Sunday, December 29, 2019

Another good Culture series novel from Iain M Banks

I somehow had no memory of getting all the way through this one even though I bought it in 2014:

The title is Matter, by Iain M. Banks, and the plot involves the inhabitants of a "shell world" (artist's rendering above) ... there's been a murder in the Royal Family and surviving Prince Furbin evades the killer with his trusty servant Holst ...

There are a lot of interesting ideas in this novel:
  • the idea of the Universe being a simulation, and of war being better waged as a simulation
  • the Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics
  • The interaction between cultural less developed civilizations and the "optimi" like the Culture and peers
This is almost as good as my favorite, Surface Detail ... where a lot of these ideas are given fuller treatement.


Five stars! Money back if not satisfied ... contact me!
 

Monday, November 18, 2019

Free EV charging at some Walgreens and maybe elsewhere

I was in Covington WA the last couple of weeks and saw this sign:


I tried plugging in my 2015 Nissan Leaf while I was sitting nearby at Jimmy John's ... and it worked!

It's a level 2 charger, not the faster CHAdeMO type that my car handles, but much better than nothing!



Sunday, November 17, 2019

Politics roundup

Three items from recent news and one from further back:

Ranked choice voting in NYC



Ranked choice was on the ballot in New York City in the recent election and won with 73% approval!

Trump fails boosting Republicans in Red States

Kentucky: Matt Bevin concedes to his Democratic opponent Andy Beshear.

Lousiana: Democrat John Bel Edwards wins reelection ...

In both cases, Trump campaigned vigorously for the losing Republican.

Tee hee!


Comey probably cost Hillary Clinton the election




538's article came out in 2017, but I just found it recently via the New York Times ... History turns on events like this ... what would 2020 look like if we did have President Hillary? The mind boggles ...

Thursday, October 24, 2019

Rats taught to drive teensy rat cars!

Here's the video evidence:


Will this guy win the Indy 500 one year?


Monday, October 21, 2019

Potassium calms the racing heart!

As I've mentioned here before, I have afib and control it with a boatload of supplements, potassium being notable among these.

My Lovely Wife likes dessert, including the wonderful ones that she makes:



But she's been complaining recently after having sugary desserts that her heart was racing, and I remember this clickbait I experienced:

Here’s how many avocados it would take to kill you


The basic idea is that avocados have potassium, and too much potassium slows down your heart until it stops.

That made me remember my wife's complaint, and after a nice dinner out on Saturday night with Creme Brulee for dessert, I suggested that she try potassium to make sure her heart didn't go off.

It worked! Hope this is helpful for some of you that have been avoiding sweets because of this effect ...

Enjoy!

Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Iodine deficiency a cause of breast cancer?

My Lovely Wife gets all kind of books, including one of hers that I read recently:

I found it fascinating, for a few reasons:

  • I never thought of iodine as something humans need internally, just as that pink stuff that used to get painted on wounds, but even that is supposed to be a bad idea
  • But according to this book, we need iodine not just in the "iodized salt" amount to prevent goiter
  • In fact, iodine was baked into bread (in the form potassium iodate) until around 1970 such that one slice was enough for humans ... but some sketchy research published in the 70's that implied (without any proof whatsoever) that iodine was dangerous to human health ... and iodine was removed from bread in favor of bromine ...
Which binds to the same receptors and blocks iodine uptake by the body and seems to be implied in the rise of breast cancer.

Unfortunately the word hasn't gotten around to the Indians:


Potassium bromate and iodate: Why the presence of these chemicals in bread can harm you

From "firstpost" in India ...

I found one other note in the book of personal interest: there appears to be some association with Afib (which I have) and iodine deficiency, so I started taking:

... in addition to my potassium and magnesium heavy regimen ...



Thursday, August 29, 2019

Summer of Space on my local PBS station ... rewarding and surprising

PBS and other broadcast organizations have been running a lot of space-related content in recognition of Apollo 11's 50th anniversary this last month.

