Mittwoch, 28. März 2012

Schloss Kapfenburg + Nördlingen

The same day I posted about past bad experiences in my life, I happened to have another very pleasant one. Enjoying a whole week off duty from work, in order to use up the remainder of my vacation from 2011, I hopped on my car and drove to a town called Nördlingen, following the friendly advice of a friend of mine (Jörg, the husband of Nina). Knowing only that Nördlingen is a picturesque town, I was still pleasantly surprised how true this actually is.

On the road from Oberkochen to Nördlingen, which is a total drive of 30+ min, I also encountered a castle by the name of Kapfenburg. - A "castle", being a "castellum" in the Latin original, would denote a type of fortified structure, like the German "Burg"; however, the German "Schloss", while being related to the German verb "schließen" (to close, to lock), nowadays refers to a rather unfortified palace-like home of great splendor. Nevertheless, apparently owing to the etymology of Schloss, the two meanings are not fully separated, and hence Kapfenburg is actually Schloss Kapfenburg. Despite several attacks on the compound, it is in an excellent state till the present day and thus open for (free) visits, and also the home of a musical academy (I could hear them practice), plus the location of a restaurant that is specialized on weddings. In light of the breathtaking view from the hilltop, I can definitely see how that would be a good choice, even without having tried their menu.

Schloss Kapfenburg
Schloss Kapfenburg - gate details
Schloss Kapfenburg - a citadel-type building within

Schloss Kapfenburg - the interior side of the gate

Nördlingen itself also made it through history without significant damage. Centuries ago it was styled a Freie und Reichsstadt (contracted to Freie Reichsstadt, or Free City of the Empire, in the vernacular). The empire, or Reich, in question, was the Holy Roman Empire (later: Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation), a succession state of the Carolingian Empire of Charlemagne (Charles the Great). It was Charlemagne who adopted the title of emperor from the waning (western) Roman Empire (waning in particular because it had been split in west and east; the eastern part being the Byzanine Empire). (Note that in these times each part of the empire had a prime ruler, the Imperator, and a second in command, the Caesar, the Latin original of Cesar. Ironically, the German word for emperor, which is obviously derived from imperator, is Kaiser, which itself is derived from Caesar.) - The sons of Charlemagne soon engaged in a succesion war, which ultimately resulted in a division of the former western Roman empire in a western Franconian realm and an eastern Franconian realm. The latter then became the Holy Roman Empire under the regnum of the Ottonians (at first), and was to last until the 19th century, when Napoléon Bonaparte from the former western part of the Franconian realm, now known as France, challenged the east (or what was left of it after such notable conflicts as the Thirty Years' War between Protestants and Catholics) for the throne and the imperial crown. Being a highly capable military commander, he defeated most everyone in Europe and declared himself Emperor of France, thus extinguishing the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. The latter, however, maintained a successor from its own ranks in the house of Habsburg, which continued to rule over Austria. Ever since this "schism" (of the imperial style between France and Austria) modern-day Austria and Germany have been separate countries (if we disregard a short period of reunification in the darkest of times in the 20th century). Napoléon, also a very cunning man, promoted many members of the German nobility, and especially the elevation from Duke to King (e.g. in Bavaria) gave some of them a feeling of independence that competed with the idea of belonging to a greater entity. When the Bonaparte dynasty faded (still within the 19th century), and Germany was reunited under the lead of Prussia, the German Empire was formed/restored. Austria, however, remained separate, and continued to uphold its own imperial style. Thus, in 1914, there were five great powers in Europe who clashed over their (colonial) expansionism: Russia, France, England, Germany, and Austria. Eventually, in 1918, the Austro-German alliance was defeated, and the German Emperor was forced to abdicate, giving way for the first Republican government on German soil. Unfortunately, World War I had wrecked the German economy, had empoverished much of the German population, and some people wanted revenge on the French for the defeat. Therefore, Hitler was able to assume absolute power and establish his reign of terror, which took an estimated death toll of 60 - 70 million, but fortunately ended long before the proclaimed 1,000 years it was supposed to last.

