Thursday, December 29, 2016

Eyes on the Skies & Feet on the Ground

HUMAN COMPUTERS: There's a movie hitting the silver screens right now called "Hidden Figures." Based on a true story, it's about some amazing African American women, including Katherine Johnson, and how they helped NASA. 

Below, Johnson is pictured while working at NASA in 1966.
The NASA Web site has an archival story from 2008, and Johnson's 80th birthday. It noted, her accomplishments included calculating the trajectory of Alan Shepherd's 1961 trip into space, America's first. The story quotes Johnson as saying, "The early trajectory was a parabola, and it was easy to predict where it would be at any point. Early on, when they said they wanted the capsule to come down at a certain place, they were trying to compute when it should start. I said, 'Let me do it. You tell me when you want it and where you want it to land, and I'll do it backwards and tell you when to take off.' That was my forte."

From a NASA email today, we learned about a neat-o online toolkit called Modern Figures. Its activities highlight the contributions made by the African American women called “human computers," as seen in the new movie “Hidden Figures.”

The toolkit is a collection of resources and educational activities for students in grades K-12. Each educational activity and resource includes a brief description, plus info about how the activities and lessons align to education standards. Resources highlighted include videos, historical references and STEM materials. It can be downloaded here: www.nasa.gov/modernfigures-education-toolkit.

We'll be seeing "Hidden Figures" this week, and it's nice to have this real life info on hand before we see the dramatized version!
https://youtu.be/5wfrDhgUMGI


DO THE MOON WALK: Ever wanted to do the moon walk? Or maybe "just" walk to the moon? Mission X is the way! The multi-agency program encourages students of all ages to pursue a healthy lifestyle by training like an astronaut. The mission includes six- to nine-week "challenges" each fall and spring, schools and student groups from around the world complete Mission X classroom-based science lessons and physical education activities.

It sounds like something MPA could certainly use, so I tried to sign us up (just before the program's Dec. 31 deadline, might I add).

For the "Walk to the Moon" challenge, we will have to help move "Astro Charlie" the 478 million steps (238,857 miles, or 384,403 kilometers) it would take to walk from Earth to the moon, a feat it would take one person about nine years to complete, per NASA's calculations.

Registration and more details here: http://trainlikeanastronaut.org/wttm, and the application to be part of Team USA is here: http://trainlikeanastronaut.org/usa_application. We filed our application tonight. I was kind of surprised it isn't an open-to-all-comers proposition, but it is what it is. Hopefully we make the cut. ...

For 2016, Mission X involved students in 30 countries and more than 53,000 participants.
 

LOOKING FOR THE LIGHT: Oh how we here at MPA long to see the Northern Lights. We watch for notices about possibilities of them appearing, and have gotten up in the wee small hours in hopes of seeing them, but they have eluded us to date.

Perhaps it's no wonder that news of NASA's 'Aurorasaurus' Project for citizen scientists grabbed our attention. Per the notice we saw about it, "Aurorasaurus is the first and only citizen science project that tracks auroras around the world via online reports, mobile apps and social media."
Reading more, it turns out the Aurorasaurus project gathers real-time data about aurora sightings and sends out notifications to users when the northern or southern lights are potentially visible in their area. Registered users can get location-based notifications and a real-time monitor of space weather activity, and project participants can help verify tweets and search for real sightings. The Aurorasaurus website also features answers to science and aurora questions. You can check it out here: http://www.aurorasaurus.org/.

We registered for the program, and I already spent a few minutes verifying whether or not tweets mentioning "aurora" were of sightings about the Northern Lights. (So far, all other ones I've seen were about anything *but* the lights!)

USE THE FORCE: Everyone here has a cough or cold, so aerobics seemed like a bad idea, but I thought it would be good to get moving in one way or another. Enter "Star Wars Yoga for Beginners." At least that was the title of the video we found on YouTube.

