Sunday, August 31, 2014
Earthquake in the U.K.!
Earthquake in the U.K.! A political earthquake, that is – the one named Nigel Farage and his UKIP party. I've been watching and reading his speeches for years. The man makes a lot of sense, which is why I assumed he'd never actually succeed in politics. The fact that he is succeeding, and in a big way, I find both surprising and uplifting. Maybe it could happen here, too!
Newspaper slams Al Gore and his Arctic ice cap predictions...
Newspaper slams Al Gore and his Arctic ice cap predictions... What's this? A newspaper reporting actual news? Oh, it's a British paper, of course!
I had breakfast here this morning...
I've probably eaten at Angie's more than any other local eatery. It's not the best food in town, and it doesn't have a fancy wine list or a romantic atmosphere. So why do I go back there so often? That's easy: friendly people, a welcoming and wholesome atmosphere, consistently good food that looks and tastes like something your mom made. I'm particularly fond of their homemade soups, but there are a lot of things that I look forward to eating there. I haven't yet had a disappointing meal. The waitresses are a hoot. Friendly locals are everywhere. The guy who greets me at the door calls me “young man.” And everybody there bends over backwards to make sure you're having a good experience...
Math is so hard!
Math is so hard! Well, if you're an environmental wacko, at least. The “green” propaganda I've seen that promotes wind or solar power always compares the cost of installation based on the “nameplate” capacity of wind turbines or solar arrays (the maximum power they can generate under ideal conditions), not their actual contribution. The same practice is used for conventional power stations, so one can argue (and the environmentalists do) that this is an apples-to-apples comparison – but it's not. The reason it's not is that wind and solar power outputs are determined by Mother Nature. A wind turbine generates power at the whim of the winds, and a solar array is at the mercy of the daily sun cycle, clouds, snow, etc. Conventional power plants don't have this problem – they generate power whenever we ask it of them.
The graph above right comes from an excellent post over at Watts Up With That, which goes into some detail about the actual contributions of wind and solar as compared with their nameplate capacities. For the U.S., the average contributions have been running at just over 20% of the nameplate capacity. That means if you want to generate one megawatt of solar power on average, you need to install five megawatts of solar panels. The obvious corollary to this is that environmentalists have been badly underestimating the cost of replacing conventional power with “green” power – that's not a new observation, mind you, but here it is backed up with pesky actual data and experience...
The graph above right comes from an excellent post over at Watts Up With That, which goes into some detail about the actual contributions of wind and solar as compared with their nameplate capacities. For the U.S., the average contributions have been running at just over 20% of the nameplate capacity. That means if you want to generate one megawatt of solar power on average, you need to install five megawatts of solar panels. The obvious corollary to this is that environmentalists have been badly underestimating the cost of replacing conventional power with “green” power – that's not a new observation, mind you, but here it is backed up with pesky actual data and experience...
What would it take for Romney to run again in 2016?
What would it take for Romney to run again in 2016? Scott Ott has the inside scoop...
Who do terrorists fear most?
Who do terrorists fear most? One of the things learned by our “enhanced interrogation” of terrorists shortly after 9/11 was that the terrorists feared the U.S. Marines more than they did our special forces – much to the consternation of the special forces folks. The attitude embodied in this sign speaks to why that might be. Via friend, reader, and former colleague Simon M...
“It’s better to die on your feet than to live on your knees.”
“It’s better to die on your feet than to live on your knees.” One of 40 Of The Most Bad-Ass, Masculine, Manly, Alpha Male Quotes Of All Time...
The fast way to peel an apple...
Can't you just see a rechargeable electric version of the old gadget? Sounds like a Kickstarter project to me!
Saturday, August 30, 2014
Neighbors bearing gifts...
Neighbors bearing gifts... A few minutes ago my front doorbell rang, which is a very unusual occurrence. I went down to greet my visitor, and discovered the two oldest (about 9 and 11 years old) sons of my neighbors to the west, with their arms full of gifts from their garden: an onion, two cucumbers, a zucchini, and a fresh loaf of zucchini bread.
Tomorrow for lunch I'm going to make myself a corn and zucchini medley. Tonight I'm going to have some decaf tea and zucchini bread.
Yum!
Tomorrow for lunch I'm going to make myself a corn and zucchini medley. Tonight I'm going to have some decaf tea and zucchini bread.
Yum!
The great garage door opener project...
The great garage door opener project... I just finished installing two replacement garage door openers (our garage has two roll-up doors). The old openers were 22 years old and practically falling apart. I discovered this while prepping the garage for painting. When I was up on a ladder, I could see down into the chain drive mechanism – and what I saw wasn't good. I'm fairly certain that none of the moving parts that required lubrication had ever been lubricated. Some chain links were worn right through, and all were loose and “rattly”. I checked into replacement parts, and they would cost nearly as much as a new unit – so I opted for two new units, this time with quieter belt drives.
