Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Genius - defacing of us currency

One of those things that's better than you figure it's going to be...
A collection of currency from a bored guy - link.


--Nate

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Babies babies everywhere

Clau finally got back from Brazil with tons of stories - I went on a quick Bay Area trip while she was gone and it was great - got to see almost everybody. Spent some time getting to know my little sister, which was also cool - she's getting big fast!
The day after Clau got back home, her friends Andre and Roberta came over to spend some time w/ us and they brought their little baby Gabriella along. Clau just absolutely fell in love w/ the baby so that looks good for us!
Other than that, life is progressing at its usual pace - projects, little stuff, returning back to marital bliss. Of course there's a slew of details but right now I don't have the time to get into it - just wanted to let the world know that I'm still here...

--Nate

Friday, March 21, 2008

This is brilliant

Fictional forum of time travelers in the far future. Exactly what I bet it would look like...

--Nate

Thursday, March 13, 2008

My new wallpaper


I got a wallpaper-sized version of this beautiful oil painting of the Crazy German Kid (search for it on YouTube w/ English subtitles - it's disturbing but funny). I got it from this guy who takes suggestions from readers about what to paint and then paints it - usually some interesting Internet memes. Plus it's a good place to go and make sure that you're up on your Inet culture. For example, I was unaware of the awesomeness that is the Techno Viking until I visited this guys's page - would have been worth the browsing even if I hadn't picked up this nerd-pop-culture-kitsch wallpaper along the way...

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Last-minute trip

As part of my new job, I will sometimes get called to go somewhere at the last minute (although it doesn't happen often). So, tonight I'm jumping on a plane to Hamburg, working Wed-Fri in Hamburg and taking the 6am flight back to NYC on Saturday. Awesome.
I went to Hamburg when I backpacked Europe, and nothing sticks out in my memory. I recall staying for a day or two, thinking "that was lame", and moving on. Maybe this time will be different, although I doubt it.

Anyway, if you're wondering where I am Tues-Saturday, I'm either en route or in Deutchland...

--Nate

Monday, February 11, 2008

Turks and Caicos

Just a quick couple of links - Clau and I spent last Thanksgiving in Turks and Caicos. Definitely a nice place to go, although I prefer Cozumel, both for the amount of stuff to do and the quality of the diving. However, if you like to dive and you really want to get away from it all, T&C is not a bad choice.

Here's a link of the place we stayed on Google Maps

Here's a link to the photos on Flickr (admittedly not a whole lot of 'em, I'm really bad about that...)

That'll at least give some idea of what it was like...

--Nate

Guests and diet

Well, we've been very popular folks lately. Attila, Claudia's Hungarian friend from college, came to NYC on a business trip (he works for Morgan Stanley in Hungary), and stayed with us over the weekend. I really like him a lot - he's a guy of few words but obviously brilliant. He invited a couple of his friends from his GE days to come hang out with us, and we all had a really good time. My mom just came and visited us for a couple of days (always a treat!), and it was great to see her. Unfortunately I had a ton of work I had to do, but I managed to get home on Friday at a reasonable hour so we could have a nice dinner of sushi and Yolato, followed by passing out. Mom left on Saturday morning, then we had one of Clau's colleagues from Venezuela come by in the afternoon - we went to a great Venezuelan place in our neighborhood, then headed back to our place for some marathon gaming sessions - I taught Clau how to play hold 'em and she's really good for a beginner.
Yesterday our latest guests showed up - Viviane (another college classmate of Clau's) and Marcel. We really like them a lot and it's great having them here - in fact the only complaint I have is the effect of all these visitors on my waistline. Needless to say, I have not been eating properly for the last couple of months (between Brazil, no time for Clau or I to cook, and all the visitors), and I'm starting to gain my weight back. Gotta put a stop to that.
So, for the next week, we're entertaining. It's ridiculously cold this week - today it's about 15 degrees and just brutal. Next week, Clau and I are going to take some time and just chill out...