I apologize for deviating from the original topic of Freie Reichsstadt by this much. But I intended to point out that although in the anglophonic community the word Reich may be primarily associated with the unholy Third Reich, it is not per se the term under which Hitler's evildoing is best subsumed. In fact, the idea of a Reich is associated with a monarchy, and Hitler was not a monarch, rather than a dictator. (Likewise, a monarchy is not neccessarily the opposite of a democracy, as it is easily exemplified by the UK. The opposite of a monarchy is a republic; i.e., a nation whose head of state is elected and not crowned.) Nevertheless, Hitler saw his ruling as Reich #3, where #1 was the Holy Roman Empire (962-1806), and #2 was the rather short-lived German Empire (1871-1918). - By the way, I remember once reading about Germany in the CIA factbook that it had achieved its "independence" in 1871. That is a rather crude misrepresentation of the historical accounts: in light of the historical roots the concept of gaining Independence does not apply to Germany, but then again, it is an American source, and in American history forming a nation required gaining independence. It is true though that the moment of forming the nation of Germany is usually attributed to the creation of the German Empire.

There is another reason why I layed out the history of Germany by this extent. Previously I have told you about the three most difficult times in my life. They appear to have occurred in ascending order: #3 civilian service, #2 a bad breakup, #1 recent unemployment. Likewise, the three German Reiche (the plural of Reich) appear to have an increased moral corruption, in my personal, naïve perception: #1 was an entity struggling for power with its neighbors and rivals from within, but neccessarily (to the best of my knowledge) an example for cruely and barbaric behavior that goes beyond its contemporaries. #2 was looking for a fight with its neighbors, but at the end of the day the neighbors were eager themselves to slug it out for the lead in Europe. It was the cruelty of ensuing World War I (chemical weapons, trench warfare, introduction of the battle tank etc.) that leaves the German Empire in a bad light. Yet #3, as much as it ashames me, is now for all times the textbook example of a rogue state and an enemy to humanity.

Therefore, let's enjoy the scenic sight of Nördlingen, and for the moment forget about the Nazi horror.

Nördlingen - church of St. Georg from afar
Nördlingen - one of the city gates
St. Georg from below


typical house in Nördlingen
Nördlingen - another city gate
steep (!) stairs inside the tower at the (second) city gate
first city gate again, seen from inside
"He who prefers safety over freedom deserves being enslaved."

beautiful sunset just outside the city wall of Nördlingen

Montag, 26. März 2012

Happiness - A Matter of Perspective

This post will be different. I won't feature a photo, or any other type of media. It will consist of mere text. It will also tell you more about the way I feel, rather than the way I think.

Recently the military draft system in Germany has been suspended. As per the German constitution (the Grundgesetz, or basic law, § 4.3), "noone shall be forced to do military service bearing arms, against their conscience. Further details are regulated by a federal law." Said details involve how a male German at the relevant age was allowed to dodge military service by performing a civilian service, which typically consisted of assisting the staff in a hospital, or an educational institution. Some even got to drive an ambulance.

When I reached the age of 18, I was told to report to a military office in Saarbrücken, where I would have to undergo a medical check-up. It was also to be determined on that day when and where I would have to serve. Owing to a peculiarity of the German secondary schools, I was going to graduate only at age 20, so my actual service was postponed by another two years. Also, the day of the medical examination I already filed for the option of civilian service. Now, legally speaking it isn't really an option, rather than a replacement, as the military service was considered the standard way, and the civilian service an exemption; this did not change the fact that in my generation about 50% of the young German males rejected military service and were accepted into civilian service; not least because civilian service personnel was considered an important factor in staffing hospitals and other community institutions.

Nevertheless, in order to be accepted one had to write an essay, laying down the reasons why one's conscience would not allow a participation in an armed conflict. I remember stressing on my upbringing, on attending a catholic high school, on watching influencial movies such as Full Metal Jacket, and on other similar things ... I eventually received a letter from a federal office that said I was exempt from the military and could serve the civilian way, and that this decision could not be legally challenged. I was quite happy, because besides the prospect of actually killing someone, which I honestly would not want to do, I have always imagined the military as a place where people get yelled at, and have to perform dull tasks. Instead, I thought of the civilian service as a satisfying commitment; especially at that kindergarden where I was going to perform my duties. In hindsight, this is quite ironic ...

