All posts by Carl

Home Cooking

All three kids have picked up their mother’s passion for cooking and good food.  Nicolai is particularly good at breakfast dishes, seen here preparing something wonderful that his father did not get to sample. The family spent most of the day relaxing, eating, and playing games.  Jeanine’s sister, Susan, arrived from Burlington and among other things got us hooked on The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.

Wall Rats

Nicolai suggested the entire family go out for an afternoon of wall climbing.  We packed up the crew and headed down to Brooklyn Boulders, an excellent climbing facility very close to my office.  Nico has the most experience and coached his siblings who demonstrated remarkably good innate skills.  Jeanine did a cardio workout while I handled the photography.  I have a slight case of carpal tunnel syndrome and thought it best to give my wrists a break. Everyone had a great time and I am hoping this becomes a holiday tradition.

Karunart

Karuna, Nico’s girlfriend, has been creating some amazing images which combine her athleticism and photographic flare into what I am calling Karunart.  These are truly amazing self-portraits and I think she has a future both as a model and a photographer.

Harbor View

Cengage, the company Kyle works for will be moving to a new office in May of 2019.  It is located across the street from his apartment, literally. He and his colleagues had a chance to tour the 14th-floor offices with a commanding view of Boston Harbor. Photo courtesy of Kyle.

Wall Art

When I worked near Central Square, street art could be found everywhere.  Somerville does not have as much, but this recently completed wall mural is quite interesting and can be found along my commute less than a half mile from the office.

Sleeping Beauty

Maya returned home from Olin for the holiday break.  She promptly fell asleep on the couch to begin recuperating from the demands of her sophomore fall semester.  Maya has been thriving at school and we love to hear about her many projects.  She will be joined by Nico tomorrow and Kyle at the end of the week.  Jeanine and I are looking forward to having a full house again.

Town Hall

Roughly once a month, Formlabs has a Town Hall meeting during which the entire company (close to 500 employees now) assembles in person and by video conference for an update on varying topics of general interest. Today the meeting focused on our 2018 financial performance and a new printing material for the dentistry market. I was also introduced and spoke briefly about my background and objectives. One of my slides included a collection of the logos of the companies I have worked for (not including Formlabs). This is my 38th year working in high tech and my 32nd managing engineering teams. I started my career wearing a lab coat over a suit, using a slide ruler for calculations. Today I am dressed ready to climb a mountain, wearing a watch that will answer any question I ask of it including what is a slide ruler. When I pause to think about all the technical and cultural changes that have occurred during my working life it is almost incomprehensible. I feel fortunate to have lived at this time in history and am proud of my journey.

Concord Journal Call Out

I found this Concord Journal clipping today on the kitchen counter. I must have missed it when first published.

Last Performance

After being posted for 4 months on Craig’s List, our grand piano finally sold today.  The market for large pianos has really collapsed in recent years. Even so, we got one-third of the price we paid nearly 25 years ago.  Not bad.  The buyers drove up from Mystic, CT, and were joined here by a piano technician they hired.  He did a thorough inspection before declaring the piano “as good as new”.  Pictured above is the entire keyboard assembly removed from the piano for closer scrutiny.  Jeanine and I were very sad it will not be here for Nico to play, something we look forward to every time he visits.  Professional piano movers will arrive next week to pack it up and ship it to its new home.

Farewell to the King

Nearly 25 years ago, Jeanine and I commissioned this bed, designed by her sister and built by an Indianapolis woodworker.  I was too busy with work at the time to do it myself although I later constructed the canopy section.  As part of our year-long preparation for downsizing, I have been selling off items that don’t make sense in a more compact footprint.  With the kids out of the house, we are looking forward to finding a smaller home located nearer to Boston to shorten my commute. This evening I shot the photos that will accompany the listing on Craig’s List.

Climbing Wall

Nicolai and Karuna have taken up rock climbing, a very popular activity where they live in Colorado.  I believe she was responsible for capturing this video recording that was posted to his Instagram account.  Karuna’s strength-to-weight ratio is probably higher than any human I know and Nico’s upper body strength makes them both naturals for the sport.  

Skatepark

\

I reached my one-month anniversary at Formlabs today.  I have been working an average of 14 hours a day plus another 90 minutes of commuting.  As is always the case with a new job, there are a million things to learn and hundreds of people to meet.  This initial push has allowed me to come up to speed fairly quickly and I believe I am now in a position to begin scaling back to a more sustainable work rate.  What has suffered the most is my fitness.  Starting today, my plan is to get an hour of exercise every morning.  If I leave at 6 am I can beat the traffic into the city, get my workout in, and arrive at the office before 8 am.  This morning, despite the sub-zero temperature, I enjoyed being out in the sun during an easy 3-mile walk that took me to the Lynch Family Skatepark where I photographed one of the swimming pool-like features with a “Tee” train and the Boston Sand & Gravel Company in the background.

