Postal Delivery

The ketubah came today! It is crazy and very exciting to see our names printed in Hebrew and English interspersed throughout the text. Apparently the trendy new thing to do is to get the ketubah framed before the wedding, but leave the glass out until after it is signed. I think it’s a neat idea — better than putting it on an easel with a chintzy cellophane protective covering during the ceremony and reception.

And the other thing that came in the mail today was a letter from the IRS — apparently I forgot to send them my W2 with my taxes. Oops. That’s what happens when you don’t e-file. I have to admit, I was pretty freaked out when I saw the IRS on the return address at first, so I was rather relieved when I opened up the envelope and saw the note. Phew!

Avalon + Indigo = Magic

At PDC 2005, Chris Sells and Doug Purdy gave a talk entitled “Avalon + Indigo = Magic”, in which they built a smart client app using Avalon and Indigo and showed off some of the fun integration points between the two. They also had a bit of a comedy act going on, as was only fitting for the last day of a long and meaty conference.

They had this great idea that they would show a human example of how the combination of Avalon and Indigo is better than the sum of its parts, so they somehow convinced me and Kenny to get up on stage with them and discuss our recent engagement. Chris immortalized this moment on his blog:

I’ve got a developer from Indigo and a PM from Avalon in the front row that we bring up on stage because they’ve just gotten engaged and we made them kiss to show off the power of Avalon and Indigo integration, I announce that I got ordained on two separate internet churches the night before in case they wanted me to marry them on the spot. They politely decline, but the audience eats it up.

Well, I’m sure Chris will be very proud, because Kenny and I are giving a little Avalon + Indigo talk of our own next week. We’ll be at Florida Institute of Technology, and we’re going to show a group of CS students how to write a multiplayer networked game using Avalon and Indigo. In 45 minutes. So, uh, if you happen to be an FIT student and a reader of my blog (are there any of you out there?), come on by. :)

Ketubah

When Kenny and I were in New York a few weeks ago, he had some free time while I was in a work meeting, so he went down to the Lower East Side to check out ketubot. A ketubah is a Jewish marriage contract. A traditional ketubah spells out the rights of the bride, including the fact that the husband must provide her with food, clothing, and “marital relations”. If the husband passes away, she may exchange the ketubah for money from his estate on which to live.

Ketubot may be very simple or may be elaborate pieces of art that couples will display in their homes.

Back in ancient times, the ketubah was a rather progressive development, because it guaranteed a set of rights to a woman. Today, the traditional ketubah text is considered outdated by most, and many people choose to use a more modern egalitarian text — of which there are many.

Quite a few couples today also commission local artists to make their ketubot, incorporating images from their lives or other symbols that are important to them. Kenny and I considered commissioning a ketubah, but when we started thinking about images associated with our relationship the ideas we came up with were strange: the Microsoft logo, the Ramayana (the apartment building in which we both lived, but not at the same time), a rubber frog, a computer? Perhaps if we were more serious individuals we would have come up with something better. :)

But Kenny found a ketubah in the Lower East Side that we both really liked, and we just ordered it. It should look fantastic when it is framed and hung on our bright red living room wall.