The idea of serving in a kindergarden was originally my mom's, who encouraged me to seek a post where I could rely on my ease of connecting with children. Sounded great to me, too. So I ended up being hired by a charity organization; in order to assume the preferred duty station, one has to acquire the post themselves, present it to the authorities, and the wait to have it formally approved. That's how it worked for me, and after a proud and joyful graduation from high school in June 1996, I started my civilian service on September 2, 1996. (Typically the service starts on a first of a month, but in my case that would have been a Sunday, so I had formally one day less of service, and in practice one day less of pay.)

It started out fine, and as it happened my "predecessor" was still around for a few weeks. He had to serve a total of 15 months, while it had been reduced to 13 months right before my term started. By coincidence he was also the son of a former high school teacher of mine; a lady who has enabled me (quite well) to read Latin texts (up to the point of being able to follow Julius Cesar's accounts of his war against the Gauls). Therefore, although this guy (who had also attended the same school) and I had never been socially involved, we did know one another, and he knew that I had been a successful student (in all modesty I ranked third out of more than 80 students in my year). While for me this was an obligation to perform well also in this new environment, for one of the staff it became the ultimate reason to bully me all the way through my 13 months of civilian service.

At this point you perhaps exclaim, wait a minute - how can you be bullied by a member of the staff of a kindergarden? Aren't these supposed to be nice ladies (ofr, less often, gentlemen) who read fairy tales to the little ones, and offer sweet treats to anyone who comes around? Or so I thought myself, in all naïveté, and of course I would never have revealed my scholastic achievements to my new colleages without them asking - it was the other guy who hinted it to them, and when they asked I had no choice but to answer.

That alone would haven't led anywhere. Turns out, one of the four permanent staff ladies (two for each group of fifteen children) apparently envied me for my past and future academic ambitions (college was next for me), especially because she had acquired her permission to attend college in televised classes, and still at her age (then mid-thirties) she would have to find a source of money to get her actually all the way through that stage, while I could still rely on my parents to fund me. So, obviously I was privileged, and she was not, but I would like to think that I earned my tertiary education, and that I belonged in college, and even in grad school. I feel sorry that said lady could not live her dream, but it wasn't right of her to take it out on me. I would like to refrain from whining about each and every incident, because that was not my goal when I started this post, and especially because this happened many years ago.

Nevertheless, I feel I should exemplify the lady's behavior, and there was one particularly revealing incident: one day another kindergarden, who belonged to the same organization but didn't have anyone performing his civilian service at that time, decided to go on a day trip to an amusement park. Therefore they requested that I be their driver for that one day. So I hopped on one of the vans the charity organization actually owned in two-digit numbers, drove to the other kindergarden, then onward to the amusement park, and finally back home. Everyone was happy, and the staff of the other kindergarden and I apparently clicked pretty well. A few days later I was told by my bully colleague that they liked me so much that they would even hire me, as the post of doing civilian service continued to be vacant; but she went on and told me that she couldn't understand why anyone would like to do something like that. - That compliment was a tad tainted, to say the least, eh?

Again, my intention is not to whine about such (obviously) unfair treatment, nor to publicly expose an old bully. While such erratic behavior still leaves me speechless, in particular when shown by someone who is entrusted with the well-being of three to six year old, at the time I felt I could not fight back - because of the little children. And it was them who helped me to get through this dark period, because at the end of the day my mom was right: I did enjoy their company. It enabled me to be walking tall, despite the hostilities I was receiving.

Now, this is how far I can stick out my neck without sounding too self-righteous. And in fact, I wanted to share a lesson learned on happiness: if you are able to find it somewhere, then many a hardship becomes bearable. Not all, but many. To put it into perspective, my civilian service turned out to be the third most difficult time of my life (as of today). The second most difficult time was due to a very painful breakup. The foremost difficult time of my life so far was the period of unemployment after coming home from my postdoc. Hence, another lesson learned: everything is easier if I have the benefit of feeling useful ... Luckily, there was a happy ending; so if I do an occasional whining about the lack of entertainment in my new home town, please bear in mind that the alternative of being unemployed would mean to me the very essence of doom.

Sonntag, 5. Februar 2012

A Sort of Homecoming

Once more it took me longer than anticipated (and than I had hoped) to update this blog. In case you are still bearing with me, thank you for your patience!

