Today I rented a lovely little Nissan Versa and drove to San Jose to view the Winchester Mystery House. This house seems very creepy on TV shows, but having now toured it and learning more about Sarah Winchester, I think the mystery of the house has dissipated. It’s a very lovely place — full of Tiffany stained glass and beautiful sculpted woodwork. It was very interesting to see rooms that had been damaged by the 1906 earthquake and never fixed (Sarah Winchester decided after the earthquake that she hadn’t been spending enough time working on the rest of the house and had those rooms closed off and never used again). I also took the “behind the scenes” tour (too bad I didn’t get a photo with my hard-hat), which took me through an aviary, and into the boiler room and an unfinished ballroom, among other places. That house is really gigantic.
After also touring the grounds (grapefruit trees!), I spent another few minutes taking photos outside, then decided I needed to continue on the road. I grabbed lunch from the drive-through at Jack-in-the-Box because I had never eaten there. (Side note: I never did get food from In-and-Out Burger. Next time!)
I decided to drive further south to Monterey so I could see more fish and aquatic animals at the Monterey Bay Aquarium.
I had planned to finally eat whole crab for dinner tonight, but I had a long drive from Monterey back to San Francisco so I went to the first place on the Cannery Row that sounded good: Louie Linguini’s. It was a lovely little restaurant with a lot of fun photos and fictional news clippings, but I wish I had waited for crab (just for the experience).
I made the long drive back to San Francisco in the dark. It was just a little nerve-wracking with the hills just south of San Jose and the scary biker gang just south of San Francisco. But I had one reminder (from a grumpy taxi driver) in my mind: “Van Ness, Van Ness — Just remember: Van Ness!” Van Ness Avenue will get you to some very important sights in San Francisco, such as the Golden Gate Bridge.
I’m not sure why, but driving over the Golden Gate Bridge was nearly panic-worthy. I figured I had better just do it, though, so I could say I’ve done it. I took a little break at the vista point on the north side of the bridge, but then kept moving. I made a quick drive through Sausalito at night (I think everyone had gone to bed), then back over the bridge. I decided to drive up a very steep hill, then I drove down a very steep hill, and then I was very much done driving in San Francisco.
Today I left Union Square (noisy and sort of smelly) to stay in a hotel near Fishermans’ Wharf (touristy, but warm and less creepy). The new bed is bigger than my apartment (king size) and it’s fabulous. There are four pillows!
I had breakfast at the Pergamino Cafe before walking up a gigantic hill to the top of Lombard Street, “America’s crookedest street.” The walk down the hill was a relief for my legs, but I wanted to keep looking up at the amazing view (Coit Tower perfectly framed in the distance) — the shallow stairs almost made me trip a couple times.
I kept walking… and walking… and walking through North Beach, up Telegraph Hill (where I didn’t see any parrots, but I did see a hummingbird) to Coit Tower. Thank goodness: instead of climbing stairs to the top, there is a short elevator ride. I hung out for a while, just taking in the many different views down to San Francisco (my third 360° viewing of the week). I actually met someone else from Minnesota (and her traveling companion from Germany), but there were many languages being spoken at the top of the tower. If nothing else I loved how international San Francisco felt.
With time to kill, and no idea of what else to do (not enough to return to my hotel for a nap), I wandered back down to Pier 33 and had a couple drinks and very spicy eggrolls at Butterfly while waiting for the start of my evening Alcatraz tour.
When I got back into the city, I had dinner at The Buena Vista (and had two sips of their famous Irish Coffee — I didn’t finish it because whiskey is disgusting). Then I went back to my hotel, just in time to watch Grey’s Anatomy. I went to bed early-ish in order to prepare for a Friday full of driving.
Flash CS4 Professional for InDesign Users hosted by Chris Converse
Building Desktop Applications with Dreamweaver CS4 and Adobe AIR hosted by Justin Nemeth
Common Mistakes Print Designers Make on the Web hosted by Stephanie Sullivan
Fireworks Mock-Up Lab hosted by Jim Babbage
It was a pretty quiet day, overall. There were no group programs and everyone seemed fairly subdued. I know that by the end of the day, though I had some great sessions today, I was ready to get out of the lab and back into San Francisco explorations.
David and I indulged with dinner at John’s Grill — I had red snapper. It was delicious!
Then we sort of wandered around aimlessly before we met up with other coworkers (who were in town for a different conference) at an irish pub near the Embarcadero Center. We had a few more drinks at the hotel they were staying at, and met a few other coworkers who had arrived late.
Today’s general session was hosted by Adobe’s Tim Buntel and Ben Forta. I unfortunately didn’t grab any video, but it was also very clever. They acted out a scenario that would involve a design team, a development team, and a deployment team to create one product with a seamless workflow. It was great to see all of the various Adobe Products (InDesign, Photoshop, Flash, ColdFusion, etc.) working together and across various teams set up on the stage.
Today’s sessions and labs were:
Getting Started with ActionScript 3.0 hosted by Lou Barber
Designing and Building Web Experiences in Flash CS4 Professional hosted by Lee Brimelow
Flash CS4 Professional: Deep Dive with the Product Manager hosted by Richard Galvan
At the end of the day, Adobe hosted a customer appreciation event at the California Academy of Sciences and the de Young Museum of Art — “Where Art Meets Science.” It was such an awesome night! We only had three hours to see and do everything, but David and I managed to squeeze nearly everything in… Here’s some of what we saw (links to photos):