The instructor was pleasant enough and her instruction was clear and sound, but can we just say that wearing Star Wars leggings and supposedly breathing like Darth Vader doesn't really make it Star Wars yoga in our book. ... It's just yoga, with a couple of quick Star Wars references.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HpFV5afUrwU


Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Here and Gone



CHRISTMAS VACATION: We've been away from the blog for about a week, caught up in Christmas-y doings.

On Christmas eve, we hosted 20 or so people at our place. We had lots of food and fun and watched the Seahawks (lose, on the last play, might I add).

But it's only a game and we had a great time with family and friends. And, unlike the game, the gingerbread didn't leave a bad taste in our mouths. ;)

ALL GONE: In many ways, 2016 has been a cruel year. The world has lost so many icons. It started back in January, with the passing of the magical, irreplaceable David Bowie. I don't think I'll ever get over that. Also gone this year, Prince, a musical phenom, the remarkable Leonard Cohen, and entertainer George Michael, a gifted and long-suffering soul with a philanthropic heart.

But it's not just musical maestros that have passed. Last week, we lost Pier Sellers, a space shuttle astronaut and climate scientist. Sellers was on "our" shuttle flight - STS-132. We got to see him hurtle space-ward, in a column of fire and smoke, from the NASA Causeway in Cape Canaveral in May of 2010.

       CREDIT: NASA
Sellers' death came just under a year after he shared he had Stage 4 pancreatic cancer. I remember reading the announcement in a poignant editorial he penned for The New York Times. He wrote about how his prognosis added a sense of urgency to his work on climate change, and shared that he had decided he wanted to spend his remaining time with people he loved, and doing the work he was passionate about. 

When he was selected to the elite astronaut corps in 1996, Sellers was the project scientist for Terra, NASA's flagship Earth observing system, Terra. He took a part of Sir Isaac Newton's famous apple tree to space with him. 

All totaled, Sellers spent 35 days, 9 hours and 2 minutes in space. He also had the rare opportunity to be a spacewalker, amassing more than 41 hours on six extravehicular activities. 
On Christmas morning, Earth lost another pioneer. She wasn't a household name, but astronomer Vera Rubin's work led to the theory of dark matter. That's a pretty big deal. 

As a child in Washington D.C., Rubin was fascinated by the stars. Her father helped Vera build a telescope and encouraged her studies. In 1948, Rubin graduated as Vassar's only astronomy major. In subsequent years, Rubin pioneered work on galaxy rotation rates. 

I love this Carnegie Institution 1965 photo of Rubin taken at the Lowell Observatory.
We've been reading some Rubin quotes over the past couple of days. Here is a favorite: 
"I live and work with three basic assumptions:
1) There is no problem in science that can be solved by a man that cannot be solved by a woman.
2) Worldwide, half of all brains are in women.
3) We all need permission to do science, but, for reasons that are deeply ingrained in history, this permission is more often given to men than to women."
Also, Rubin was a voice for scientific literacy at all levels. In a commencement address she once said. "We need senators who have studied physics and representatives who understand ecology." 

Amen to that, Vera!

Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Space Needle Santa 2016

HOLLY JOLLY: Santa is everywhere this time of year, and he pops up all over Seattle, at malls, Macy's, you name it. However, our favorite place to catch up with the jolly old elf is at the Space Needle. After all, it doesn't get much more Seattle than that!

We caught an elevator up this morning, shortly after 11 a.m. The photo below is of the Pacific Science Center Arches the the Chihuly Garden of Glass through smudged glass doors.
On the way up the escalator, there are graphics on the wall, chronicling the iconic landmark's history. Like most other brilliant ideas, the Space Needle's genesis was a sketch on a cocktail napkin. 
One thing we learned today is that way back when (1962), there was a torch atop the Needle! I can only imagine how cool that looked! I wish they'd bring it back!
 Instead, there's just flashing bulb atop it now.
We also learned that the Needle's rotating restaurant is spun by a one horsepower motor. Wow! How is that possible?
Up top we had a view of one of our favorite playgrounds in the city, the space just west of the former Experience Music Project (now MoPOP).
Naturally, we had to take the obligatory photo toward our neighborhood. The foreground is the roof of Key Arena, In the distance is Magnolia, our 'hood.
 Christian caught a shot of this Coast Guard ship being tugged across Lake Union. 
Later, I found this photo (below) from the Ballard Locks of the big ship, U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Munro, moving through, on to Puget Sound
On our way away from Seattle Center, we had to stop by the Center House to check out the annual model railroad display. 

