Larry Hosken: New

Book Report: Under a White Sky

Elizabeth Kolbert, science writer, visited scientists trying to undo some of humanity's damage to the ecosystem and perhaps avert the end of all human life. E.g., trying to keep a very-efficient snail-killing fish species out of the Great Lakes so it doesn't wipe out the food supply for the existing not-so-efficient snail-eating critters. Or trying to preserve the desert pupfish, whose natural environment nowadays consists of a pool in one desert cave. Or trying to prevent southern Louisiana from sinking under the Gulf of Mexico. Or geoengineering tricks to reflect sunlight back out into space. Or…

What have we learned? Undoing the damage is hard. Replacing the things that have been destroyed is hard. The scientists preserving the Desert Pupfish constructed a second pool in which to raise more Pupfish. Rather than quarry out rocks exactly like those from the original Pupfish pool, the scientists tried constructing something from foam. I mean, sure—it's plain ol' rocks, right? There's no way you'd need an exact copy of plain ol' rocks to keep Pupfish going, right? Except that the Pupfish pool's ecosystem has some burrowing beetles; it's easier to burrow into foam than into rock; the beetles in the constructed-second pool had too easy a time, ate a lot of pupfish. Not even plain ol' rocks are easy. It's easier to just not trash the original ecosystem; and that's hard, too.

We're getting pretty desperate. There's no reason to think any of these measures will work better than nationalizing ExxonMobil, Chevron, etc and winding down oil drilling and coal mining. I guess it's easier to get a grant to save the Desert Pupfish?

Permalink

2025-02-18T17:37:06.663465

Richmond District Onion Domes

Walking in #SanFrancisco 's Richmond District, I saw a new-to-me (but actually almost a year old) mural by Sorrell Raino-Tsui of the ABG Art Group and/or Athen B. Gallery. Celebrating immigrants who settled in the neighborhood, it featured (among other things) onion domes.

big mural on the side of a big building, 4200 Geary Blvd. There are Russian-looking swirly-painted onion domes. There are also Chinese-looking painting-ish clouds and a dragon

Later on, I bumped into a utility box painted by Eddie Ahn. I'd been a fan of his comic books. He'd been on my mind lately: he was running for public office. Alas, he was on the Neighbors and Labor Slate, backed by let's-outlaw-the-poors groups like GrowSF and the Alice B. Toklas LGBTQ Democratic Club. It's tough being a comic book fan; every couple of years, you find out some creator is a jerk and reading their work just makes you sad. Anyhow, Ahn also called out neighborhood features, including onion domes.

utility box decorated in a cartoon style. towards the top you can see an onion-dome cathedral. towards the bottom, there is a cute turtle drinking coffee

That utility box obviously depicted the Holy Virgin Cathedral out around 26th Ave, so I kept walking until I could see the original.

hilly residential street, but in the background there is a big cathedral topped with five big golden onion domes San Francisco's Holy Virgin Cathedral. big building. five golden onion domes. murals depicting saints. big orthodox crosses.

Permalink

2025-02-08T21:54:40.987031

Chalk art at 20th and Irving in San Francisco: ¿dónde están los huevos?

sidewalk chalk art. pretty surreal. an anthropomorphized egg has climbed a ladder and addresses a few neighbors. text below reads ¿dónde están los huevos?. text above is in Chinese which I can't read, but when I plugged 'where are the eggs?' into Google translate and tried a few dialects, I noticed the Traditional Chinese translation had a few characters in common. The neighbors... Well, there's a lady with a cloud head carrying a turnip. There's a caftan-wearing rainbow-headed figure carrying a chard? kale? leaf. There's a ✳-headed figure carrying a loaf of bread. There's a potato-bodied person covered with human eyes. The potato-eyes thing makes me wonder if I'm overlooking puns in the other figures. Off the the side, mostly out of frame: a snake (Happy New Year!)

Permalink

2025-02-08T20:17:42.656661

Book Report: Empire of the Sum

It's a history of arithmetic technology leading up to (and after) the pocket calculator. I wasn't expecting to learn much; but I did learn some. Why wasn't I expecting to learn much? I've read a lot about the history of computers; unsurprisingly, there's plenty of overlap between computer-history and calculator-history. But the bits of calculator history were sufficiently weird for most purposes.

E.g., John Napier, the logarithm guy, was seriously into the occult. I guess back then, you became a "Renaissance Man" by reading all the books you could get your hands on. It was possible to learn everything; but some of that "everything" was just wild crap that someone made up about demons. John Napier had darned broad book-larnin', but trusted some books' assertions-without-evidence overmuch. Fortunately, he could figure out logarithms were cool without needing to interact with the real world too much and/or asking the advice of slow-to-reply demons.

Casio's first calculator wasn't near pocket-sized. Back before transistors, its logic was electromechanical relays. This calculator was the size of a desk. Imagine asking for the answer to a simple formula and hearing a sound like a bank of Strowger switches.

Oh, and a UX tale of figuring out how a calculator's keys should feel: instead of something silly like a piano, they took inspiration from accordion buttons 🪗.

Bonus: The epilogue talks about the decline of the pocket calculator. One reason for the decline: Smartphones came along, with built-in calculator functions. Carrying another device just for calculation didn't make so much sense. But but to illustrate the idea of a smartphone, he used a picture of a Nokia 9000 Communicator, giving me a bracing whiff of nostalgia. Yes, our GEOS operating system brought about the decline of the pocket calculator (albeit a miniscule fraction).

