the stamp to the letter, I had to use glue from a bowl on the counter. No pre-moisted or self-adhesive stamps! Fast forward to 2005 and much has changed. Now S. is in her early 20s and working in an office. She has access to the Internet, sends email, and chats online. How things changed in ten years...

Up until recently, I only chat via iChat client software using a free AOL handle. To chat with S., I had to open up an account with MSN Messenger and use Adium. Silly me, at first I thought with Adium and similar multi-protocol client, I would be able to use just my AOL handle. Of course not. Client software like Adium only allows the chat to happen within one program and one still needs to use accounts from the various services.

21 February 2006

Happy Computing

From foreground to background: My PowerBook Aluminum 15", my elder brother's iBook 12", and my second elder sister PowerBook Titanium 12". Not shown are my ancient PowerBook Wall Street 14" and my first-generation iMac.

Some times ago when my sis needed a laptop to eventually replacement her old Win2K desktop, I convinced her to go the Apple way. She has had very little troubles with it. When she visited my house this past weekend, she brought it along so I could show her how to input Vietnamese and also to fax documents. I setup NeoOffice for her to write Vietnamese with - it's a decent clone of MS Office but it excels Office when it comes to input in other languages. At least that's the way it is with MS Word v. X for the Mac.

When my bro finally decided that he needed a laptop computer, naturally I strongly advised him to get a Mac laptop. He went along and hasn't had to ask me many questions. He had been able to figure out a lot of things himself, even if his computing experience so far has been limited to web-surfing and email. While setting up his iBook to wirelessly access my DSL router, I became hook on wireless web-surfing. Shortly later, I got myself the PowerBook Aluminum 15". Ah, the freedom of wireless networking!

18 February 2006

Goldilocks and The Three Office Bears

At this month's group meeting, some of the topics mentioned were: better passwords; locking our computers when we are away; and someone's been eating the food stored in the pantry! This cartoon can be called Goldilocks and The Three Office Bears. At least Goldilock only completed Baby Bear's time-reporting for the month and didn't do anything harmful, like deleting a bunch of accounts using his computer and account.

15 February 2006

Ba'nh Da Lo+.n (Thousand-Layer Cake)

My mom is a great cook and makes many excellent Vietnamese or Chinese dishes and sweets. She has a sweet tooth herself and likes to make her own things. One of her favorite is ba'nh da lo+.n, a kind of desert. As the picture may reveals, there are many layers making up the cake, thus the Chinese name, when transliterated to English, is thousand-layer cake. I supposed five-layer cake or three-layer cake just don't have the same ring, only "thousand" will do. It takes much time to make the cake, as layers are steamed one at a time. The result of putting ingredients together is some sort of liquid. The liquid is poured into a mold and steamed until it's solidified. Next the next layer is poured onto the bottom layer and the whole thing is steamed again, on and on until the mold can no longer take any more layers, or my mom decides there are enough layers. I think it's steaming that's involved here - one thing I haven't learned in life is how to cook. Mom likes to give the cakes to friends and hear praises, not undeserveredly. People have told her that the cake look beautiful, too good to eat, have a nice texture to them. I encouraged her to sell them as special order, but she hasn't agreed to it. It does take lots of time, so to recuperate the time she would have to charge something for it. There would always be someone who would complain that it costs too much, no matter how good or how beautiful it is, and that's enough to discourage my mom.

This particular cake is in the shape of a fish because mom made it for the Lunar New Year. In the Chinese language, "fish" sounds like "having extra" or "having more than enough", or "prosperous".

What do you think?

14 February 2006

It Is Only Love, Can You Handle It?

For those who care, Happy Valentine's Day! I am more inclined to the not-care camp. It's just a day for the florists to rip us guys off. And for us married guys, it makes little difference what happened today.

Atop the earlier cartoon Burn Dragon Burn, this design is made up of 29 Love Links origami heart design by Francis Ow. I've been doing lots of origami heart but this one was particularly difficult, partly because the instruction on Mr. Ow's web site was rather sparse. I managed to figure it out in the end. My colleague Susan had been picking up various colorful flyers from some public area at New York University. We were supposed to make the entire English alphabet by joining origami cubes but that project was never finished. I put them to good use for this "cartoon".

From top to bottom and going left to right, the origami hearts form lowercase i, the plus symbol, lowercase a, and lowercase m - I&AM is our current group name. Some months down the road, they probably change it to something else.

Always the punster, I included the sentence, "It's Only Love, Can You Handle It?", with Love and Handle strategically placed and highlighted.

13 February 2006

Remembering Dad

Five years ago today my father passed away after two years of living with liver cancer. In my early years, I knew him mostly as the one who meted out corporal punishment, usually with a knuckle or two to the head. It was the norm for life in Vietnam back then, maybe even now. As an adult, I got along better with him, but maybe it has to do with the male attitude, I sometimes didn't give him the credits he deserved and thought I could be better than him at certain things. At the age of 39, I realize now that I'm at the same age as my father was when he left Vietnam with us to become boat people in search of a better life. That took lots of courage. Here he was with a family of wife and four children, mostly teenagers and older, with a house and a job, but he just upped and went out into the unknown of the Pacific Ocean. We were the luckier ones who didn't run into Thai pirates and made it to Indonesia eventually. During the months in various refugee camps, Dad labored to get us money for other necessities of life. At one job, he tried out to unload a large bags of rice, but with insufficient food to eat, he couldn't hold on to the bag and it simply fell off his shoulder. At another job, his feet were badly hurt by cement leaking into his boots. In America, he worked at various jobs, as a dishwasher, a busboy, clothes folder, and finally as a taxi driver. He managed to learn some decent English, good enough to earn him some good tips every now and then as a taxi driver.