STATION TO STATION: This afternoon, a friend shared a link to a site that let you hop around to live broadcasts from radio stations circling the globe. 

Called Radio Garden, all you have to do is click on any of the little green spots/stations around the world to listen in to what they're broadcasting.


We clicked on all sorts of countries - Japan to Iceland to Greenland to Russia and beyond. What was interesting to us was how many of those stations were playing "American" music, with English speakers/singers.


Finland seemed to be an exception; the stations we 'visited' there were all non-English. 


We did listen to some Russian sports radio. We were guessing they were talking about hockey, but who knows?


We totally encourage you to give Radio Garden a test drive. Much fun!

Monday, December 19, 2016

December Doings

DRAMATIC DEPARTURE: This NASA photo (by Bill Ingalls) is a stunning capture of the send off for Mercury, Apollo and STS astronaut John Glenn. His casket was on display in the Ohio State House prior to his memorial, which was held on Saturday, Dec. 17. 

The archival video of the service can be viewed on YouTube: https://youtu.be/RfrAmFaNBgc


GAMEY: As anyone who reads this blog regularly knows, we love to play games. All kinds of games, including tabletop strategy games. Solving problems, working cooperatively, facing challenges and being flexible, games are honestly probably the bulk of our math/logic education here at MPA. 

Last week, we tried a simple, fun game called "Repeat or You're Obsolete." A very not catchy title, the game is mostly about being able to remember lists. 
Here's a YouTube video from the young man/game inventor explaining it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22_MP7tq6W0

It was fun and challenging and easy/quick to learn. However, at the end, we all concluded we weren't looking forward to playing it again, so we'll pass it along.

We also just recently took our first go at the long-awaited "Labyrinth" board game, based on the 30-year-old movie starring David Bowie as the Goblin King. I pre-ordered it months and months and months ago. This week, we finally got to give the game a go.
It's fun - and confounding! We've played it twice and were nowhere near beating it either time. We aren't giving up, though!

ELFISH: Tis the season of holiday movies, and one of our very favorites is "Elf."

In fact, it's such a favorite that CJ was the title character from the movie for Halloween. 

A local, independent theater shows the film each holiday season, and this year we finally made it out there to see "Elf" on the big screen. Of course CJ recycled his Halloween costume for the occasion! 

Imagine our delight when we entered the theater an hour pre-movie and a song from the Pee Wee Herman Christmas Special was playing!
 And things got even better when Elvis from the '68 comeback special came on, with him singing "Blue Christmas."
It was *so* much fun seeing the movie on the big screen, and everyone in the theater sounded to be a big "Elf" fan- laughing uproariously at certain scenes, and singing along at the end. Big fun!

Friday, December 16, 2016

Movies and More

THERE IS ANOTHER: Our house was alive with excited buzz at 4:45 this morning. By 5:05, we were out the door, headed to Pacific Science Center, where the region's biggest and best IMAX - 3D screen resides. There, we saw the new "Rogue One: A Star Wars Story."

We got there nice and early for the 7 a,m. show, so we could get the perfect center seats. Breakfast was popcorn and a Star Wars book. 
For fear of spilling spoilers, I'm not going to say anything about the movie right now. ...But boy do I want to! 

SPEAKING OF MOVIES: Wednesday morning, CJ and I attended a members-only screening in Pacific Science Center's other (smaller) theater. It was a 'rough' director's cut, and the movie company was apparently hoping to get some feedback. 