I got lucky on the doors – they are quite nice quality, with sealed ball bearings in the wheels and in the torsion spring assembly. The hinges and wheel brackets needed lubrication, as did the torsion springs, but everything else was in great shape.
I'd never installed a garage door opener before, so this was a learning experience for me. It was actually pretty easy; the instructions were very clear and complete. The old openers' wiring had been installed by stapling it to the ceiling and walls, which was quite ugly and also vulnerable to an accident (shovel handle, rake, etc.). So I tore out all the existing wiring, spackled up the staple holes, and installed all new wiring inside of 1/2" PVC pipe hung from properly fastened conduit hangers (also PVC). Then I primed and painted the pipes to match the garage walls and ceiling. The result is, I think, much better looking than the stapled wire – and it is certainly more resistant to any physical abuse I might give it!
Some photos:
I got lucky on the doors – they are quite nice quality, with sealed ball bearings in the wheels and in the torsion spring assembly. The hinges and wheel brackets needed lubrication, as did the torsion springs, but everything else was in great shape.
I'd never installed a garage door opener before, so this was a learning experience for me. It was actually pretty easy; the instructions were very clear and complete. The old openers' wiring had been installed by stapling it to the ceiling and walls, which was quite ugly and also vulnerable to an accident (shovel handle, rake, etc.). So I tore out all the existing wiring, spackled up the staple holes, and installed all new wiring inside of 1/2" PVC pipe hung from properly fastened conduit hangers (also PVC). Then I primed and painted the pipes to match the garage walls and ceiling. The result is, I think, much better looking than the stapled wire – and it is certainly more resistant to any physical abuse I might give it!
Some photos:
Wiring is inside the pipes |
Wiring detail, photo sensor |
Chain drive mechanism |
Wiring detail, motor unit |
Motor unit from above |
Old computer ad...
Old computer ad... From 1952, the year I was born. High resolution version here. The computer is based on vacuum tubes and crystal diodes (an early version of semiconductor diodes). The main memory was about 2kb, and the tape mass storage about 400kb – absurdly small by today's standards (and about one 30 millionth of my laptop!). The clock speed was 120 kHz, about one 25,000th as fast as my laptop.
Some things that I noted as I read the ad:
Some things that I noted as I read the ad:
- It refers to “binary digits” – now called “bits”!
- The main memory was based on a magnetic drum, as were some of the computers I learned on in the U.S. Navy. These posed special challenges when programming, as the memory wasn't randomly accessible – the access time varied depending on how far the drum had to rotate to get to the word you wanted to read.
- I love the way all the ALU capabilities are listed. There's one listed that I never heard of: multiplication with “round-off.” I'm guessing that means the 30 most significant bits are returned, rounded.
- The main I/O is a Flexowriter, a device I'm very familiar with. Several of the computers I used in the Navy had attached Flexowriters, and I was trained to maintain them (oil and bending metal were involved). Later, in the late '70s, I bought a used one and connected it to my homebrew Z80 system. I still remember the smell of them; as they warm up the Flexowriters gave off an aroma of lightweight oils, like hair clippers.
- Uses 3 kilowatts of power – the same as 30 hundred watt light bulbs. My laptop averages about 60 watts. It's hard to directly compare the power efficiency of my laptop vs. the advertised computer, but the difference is on the order of several million to one.
- Has front panel controls and indicators that allow single-step or single-cycle operation, examination and modification of register contents, etc. This is exactly like the Navy computers I learned on, and it's a capability that I still miss :)
What makes a pear taste like a pear?
What makes a pear taste like a pear? That would be ethyl acetate, but the story is a bit more complicated than that. Artificial flavors keep getting better, because we're learning what makes natural foods taste they way they do in far more detail than ever before.
A few years ago, in England, I had a glass of alcoholic pear cider that I thought was outstanding. It was pleasantly fizzy, slightly sweet, and evocative of a fresh, ripe pear. I was certain, in my own mind, that it was a craft-made product, involving barrels of overripe pears crushed by the feet of sweet young maidens and fermented in an old oaken barn. Nope. It was, instead, a laboratory creation. There wasn't a molecule of pear in it – it was completely artificially flavored. And it was fantastic! Since then I've had a few other pleasant surprises with artificial flavoring – still the exception, but it's happening more often.
I hope someone will tackle tomatoes. I miss the flavor of an excellent fresh tomato...