The previous post was a bit of escapism, telling you how I travel around between Stuttgart, Ulm, and Oberkochen, in order to escape the scarse supply of entertainment in town, and the dullness of not being online at home. Now, as to the latter, this has been remedied since about one month ago, which is now enabling me to post more regularly ... or so I wish. The former isn't actually so bad asit may have sounded in the revious post. I just needed to adjust a little more and find some hobbies I can pursue on my own.
I would like to prove that I have found more than one such occupation. In principle I have been a lover of photography (myself taking the photo, that is) for a long time. Recently I awarded myself for (re-)joining the work force with a new DSLR camera the technical possibilities of which certainly outdo my skills at this point. But I will accept the challenge and try to become an even more avid picture taker (and, by extension, an even more dedicated blogger) in the future. - The other hobby I have come to indulge in is cooking.
But let's have a look at the photos in this post. Starting out with the visit of my godchild and his parents (which, by coincidence, took place on the very weekend I had posted that whiny complaint about the lack of distraction in Oberkochen), we find that I am still in touch with them, and this time it took them only a few months to come and see me after I had moved to a new location. Not that I would blame them - having a family means a lot of your spare time is booked already. Nevertheless, (a)-(d) show that they were here, and we were having a great time together!
The next highlight was my quick and spontaneous getaway to Munich, for New Year's Eve and New Year's Day. Despite spending only one night there, I got to see much of the downtown area ((e), (f), (i), (j)), I rode the subway ("U-Bahn") to move around the city ((g) was taken at Marienplatz, beneath the City Hall), I went on top of the TV tower at the Olympic Stadium of 1972 ((h), I will have to do this again when it is allowed to access the open platform, so there won't be any reflections from the windows), I had several slices of really delicious pizza at La Pizzetta ((k), note that Munich is only a couple of hours away from Italy), and some equally satisfying ice cream next door at Häagen Dazs, but by then I had grown weary of walking in the rain, so I decided to return to the hotel and await the new year in a supine position (i.e., watching television). Nevertheless, on the way back I came by the central train station, where I bought a piccolo size bottle of champaign and a bag of potato chips for a proper welcome celebration for 2012. (After all, I was having much greater expectations for this year than I was having for the one before ...) So I did celebrate a bit, even if it wasn't in the company of other folks. And finally, the next day I had an original Bavarian lunch at Augustiner, a local micro brewery ((l) wild boar, a dumpling, mushrooms, and some berries). In fact, I had a late Bavarian lunch the day before, too, but there is no photo. Either way, Bavaria is beer country, so there was no peril of going thirsty ...
Back at home in Oberkochen, I recently continued to practice my photographing skills, and the results can be examined in (m)-(o). As to the cooking, last weekend I prepared scallops as my Sunday lunch ((p) a dish I have picked up from my mother's finer repertoire; i.e., for rather special occasions, or at least for a Sunday).
Today, I eventually decided to familiarize myself a little more with Oberkochen, and thus to climb on top of the Volkmarsberg, the local mountain with an outlook tower. Given the beatiful sunshine I seemed like a brilliant idea to do this, and to take the new camera out for yet another sightseeing session. I did get a few nice shots ((q)-(s)), but I never made it up to the tower. Unfortunately the sunshine comes at a price, which is a hefty freezing cold temperature. Americans would refer to this as being "in the low single digits": i.e., around 0-5°F. Everyone else is using the Ceslius scale, so it is around -15°C. After walking for about 15 min in that cold I arrived at a parking lot where Oberkochen borders the forest. There was a sign that the tower was another 25 min away, so I lost my enthusiasm and just took a few shots from the parking lot. After all it is already nicely above the town, and it offers a great view. I'll visit the outlook tower when I can do so safely without a jacket. Fingers crossed that there will be just as much sunshine as today on a weekend in spring, because the tower opens only on Saturday afternoons, and Sundays.
I would like to conclude by saying that I have come to view Oberkochen as my home every day a little more ... as long as I don't have to shovel snow!

