I’m really starting to make progress on getting my day-to-day life under control. There have been a number of great opportunities that have recently come my way. Unfortunately, each of them has required a “drop everything you’re doing right now” type of attention to take advantage of them. The latest example was a grant opportunity for the OPL from HP Labs. It’s a chance to get some great funding for our work (which is good). It also requires that I shift my attention from helping our summer co-ops with their research (which is bad).

Thankfully Dre and I haven’t been letting these type of upheavals compromise our wellness work. We’re avoiding going out to eat, are trying to eat more veggies, and even have begun running in the morning. I’m even finding myself kinda, sorta, liking running in the morning. Weird.

We’re also spending time getting the house ready for Rita Mae. We’ve been spending the last few days shopping for doggie supplies and Dre’s already enrolled her in obedience courses. We’re still trying to figure out how the cats are going to react to the new member of the household. We’ve asked, but as you can see from this picture, we only seem to get one response…

quote Lilah the Cat 'No Comment'

Quoth Lilah the Cat "No Comment"

Things have been moving fast the last few months. The RIT Innovation Fest was a success and has led to a lot of good publicity and opportunities for the OPL. Then there was the race to graduation and the bittersweet experience of saying goodbye, for now, to a number of excellent students. And since then there’s been lots of activity at RIT and in our house.

Which leads me to the new addition to our household, a sweet beagle/jack russell mix named Rita Mae:

[Dre and Rita Mae]

Dre and Rita Mae taken the day we went down to meet her. 

Dre had wanted to get a dog for quite a while and I finally realized what was good for me and got with the program. So we began to look at local animal shelters and at rescue dog sites, trying find an older dog to adopt (neither of us was interested in getting a puppy). The key thing was finding a pooch that would get along with our cats (as they obviously have seniority).

After a lot of searching and having a few dogs adopted before we could meet them, Dre came across <a href=”http://cayugadogrescue.org/ritamae.htm”>Rita Mae</a> and immediate feel in love with her. Rita was rescued from a high kill shelter in Kentucky by a group in Ithaca and has been living peaceably with other dogs and cats at a foster home.

We finally got to meet Rita Mae in person this past Thursday (after a phone interview and a home inspection) and there was no doubt she is the dog for us. We visited with her for a couple hours, took her for a walk, saw how she interacted with other animals, and got lots and lots of kisses from her. We just got the news yesterday that the adoption is a done deal and we’ll be going back to Ithaca on Friday to pick her up!

Needless to say, we can’t wait to bring her home. So more pictures and stories are coming soon.

Suddenly, and seemingly without warning, I find myself in my last official week as a professor. My time as a visiting professor is coming to a close — though you wouldn’t guess it looking at my desk, and the long list of students I have to meet with.

Honestly I’m too busy right now to really adjust to the idea that this is almost over. More to come on all of this.

It’s difficult for me to believe that we just finished week 6 at RIT. This has been the most intense quarter yet. In part that’s because it’s my last. Teaching one class for only the second time has contributed as well. But most of that time has been taken up trying to come up with ways to bring sustainable change to the School of Print.

Coming up with ideas has not been hard. It’s the doing and nurturing parts that take all the time.

One effort we’ve undertaken is to start a blog for the School. SPMEtcetera soft-launched earlier in the quarter. Our hope is to create a destination where the industry, alumni, and prospective and current students can discover all the neat things that are going on at SPM. The great part, from a sustainability perspective, is that all the writing is being done by student employees. We’ll make an official announcement about the blog later this week.

The other big project is the Open Publishing Lab. There will be a lot more about that soon. The good news is that over two years of planning will (hopefully) be coming to fruition in less than 14 days. We just need our teams to make it to May 3 and the innovation festival and then we’ll have a lot to talk about and show.

Sorry about that everyone. Sometimes I’m such a noob.

In my e-mail que this morning was an invite to reunion.com. It had been sent to me by an business associate. Being the Social Networking patsy that I am, I decided to go through the joining process. After registering, and avoiding the pay-to-play options, the website volunteered to search through it’s member database to see if any of my friends were already members. All I had to do was let it look at my g-mail address list. This seemed like a good idea at the time to my sleepy brain.

*sigh*

I unfortunately missed this little clause:

We’ll find your friends and family who are already members and also automatically invite any non-members to join (it’s free!).

I just failed the internet.

I also have a feeling that this “helpful feature” is going to create a lot of problems for reunion.com.

Update: as I expected the e-mails are beginning to flow into my inbox from folks who received the spam…