A few years ago, in England, I had a glass of alcoholic pear cider that I thought was outstanding. It was pleasantly fizzy, slightly sweet, and evocative of a fresh, ripe pear. I was certain, in my own mind, that it was a craft-made product, involving barrels of overripe pears crushed by the feet of sweet young maidens and fermented in an old oaken barn. Nope. It was, instead, a laboratory creation. There wasn't a molecule of pear in it – it was completely artificially flavored. And it was fantastic! Since then I've had a few other pleasant surprises with artificial flavoring – still the exception, but it's happening more often.
I hope someone will tackle tomatoes. I miss the flavor of an excellent fresh tomato...
Expatriation tax...
Expatriation tax... I just stumbled across the existence of this U.S. federal tax. Basically it's a capital gains tax on all assets, marked to market, of anyone renouncing their U.S. citizenship (there are some exclusions and limitations). Apparently the U.S. is one of just five countries (one of which was Nazi Germany!) that have imposed such a tax.
If all that is gobbledegook to you, let me give you a simple example. Suppose that when you were 25 years old (and a U.S. citizen), you bought $100,000 worth of Google stock. Now you're 40 years old, you still own that stock (now worth $5 million!), you're disgusted with the Obama regime, and you've decided you want to be a citizen of Singapore instead of the U.S. So you rent a flat in Singapore, move, and renounce your U.S. citizenship. The IRS says that you owe capital gains tax on $4.9 million (the increase in your Google stock's value) even though you haven't sold your Google stock. That means you have to cut a check to Uncle Sam for $735,000!
I see the rationale for this: the tax man wants his cut for anything you've “earned” while you were still a U.S. citizen. In the example I gave, the stocks are a relatively liquid investment and some could easily be sold to pay the tax bill. However, the tax isn't limited to liquid assets – it applies equally to illiquid assets like real estate, collectibles, etc. For individuals with substantial portions of their assets being illiquid, this tax could represent a serious impediment to leaving the U.S. (and the way I found out about this tax was through just such a story).
But all that aside – this just seems un-American to me. Voting with our feet is a quintessentially American freedom, and the expatriation tax interferes with that. The stated purpose of this tax is to prevent the flight of capital (or at least, to reduce the incentives for it) – but a far better way to accomplish that would be to make it more attractive for capital to stay in America. Putting up barriers isn't the American way...
If all that is gobbledegook to you, let me give you a simple example. Suppose that when you were 25 years old (and a U.S. citizen), you bought $100,000 worth of Google stock. Now you're 40 years old, you still own that stock (now worth $5 million!), you're disgusted with the Obama regime, and you've decided you want to be a citizen of Singapore instead of the U.S. So you rent a flat in Singapore, move, and renounce your U.S. citizenship. The IRS says that you owe capital gains tax on $4.9 million (the increase in your Google stock's value) even though you haven't sold your Google stock. That means you have to cut a check to Uncle Sam for $735,000!
I see the rationale for this: the tax man wants his cut for anything you've “earned” while you were still a U.S. citizen. In the example I gave, the stocks are a relatively liquid investment and some could easily be sold to pay the tax bill. However, the tax isn't limited to liquid assets – it applies equally to illiquid assets like real estate, collectibles, etc. For individuals with substantial portions of their assets being illiquid, this tax could represent a serious impediment to leaving the U.S. (and the way I found out about this tax was through just such a story).
But all that aside – this just seems un-American to me. Voting with our feet is a quintessentially American freedom, and the expatriation tax interferes with that. The stated purpose of this tax is to prevent the flight of capital (or at least, to reduce the incentives for it) – but a far better way to accomplish that would be to make it more attractive for capital to stay in America. Putting up barriers isn't the American way...
Submarine cable map...
Submarine cable map... This is the best one I've seen. The image at right is one small section of it...
Mannomatic filtering...
Mannomatic filtering... The technical types over at Climate Audit are reverse-engineering Michael Mann's temperature data manipulations (the ones that led to his infamous “hockey stick” graph). It's fascinating reading (including the comments) if you're at all interested in the data underlying the IPCC's repeated declarations of impeding climate doom. This particular investigation is close to one of the things at the heart of what makes me most skeptical of the warmists' position: the opaque, secret, and (as shown by ClimateGate revelations) deliberate manipulation of the data used to support it. Close behind it: the reliance on climate models that have utterly failed in their correspondence to reality...
Friday, August 29, 2014
“Everyone's instant impression of the smell was that of spent gunpowder.”
“Everyone's instant impression of the smell was that of spent gunpowder.” Astronauts describing the smell of the moon's dirt...
Technological archaeology...
Technological archaeology... Recovering “lost” recordings from a homemade steel wire recorder. Awesome!
Oopsie!
Oopsie! A software bug put two of the (very expensive and vastly over-budget) Galileo satellites into the wrong orbit. They are completely useless in this orbit, so they are a complete loss. This is yet another blow to the European alternative geolocation service, which does basically the same thing as the American GPS.