The 2018 Holiday Card

This year’s Calabria holiday card features both boys on the front side.  Maya, Jeanine, and I can be found on the back.  Past cards have more often than not featured Maya on the front and it was time to balance the scales.  The card should be reaching many of you shortly.  I like posting a copy on the blog as well so that we can look back upon it years from now when the physical cards have long since been recycled.

Cool Ice

I am often amazed by the patterns I find in nature. Something very interesting must have been happening as this water turned to ice. Find the feather in the photo for a sense of scale.

“Graduation” Party

It is often said that teachers do not join the profession for the money.  After hearing what her colleagues and students had to say about my sister-in-law during her retirement party from UVM, it is easy to understand what motivates them.  Susan has enriched the lives of all she has touched and the gratitude in the room was overwhelming.  Speaker after speaker, young and old, had nothing but the most amazing things to say about her and the impact she has had on their lives.  I took hundreds of photos at the event (celebrated as a “graduation party”) which can be found here.

Burlington Reunion

Jeanine and I traveled to Burlington, VT this morning.  Her sister Susan will be having a retirement party tomorrow and the family is converging for the celebration.   A 27-year veteran of the University of Vermont, she is the Chairperson for the Department of Social Work and has served as an Associate Professor in the department. 

We are looking forward to her party tomorrow and got the celebration started with a family outing this evening which included all three sisters and close friend Jean.

Party Portraits

Pictured here, from last night’s holiday party are a couple of the people I work with at Formlabs.  The entire team is extremely talented and a real pleasure to work with.  Ridiculously dim lighting limited the quality of the shots I could get but these certainly captured the mood.

Holiday Party

Jeanine and I enjoyed the Formlabs Holiday Party held at Lucky Strikes on Assembly Row this evening.  She met me at the office for a tour of the facility before we made our way to the festivities.  We rented out the entire venue to accommodate our nearly 500 employees and their plus ones.  Jeanine and I are more than twice the age of the average Formling.  As we were being checked through the door, the attendant asked to make sure we were attending the right party.  It was as sobering as it was funny.

Local Shout Out

Always nice to get a little local coverage by the Concord Journal. 

Morning Sun

For the first time since joining Formlabs, I enjoyed a post-dawn walk that took me down to the Charles River. For the last three weeks, I have been arriving at the office before sunrise and leaving after dusk to beat the traffic and to get ahead of the curve at work.  It was my first dose of weekday sunshine since starting and it felt great despite the below-freezing temperatures.  I plan to join a nearby gym, hopefully, this week, where I will workout each morning before coming into the office.  I need to get in shape for a couple of soccer games coming up in February.  My team will travel to Argentina for the matches and I plan to do some mountain climbing with Nico in Patagonia ahead of the competition.  I am in shape for neither activity and need to get into a more healthy exercise regime. Pictured above in the foreground is the Longfellow Bridge with the Esplanade in the background..

Built In Boston

Built in Boston, a self-proclaimed community of local techies keeps tabs on executive hiring in the Boston startup scene.  My move to Formlabs was covered in their November installment.  

Sip & Stroll

It was a year ago that Open Table first opened its doors to the residents of Maynard during their annual Sip & Stroll celebration.  This year, visitors to the facility enjoyed musical entertainment by the Maynard High School Wind Ensemble and a craft-making area.  Bags of homemade granola were on sale to raise funds for the charity and Jeanine addressed the standing-room-only crowd to remind them that not everyone enjoys the security of knowing where their next meal will come from.  I was asked to photograph the event, which took place last night and spent a few hours this morning culling through and post-processing the images.

Ponyhenge

One town over from Concord is Lincoln, where one can find what is best described as Ponyhenge, a whimsical collection of some 30 wooden and plastic rocking horses arranged in a circle.  The phenomenon is said to have started with a headless horseman halloween display after a single rocking  horse was left behind.  Over the years, other horses have mysteriously appeared to form the collection that has now become an Atlas Obscura destination.

Closer to home, the Concord, Sudbury and Assabet Rivers are all well above flood stage.  Pictured below is French’s Meadow, completely inundated with water.  If not for the fact that our kayak carrier only fits the Audi (which Maya has at college) it would have been a nice day for a local outing on the water.

New Record

I set a new record time for reaching the office this morning of 26 minutes.  All it required was a start time of 5:18 am.

Player of the Year Nominee

Nicolai has been nominated by US Soccer for 2018 Player of the Year with a Disability. Votes are collected from National Team and Youth National Team coaches and staff, National Team players who have earned a cap in this calendar year,  American professional soccer league head coaches as well as select media members, former players and administrators. The winners will be announced during the first week of December. The U.S. Soccer Player of the Year award is the highest honor awarded to soccer players in the United States. The Male and Female Player of the Year awards are the oldest and most prestigious awards of their kind, dating back to 1984 for the men and 1985 for the women. The Young Male and Young Female awards were added in 1998 and the Disabled Player of the Year in 2012.