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Poker and Obama

I've finally changed my "books" list to reflect stuff I've been reading lately. I got called for jury duty in early November, and since I had just finished the big project I figured it was a good time to serve. It turns out that I was part of a criminal jury pool - in NYC you're pooled together with a whole ton of other people as potential jurors for the week - when a judge wants to select a jury, the judge requests some number of jurors from the pool (probably 2-3 times the required number of jurors), the clerk randomly draws names from the pool, the selected potential jurors go through the voir dire process, some are selected, and the rest are tossed back into the pool.
At the time I showed up, there was a really high-profile murder trial that was going to begin the selection process, so the judge ordered _all_ the pool (about 200 of us) to go to the courtroom. The judge explained that the case would likely take 4-6 weeks, and told us that if we had a reason we couldn't go, we better give it now. Since I already had our vacation planned for later in the month, I told the judge I couldn't serve without losing all my pre-paid items (airfare, hotel deposit, etc), and she let me off the hook. That was the closest I ever got to serving on a jury - the rest of the time I just sat there. So, at lunchtime on the first day, I purchased "The Audacity of Hope" at the nearby college bookstore, powered through it over the next two days, and decided right there and then that I'm voting for that guy.
For our trip (I'll have to write about that in another post), I borrowed "Dreams From My Father" from the library, and again was struck by what a great writer Obama is. I don't believe I had ever read a book by a politician before - I always imagined that they would be dull - but I really enjoyed those books. Incidentally, when I checked the book out of the library in mid-November, there were probably twenty copies sitting on the shelf (it was filed away in the History / Biography section) - keep in mind this was the main branch of the library, but there are probably another 50-100 copies scattered around the NYC library system. Later on, I tried to renew it online (it was raining and I was lazy), I found that there were almost a thousand people on the waiting list for the book! So, it looks like a lot of people are really interested in checking it out.

On a completely different front, I've started learning how to play poker. I've been playing for about 10 days now and I have to say I'm enjoying it - the time I normally play is between 11pm and 1am, after Clau goes to sleep - I usually play in one tournament per night. So far, I'm 10 bucks down, which isn't too bad! I got the book "Bigger Deal" from the library on a whim and I read it while we were in Turks and Caicos. A bit boring and dry, especially if you don't play poker, but it did get me interested - theoretically it's about the author trying to improve his game sufficiently to have a shot at the WSOP (he ultimately wins a satellite to enter, but does poorly in the actual event), but there's a lot of history and fun facts about the game interspersed throughout the book. So, I figured that since I'm something of a dilettante, I would be best suited to borrow some books from the library and see if I can get anything out of them.
After reading a bit about poker, I've discovered that the really interesting thing about it is that it's a game of both math and psychology - on one hand, you need to be able to quickly figure out what you have, what you _might_ end up with and the approximate odds of you ending up with it, as well as what your opponent(s) might have and the approximate odds of _their_ ending up with something better than what you have or might end up with. Sound complicated? It is! But, of course, most people (like me) can only get a general idea of these things, and particularly when you're playing online and the action is fast and furious, you don't have adequate time to really think all these things through - however, the more you can calculate in the short amount of time you have, the better off you'll be.
Now, if it were just a game of math then it would just be math nerds who excelled at the game - but then you throw bluffing into the mix and it gets really interesting. I've never played with actual people before, although some friends have a ongoing game that I'm planning on checking out next week, but even online you've got to build a quick profile of your opponents - do they call a lot of hands, do they raise more often than they should statistically have good cards (i.e. do you think they're bluffing or at least semi-bluffing), do they almost never play and then, once in a blue moon, start throwing all their money into the pot, etc? These styles of play all have different strengths and weaknesses, and it's a lot like paper-scissors-rock: what works against one style can get completely dominated by another, but there's no one style that beats all others (or else everyone would be playing that way!).
Finally, of course, there's dumb luck - sometimes the cards are coming your way and sometimes they're not. I haven't really learned what to do about that yet, although really good players can certainly take those lemons and turn them into lemonade. But, as you can tell, I'm definitely enjoying the learning process, especially since I can play a tournament and get a lot of practice for two bucks. And, truthfully, there's a lot of lessons that can learned from poker and applied to your everyday life - a lot of decisions in life are based on the same criteria: where do I currently stand, what are my potential payoffs, how likely is this to succeed, what's the likelihood of failure, what are the benefits of success vs. the costs of failure. Plug numbers into machine, chug chug chug, and out comes the "correct" answer - then you have to decide what to do with it. Not a bad series of life lessons for 5-10 bucks a week!