I'll let CJ tell you a bit about the film.
Sometimes, I will watch a documentary film at the Pacific Science Center, usually in the Paccar Theater, one of two theaters at PacSci. While the last "documentary" we saw at PacSci was horrible (Voyage of Time: The IMAX Experience), we decided to go to PacSci again to see a film they were showing a rough cut of, known as Amazon Adventure.
Amazon Adventure (It had a subtitle, but I can't remember it and the subtitle was really stupid) in an in-development documentary made by SK Films, a Toronto-based film company founded in 1998. Amazon Adventure primarily tells the story of Henry Bates, a man from England who traveled from London to the Amazon Rainforest in 1848 in an attempt to prove that species could change from one form to another, an idea that contradicted what was taught in England at the time. At the time, if you lived in England, you were almost certainly told that every species on the planet had been created in their current form long ago, and would never change.
Henry Bates went with Alfred Wallace, a friend of his, to look at life in the exotic-to-Englishmen Amazon Rainforest and see if there was any evidence for the idea of species changing there. For years, Henry worked very hard in his shed and boat trying to find evidence for his theory. An important subject that would come up in search for evidence of species changing is mimicry. To my knowledge, mimicry is a specimen or species changing shape or form in order to avoid getting killed by predators. For example, a butterfly might change its colors to resemble the colors of a different, poisonous butterfly in order to deter predators.
During his voyage in the Amazon, Henry collected thousands of different specimens to catalogue for his collection. Over the years, Henry would collect specimens of the same species, and noticed how their appearances would change over time. He speculated that the species' appearances would change because of mutations, and specimens with beneficial mutations would survive to breed. Eventually, Henry had collected enough butterfly specimens of one species, and he was able to create a sequence of the corpses that showed a logical progression from one pattern on the wings to a different, presumably beneficial one.
Back in England, Henry was apparently ridiculed for believing that species could change forms or emerge from other species over time. This was demonstrated in a scene where he reads scathing remarks about him in a newspaper on a train. Back in England, Henry was able to get in touch with Charles Darwin, a much more well-known proponent of the theory of evolution and Henry's "childhood hero".
Apparently, Henry's research was a major contributor to research about evolution.
I found Amazon Adventure very interesting, and I would like to learn about more people like Henry Bates.
Like CJ, I thoroughly enjoyed the movie. What a pioneer Bates was, leaving London for parts unknown. We are definitely going to read more about Bates - for instance, I'd love to review some of his field notes!  In all, Bates was in the Amazon for 11 years. His enormous body of work included crucial contributions to evolutionary biology, discovering the phenomenon "Batesian" mimicry.

While watching it, I wondered who funded the project. On the film's Web page, I found a press release from 2014 noting, in part: "Pacific Science Center is proud to announce that it has been awarded a significant grant from the National Science Foundation for Amazon Adventure to conduct research that will study the effect of the giant screen on learning outcomes, support SK Films’ production of the giant screen Amazon Adventure film, and create an accompanying educational outreach program and materials. The research will be conducted with the participation of key personnel from Rutgers University and Arizona State University and will involve GSCA members from the Marbles Kids Museum, California Science Center, Maryland Science Center, Ruben H. Fleet Science Center and, of course, Pacific Science Center."

Interesting! No wonder we got to see a sneak preview there!

By the way, the guy on the movie poster is not Bates. He's an actor. Here's what Bates looked like.
FUN ZONE: A couple of days ago, we made a fun pit stop at one of our favorite stores, Archie McPhee. It's full of fun stuff like bacon toothpaste, yodeling pickles, a Bigfoot air freshener, and so much more. 

The have fun graphics on the sides of their store. CJ and Annabelle darn near got sucked back up to the mothership near this one. 
WATERY GRAVE: We have some unhappy news to report. Annabelle Fish, our pet of 12 plus years, has left us. Her tumor had grown steadily for the past few months (perhaps even years), and a couple of days ago, the poor thing couldn't even really swim or feed any more. :(
After a couple of days of mourning, we hit a couple of pet stores, looking for another fish to keep our sole survivor company.