The first one of these I watched was the documentary movie Apollo 11, which was terrific:


Then, PBS showed us a tour of the solar system and somewhat beyond:


And I found Wikipedia entries for a lot of the Apollo astronauts, and they're still alive:


  • Buzz Aldrin (Apollo 11), age 89
  • Frank Borman (Apollo 8), age 91
  • Jim Lovell (Apollo 8 and 13), age 91
  • William Anders (Apollo 8), age 85
  • Michael Collins (Apollo 11), age 88
  • Fred Haise (Apollo 13), age 85
  • Thomas P. Stafford (Apollo 9), age 88
  • Ken Mattingly (Apollo 16), age 83

And Neil Armstrong might still be here if not for an allegedly botched medical procedure that was said to have shortened his life. Overall quite a long-lived crew for a bunch of test pilot/astronauts, including the 3 who survived Apollo 13!

Most recently I watched an episode of the American Experience Chasing the Moon. It was also excellent, including recounting the darkest moment of the Apollo program, the Apollo 1 fire.

I'm not sure what's next (in real life or on video!) but this summer has certainly been fun ...


Saturday, August 10, 2019

Solar cheaper than oil/gas ... since 2016!

Much to my surprise ... it turns out that oil and gas have been more expensive than
solar power ... since 2016!



Take a look:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmyrbKBZ6SU

This implies a trade, for that, see my other blog.

Happy solar!




Saturday, July 20, 2019

Miscellany: Apollo 11 computer crash, Malcolm Gladwell deconstructing law school admissions ... and maggots

Today is the day 50 years ago that the Apollo 11 astronauts landed on the moon ... there have been a boatload of articles and specials commemorating their achievement, but as a computer guy I found a Wired article especially interesting ...

During the final approach to the moon's surface, the guidance computer "crashed" several times, giving just warning codes to Buzz Aldrin, the pilot. It finally turned out that the software was too busy with other activities like changing the thrusters minutely to be able to get the right display codes to Aldrin ...

Amazing that the thing worked at all, running in a tiny memory space that they had available ...

As well as a superbly performing technical organization, NASA probably had another type of resource available:



But how do lawyers get into law school, and does law school prepare them for the profession?

Malcolm Gladwell's Revisionist History podcast has been consistently excellent and fascinating, especially these two:

http://revisionisthistory.com/episodes/31-puzzle-rush

http://revisionisthistory.com/episodes/32-the-tortoise-and-the-hare


From lawyers, finally, we come to ...

Yes, maggots ... an important source of food (for humans!) for the future, according to this company ...

Yummm! :-)


Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Apple News destruction of Texture leads me to a free alternative

I was pitched by Amazon about 18 months ago to try this digital Magazine app Texture:
I tried it an it was worthwhile ... $10 per month for digital magazine copies of several magazines that I was getting already at a significantly higher price for the print version.

Unfortunately, Apple bought Texture and killed it in favor of its own "Apple News +"


I didn't like it half as well; not only did it not keep some of the magazines I was getting from Texture, its interface was just lots of individual stories that you can read individually.

I like getting an issue of a magazine or newspaper so I can know when I'm DONE!

I happened to be in one of our fabulous local King County Libraries and saw an ad for another app called RBDigital with magazines:


I cancelled Apple News + and am just using this now. It's not perfect: the interface is a little clunky and not as nice as Texture's ... but it's free.

It's not a perfect replacement; it doesn't carry some magazines that Texture did, notably the Atlantic Monthly. But it carries some magazines that Texture didn't, too:


It doesn't have the 'modern interface' that Texture and Conde Nast promote: navigation horizontal, stories vertical. Instead it's just copies closely turning a print magazine page.

This OK with me, especially at this price point!

Happy reading ...


Wednesday, June 26, 2019

My new iced tea setup

I've been an aficionado of iced tea for decades ... For making tea at home I've mostly been using this thing:

And since I've had some extended family members in mooching the tea supply I've been supplementing with these:

Both of these taste fine ... I like moderately sweet tea from my youth in the south, I guess.

But the Mr. Coffee plastic tea makers over time can pick up whatever kind of tea or other stuff you brew in them and just don't taste the same after a couple of years.