Long time no write

Well lots has happened - as everyone knows we went to Brazil, it was great - my Portuguese has definitely improved since last time, and it was an interesting experience to talk to a lot of Claudia's family for what felt like the first time. We also went to Joao Pessoa, the hometown of our friend Andrea, and stayed with Andrea's family there - they remind me a lot of Claudia's family: they're very close, very warm and wonderful people. Unfortunately Clau and I really wanted some time by ourselves and we didn't get it - normally we take a few days "off" in the middle of the vacation and retreat somewhere by ourselves, but we used that normally reserved time to go to Joao Pessoa. The funny part is, I think we were a bit of a burden on Andrea's family as well, but it was a cultural etiquette problem more than anything else; we didn't want them to think that we were using them as a hotel, and they didn't want to invite us to their city and not be there to guide us every step of the way. But, like I said, if you're going to be stuck with folks in a strange city, Andrea's family are great folks to be stuck with.
Other than that the trip was relatively uneventful - as always there are lots of fun things to gossip about going on in Clau's family, but then again what family isn't like that?
Doing some interesting work lately - I was pretty much twiddling my thumbs for the better part of November and December, but now things are picking up. I can't really get into stuff in progress, but suffice it to say that I have (at least on paper) a very cool job, and things have hit a good level of busy-ness, so that I'm not working my butt off but I'm also not bored. Overall not such a bad deal.
I know this isn't very interesting and I'll cut this off now, just that folks have been asking how life has been for the last few months - truthfully Clau and I have settled into a groove - if it were any city other than New York I'd probably call it a "rut", but since there's always stuff going on, it hasn't gotten boring yet. We both come home from work tired, if we're up to it then one of us cooks, if we're not up to it then we order something (this is one thing we're trying very hard not to do, but we're still at about 50% home cooking at this stage). On Fridays, if we have the energy, we go out with friends, if not then we stay at home and watch TV or a movie, on Saturdays we talk about all the errands we have to get done over the weekend and end up vegging all day, then usually go out on the town for our weekly drinking binge. On Sundays we vow to start taking it easier on Saturdays, or at least to start taking care of our weekend errands on Saturday so we don't need to do them with a hangover on Sunday. On Monday we go back to work and play bocce at night, Tues-Thurs we come home, get changed, and cook/order food.
Like I said, a groove.

I've got some resolutions, I'll write about those separately. One of them, however, is to write more entries to this blog, for my own posterity if for nothing else...

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Done done done!

We finally finished last Friday, and so far everything is working very well (with the exception of an ongoing problem apparently caused by a partner this morning). Everything is working and groovy, and we now have premium content such as Arrested Development available on our partner's web pages. There were some snags but overall it went really well.
For fear of the mighty search engines finding me, I'm still not going to name names, but overall it's been a great experience. Things definitely didn't end up the way I thought they would, but I think everyone got a lot out of the project, and we are all really really happy that it's finally over.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Laying low

Just waiting to move from one project to the next. To break the ennui, I've started experimenting with a less resource-intensive alternative to Azureus. I finally settled on rtorrent - it's a really neat ncurses-based torrent client, has a very small memory footprint (less than 50M when it's cranking, and that's including shared libs), and can be conveniently run in a screen session (making it easy to check from anywhere). Furthermore it can be almost entirely event-driven so it's really easy to write hooks however you like. As an example, it's easy to define hot-drop folders for torrents, and when a torrent is deleted the program stops dl'ing / seeding. Very very cool.
So, Azureus has a few features that I really need - mainly SafePeer and RSSFeed. To replace SafePeer I've installed MoBlock - it's an extremely lightweight PeerGuardian-esque tool that works as a set of iptables queuing rules. So far it's been working out well for me, the only drawback is that I haven't found a good place to automatically check for updates to the p2p file, but I expect to have that sorted soon.
So, all that was left was RSSFeed. And, believe it or not, nobody seems to have written this yet. There is a Perl GTK client for this, but the whole point is to be light and (preferably) gui-free. And, oddly enough, nobody seems to have written a text-based client for this - what I wanted was something that could be daemonized, because further down the line I would like to have this all as part of the startup scripts for my home server.
I was able to find this script on the Interweb, and I've heavily bastardized it to fit my own needs. At some point I will probably re-write the whole thing entirely (since it now bears little resemblance to the original script), and then maybe release it into the wild. Let me know if you're interested in trying it out (it's still Perl, so theoretically it should work on a Windows box, although I don't know how useful anyone else would find it). It's definitely been a fun little project to work on.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

WTF mate?