Samstag, 19. November 2011

The Great Escape



It has been longer than expected for me to write forth this little blog of mine. The reason is simple - I have been deprived from internet access at home ever since I moved to my new home in southern Germany. Of course I have submitted a subscription with a provider company; however, as it turned out, they have to rely on the bandwidth they receive from the former state-owned, former monopolist, Deutsche Telekom (or just Telekom). Naturally Telekom will cling to any advantage they have in this competitive business, so they won't easily give up bandwidth to their competitors, hoping potential new customers will eventually get annoyed with them, and return to the save haven of Mother Telekom ... Alas, but not me! Unfortunately I am forced to buy a landline phone connection through Telekom, but then I will have internet through their competitor, 1&1; and the latter will check recurringly for available phone bandwidth of their own in my area, so that in the long run I can transfer to 1&1 entirely. This is part one of the Great Escape - escaping from the claws of a former monopolist with almost proverbially poor customer service.

Escaped I have, of course, also from the limbo of unemployment; this being the second leg of my Great Escape. Though I had to relocate once more (the number of moves I have had in my live seems to already approach double digits), and this time to the very rural Svabian Alb (quite unlike the urban giants, Chicago and Berlin), I am happy beyond being able to tell you that I have secured this job! It is essentially how I have always imagined my first industry job to be - an exhilaratingly motivated, yet totally welcoming crew of colleagues, a super-exciting product of great impact on the high tech community, an adequate level of remuneration - all in all a very satisfaying package. Yes, there are disadvantages, too, but they are far outweighed by the pros (and of course I'm not allowed to talk bad about my employer ... but seriously, it's a great job!).

However, there is even a third part to my Great Escape, and that is escaping from the occasional dullness that arises on weekends in places like Oberkochen, population < 8,000, number of traffic lights: zero. Thus, in the first weeks at my new place it was literally every weekend that I drove south to a city called Ulm, which has the nearest IKEA. To those who are unfamiliar with the concept: IKEA sells furniture of decent (yet not great) quality for little (yet not very little) money. The trick is that they can rely heavily on mass production - IKEA is somewhat of the McDonald's of furniture, in terms of world-wide representation, even though they like to think of themselves as very green. Also, the furniture is assembled by the buyer; you only get the parts in a few boxes, and you have to demonstrate your crafty skills at home. Well, despite occasional breakdowns that are rumored to occur over the latter, finding a space to park your car at IKEA on a Saturday may well be a greater test of your patience ... Anyways, I think I have done quite okay in setting up all my furniture, and after a while you got it figured out that most IKEA pieces are built in similar ways. By the way, it's not that I moved into a totally blank apartment - I had a basic set to make me feel at home right away; but then I needed more shelves for the living room, and then I discovered that I could transport an entire dining table for 4-6 persons in my tiny Peugeot 107 (which is about the size of the trunk of a full fledged American SUV ...)., and then I decided I didn't like the old study room furniture I was given by my parents. In total I may have spent at least twice as much money in extra tours to Ulm than I did on the original pieces I moved in with. But buying and assembling furniture isn't the only escape from rural Oberkochen I allowed myself. Slightly further to the west from Oberkochen than Ulm is to the south, there is Stuttgart, the capital of the German state of Baden-Württemberg. That's where I have commuted about every week to spend time in places called Starbucks and Coffee Fellows. Even though I feel seriously apalled already by the smell of coffee, I do enjoy their free public internet - for customers, of course, so I resorted to a hot chocolate. I already drove almost 6,000 km with my new car - since I've got it in August, that is. Fortunately it is really not thirsty. According to the manufacturer it consumes about 4.5 L of gas over 100 km, which corresponds to about 60 miles per gallon. Given that gas is about twice as expensive in Germany as it is in the U.S., I do appreciate the low consumption. It's green, too, of course; and all of that makes up for the only 60 horsepower that force me to think twice before I take over a slow truck on a narrow road ...

