Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boston. Show all posts

Friday, February 3, 2012

My TouchPad Today: Kevin White

The passing of former Boston Mayor (1967 - 1983) Kevin White brought back to mind two times in my "ute" when I had a close encounter with Mayor Deluxe.



Kevin White at the Boston Marathon - rnolan1087 Photo


State Street, Boston - October 1970

Hizzoner was the Massachusetts Democratic gubernatorial candidate and had recently been released from the hospital after emergency surgery to remove half of his stomach due to a problematic ulcer. He wasn't looking too good, but he was back on the campaign trail.

I was a fifteen year-old kid who frequently found my way to downtown Boston and spent hours exploring the streets and "cowpaths" of the old city.

It was a crisp, fall morning and I saw a bit of commotion up ahead... Black cars, men in suits and raincoats who seemed to be milling around, waiting for someone or something.

I managed to get myself near the edge of the activity and tried to blend in with the wall of a building so I could be invisible and watch what everyone seemed to be waiting on. But I was unable to blend all the way in because there were two raincoat clad men behind me having a vigorous conversation of some sort.

It seemed like several minutes had passed when one of the gents milling around the black cars turned towards me and shouted, "Kevin... Kevin, we gotta get goin'!" I backpedaled and almost bumped into the two conversing men behind me... one of which who was the gaunt-looking Mayor Deluxe.

Kevin waived off the shouting aide and kept chatting while the calls of "We gotta go!" kept coming at me, the kid who was trying to be invisible.



Boston Marathon Finish Line - April 1973 (?)

Back in the years right before the Boston Marathon became a big-time, international, sponsor and money-laden event, the finish line was a fairly modest affair on Boylston St. in front of the Prudential Center.

In 1971 I found that if you arrived in the finish line area around noontime (about two hours before the race ended) that the police barricades were not set up and, with a little footwork, a fella could manage to stay inside them with the race officials and sports media.

In (to the best of my recollection) 1973, while toting my Kodak Instamatic camera, I tapdanced around while the barricades were erected and scored a spot at the base of a small wood-sided trailer that was where the winner was brought to get his laurel wreath from the Mayor of Boston.

I wasn't lucky enough to be in a position to get a snapper of the mayor honoring the winner, but I did get some pix of Kevin schmoozing with the crowd.


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While writing this post about my "uteful" encounters with Mayor Deluxe, it occurred to me I saw him one other time.

The sighting was at several major intersections just a short distance from my 1970 encounter, but the time was now the mid-1990's.

I was on a late morning coffee run with some co-workers and the intersections near the Old Massachusetts State House were abuzz with people saying, "There he is!", about a white-haired fella striding along, smiling and waving at the pedestrians.

My work colleagues were a bit younger than me and had grown up in Central and Western Massachusetts, so their reaction was, "Who's that?".

The best answer I could muster was, "He used to be the mayor."
It was impossible to answer their question with anything more than that one sentence. Morning would have turned to afternoon. Afternoon would have turned to night. And I couldn't have even come close to really answering the question "Who's that?" about Kevin White.









This post was written on my TouchPad


Follow me on Twitter... @rnolan1087

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

My TouchPad Today: Filene's Basement - After a Long Illness...

Another post in a series of wanderings out and about with my HP TouchPad and Pre 2 in tow...


On the way to Copley Square Saturday morning to see the final prep work on Boston's First Night 2012's ice sculptures, I passed the final resting place of Filene's Basement on Boylston St.


Pre 2 Photo - rnolan1087

The original Basement on Washington St. (Downtown Crossing) was widely known for its automatic markdowns of unsold merchandise and the annual "Running of the Brides" wedding gown sale.

Princes/Princesses and paupers stood shoulder-to-shoulder while hunting bargains.

Modesty was checked at the door by patrons who tried on new clothing in the middle of the crowded floor... no dressing rooms!

Pre 2 Photo - rnolan1087

See the trailer for the documentary Voices from the Basement on YouTube.

Read the story of the Basement's long illness and passing on boston.com.


Kinda sad to see a Basement ending its life on the ground floor.





This post was drafted on my TouchPad


Follow me on Twitter... @rnolan1087

Saturday, December 31, 2011

My TouchPad Today: Boston's First Night Ice Sculpture

Another post in a series of wanderings out and about with my HP TouchPad and Pre 2 in tow...


This morning I wandered through Copley Square in Boston and caught some video and still pix of the final touches being put on the ice sculpture that is the centerpiece of tonight's First Night 2012 celebration.

See the video here on YouTube.


Pre 2 Photo - rnolan1087
Click here to see a map of the First Night 2012 events in Boston and Cambridge.

Happy New Year to all!




Follow me on Twitter... @rnolan1087

Friday, December 9, 2011

My TouchPad Today: TouchPad goes to Symphony Hall

More wanderings with the TouchPad and Pre2 in tow...

Last weekend the TouchPad accompanied the wife and me to Boston's Symphony Hall for the Handel and Haydn Society performance of Handel's Messiah.

Symphony Hall, Boston, MA - HP Pre2 Photo

The TP wasn't just along for the ride, it was there to work!

Based on past visits to Symphony Hall -- for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Boston Pops -- I knew it can be difficult in the half-light of the hall to read and follow the goings on via the program booklet.

My first thought was to go out and download the program from the H&H Society website for use on the TouchPad.

Alas, this was not to be. The H&H does not have downloadable programs on its site. What they do is post the program on the website of a service (that will go unnamed here) which is a poor choice for navigation and reading on a PC web browser, nevermind how it reads/navigates in a tablet-based browser.