Dad sure went through much changes. I cannot imagine me doing the same thing - just pack up and re-start life elsewhere. The most change I've done is to change jobs, but even that involves staying in the same field, so it's not that dramatic. I would definitely would not last long if I have to spend ten hours a day in Manhattan traffic five or more days a week - but that's what my Dad did for the many years he was a taxi driver.

I miss you, Dad.

12 February 2006

Igloo 2006


It is a snowy weekend in the Northeast. New York City got something like twelve inches of snow. Here in Brooklyn, I don't know what the measurement is but it sure is a lot. I started shoveling the sidewalk around 1pm, while my son played in the front yard. Around 2, we came inside to have a cup of hot cocoa - we actually shared one bag because Justin needed to cut down on his sugar intake. We came out again around 4pm, in the backyard, just to play. I built Justin a house by carving a cave from a big pile of snow but then dug too deep and made a hole in the house. It took more shoveling to patch the hole and when it was time to go inside, Justin insisted on breaking down the house. All the sweat and effort I put into it. To have my car ready in case of emergency, I unearthed it - really just the left wheels. Maybe it was because of the 4-wheel drive, or maybe because it was my dilligent shoveling of the snow until the tar of the road was seen, I was able to move it out easily. No pain, no gain. Speaking of pain, my arms are now aching from all that shoveling. I guess it's too much work compared to mousing on the computer. I need to exercise more...

11 February 2006

Dragon Burn



To expand my exposure level, I regularly contribute to the web newsletter MetroExpress of the local Mac user group MetroMac. For MetroExpress, I usually draw with pencil on paper, then scan the result in and add speech bubbles and such via Photosphop. I have thought of at some point to draw on the whiteboard at work and take care both of my weekly cartoon and MetroExpress. The chance finally came with this cartoon. For an upcoming edition of MetroExpress, I've written a review of the CD burning software Dragon Burn. I didn't mean to criticize anyone in the office and made the title of one of the book while thinking about a Broadway play. However, my colleagues quickly translated that to mean nepotism, which we do have a lot around the office. Fraternizing, sucking up, kissing @ss, lunch club, you name it.

The MetroMac version is an embellishment of the original one. I erased the spoken words via Photoshop's Blur tool, then added them back in Comic Life Deluxe. It's so much nicer to use Comic Life's speech bubble instead of drawing them by hand in Photoshop. Comic Life can do much for the average hobbyist and even more for an aspiring cartoonist like me. I plan to make more usage of Comic Life...

04 February 2006

California Adventure


I've been back from a trip to sunny Los Angeles to attend a high school friend's wedding. The last time I was in L.A. it was August 1992 or 1993, I cannot recall the year now. It was suffocatingly hot and a cousin of mine drove me around from places to places. I don't recall any of the places other than that we went to the Hearst Castle and boarded Amtrak at the San Bernardino station. This time around I did all the driving and felt the brunt of the brutal L.A. traffic. I took advantage of the HOV lane but sometimes even that is crowded. One drawback with the HOV lane is sometimes you can miss your exit if you fail to notice the sign announcing your exit coming up. On the morning of the wedding day, I almost missed my exit and had to cross the solid line to get out of HOV then traverse four lanes to barely make it to the exit. At least the drivers in L.A. weren't as rude as New Yorkers. I recall being honked or cut off only once the entire week I was there.

The first morning after we arrived, my friend treated us and his family to a fancy brunch at Cima Restaurant inside the Pacific Palms Resort. For $40+ per person the food and service were very good. My son Justin had a milkshake and decided to make a milk moustache out of it. He's such a funny fellow!

30 December 2005

Anamorphosis

One day a friend sent me pictures of pavement drawings made by the artist Julian Beever. They are amazing! They were drawn on sidewalk and are naturally flat, but when viewed at one certain angle, they look three-dimensional! That's how I got interested in the art of anamorphosis.

The web link above to Phillip Kent is a very good site about all things anamorphosis. Normally we look at art at 90 degrees, straight on. However, with anamorphosis, the drawing is made at an angle different than 90, more often at a very odd angle such that when viewed at 90 degrees it looks out of proportion, at least as we normally take it.

I cannot mention anamorphosis without providing a link to Julian Beever's web site, so here it is, http://users.skynet.be/J.Beever/pave.htm . My favorite is the Batman and Robin drawing. If I ever get to meet Beever, I will bow to him while chanting "We are not worthy!", in the fashion of the dudes in the Wayne's World movie.

Also great is Kurt Wenner's drawings, http://www.kurtwenner.com/street/. In my mind, they are both great. How in the world do they visualize the drawings? Great sense of perspective these artists possess. Not only that, it take days to draw as the artist meticulously fill in the artwork square by square.

Not one to have the talent or the time to draw anamorphosis art, I gave Phillip Kent's Anamorph Me! software a shot but so far the outcome has been disappointing. The more I used it, the more I thought, "Hey, isn't there a filter like this in Photoshop?" I think Anamorph Me! can be great at making cylindrical anamorph, but first I have to get some mylar sheets to create the cylinder. So far in my office's neighborhood in Jersey City, NJ, no store carries it. I am tempted to just buy one of the fun book mentioned by Kent, but eventually if I want to give away anamorph and cylinder I still have to be to make them myself.

Oh, yeah, Happy New Year!