But after a threefold escape, one might wonder whether I will actually settle down after all. Yes, despite the lack of entertainment, I feel like I have settled down in Oberkochen, and I could stay very well for quite a while. To explain why that is so, I am sharing with you some of the impressions I managed to capture - with my new camera, a Canon EOS 600D.
(a) me at the welcoming sign at the southern end of Oberkochen
(b) the train station of Oberkochen (it's really just an Asian restaurant with a beergarden, the actual station is a single platform)
(c) looking across the valley
(d) the southern tail of Oberkochen - I live now in the peculiarly peach-colored house in the center of the photo, just above the meadows
(e) a spiderweb outside my window that my camera was able to capture (I insist that there are no spiderwebs on the inside)
(f) the tower of the local church, at the center of Oberkochen
(g) an interesting fountain, also at the center, reminding me of far-far-away Alaska ("drill, baby, drill")
(h) a tree in the middle of the road near the train station
(i) southbound railroad tracks, leading to Ulm
(j) Oberkocheners like to wave their flag, too
(k) not so ugly ducklings
(l) an old building
(m) lots of light in that backyard
(n) the graveyard of Oberkochen - there is also an undertaker's business, so if I am destined to stay here for good, the essentials are taken care of ...
(o) a practice close-up of a leaf on the graveyard wall
(p) another practice shot, from above the bridge at the southern exit of Oberkochen
(q) a close up of the Rain Tree in Aalen, which is the seat of what Anglo-Saxons would call a county
(r) the old town of Aalen
(s) more of old Aalen
(t) a little ditch that drains water from the Rain Tree (along with my long afternoon shadow)
(u) a square at the center of the old town of Aalen
(v) Obviously the owner of this car doesn' know what (s)he is doing ... especially since the first group of (1-3) letters represents the county, but the subsequent 1-2 letters and 1-4 digits are random and can be picked according to personal taste, subject to availability ...

Sonntag, 24. Juli 2011

Carl Zeiss Syn-"op"-sis

Good news! After almost one entire year of frustration (post-graduation unemployment is very much like "post-production hell" in the movie industry) I can proudly report that as of September 1, 2011, I am employed by Carl Zeiss AG, respectively a subsidiary, Carl Zeiss Laser Optics GmbH. (AG and GmbH denote the type of legal entity company belongs to, such as the American Ltd., Inc., Corp., etc.) I received the phone call on the birthday of a good friend of mine from college times, and apparently I will join the work force just two days after my own 35th birthday ...
Carl Zeiss has been around for more than one century, and made a name for itself as a world-renowned optics supplier. The founder, Mr. Carl Zeiss, started out as a workshop employee at the university of Jena (Thuringia, Germany), where he would, in collaboration with Physics faculty member Dr. Ernst Abbe, for the first time develop optical microscopes in accordance with physical theory. Prior to this, microscopes had been built in an inefficient trial-and-error fashion, but from then onward it was possible to reliably manufacture them in larger quantities. The duo was later joined by chemist Dr. Otto Schott, who did seminal work on improving the quality of the glass that was used for the microscopes' lenses. This fruitful collaboration became a successful business, when Zeiss and Schott started their own companies, Carl Zeiss AG and SCHOTT AG, which till the present day continue the original shared work of making glass at the latter and shaping it into optical devices at the former. - Abbe did not have a company of his own, but later became the head of Carl Zeiss AG, and an as prominent as important figure for the Carl Zeiss foundation, which is still the owner of both aforementioned businesses.
With time Carl Zeiss AG has started to occupy other fields of optical applications, including the proximate manufacturing of glasses, but also of instrumentation for medical applications, electron microscopes (which employ electrons instead of light for higher resolution), photo cameras and related accessories, and of lasers for special applications. This last activity is carried out by a subsidiary called Carl Zeiss Laser Optics GmbH, which I am joining now.
However, today the headquarters of Carl Zeiss AG are no longer in Jena, due to (very unfortunate) historical events. As it is widely known, Germany started, and lost, World War II, leaving it occupied by the allied forces: France, the United Kingdom and the United States in the western part, and the Soviet Union in the eastern part. The American-British-French "trizone" eventually evolved into the western "Federal Republic of Germany" (FRG). A not-so-well-known fact is that a part of what would later become the Eastern "German Democratic Republic" (GDR), namely Thuringia (German: Thüringen), was originally occupied by the Americans, but was traded in for one sector of each of the three western allies in Berlin. Thus, the Soviets withdrew from West-Berlin (where I pursued my doctorate!), which prior to 1990, when Germany was reunified, belonged to the FRG, but gained control over Thuringia. In anticipation of the emerging Cold War, the U.S. dismantled many, if not all, Thuringian high-tech sites, including those of Carl Zeiss in Jena, which were relocated to the state of Baden-Württemberg, which was in their part of the FRG. From the onward, Carl Zeiss AG has been headquartered in Oberkochen, near Aalen, 70 km east of Baden-Württemberg's capital Stuttgart, and 50 km north of Ulm. The new site is very close to the German state of Bavaria, which is adjacent to Baden-Württemberg to the east. (Funny enough, the surface area of Bavaria is about as large as that of Lake Michigan, and Oberkochen / Aalen are almost as close to the inter-state border as Chicago is to the lakefront ...)
As mentioned at the outset of this post, Carl Zeiss AG is an optics supplier. Their photography division used to be renowned for the Zeiss Ikon model, which became defunct, but was revived in 2005. My mother had once been presented such a camera as a gift from her father, and she passed it on to me on the occasion of my being hired. Please join me in marveling at this beautiful piece of vintage technology, encased in a no less beautiful leather hull, as depicted in the left photograph. (The inset shows the Zeiss Ikon logo.) - Coincidentally, my current camera was produced by Jenoptik, another pre-WWII subsidiary Carl Zeiss AG subsidiary. It is depicted to the right, photographed with the camera of my father. (I bought the Jenoptik in 2006, when I was visiting Glasgow, which had been my home for 3.5 months in 2002, and at the time of the visit was where my sister was doing one semester abroad, just like myself. - If you click on the image and then enhance it to its actual size, you can see a reflection of me taking the picture on the tiny metal knob between the flash and the objective.) Since I am thinking about buying a more sophisticated D-SLR camera, now that I am about to earn good money, I will probably give the Jenoptik to my mother, who currently doesn't own any camera at all.
So much for a synopsis on my new employer and the related history; a term that is of course etymologically related to optics, the Carl Zeiss AG's core business.