Annabelle picked out a 35 cent beauty at Petco by our home. Let's hope the new fish gets a good 12-plus year run. And we know not to name it after a family member this go round. ...

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Pledging Allegiance



HEART MOUNTAIN HEARTBREAK:  Last night we had the opportunity to attend a special screening of the Broadway musical "Allegiance" at a local movie theater. I posted a bit about it yesterday, but I'll let the kids share some more.

Here are Annabelle's impressions ...
Allegiance is a Broadway musical about a young man namedSammy and his time in a Japanese-American prison camp during World War II. He and his family are forced to move out of their house and abandon their farm because they were of Japanese heritage. They were sent to Heart Mountain Internment Camp in Wyoming, and they were only allowed to bring what they could carry. In the internment camp, they were kept in a horse stall and were treated likeprisoners. They couldn’t  even get aspirin or cough syrup from the nurse- those were for military use only.
Life in the camp was hard, and  many people became sick and died because of
the conditions. Eventually, they started a campaign to allow Japanese-Americans
to join the army. The request is done and Sammy applies to the army, while others
in the camp revolt and protest about being forced to fight, including his own
sister, and start a rebellion. While he is away, many of his friends, family and
loved ones die or become ill. He comes back as a war hero, but is torn apart by
how his family has died and his sister is now married to his greatest enemy.
Flash forward to the present, his niece gives him another chance to reconnect
with his family.
The musical was a story from George Takei, who went to an internment camp when he was only 5. The characters are fictitious, but the hardships of living in an internment camp were real. For a musical, the songs were less than stellar, but still good. I wish there was a little less singing, actually. And the choreography was not the best either. All in all, it was good, but not the most amazing Broadway play either.