OK, so I've gotten a taste of the new 720p rips of shows that are now out there. Oo-la-la, they look nice. Unfortunately, the G4 Mac Mini just doesn't have anywhere near the horsepower required to play them, so I've got to look into getting a new Mac Mini. I took a quick look at the Apple TV, which I could hack to get it to do what I want, but really we're talking 300 dollars for a medium-power Apple TV plus a lot of hacking around (and voiding the warranty) vs 700 dollars for a full-power Mac Mini and a lot less hacking around. I'll probably go with the more expensive and easier option.
While I was shopping around, it occurred to me "hey waitaminute! I have a badass XBox 360 - surely it can handle some hi-def content?!?" But alas, the Xbox 360 suffers from being completely crippled, and it can't really handle much in terms of video out of the box. You can, however, connect it to your PC running Vista or Windows MCE, which will transcode your video from the Windows PC to the XBox on the fly and stream it. I suppose that just being able to mount a share on your PC and watch it over the network is so, like, 2003. No, it's way cooler to transcode my media into another codec and stream it - after all, why just saturate the network when you can saturate the network _and_ spike the CPU load on your desktop? I think Microsoft has become a lot less evil over the years, but stuff like that just completely chaps my ass.

In other news, Switzerland was awesome. It was great to see Fabienne and I felt particularly honored to be invited. I made an ass of myself more than once but overall it was cool. We brought home lots of chocolate and duty-free booze, which we later discovered was actually more expensive than just getting it in the states. Live and learn.

Work is nuts, I have a good idea of what I'll be working on next but I don't wanna jinx it. More on that later.

--Nate

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Travel plans

We've been trying to work out travel plans for a little while and I think we're finally set. We're heading to Zurich this weekend for Fabienne's wedding - it's just a quick trip, leaving Thursday evening and coming back on Monday afternoon. Still, I'm looking forward to the wedding, and at least there should be good chocolate. Too bad the dollar is doing so poorly now, since it means I'll be paying a lot more this time around than the last.
We've been debating what to do for Thanksgiving - last year we went to Aruba, and we've decided to follow in that same vein this year - having two free days and employers that will generally give you a freebie day or two for TG is just too good an opportunity for vacation to pass up.
So, this year, we're heading to Grand Turk island in the Turks and Caicos - the island is 6 square miles and it's reputed to have fantastic diving (and not much else). It's also considerably less expensive than we initially thought it would be - overall it's probably gonna run about three grand for a week of diving and beach solitude, which is about standard for a week-long vacation these days. We wanted to drag Sam and Matt with us, but they're trying to save up for an apartment so they'll probably be responsible and stay in NYC. Claudia is jumping up and down in anticipation and I'm getting pretty excited, too.
For Christmas / New Year's we'll be in Brazil - it's been at least two years since we were there for the holidays and we're definitely due to spend them with her family (I can't for the life of me remember what we did last Xmas - I think we stayed in NYC but it's all blurry - hey, I suppose I can check my blog later and find out!). We'll be in Rio / SP for Xmas, then head up to Joao Pessoa for the New Years - another break of nothing but beach and beer - man, life is good!

--Nate

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

I have seen the light! Now what?

Well, the big project finally finished. In the interest of not drawing any attention to myself or the company for which I work, I won't get into details. Suffice it to say that I worked harder than I ever have in my life, and if not for the fact that I barely got to see my wife, or the beautiful NYC summer, I would have loved it. As it is, I enjoyed it.
So now what? We've basically gotten everything out the door and we're going through some validation. I will probably go to LA sometime later in the month to do a formal handoff of the SysAdmin duties and say goodbye to all the people I've met and worked with, and after that I'm pretty much done w/ it. I'm also assisting another team with another thing, but that's more of a 40-50% time job, so overall life is looking pretty good.
I had a meeting with HR yesterday, and they said they'll be presenting me with a few options in a week or so. We'll see what the future holds!