Montag, 18. Juli 2011

FIFA 2011 Women's World Cup

As I have previously mentioned in the post on my trip to Berlin, Germany was the host of the FIFA 2011 Women's World Cup, which has ended less than two hours ago. Much was written in the run-up to this event about gender equality, as in Germany women were banned from playing soccer until the 1970s. I would like to refrain from adding any more this this debate, while also drawing your attention to another earlier post, on women in science.
Nevertheless, since I would prefer my significant other to be female, and since I have also been an avid lover of soccer for virtually all of my life, I confess that the combination of two concepts that appeal to me leaves me no less than enthusiastic. When I was a boy, children's birthdays were a little complicated because the boys wanted to play soccer, and the girls preferred Blind Man's Buff (or so I remember). Nowadays, it seems, gender stereotypes have eroded, and the ladies are into physical games just the same. Well, you can tell that this is definitely in my good books! In other words, if you are a thirtysomething female soccer player, with decent guitar skills and a progressive mindset - I fear I would drop dead at the mere sight of you ...
To dissociate myself from any hint of male chauvinism, I would like to congratulate all contestants of the FIFA 2011 World Cup on their performance. Especially, thank you for the most thrilling final (including extra time and penalty shootout) I have seen in a long time. Team USA was a worthy opponent, but over the course of the whole match, and the entire tournament, Japan has earned the title of World Champion most convincingly.
Then again, it's not a crime if I find some (many) of the players pretty, is it? (At least not as big a crime as stealing the photo from somewhere in the depths of the Internet, I guess.)
Update, July 19, 2011: Last night, while in line for a movie ticket, I overheard a conversation about the final. A person stated that the performance of the US team in the penalty shootout (three misses in the first three shots) was so bad, it were a reason not to watch women's soccer in general. The person was a young woman, age 20+.

Mittwoch, 13. Juli 2011

Ingobertusfest

This is actually an ancillary post to the announcement of Heinrich's successful defense. The same night, after returning to St. Ingbertby train, I walked home from the train station, which is located on the far end of the town. That weekend the Ingobertsfest (St. Ingbert's equivalent to Saarbrücken's Altstadtfest) of 2011 was taking place. To my benefit I could buy a Schwenker steak, and spend a few minutes in front of a musical stage before eventually heading home. To demonstrate the skill level of some local bands, I recorded a short video clip - but beware! These guys rock!