CJ's review  ... 
George Takei is a world-famous actor known for playing Hikaru Sulu, the helmsman of the Enterprise, on most of the Star Trek television shows and movies (except for the J.J. Abrams film series). In 1941, when Takei was four years old, the Imperial Japanese Navy and Air Force unexpectedly attacked Pearl Harbor, an American naval base in Hawaii. In what I presume to be a result of not differentiating "normal citizen of Japanese descent" and "foreign spy that needs to be put in check", the then-president, Franklin Roosevelt, issued an order that forced nearly all American citizens of Japanese descent on the west coast to relocate to an internment camp. Takei's family was one of many Japanese-American families that were forced into an internment camp (in their case, the Heart Mountain Relocation Center in Wyoming).
Takei's family survived the 4 grueling years, and, more than seventy years later, George Takei would help create Allegiance, a Broadway musical based loosely on his experiences in Heart Mountain (what I will call the internment camp from this point on). Allegiance is a two-act play primarily (though not entirely) set around the Kimura family, a fictional Asian-American family that must get by in the poor conditions of Heart Mountain.
Here be spoilers. ...
Throughout the play, there are twenty-five songs, from "Gaman", named for a Japanese word that means "endure", obviously referring to surviving the difficult conditions of the internment camp, to "Still a Chance", a ballad about how an aged Sam Kimura (the main character of Allegiance) still has a chance to be forgiven (or forgive, I honestly couldn't tell). However, none of the songs are real showstoppers, so that's a disappointment. While most of the cast was good (including George Takei himself as an elderly Sam Kimura and "Ojii-san"), the choreography was odd at best and abysmal at worst. For example, in several parts of the play, the actors repeat strange arm motions that aren't quite dabs for whatever reason, and there's a cringe-inducing sequence during a song where some of the actors pretend to swing baseball bats in an awkward manner. The death scenes are often disjointed and confusing, such as the main character's brother dying after being shot on the battlefield, and then having the dog tags get taken off his corpse by Mike Masaoka, who appears out of thin air.
While Allegiance is an enjoyable musical (and might be worth a watch), it still came off as kinda lackluster with poor songwriting and abysmal choreography, among other flaws.
Interesting note: On the way out of the theater, I heard chitchat about two Heart Mountain survivors being present at that showing. While entering the men's room after the showing, I saw a very elderly Asian man who may or may not be one of the survivors I heard about.
So yeah, the kids aren't easily impressed. But that's OK and they are entitled to their opinions and there's probably a reason the show, despite all its publicity and funding, only had a four month run on Broadway. ...
Still, it was a story worth telling. For instance, a central part of the musical involved a questionnaire internees had to fill out, the  "Leave Clearance Form," and two questions in particular: The questionnaire was given to all adults in camp, and most of the 28 questions contained wherein were designed to assess the "Americanness" of the respondent. It asked about education (was it n Japan or the U.S.), religion (Buddhist or Christian?), and even whether or not people practiced judo or played baseball.
The most contentious part of the form were questions 27 and 28, also known as the "loyalty questionnaire." They were ... Question 27: Are you willing to serve in the armed forces of the United States on combat duty, wherever ordered? And Question 28: Will you swear unqualified allegiances to the United States of America and faithfully defend the United States from any and all attack by foreign or domestic forces, and forswear any form of allegiance or obedience to the Japanese emperor, or other foreign government, power or organization?
Those questions became a major point of contention. Many viewed the questions as confusing and offending and wondered about the implications and objected. When drafted, some opposed and were imprisoned.
Meanwhile, other Japanese Americans were eager to sign up for the war effort. The 442nd Regimental Combat Team was a fighting unit composed almost entirely of American soldiers of Japanese ancestry who fought in World War II. According to Wikipedia, the 442nd Regiment was the most decorated unit for its size and length of service in the history of American warfare. Its motto was "Go for Broke".
I thought "Allegiance" did a terrific job portraying the divide between those eager to enlist, and those who resisted the draft. Both were shown to be heroic in their own ways.
There is a present day nonprofit that has a Heart Mountain has a Web site, complete with a . virtual tour, which they invite you to 'enjoy.' http://heartmountain.org/virtualtour.html
Honestly, I was surprised by how surprisingly 'light hearted' so many of the elements on the site are given the gravity of what happened.
Following links on their site, The Heart Mountain, Wyoming Foundation (HMWF) was formed in 1996 as a public nonprofit corporation and obtained its federal 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status in 1997.  Its board is 15 members, led by Shirley Ann Higuchi, a descendant of Heart Mountain incarcerees. The Board includes former internees, descendants, scholars and other local and national professionals from across the country. So, obviously, they all know a lot more about what happened at Heart Mountain than I do.

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Sale and Show

TO MARKET, TO MARKET: Today, the kids took place in a lunchtime bazaar at their learning center. It was fun seeing all the kids' various creations they brought to sell - everything from grilled cheese sandwiches made to order to a cardboard box arcade to catnip and cookies. 

Annabelle decided to go with Perler bead ornaments. They're small, plastic beads you make patterns out of and then melt. She displayed them using an easel we have and some of our over racks. Unorthodox, but it worked great!

Her ornaments were cute, colorful and priced to sell. She was all but sold out by 1 p.m., two hours before the market ended. The photo above is about 10 minutes into the event, so she'd already sold a fair amount at that point.

NIGHT LIFE: We headed out after dinner tonight to a mall. If you know me, you know I am mall averse, shall we say. But we did what we had to do to go to the theater nearest us where George Takei's "Allegiance" was playing.

It was fun getting out after dark. We got to see the Space Needle looking lovely in green, to celebrate the Seattle Sounders' win in the Major League Soccer Cup last weekend. 
The movie theater we went to was in Pacific Place mall downtown. When we walked in "It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year" was absolutely BLARING over the sound system. We couldn't believe how loud it was! 
As we made our way to the main floor of the mall, we saw why. Apparently during the holiday season, they have a nightly indoor snowing session or two.