Some poor programmer is in a world of hurt today, I'm sure...
Some poor programmer is in a world of hurt today, I'm sure...
“What is happening to my country?”, part 9,394 in a long series...
“What is happening to my country?”, part 9,394 in a long series... Peaceful demonstrators are threatened by rock-throwing thugs. What happens? Why, the police told the peaceful demonstrators are told to shut up and leave, of course!
Barn: ready for the foam and heating pipes...
Barn: ready for the foam and heating pipes... Lots of progress on the barn yesterday, as you can see in the photos below. The last photo shows the completed barn floor “underpinnings”: a layer of fine gravel that's been carefully leveled and compacted. The under-slab plumbing is in (drains for the toilet, sink, and floor). Next up, perhaps today: installation of the insulating foam that will end up under the concrete floor, and then clipping the heating tubing to the foam. There will be three serpentine loops of heating tubing, one under each of the three main areas in the barn (garage, workshop, dog agility arena). Each of these will have a separate thermostat when we're all done – a “three zone” heating system.
The “thumper” used to compact the gravel moves forward of its own accord, thanks to an asymmetric vibration pattern. This allows fully autonomous operation with a very simple trick: tie one end of a rope to the thumper, then tie the other end to a stake. The thumper will travel round and round the stake, slowly winding up the rope and spiraling in toward the stake, just a couple inches closer on each revolution. This results in thoroughly thumped circular areas with almost no effort. Nice trick!
The plumber very carefully pressure-tested the parts of the septic line that will end up under the slab. You don't want those to fail, because fixing them would require jack-hammering the slab...
The “thumper” used to compact the gravel moves forward of its own accord, thanks to an asymmetric vibration pattern. This allows fully autonomous operation with a very simple trick: tie one end of a rope to the thumper, then tie the other end to a stake. The thumper will travel round and round the stake, slowly winding up the rope and spiraling in toward the stake, just a couple inches closer on each revolution. This results in thoroughly thumped circular areas with almost no effort. Nice trick!
The plumber very carefully pressure-tested the parts of the septic line that will end up under the slab. You don't want those to fail, because fixing them would require jack-hammering the slab...
Morning: 8 pier pads and some gravel |
Tube forms for pier foundations |
Spreading the fine gravel |
Pressure-testing the drains |
Tedious work: compacting gravel |
The last load of fine gravel arrives |
Automatic compacting! |
End of the day: ready for foam |
Final drain installation |
“The most important story on earth.”
“The most important story on earth.” Excellent Taranto piece on the evil press coverage of Israel vs. the Palestinians...
Thursday, August 28, 2014
Office hours...
Office hours... Saw an article on this study, which looks at when people actually go to work (graph at right). This immediately brought two thoughts to mind:
First, in my last job I kept very strange hours, which will surprise exactly nobody who knows me :) I generally arrived at work between 5:00 am and 5:30 am (after a one hour drive), and left around 2:00 pm. I was in almost perfect sync with people who worked on the East Coast, in a time zone +3 hours from mine.
Then I recalled one quite interesting problem I worked on at that same job. Our product was a SaaS product (otherwise known as a web application), and generally people logged into it when then came into work, and remained logged into it all day long. Each of our customers had a separate instance of our product. One of our large customers – out of hundreds of customers – was having a problem we were having trouble tracking down. Every morning their system would start thrashing like mad: CPU utilization spiked, disk I/O spiked, and response times were in minutes instead of seconds. After a half hour or so, every single morning, their system would settle down and start behaving normally. Diagnostics showed nothing. We swapped out hardware; no change. People were pulling their hair out trying to figure it out, while the customer was issuing escalating threats on a daily basis. I was one of the team troubleshooting the problem. I was chasing down a strange symptom we observed, and happened to look at the table that contained login information – and noticed that almost 1,000 (of 1,200 total) users were logging in within a 3 minute period. This seemed almost impossibly synchronized – how could 1,000 users all log in with such a synchronized schedule? That question prompted a phone call to the customer, who verified that in fact all their employees did report to work in exactly this synchronized fashion. About 90% of the employees were union members, and they clocked in precisely at 9:00 am, and out at 5:00 pm. In fact, our contact at the company was surprised there was as much as a 3 minute spread in the logins, until he realized that many workers probably grabbed a cup of coffee on the way in. Anyway, the high number of concurrent logins was the root of our issue. We had the company solve it temporarily by telling their folks to log in on a staggered schedule (based on the last two digits of their SSN); then we fixed the concurrency issue with a simple queue mechanism. No other customer had ever reported this issue, in years of experience with hundreds of thousands of users. It's all the union's fault :)
First, in my last job I kept very strange hours, which will surprise exactly nobody who knows me :) I generally arrived at work between 5:00 am and 5:30 am (after a one hour drive), and left around 2:00 pm. I was in almost perfect sync with people who worked on the East Coast, in a time zone +3 hours from mine.