I had noticed in the restaurant iced tea that I liked best that this pattern held: metal tea makers/pots were fine, plastic ones that had been there for who knows how long, not so good.

We moved recently and I googled around for 'metal tea maker' and came up with this:

It works with a half-gallon wide-mouth mason jar:
And finally I got a spout lid:

Total cost for this setup was around $20 ... but should last forever without getting plastic polluted. (Maybe I'll have to replace the lid in 10 years ...) Also no electricity! Takes maybe 12 hours to brew sitting on the counter ... I have two of these and just swap them out and sweeten the incoming one and put the tube with new tea in the outgoing one.

I tried loose leaf tea for starts, but tea bags work just as well and are a sight easier to clean up.

Happy iced tea drinking to you ... I thought this was a revelation after 20 years of Mr. Coffee!


Friday, June 7, 2019

I've been neglecting superstar SF author Daniel Suarez ...

I've enjoyed everything Daniel Suarez has published the last few years, but his latest one may be the best yet:
Flamboyant billionaire Nathan Joyce recruits a bunch of adventurers and scientists to try out for his mission to mine asteroids ... The description of the tryouts and training and the mission itself with all its complications is just fascinatingly well done and not to be missed.

Five stars: money back if not completely satisfied on this one.

The first two I experienced of Suarez was this duology:

These two concern rich and recently deceased game developer Matthew Sobel, who's apparently left a complex computer-game type set of deadly traps for former employees and law enforcement personnel.

One of these, Detective Sargent Pete Seabeck, is targeted for especially horrifying treatment ...

The second book continues the story with a critique of modern society, and the way Suarez weaves the whole thing together I thought was just brilliant.

Five stars for both of these, too, but warning as they both contain scenes of extreme violence ... I'm actually going back to replay the audiobook of Daemon after finishing Delta-V this past week.



Sunday, May 26, 2019

More on Ranked Choice Voting: Results from Maine 2018 and an educational video series

Ranked Choice Voting update:

Sore Loser Loses Again': Federal Judge Rejects GOP Lawsuit, Defends Mainers' Right to Ranked Choice Voting


The Republican got a few more votes than the Democrat, but not a majority. So ranked-choice voting kicked in and the two minor parties' voters second choices were overwhelmingly for the Democrat and he won.

The Republican then sued, to no avail. Full story if you want it ...



On to the best educational series I've seen: Politics in the Animal Kingdom by C. G. P. Grey ... Enjoy!

Saturday, May 25, 2019

David Cameron's memoir is coming out, and his "fans" can't wait

Here he is, the man, the legend:

He has a book coming out: his memoir. The comments when this was announced:

  • "The audiobook version should just have the sound of sobbing."
  • "I presume the hardback version should be released without a spine."

Sunday, May 12, 2019

USPS receives UPS and FedEx packages, but NO HURRY!

The US Postal Service has been accepting UPS and FedEx packages for a while now, but my wife and I had never tried anything time-critical. We did on Friday, asking for a title company to send a UPS overnight package for Saturday delivery.

I first checked in at 9:30 or so; the envelope wasn't in my box. They said normal delivery was around 1pm, so I got back 1:30 ...

The person on that trip said they get so many envelopes and UPS packages on Saturday that they can't get them all sorted  and placed in boxes ... until Monday a.m.



I'm going back then, but let this be a warning ... don't expect timeliness on any UPS or FedEx envelope or package going to your PO Box!

Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Radiolab missing "Bliss" segment available here now!

Radiolab recently reran a 2012 segment entitled "Bliss" ... but without the final segment on psilocybin included!

I emailed Radiolab about this a couple of months ago and they finally responded with a link to the missing segment, and here it is:


My only remaining question: why cut this segment? I'm waiting on Radiolab's response to this question ... in the meantime, enjoy!


Saturday, April 27, 2019

Why John Scalzi got $3.4 million for his next 13 books (in 2015)

The short answer: Tor, his publisher noticed that many people who bought one of his books went right back and bought all of them!