So that was kind of fun!

We made our way to the theater, and enjoyed a filmed version of the Broadway musical "Allegiance." It was inspired by George Takei's time spent in a Japanese internment camp when he was a child during World War II. 

I'll have the kids write a full review for tomorrow. For now, here's one number from the production.

Monday, December 12, 2016

Loving Lovelace

BIRTHDAY GIRL:  Saturday morning we headed to the Sodo district for a birthday party. The guest of honor: Ada Lovelace, heralded by many as the first computer programmer. She turned 201 years old this year. :)

Living Computers: Museum + Labs put out quite the spread for Ada! I'll let CJ tell you more about it. 
As I just wrote about in a blog post not too long ago, my family frequently, *frequently* visits the Living Computers Museum + Labs. We usually visit to attend new and interesting events, such as our last visit, where we went to see a documentary about a baby elephant's tale of survival (that had little to do with computers). At our most recent visit (on December 10), my family attended The Ada Party event, which celebrated the 201st birthday of Ada Lovelace, Lord Byron's daughter who is widely considered to be the first computer programmer. Ada Lovelace apparently wrote programs for Charles Babbage's Analytical Machine, which was an unfinished machine built in the 1840s as a general-purpose computer.
Upon entering the museum, one of the first things I noticed was that a large part of the northeastern corner of the building was taken up by a place where you could get a sugary drink and a bag with candy such as M&Ms and Skittles. Apparently, aside from being the daughter of Lord Byron and being the possible first computer programmer (as I mentioned previously), Ada Lovelace was also known for having a sweet tooth. At the sugar area (what I will call it from this point on), there was a cake featuring Ada Lovelace's likeness (with shutter shades). A lady dressed as Ada Lovelace from the event company running The Ada Party was present at the event, often interacting with the attendees (for example: While I was playing the classic Oregon Trail on an Apple ][, Ada asked my why I didn't put her in my party. I promised her I would name one of my party members "Ada" next time I played Oregon Trail.
Eventually, we went to the lounge area in the center of the museum to listen to a speech from Kate Edwards, the Executive Director of the International Game Developers Association. The IGDA is apparently the world's only major professional association for video game developers. One of the first things that Kate Edwards told us was that she was very geeky. To demonstrate her geekiness, she showed pictures of her in Norway and Tunisia, both prominent filming locations for the Star Wars original trilogy. Kate Edwards worked at Microsoft from 1994 to 2005, and she was involved to some extent in nearly every Microsoft game released in that period. According to the IGDA website, Kate Edwards was a "Geopolitical Strategist" at Microsoft, which, if I interpreted it right, meant that she made sure there wasn't any stuff in games that might be problematic or considered offensive outside of the U.S. During her presentation, Kate gave several pieces of advice that I consider not only helpful to game designers like her, but to creators as a whole. For example, Kate told us that we should ignore haters and "embrace your superpowers", which I interpret as meaning that we should take advantage of our abilities to help us succeed (I feel like there's a better way to phrase that).



 There was a lovely actress playing Ada.
 She never broke character, even when encountering a stand in assistant.
Ada's birthday featured keynote speakers, including Kate Edwards of the International Game Developers Association.
Edwards has had a unique and remarkable career path, and had a ton of insight and wisdom to share with the audience.

One of the most powerful moments came when Edwards told people to listen to others and what they're telling you you're great at, and believe it! For instance, if people are forever telling you you're a great artist, acknowledge and embrace and celebrate and own that. Don't second guess it and just think it, *KNOW* it and run with it!
In a quiet corner of the museum, Annabelle explored Encarta for the first time ever. I told the kids that these CD-based encyclopedias were the BOMB for research before the Internet was widespread. 
Below, Annabelle using conductive thread to make a custom superhero mask, complete with LEDs,
Volunteers from ChickTech Seattle hosted the workshop. https://chicktech.org/
Fun bling for the masks and sweet swag from ChickTech.