Then I recalled one quite interesting problem I worked on at that same job. Our product was a SaaS product (otherwise known as a web application), and generally people logged into it when then came into work, and remained logged into it all day long. Each of our customers had a separate instance of our product. One of our large customers – out of hundreds of customers – was having a problem we were having trouble tracking down. Every morning their system would start thrashing like mad: CPU utilization spiked, disk I/O spiked, and response times were in minutes instead of seconds. After a half hour or so, every single morning, their system would settle down and start behaving normally. Diagnostics showed nothing. We swapped out hardware; no change. People were pulling their hair out trying to figure it out, while the customer was issuing escalating threats on a daily basis. I was one of the team troubleshooting the problem. I was chasing down a strange symptom we observed, and happened to look at the table that contained login information – and noticed that almost 1,000 (of 1,200 total) users were logging in within a 3 minute period. This seemed almost impossibly synchronized – how could 1,000 users all log in with such a synchronized schedule? That question prompted a phone call to the customer, who verified that in fact all their employees did report to work in exactly this synchronized fashion. About 90% of the employees were union members, and they clocked in precisely at 9:00 am, and out at 5:00 pm. In fact, our contact at the company was surprised there was as much as a 3 minute spread in the logins, until he realized that many workers probably grabbed a cup of coffee on the way in. Anyway, the high number of concurrent logins was the root of our issue. We had the company solve it temporarily by telling their folks to log in on a staggered schedule (based on the last two digits of their SSN); then we fixed the concurrency issue with a simple queue mechanism. No other customer had ever reported this issue, in years of experience with hundreds of thousands of users. It's all the union's fault :)
Mystery of Death Valley's “traveling rocks” solved...
Mystery of Death Valley's “traveling rocks” solved... It's ice!
Multiculti gone horribly wrong...
Multiculti gone horribly wrong ... in a new and awful way. Press reports are saying this happened (and is continuing to happen!) in multiple U.K. cities. This immediately makes me wonder if the same thing is happening in other European countries, most especially in southern France and Scandinavia...
Did Michael Mann help write the EPA documents...
Did Michael Mann help write the EPA documents ... the same ones that he claims validate his research?
This somehow seems of a piece for the guy who falsely claimed he was a Nobel Prize winner...
This somehow seems of a piece for the guy who falsely claimed he was a Nobel Prize winner...
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
Take no prisoners...
Take no prisoners... Afghanistan has ordered its soldiers and police not to take Taliban prisoners – but to kill them outright instead. Why? Because captured Taliban are finding it relatively easy to bribe their way out of prison. That means the only way to stop a Taliban operative is to kill him.
Most Americans have no experience with the kind of pervasive corruption one finds in many other societies, and are constantly surprised (and appalled) at the effects of it. Afghanistan is one of those countries, and reportedly one of the worst – but it is certainly not the only one. I was once responsible for business subsidiaries in Russia, where we routinely paid bribes (for things as mundane as getting an Internet connection) and protection money (it would be a shame if something happened to your nice, modern office).
Locals quickly figured out that American money was being poured into our office in St. Petersburg, and it was obvious that people were angling for every possible means to take a chunk of that for themselves. Not by the means Americans would generally expect, either. One example will give you a flavor for it. Our staff there asked us if we would spring for a bottled water delivery service, so our engineering staff could stop drinking the municipal water – which smelled like gasoline and tasted worse. We said “Of course!”, since we didn't really want to lose staff members to poisoning. The first day's delivery consisted of 20 liter (~5 gallon) bottles filled with distinctly cloudy water. When our staff complained to the water delivery guy, he said: “Oh, you want the clean water! That will be 30 rubles (about $1) extra per bottle, cash only.” This enterprising fellow had found a way to bribe us for our water! Complaining to his boss didn't help, because of course his boss got a cut of it.
Take that story and repeat 100 times, and you'll see why we estimated that about 1/3 of our St. Petersburg operating budget went to bribes and protection money...
Most Americans have no experience with the kind of pervasive corruption one finds in many other societies, and are constantly surprised (and appalled) at the effects of it. Afghanistan is one of those countries, and reportedly one of the worst – but it is certainly not the only one. I was once responsible for business subsidiaries in Russia, where we routinely paid bribes (for things as mundane as getting an Internet connection) and protection money (it would be a shame if something happened to your nice, modern office).