Sounds rational to me ... I've just finished his latest:


I found this one extremely satisfying ... even better than its predecessor:


These two (and a proposed third book) are set in an alternate universe where there are physical "flowstreams" that allow quick interstellar travel.   But what happens when a physicist predicts that these flowstreams, which are the basis of many civilizations including several space habitats that can't support human life without regular trade? Two very good novels, that's what ...

Try any of Scalzi's books; you can't go wrong!

An interesting interview with Scalzi is here ...

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Pulitzer prize winner and another good one from Matt Richtel

I saw a review of this one recently and added it to my library list:

It tracks four patients through cancer and autoimmune disorders and give a history of the understanding of the immune system. Well done!

I enjoyed this one so much (four stars) that I looked for other work by Richtel and found his Pulitzer Prize winner:

I could hardly put this one down! This is the story of the first prosecution of a person suspected of texting while driving who caused a fatal accident.

I thought the way the author put together the stories of all the main characters (the perpetrator, the state trooper, the prosecutor and more ..) was just masterful.

Five stars for this one; money back if not completely satisfied ... and old enough (published 2014) that you can get it from the library!

I ordered a copy for my 86.8 year old bridge partner who called me from his car the other night ... my goal is to keep him alive until he can get a self-driving car!

Friday, April 19, 2019

Finally cold-less string broken; starting a new one!

I finally came down with a minor respiratory crud the last week in March:

This for the first time in around 3 years! And timing really stunk: I was playing in a national bridge final!

I coped with two over-the-counter aids:

and ...

This worked! The first day I had this crud was the day I did well in the national tournament I was playing in ..  But one side effect of the Ricola:

I couldn't understand why I was having this effect until I realized that a bunch of Ricola lozenges was an extra load of sugar! So I just added some more potassium to my regimen for a couple of days, and that handled it.

Here's to three more years (or more!) with robust health!


Friday, April 5, 2019

On becoming a "life master" at bridge

I finally got my the last 1.5 "gold points" (see below) needed for me to achieve the Life Master designation with ACBL.


Just to be clear: the significance of this achievement in the wider world is like this:

The ACBL put in "masterpoints" of various colors decades ago to get money out of the game ... some people will cheat for masterpoints, but many fewer than might have been expected to cheat when playing for money ...

I've been playing steadily since 2006 ... the game is deep and complex enough that it's still plenty challenging. This "life master" bit is really just a low intermediate step in the bridge hierarchy.

I'm still playing the "strong one club" system I wrote about at the beginning of this blog, and doing well enough with it that a partner and I were using it to score 18th of 87 entries in a national event (the NAP Flight C pairs event in Memphis at the national ACBL tournament this past week.)

So: not significant but satisfying to do that well against tough competition. I'm looking forward to several decades more bridge, learning all the way!

Saturday, March 23, 2019

Nissan loses a customer

I have been driving the Nissan Leaf quite happily since 2016. In fact I drove the 2016 I was leasing right over the end of the 24000 miles (2 years at 12000 per) and finally stopped driving around 32000 (when I bought the 2015 I've written about here).

Leasing requires one to get a third party certification of the vehicle's condition and I did that, passing with 100%!




I had something like 32500 on it when I turned it into a local dealer early in January. This wasn't the dealer where I bought it and they apparently didn't have enough of a computer to ding me at the time for the excess mileage (15 cents a mile, so something like $1275.)

I was expecting some communication about this directly from Nissan any time now ... but instead I got a call and then a letter in the mail:

     YOUR ACCOUNT HAS BEEN PLACED WITH US FOR COLLECTION

WTF?  Nissan, you couldn't have just contacted me?

Not only that: $1780.92, they said. We'll see about that. I guess I'll have to call them on Monday to see what they got from Nissan ...

There are too many competitors out there these days for me to have to put up with this: Hyundai Kona EV, Kia Niro ... Tesla Model 3 ...

I am "underwater" on my current 2015 since I financed it 100% with Zoom. So I'll be driving it for a while yet. But geez, Nissan, you blew it!