--Nate

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

rude people and life lately

This morning was like almost every other morning - I hit the snooze button on my alarm for about an hour (when will I learn? Either wake up or set your alarm for an hour later - sleeping in a 9-minute cycle benefits nobody!), showered, got on the subway, and went to the Starbucks for my wakeup. The Starbucks right by my work is pretty good - they know their client base is working fools like me who need a wakeup and not hipsters who want to hang out, so it's efficient. Even so, the line can sometimes get really long, and as an additional speedup measure they will occasionally ask you what you want while you're still about 6 people away from the register - they get started on the drink, you pay, you pick up the drink, you leave - everyone's happy.
So, this morning was busy - I'm still waking up, I've got my mp3 player going full blast and I'm reaching for it to turn it off. I see a Starbucks employee talk to a woman, then she casually wanders off to the pickup area (in the opposite direction from the registers).
I thought to myself "did she just do what I thought she just did?" Meaning, did she just ask for her drink, then walk to pick it up without paying for it? She was really attractive and very well dressed - she didn't look like she couldn't afford a cup of coffee. I really wanted to yell at her and make a scene, but I just wasn't _completely_ sure that she had just done what I thought she had done. She picked up her coffee drink and walked off like nothing was the matter.
I suppose that some people would have made a scene anyway - after all, I'm pretty sure, just not 100% sure. Maybe I would have under different circumstances, but two times in recent memory, someone has made a scene about my doing something that I didn't do (and I'm not counting the American Airlines horror story). A few months ago at the gym a woman misinterpreted the timer on my cardio machine and told me I had to get off - I told her I'd get off when my time was up and then her boyfriend started yelling at me. I quickly told him my time was up and ignored him afterwardf - he kept yelling until the woman next to me started screaming at him about she had only been there twenty minutes and I started after her, and eventually the guy shut up.
Recently at the Oakland airport, I was in line for the security check - at some point the line forked into two lines (to show boarding pass and ID, not for the X-ray machine), with one line having about 10 people in it and the other one empty. I opted for the empty line, and later on a woman tapped me and started yelling about how rude I was to cut in front of people. Her husband (or whatever he was) spent the entire time apologizing for her. Boy, did I feel for that guy, but I don't know how he hasn't learned the important lesson by now: when your S.O. makes a scene, you always have her back, even when she's wrong.
But I digress - the point being that I won't make a scene unless I'm 100% sure that the person has done wrong, and I wasn't 100% sure. But you can bet that if I see that woman at Starbuck's again I'll be watching her like a hawk.

So, news in our lives - I've been working like crazy but the light is there at the end of the tunnel. Clau's been traveling for her job a lot, and unfortunately her travel started right after mine finished, so we haven't been able to spend much time together. She just got back from Memphis last Thursday and had her impacted wisdom tooth taken out on Friday, so we spent the entire weekend being painfully bored in the apartment. Last weekend also happened to be the first really beautiful weekend weather-wise in a long time, and we were shuttered in the apartment. Hopefully she'll be up and running by next weekend and we can have some fun.

In work news, I've been poking at a whole bunch of things - my bosses recently put me on a task to take a tab-delimited text file, a csv, and a series of XML files and do some tasks with the information therein. Obviously this is a job for Perl, and it pains me how much my skills have deteriorated. I was never a l33t Perl hacker but my current lack of ability makes me sad. Hopefully this task will sharpen me up a bit.
Also, the new company I've been helping out will soon have a name - I can't say I'm crazy about it, but in the words of the folks who gave me the name "it grows on you". It has yet to grow on me but time will tell. Soon enough I'll be able to talk about what I'm working on, which will also be nice...

--Nate

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Books

It's been a good week for books - read the last Harry Potter book, and I have pretty much the same opinion as everyone else - I really liked it but I thought the ending was a cop-out.
Just finished a book called the Kite Runner last night. That is one fucked-up story, but it's beautifully written; I'm really looking forward to reading his next one.
Work is, as usual, very busy, but I can see the light at the far end of the tunnel...