Permalink

2025-02-05T00:34:48.983785

I moved my backups off of Google servers.

screen shot of text: Canceled / Your subscription will end on Jun 1, 2025

Many months ago, April 2024, Google fired workers protesting Project Nimbus, a Google-Amazon-Israel project, during an intense period of the Gaza Genocide. This suggested that Google Cloud Services, the part of Google that works with outside-of-Google programmers to use Google's services, had fired a lot of competent people—I figure that most of the Googlers still there didn't think they could find work elsewhere and thus had been scared to protest.

Google isn't a monolith; just because Google Cloud Services was messing up doesn't mean all of Google was falling apart. But I knew that my backups used Google Cloud; my reliable backups didn't feel so reliable anymore.

It took me a few months to move my backups. Well, it took me a few months to fail to move my backups the hard way; then almost no time to move them the easy way. I wasted a lot of time trying to keep my scheme mostly the same, just storing stuff on someone else's storage. I liked my custom-made system, and to keep things simple I wanted to keep using it instead of learning some new-to-me system… But eventually I realized I was putting a lot of effort into failing to figure out how to keep my "simple" system going without Google cloud storage. Learning one of these new not-so-new anymore systems was pretty easy by comparison.

(I was using rclone mount, and thought I had a lot of choices about where to store my files; a lot of places support rclone! But when I looked more closely, I found out almost all those places support rclone mostly—they support it except the mount feature.)

Once I had my backups flowing to the new place, I didn't delete my old backups from Google right away. I had an annual subscription; so it seemed worthwhile to leave the files up there for a few months while I made sure that my new backups were working OK. That finally happened, so I finally canceled. That little task just took me nine months.

Permalink

2025-02-02T16:59:27.333674

I found out about GroceryDB, a data set of grocery ingredients sold at some big chain stores (via the excellent Data is Plural blog). Thus, future versions of the Phraser phrase list will know about cultured dextrose and modified corn starch, substances which are apparently all around us (if we are standing in our kitchens, anyhow).

Then I wasted some time staring at modified corn starch trying to use it as a cryptic clue. Alas, if there are interesting anagrams of corn starch, I didn't find 'em. Scorch rant? Never mind, then.

Permalink

2025-01-30T16:35:00.900984

A little over a year ago, the 9th and Irving Starbucks unionized. That's why became a regular. I guess that's also why Starbucks is shutting down this always-busy store.

snap of closing notice taped to door. Text: January 27, 2025 / Dear Starbucks customers, On January 31, 2025 at 7:30pm, your Starbucks at 9th and Irving, location 744 Irving, will be permanently closing. We would like to thank you for being part of our store community [part message out of frame and I forget what it said] you are the heart of who we are at Starbucks. It has been a great pleasure to connect with you every day. We are very thankful to have played a role in your daily routine and that you have shared these moments of your life with us.

Considering the context, I imagine the Starbucks CEO biden his time until an anti-labor USA president came along, then acting swiftly. Anyhow, this isn't the biggest fallout from that context; there's plenty of worse news out there.

If this was your regular coffee spot and you're not sure what to do, I recommend the Beanery, kitty-corner and a little uphill on 9th Avenue. It's pretty good. It's where I used to go, and I suppose it's where I'll go in the future.

Permalink

2025-01-29T15:29:05.898665

I saw mention of another movie database. I already knew about IMDb, a pretty-good example acquired by Amazon some years back. New to me: TMDb, The Movie Database. I previously figured out how to use IMDb's data to improve phraser's phrase list with lots of movie titles and movie-people names. Now I figured out how to do it again with TMDb, hopefully thus getting a broader list. (Maybe more international?) And maybe if Amazon ever goes on a cost-cutting rampage and discards IMDb, I might have a fall-back plan. Anyhow, this data should trickle in next time I update the phraser lists; I'm trying the new data at home now to make sure it doesn't ruin everything.

Permalink

2025-01-26T02:01:48.582900

I continue to check my little dashboard of San Francisco COVID numbers each morning to figure out whether getting together with a dozen nerds in someone's house to solve puzzles is fun weekend plans or an embarrassing thing I'll have to explain to my doctor when we determine the cause of my long-term lung problems. Lately, the numbers have been looking OK, but they don't all look OK: of the three numbers I track, one of them, COVID-in-wastewater, recently rose up from not-so-scary to kinda-scary. Although those wastewater numbers are noisy, the level's stayed high for over a week, so it's probably not just a blip.

I'm still going places; the low number of reported new cases and % positive tests give me some reassurance that things are OK. But don't be surprised if folks who only track the wastewater numbers start canceling their get-togethers.

chart graphing three values over two months. The green line, COVID in wastewater, has been above safe levels for the past couple of weeks. The purple and red lines, test positivity and new reported cases, are low but rising

As it happens, I did cancel my weekend puzzle-get-together plans; not because of scary wastewater numbers, but because of a lack of those numbers. The California Department of Public Health paused posting their numbers on January 6th and didn't resume posting until the Tuesday after Mystery Hunt. The day they paused, San Francisco's numbers were rising very steeply. I kept hoping they'd post new numbers that showed the rise had slowed down so I'd feel confident swapping air with friends for a few days. And they did post those numbers, just too late to reassure me. Ahem. It's a good thing I'm not bitter.

Permalink

2025-01-23T21:00:52.683011

Seen on Haight Street, San Francisco, USA; applies in all geographries.

flyer posted on lightpole. flyer has text 'Take all you need ❤️'. Flyer has tear strips. You might expect contact info on the tear strips, but instead are words: Love, Hope, Joy

Permalink

2025-01-22T16:31:30.364260

Tags

Archives:
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025

Feed