Below is the bio listed for Nicolai:

Nico Calabria, Forward – Amputee National Team
Nicolai “Nico” Calabria had an outstanding 2018 for the U.S. Amputee National Team, scoring six goals, and dishing out four assists while captaining the squad for a fourth straight year. He opened his 2018 account by scoring two goals and had an assist in an invitational tournament in Houston that included England and Haiti. At the 2018 World Cup in San Juan de los Lagos in Jalisco, Mexico, from Oct. 25 to Nov. 4, Calabria led the U.S., scoring four goals (one against tournament runners-up Turkey) and providing three assists. These were no tap-ins; he scored with his head or foot, while both assists required impressive athleticism and ingenuity. Calabria was born with one leg and hip and started using forearm crutches at the age of five when he took up the sport of soccer which he has played ever since. At age 17, he was named to the U.S. National Amputee Soccer Team. He has since captained the team at the 2014, 2016, and 2018 World Cup tournaments and is the all-time leading scorer for the U.S. with 17 international goals.

Young Buck

Our backyard is a haven for deer and it is fun to observe them as they try to make sense of Nala.  She barks her head off but won’t cross her electric containment fence to chase them.  Eventually, they figure this out and will come right up to the boundary.  This little guy is sporting a pair of new antlers.  They can grow from 1/4″ to 1/2″ per day so it will be interesting to keep track of this fellow.

Tool Upgrade

DeWalt just announced three new cordless tools which I pre-ordered yesterday taking advantage of some serious Cyber Monday discounts.  They included a barrel grip jigsaw, a 5″ random orbit sander, and a router; all with brushless motors.  To make room in my shop, I listed the tools pictured here on Craig’s List. 

NYC Day Trip

A large number of Formlabs 3D printers are sold to dental labs and dentists. They are used to print 3D models of patient’s teeth, surgical tool guides, and dental appliances.  Today I made a day trip to the Jacob Javits Convention Center in NYC to attend the Greater New York Dental Show.  It was a great opportunity to check out some of our competitors, understand the applications of 3D printing in dentistry, and meet a few of our sales folks.  I left home at 6 am and returned at 10:30 pm traveling by train to Penn Station. I probably covered about 8 miles on foot including the walk from Penn Station to the Convention Center and all the walking I did at the show. Pictured above is a new tower under construction that I passed along the way.

League Champions

My soccer team played to a scoreless tie in the Division 1, Over-56 League championship match played this morning shortly after last night’s torrential rains subsided.  We went on to win the title in a penalty kick shootout which ended 6-5 in our favor. Our opponent, Juventus, a mostly Brazilian and Argentinian side, gave us a run for our money in the extremely close contest. I was injury free and played well nearly earning an assist off a flicked on header that landed at the edge of the 6 yard box on the foot of a teammate. This is my 15th year playing soccer for Concord United and only the third time we have won the league championship despite many trips to the finals. We finished the season with an undefeated record of 11-0-1 with a total of 28 goals for and 5 against.

Passing the Baton

Earlier this week, Maya announced to the family that she had declared her college major;  Electrical and Computer Engineering.  Although my degrees are in electrical engineering, I spent far more time studying computer architecture and logic design. I will admit that part of me is very thrilled with the direction she has chosen but I am also confident she came to the decision of her own accord.  This afternoon, out of the blue, she asked me if I had any electronic stuff she could have.  I quickly offered up a USB in-line tester and an AC outlet tester (which we had used during our electrical troubleshooting yesterday).  I then realized that I had the perfect item to pass down to her, a Tektronix oscilloscope that I have owned for 40 years.  I purchased the $3,000 piece of test equipment new with some financial assistance from my parents when I was in college, not the kind of thing most students would dream of spending their money on.  As a visual learner, however, there was nothing more fascinating to me than being able to see waveforms which represented the movement of invisible electrons.  In some ways, this oscilloscope is a symbol of my lifelong passion for and commitment to the field of engineering.  I can think of no more fitting item to pass down to Maya as she begins her own journey on a similar path.  This scope has long since been replaced by more advanced digital models but it is still a fine and very capable instrument.  It may be one of the most pristine surviving examples of this model and while only worth a fraction of its original cost, I suspect it may one day become valuable as a collectors item.

Haircut?

When Maya returned from having her hair cut this afternoon, it was not immediately apparent that anything had changed.  Fortunately, we had before and after photographs, which when studied carefully, revealed a 4 inch change in length.  I spent several hours tracking down an electrical problem which I traced to a circuit breaker which had tripped but still appeared to be in the on position.  Maya assisted with the project as we checked voltage on every breaker in the house.  Naturally, the guilty breaker was one of the last we probed.