Locals quickly figured out that American money was being poured into our office in St. Petersburg, and it was obvious that people were angling for every possible means to take a chunk of that for themselves. Not by the means Americans would generally expect, either. One example will give you a flavor for it. Our staff there asked us if we would spring for a bottled water delivery service, so our engineering staff could stop drinking the municipal water – which smelled like gasoline and tasted worse. We said “Of course!”, since we didn't really want to lose staff members to poisoning. The first day's delivery consisted of 20 liter (~5 gallon) bottles filled with distinctly cloudy water. When our staff complained to the water delivery guy, he said: “Oh, you want the clean water! That will be 30 rubles (about $1) extra per bottle, cash only.” This enterprising fellow had found a way to bribe us for our water! Complaining to his boss didn't help, because of course his boss got a cut of it.
Take that story and repeat 100 times, and you'll see why we estimated that about 1/3 of our St. Petersburg operating budget went to bribes and protection money...
Worried about Curiosity's wheel wear issues?
Worried about Curiosity's wheel wear issues? Here's a very detailed article about it...
What the engineer should know about programming...
What the engineer should know about programming... A magazine article from 1957. Things have changed just a tad since then :)
Who needs that damned Constitution, anyway?
Who needs that damned Constitution, anyway? Certainly not King President Obama!
Related thought: do you suppose any foreign politician looks to the U.S. as a political model any more? I read an article the other day talking about a debate amongst German talking heads, wherein the conclusion was that Putin's Russia was a far more viable model for Germany than Obama's America...
Related thought: do you suppose any foreign politician looks to the U.S. as a political model any more? I read an article the other day talking about a debate amongst German talking heads, wherein the conclusion was that Putin's Russia was a far more viable model for Germany than Obama's America...
Barn: pier footing forms...
Barn: pier footing forms... Our builder finished these yesterday afternoon, but the field was too wet and mucky for a concrete truck to get in. We're hoping they can pour today.
The first photo just shows a rough form, sitting in its hole in the backfill. The second shows the two rows of four piers. The last shows the forms finished and ready to pour. These are held up by stakes and are only roughly in the design position. The top of them is several inches below the needed top of the pier foundation. Once the footings have cured a day or two, a round form will be placed on top, and the top of this will be carefully positioned and set to the right height. These will be poured next, after which the pier/footing “assemblies” will be backfilled around and compacted. At that point (hopefully still this week), it will be time to put a layer of fine gravel over all the backfill, and carefully level it...
The first photo just shows a rough form, sitting in its hole in the backfill. The second shows the two rows of four piers. The last shows the forms finished and ready to pour. These are held up by stakes and are only roughly in the design position. The top of them is several inches below the needed top of the pier foundation. Once the footings have cured a day or two, a round form will be placed on top, and the top of this will be carefully positioned and set to the right height. These will be poured next, after which the pier/footing “assemblies” will be backfilled around and compacted. At that point (hopefully still this week), it will be time to put a layer of fine gravel over all the backfill, and carefully level it...
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
The EPA deals in political propaganda, not science...
The EPA deals in political propaganda, not science... Warren Meyer of CoyoteBlog seems to be surprised by this.
I am not. I would expect the EPA to pay attention to the science only when it serves their political interests to do so. That's not very often, actually.
I am not. I would expect the EPA to pay attention to the science only when it serves their political interests to do so. That's not very often, actually.
Lois Lerner had a Blackberry...
Lois Lerner had a Blackberry... That's significant because some of her emails would have been stored on that device. But the IRS destroyed it, too!
They're just laughing in our faces, now. They don't even care if we know they're corrupt, lying sons of bitches. They don't think there's anything that we the people can do about it.
Are they right?
They're just laughing in our faces, now. They don't even care if we know they're corrupt, lying sons of bitches. They don't think there's anything that we the people can do about it.
Are they right?
Airstrikes in Libya...
Airstrikes in Libya ... were conducted by Egypt and the United Arab Emirates, acting on their own. They didn't coordinate the strikes with the U.S., or get prior clearance for them.
The U.S. is receding from the forefront of world affairs. There is no effective leadership. Tin pot dictators like Russia's Putin, and posturing closet Islamists like Turkey's Erogodan are competing for the role. I just hope things don't go to hell too fast, so that our next president has a fighting chance to reassert this country's leadership...
The U.S. is receding from the forefront of world affairs. There is no effective leadership. Tin pot dictators like Russia's Putin, and posturing closet Islamists like Turkey's Erogodan are competing for the role. I just hope things don't go to hell too fast, so that our next president has a fighting chance to reassert this country's leadership...
The best of Harry Reid...
Barn: initial backfill is complete!
Barn: initial backfill is complete! All the pit run needed is in. Despite our recent rains (over 2" in just the past few days) making a muddy mess of the field, the gravel truck managed to get all the required loads fairly close to the barn's foundation, and the builder shuttled it into the foundation with his loader/backhoe. In the photo at far right, the builder's son is compacting the backfill down, in preparation for covering it with a layer of fine gravel. In the other photo, a sprinkler is wetting down the backfill in preparation for that compaction.