Monday, August 13, 2007

The vi editor

Matt's getting into using the vi editor and it got me reminiscing. Honestly it's my unix editor of choice. Back in the good old days of QAD I had to work on every mainstream Unix flavor, and vi was the one editor that would be installed on all of them. Even now that I only tend to work on Linux it remains my editor of choice. And I have confidence that if I ever have to dig into an ancient HP-UX system I'll know exactly how to edit stuff. It's also handy if you have to work on a very strange keyboard, since you can do everything with only the a-z keys (plus escape).
Besides being ubiuitous, vi is so feature-packed that I doubt that any single person knows every single feature. I'm still learning stuff by watching colleagues - they'll do something cool and then I'll ask "whoa - how did you do that?'. A couple of fun examples:
1) substitution - just like sed - something like ':s/foo/bar' will replace the first instance of 'foo' on the current line with 'bar'. ':/foo/bar/g' will replace all instances on the current line, and ':%s/foo/bar/g' will replace within the whole file.
2) You can break into a shell w/ vi and do cool stuff with it - so for example if you are writing a message and want to give your network info, just do ':r !ifconfig' or ':r !ipconfig' if you're in windows. Voila, the output appears. Awesome. Note: the shell ability is just one reason why vi should _not_ be a sudo command - it's far too powerful in the wrong hands.
3) The period - repeats the last thing you did. Handy if I'm commenting two or three lines.
4) All kinds of little features - for example, the tilde will change the case of the highlighted character from upper to lower and vice-versa. Handy if you realize you mistyped the variable or were typing head-down with the caps lock on.

I've been using the vi editor for about 10 years now (wow!) and I'm still basically using the same functionality it's had the whole time - I'm not even getting into anything fancy yet, and at this rate I never will.

--Nate

Friday, July 20, 2007

Huzzah! (almost)

The new CEO of Company_C (the child company of my employer and a similar company) made some major org changes - the good news is that:
1) My scope of official responsibility has shrunk dramatically, and
2) I get to go back to NYC!

I had already made plans to visit my folks this weekend so I'm going to carry through with it, plus I'd like to see the data center project done before I go. But, as soon as the D.C. is finished, I'm getting on the next plane home. Clau and I are very happy.

Building the D.C. has been incredibly hard, stressful, confusing, and awesome. Yesterday was about the most fun I've had since I joined Company_B; it was an absolute nuthouse and I felt like a general (well, maybe a colonel) giving orders and making the whole thing go smoothly. I wouldn't necessarily want to do it again but it's been a blast - if I hadn't had all kinds of other stuff bogging me down then I probably would have loved it.
However, it's like a lot of other things - doing it once was a fantastic experience, but I wouldn't want to make a career out of it. Fortunately the guy who was heading up the D.C. part is about the best hardware / D.C. guy I've ever seen - if I was a colonel, then he was the general. Furthermore, even he was impressed with what we've accomplished in a very short time.

So, overall that's good news - got the D.C. hoisted, and I get to go home when it's done (and catch up on the work for my new role in the project). However, since my workload will probably shrink to a more manageable level, I might actually get to enjoy the rest of the summer. Callooh! Callay!

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

No time!

Wow life is busy right now. In LA last week, spent the weekend in NYC, back in LA today, off to Oakland to visit the family next weekend, then back to LA, then back to NYC, then maybe back to LA - but hopefully not.
The snowball is definitely picking up speed - I shudder to think of what life will be like in a month...

--Nate

Friday, July 06, 2007

The hammer has dropped

Oh my sweet lord am I busy. I'm so wiped out that I can't even focus anymore. There's an endless stream of crap that's gotta get done, a hard immovable launch date, and bosses all the way to the top with no sympathy for my wanting to have a life (at least not for the next few months). Ill probably end up spending 50% of the next few months in L.A. until it's done, and the amount of crap to crank out is just getting ridiculous. Thankfully everyone's really sharp and assiduous, so at least I'm definitely not carrying all the weight - if anything I'm pulling everyone else down - definitely a different feeling for me.
I heard that one of my old coworkers from Company_A is leaving. I'm happy for him that he's moving along in the world, but I feel bad for Company_A. In retrospect they weren't all _that_ bad, and the only thing that was really reprehensible was making me pick up and finish the search project while my little brother was in town.
So, unless I win the lottery, I'm going to be a slave for the next couple of months. After we launch in late Sept I'll be able to have a life again.
Incidentally, it's all JetBlue from now on. Although theoretically with the amount of cross-country flying I'll be doing, I could end up with an impressive number of American miles...but it's not worth it.