HP TouchPad Screen Capture

The solution (see TP screen cap above) was to download and print to PDF the libretto of Messiah from one of a number of places it is available on the web.

Thus armed, we journeyed to Symphony Hall and I managed to stay awake during the two hour and forty-five minute performance!



This post was written on my TouchPad


Follow me on Twitter... @rnolan1087

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

My TouchPad Today: Sullivan's - The End (of the Season) is Near

More wandering with my TouchPad and Pre2 in tow...

Sullivan's at Castle Island in South Boston is one of the Boston area's great hot dog spots.

HP Pre2 Photo

This month -- leading up to the November 27 closing for the season -- hot dogs are 1/2 price... 80 cents!

Sully's reopens for 2012 on February 25.




This post was written on my TouchPad


Follow me on Twitter... @rnolan1087

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

My TouchPad Today: Windpower North of Boston

More meanderings with my TouchPad and Pre2 in tow...

Using windpower to generate electricity is a controversial subject in Massachusetts and many other parts of the nation. But in a small group of communities just north of downtown Boston, wind turbines have established visibility, if nothing else, during the past few years.



Charlestown

Somerville view of MWRA wind turbine -- HP Pre2 photo
MWRA wind turbine as seen on Rte. 99, Charlestown -- HP Pre2 photo

On Route 99, across from a former Boston Edison electric plant, the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA) recently constructed a 364 foot-high -- at blade peak -- wind turbine in the Charlestown neighborhood of Boston to generate power to assist with sewage processing.

Click here to learn more about the MWRA turbine.

View an HP Pre2 video clip of the turbine on YouTube. (The video was cropped and processed in Super C, Virtual Dub and Windows Live MovieMaker.)



Medford


McGlynn Elementary School wind turbine -- HP Pre2 photo

In 2009, the City of Medford erected a 131-foot wind turbine on the grounds of the McGlynn Elementary School. The 35-foot blades of the unit have been generating 10% of the school's power needs.

Click here to learn more about this turbine on the shore of the Mystic River.



Chelsea

Forbes Park wind turbine -- HP Pre2 photo
Forbes Park from Orient Heights, Revere -- HP Pre2 photo

Reconstruction of an old factory complex began in 2008 on the shore of the "Chelsea Creek". The most visible part of the Forbes Park/Forbes Lofts project is probably a 165-foot wind turbine rising out of the site.

The entire Forbes project may have been stalled by the poor economy, but the turbine is still a stunning sight to local residents and travelers on nearby routes.

Click here to learn more about the original vision for Forbes Park.



This post was drafted on my TouchPad


Follow me on Twitter... @rnolan1087

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

My TouchPad Today: Boston - Faneuil Hall and Quincy Market

More from my recent meanderings in Boston with my TouchPad and Pre2 in tow...

HP Pre2 Photos

Historic Faneuil Hall and the adjacent Quincy Market are a major destination for tourists from around the world seeking food, shopping and entertainment in the heart of early Boston.

See my past photos of the marketplace area on Flickr.


(Post drafted on my TouchPad)


Follow me on Twitter... @rnolan1087

Monday, October 10, 2011

My TouchPad Today: Boston Public Garden

More from my recent meanderings in Boston with my TouchPad and Pre2 in tow...


HP Pre2 Photo

The famous swanboat rides in the Boston Public Garden may be gone for the year, but there's still a lot to see there as the weather cools during the autumn season.

Click here to see some of my past Boston Public Garden photos on Flickr.


(Post drafted on my TouchPad)


Follow me on Twitter... @rnolan1087

Saturday, October 8, 2011

My TouchPad Today: Peter Pan at Boston City Hall Plaza

More from my recent meanderings in Boston with my TouchPad and Pre2 in tow...


HP Pre2 Photo

Construction of a large pavilion is underway at City Hall Plaza for the upcoming run (starting October 18) of the Peter Pan show.

Read the boston.com article here about the creation of the show and the technology that makes it an immersive experience for the audience.


See my past photos of Boston City Hall Plaza on Flickr.


(Post drafted on my TouchPad)


Follow me on Twitter... @rnolan1087

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

My TouchPad Today: Haymarket Pizza - A Hidden Gem

My car is in the shop today, so I've ventured into Boston via the MBTA, TouchPad and Pre2 in tow...



HP Pre2 Photo


Stopping for a quick lunch at Haymarket Pizza (106 Blackstone St. ... just a stone's throw from Faneuil Hall and Quincy Marketplace).

I've been hitting this place a couple of times of year for 20+ years, for 2 cheese slices.

Back then, the damage for two cheese slices was $2.00.

Current damage for two cheese slices is $2.50.

Decor is bare-brick walls and saw-horse tables.

Can't beat it with a stick!


(Post drafted on my TouchPad)




Follow me on Twitter... @rnolan1087

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Flash on the HP TouchPad: Flash It If Ya Got It

For my money, one of the biggest differentiators between the new HP TouchPad and the Apple iPad is the TP's built-in Adobe Flash support for playing video.

Check out my YouTube video about the McKim Building of the Boston Public Library, as it plays on the TouchPad...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DKrx8SCzkTo

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Fit and Finish

Good... Hiawatha Bray of the Boston Globe called the TouchPad a bit "greasy" to hold.  I understand that comment to a point, but I'll choose to go down the path of saying the TouchPad feels "finely polished". Good work on the part of the folks at HP Palm.

One small nit to pick... On/off and speaker volume buttons are a bit raised on my unit, causing some snagging on other objects.  For my money, the buttons should be a bit more flush with the unit, perhaps even to the point of being a bit recessed.