The next step is to pour footings for the steel piers that will hold up the center of the roof, along with the second story storage area. There are two rows of these piers, with three or four (I've forgotten which) piers in each row. The rows of piers will be topped by a large gluelam beam that in turn will support the interior sections of all the trusses. This combination of steel and engineered wood is very common these days, thanks to technological innovations in the building industry. A few decades ago, the choices would have been far more limited – along with far more expensive, and not as strong...
The next step is to pour footings for the steel piers that will hold up the center of the roof, along with the second story storage area. There are two rows of these piers, with three or four (I've forgotten which) piers in each row. The rows of piers will be topped by a large gluelam beam that in turn will support the interior sections of all the trusses. This combination of steel and engineered wood is very common these days, thanks to technological innovations in the building industry. A few decades ago, the choices would have been far more limited – along with far more expensive, and not as strong...
Philae candidate landing sites!
Philae candidate landing sites! The ESA has released the list of eight candidate landing sites for the Philae lander. Later this fall, Rosetta will launch Philae for the short trip down to the surface of comet 67P. As is usual in landing site selection, there's tension between choosing a scientifically interesting site, and a (relatively) safe site. I don't envy those who must choose...
I recommend RealClearScience...
I recommend RealClearScience... And this manifesto they've just published nicely sums up why. The list at the end is in line with my own thinking on a bunch of “controversial” (or at least, unsettled :) science...
Triton flyby...
California leads the way...
California leads the way ... in drunk state Senator driving. Hueso is from San Diego, not all that far from Jamul...
Once speculation, now admitted...
Once speculation, now admitted... The U.S. government is now admitting that they do, in fact, have all of Lois Lerner's emails on backup tapes. They just don't want to take the trouble to retrieve them.
My, that's very convenient for the (most transparent evah) administration, no?
My, that's very convenient for the (most transparent evah) administration, no?
The Neo-Neocons...
The Neo-Neocons... This editorial by Bret Stephens, in today's Wall Street Journal, caught my eye both because of the author and the title. “Neo-Neocon” is one of my favorite blogs; its author is a woman who's gone through a political transformation in part because of the same issues Bret raises in this piece.
Stephens' piece is focused mainly on a parallel topic: the way that some (many, actually) progressive political figures have changed their attitude toward military intervention against violent fundamentalist Islamic movements. The emergence of ISIS while Obama was president neatly and cleanly exemplifies this, as Stephens documents...
Stephens' piece is focused mainly on a parallel topic: the way that some (many, actually) progressive political figures have changed their attitude toward military intervention against violent fundamentalist Islamic movements. The emergence of ISIS while Obama was president neatly and cleanly exemplifies this, as Stephens documents...
Why do Nigerian scammers say they're from Nigeria?
Why do Nigerian scammers say they're from Nigeria? The Nigerian email scams are notorious – the butt of jokes, and everyone knows about them. So you'd think it would behoove the scammers to stop telling people that they're from Nigeria, wouldn't you? Au contraire, say researchers at Microsoft: the scammers carefully and intentionally tell you they're from Nigeria. Why? Because then they know that any responses they do get are from the tiny percentage of the population that doesn't know about the Nigerian scams...
Seen in the northern Pacific...
Seen in the northern Pacific... An airline pilot saw these strange lights two days ago, under a thin cloud cover, while flying over the northern Pacific between Alaska and Japan. He has no idea what they were...
A small step in the right direction...
A small step in the right direction... The progressive/socialist bastion of Vermont has moved to start treating drug addiction as a health and social problem, instead of as a criminal problem. It's not the more complete withdrawal from the war on drugs that I'd like to see ... but it's a move away from the war, at least...
Russia is still in denial...
Russia is still in denial... Ukraine captured Russian soldiers inside Ukraine. In the face of some rather convincing evidence (including videotaped interrogations of the captured soldiers), Russia has admitted that the soldiers were there – but denies that they're there intentionally.
This is so reminiscent of the verbal games and deceptions employed by Hitler just prior to his invasions of Poland and Czechoslovakia. We've forgotten the lessons of history, I'm afraid. Knuckleheads like Putin need to be stopped sooner, not later. That's not happening, and I am concerned about that...
This is so reminiscent of the verbal games and deceptions employed by Hitler just prior to his invasions of Poland and Czechoslovakia. We've forgotten the lessons of history, I'm afraid. Knuckleheads like Putin need to be stopped sooner, not later. That's not happening, and I am concerned about that...
23 years of Linux...
23 years of Linux... On August 25, 1991, Linus Torvalds made the first announcement of the free, open source operating system Linux. Torvalds is still the leader of the project, which has now captured a large and growing share of all non-desktop operating systems. In my recent experience, Linux absolutely dominates the enterprise server market, something that I would never have predicted as recently as ten years ago. Yesterday Torvalds made a sentimental minor release of Linux, on its 23rd birthday...
Weird flowers...
Weird flowers ... that look like other things, like the Flying Duck Orchid (Caleana major) at right. Plus, a couple of bugs that look like flowers! Via my CCPOAA mom...
Monday, August 25, 2014
Another loony in a wing suit...
A magnificent solar flare...
A magnificent solar flare... An “M-flare”, just a medium-sized one. But this one was captured in a movie by the SOHO satellite...
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Grout...
Grout... The fellow who did the tile work in our remodeled master bathroom did a really nice job, but there was one imperfection that we didn't like: the grout, in certain places, hadn't been properly removed. When grout is correctly used, all of it should be below the level of the surrounding tile or rock. In the case of our bathroom, some of the right-angle joints (and especially the triple corners) had a “bead” of grout that was too high. It's easy to see how this happened: when you apply grout, the last step is to clean off the excess with a sponge. That works great on flat surfaces – but not so much on right angled joints. You can see this on the photo above right (click to embiggen).
After a bit of research on the web, I headed down to my local Home Depot to get a grout brush. I expected to be using this and my pocket knife to (laboriously) work that excess grout off. However, when I arrived at Home Depot and started looking at the tile tools, a friendly fellow came over and asked me what I was trying to accomplish. He told me about a special tool made for exactly my problem: a carbide-tipped scraper with a small triangular blade (see photos at right). I headed home considerably better armed for the battle than I had expected.
With just a little practice I got the hang of that scraper. It's important to wet down the grout and tile before you start – that keeps the dust from flying, and (more importantly) it helps prevent the scraper from “biting” into the rock, by lubricating it (same principle as shaving foam). It's also important to be gentle and to use light pressure. It's far better to make ten very light strokes than to try to remove it all with one muscular stroke, because that greatly reduces the chances of a catastrophic mistake (removing too much grout, or a chunk of rock).
The results are better than I had hoped for, and with far less work. To go over the entire shower took me about 4 hours of work. With just my pocket knife, that would have been more like 4 days. Furthermore, this was easy work, with relatively little skill required (a vital element, when it's me doing the work!).
Bottom line: if you have an excess grout situation, get this tool!
After a bit of research on the web, I headed down to my local Home Depot to get a grout brush. I expected to be using this and my pocket knife to (laboriously) work that excess grout off. However, when I arrived at Home Depot and started looking at the tile tools, a friendly fellow came over and asked me what I was trying to accomplish. He told me about a special tool made for exactly my problem: a carbide-tipped scraper with a small triangular blade (see photos at right). I headed home considerably better armed for the battle than I had expected.
With just a little practice I got the hang of that scraper. It's important to wet down the grout and tile before you start – that keeps the dust from flying, and (more importantly) it helps prevent the scraper from “biting” into the rock, by lubricating it (same principle as shaving foam). It's also important to be gentle and to use light pressure. It's far better to make ten very light strokes than to try to remove it all with one muscular stroke, because that greatly reduces the chances of a catastrophic mistake (removing too much grout, or a chunk of rock).
The results are better than I had hoped for, and with far less work. To go over the entire shower took me about 4 hours of work. With just my pocket knife, that would have been more like 4 days. Furthermore, this was easy work, with relatively little skill required (a vital element, when it's me doing the work!).
Bottom line: if you have an excess grout situation, get this tool!
Buh-bye, hard disks!
Buh-bye, hard disks! A terabyte on a postage stamp, faster and more durable than flash memory, coming soon.
The first non-volatile RAM I ever worked with (back in '72) was made with magnetic “cores” – tiny toroids with wire strung through them. These had a density of about 78 bits per cubic inch. The first versions of these new memories will have densities of roughly 2 x 1015 bits per cubic inch – a density increase of about 3 x 1013 in just 55 years. It seems unlikely that non-volatile RAM advances will keep up at that rate! On the other hand, as recently as 20 years ago I would never have guessed that I'd live to see the density of flash memory today...
The first non-volatile RAM I ever worked with (back in '72) was made with magnetic “cores” – tiny toroids with wire strung through them. These had a density of about 78 bits per cubic inch. The first versions of these new memories will have densities of roughly 2 x 1015 bits per cubic inch – a density increase of about 3 x 1013 in just 55 years. It seems unlikely that non-volatile RAM advances will keep up at that rate! On the other hand, as recently as 20 years ago I would never have guessed that I'd live to see the density of flash memory today...
Saturday, August 23, 2014
We can fix anything...
Friday, August 22, 2014
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