This morning was my first San Francisco tornado warning.
I was once again thankful to Patrick Blindauer, Rebecca Young, and St Louis puzzlehunt team WisBros
for teaching me what to do in a tornado: get under something solid.
(This morning's warning was before dawn; so I couldn't use the sky color to figure out if it was time to skeedaddle to cover. So I skeedaddled on general principles.)
Permalink
2024-12-14T14:28:41.562785
I've been buying groceries more frequently,
expanding my emergency food-and-water supply
from ~three days' worth to ~seven.
My country re-elected a corrupt dimwit.
I couldn't control that.
He will appoint corrupt incompetents to
positions of power.
I can't control that.
I don't know who he'll appoint to head
FEMA (USA's disaster response agency).
Probably either a Fox News commentator who
doesn't believe volcanoes exist; perhaps
an ex-senator under investigation for arson.
I can't control that.
Anyhow, I think it's a good idea to
expand my emergency food-and-water supply.
I'm giving more attention to this
simple task than it needs.
But it's something I can control,
so I'm focusing on it.
Permalink
2024-12-12T20:17:13.953612
Today was my second consecutive Golden Gate Park walk seeing zero (0) coyotes.
This was weird; I've become accustomed to seeing them. I'm not sure what changed.
Mmmaybe: I see coyotes when I walk in the park around sunrise; nights are longer now, approaching the winter solstice.
Sunrise is late these days; maybe coyotes don't want to stay up this late?
I guess I'll blog about it now; if I have the same question next year at around this time,
I'll know that I guessed right.
I'm still learning the system. Ten years ago, I would have surprised-ly blogged about seeing a coyote;
nowadays I'm more surprised by their absence.
Anyhow, here's a photo of some park bison.
Because I don't know how to take a photo that illustrates a lack of coyotes.
Permalink
2024-12-07T17:31:38.682500
#SFHellscape
Permalink
2024-12-05T15:47:46.559662
It's all about USA policy for electricity generation, transmission,
distribution, and retail. It gets complicated; there's some
nation-level control, but mostly everything is different from
region to region. From place to place, some organizations are
publicly traded companies, some are government departments… just
because you're an expert in your home town's system, don't assume
you know how things work in the next town over, the next state over,
in Texas (Texas is weird), and so on.
The book gets into the details. In my imagination, this book got
started when the author, an electricity policy wonk, was explaining
a spreadsheet of
[ generation | transmission | distribution | retail ]
organizations with a client who asked "You ever think of writing
all this down?" I didn't retain those details; but some vibes remain.
E.g., public vs private power. Should your
state/county/city/whatever have a power department or a
monopoly power company? In theory, a power company could
innovate more, motivated by profit, benefiting consumers.
In practice, every time a power company makes a mistake,
the state/county/city/whatever regulates the heck out of it.
Take out some big loans to build a new thingy, fall behind
on the loans, and go bankrupt? The state/county/city/whatever
will make good, because they need to keep the electricity flowing.
But they'll also apply a ton of new regulations so that it doesn't
happen again. Sign up to build a few extra nuclear reactors because
you believe that they'll produce power "too cheap to meter" and
demand will skyrocket? When the state/county/city/whatever figures
out that the power will, in fact, be more expensive than non-nuclear
choices, they'll cancel the extra reactors and regulate big new projects.
Oh, and the neighboring states/counties/cities/whatevers
also impose regulations on their local power companies, because
they saw the political disaster unfold and they don't want to get voted
out of office.
So… In the long run, you probably won't get more innovation
out of a monopoly company than out of a government department;
voters will (reasonably) freak out when things go wrong and demand
regulation.
Back when nuclear power was new, a lot of places really did sign up
to build a lot of reactors, anticipating a lot of new demand that didn't
materialize.
Back when nuclear power was new, the feds decided an interesting way
to encourage it: if a company built a reactor and the reactor had a big
accident, the feds put a cap on the liability. If I'm a citizen, this
particular incentive makes me very NIMBY about nuclear reactors.
What was the reasoning behind this incentive? If big, horrible accidents
are rare, this guarantee doesn't affect anything, so why offer it?
If big, horrible
accidents are common, then I do not want a reactor near
me, near my water supply, near anyone I care about…
Remember Enron? Remember how much you hated Enron?
That hate was justified.
Permalink
2024-12-02T23:07:25.752289
Today, I reached level 100 in Pikmin Bloom, a walk-around-with-your-phone game.
That's the highest level achievable.
And Alexander humblebragged: "Oh woe is me, I just don't know what to do with myself now that there are no more worlds to conquer."*
Anyhow, I will soon un-install the app; I'm 🏁 done-zo 🏁.
*This is not accurate: There are more things to accomplish in the game, achievement badges to collect, etc; but I don't feel motivated to go after those. Also, when I looked up that Alexander the Great "quote" about no-more-worlds-to-conquer, I found out he didn't actually say that but rather kinda the opposite.
Permalink
2024-11-30T16:22:32.521890
I continue to check my little dashboard of San Francisco COVID numbers each morning to figure out whether going into a cafe for professionally-made coffee is worth the risk or will be an embarrassing thing to explain to the medical professionals treating my long-COVID-induced heart condition[s].
This morning, my dashboard is b0rked. Good news: The California Department of Public Health has a new dashboard for COVID-in-wastewater data. Bad news: the old dashboard, whence my dashboard fetched its data, doesn't work anymore. I can't figure out how my automated dashboard is supposed to fetch data now. Ha ha, the timing: I get to find out its broken on USA Thanksgiving, and the relevant smart folks probably won't be checking their email for a few days.
Yay, computers.
This year I'm thankful that San Francisco's other COVID numbers are low; so I don't need to worry too much despite the fact that some data is missing at the moment.
Permalink
2024-11-28T17:48:27.710715
A few months back, I played in SFPursuit, a San Francisco
challenge hunt. Uhm, where "challenge hunt" is a phrase I
made up just now for "Something like a puzzlehunt, but most
of the activities aren't puzzle-y, but they are still challenging."
One of the activities involved looking over a physical book
that had been created for the hunt. A few bookstores across
San Francisco had one copy each of the special book. Each
player's phone directed them to the nearest such bookstore.
There, they could find the special book, gather data from it,
solve the book's riddle, and enter the answer on their phone
to complete the challenge.
Thus I found myself in
Fabulosa Books,
negotiating with fellow hunt enthusiasts to snap pictures
of the pages from a false birdwatching guide.
Unsurprisingly to anyone who's participated in such events,
everyone was very focused on solving the riddle;
nobody bought any books.
I remembered back to when
I helped run 'Terngame 2012
for Twitter interns. I'd set up one puzzle at
Isotope Comics and then watched over the puzzle,
in case any interns needed help solving it.
All of the interns were hyperfocused on
the puzzle; none of them dawdled in the
store after solving to browse or buy.
I felt pretty sheepish for having asked the store's
propietor to let me set up the puzzle there.
I might as well have used a conference room
back at company HQ.
That's what was on my mind when I bought a book at Fabulosa.
Oh? What's that you say? What did I think of the book?
In the novel The Fellowship of Puzzlemakers,
the protagonist goes on a quest of self-discovery.
He's been given a crossword puzzle; he's been instructed
to seek out the answers to the puzzle along his journey.
So one of the answers might be BEAUTY and the
protagonist might encounter a really-nice sunset and
contemplate its BEAUTY. And everyone reading
the book is nodding "Yep, I saw that BEAUTY when
I first solved the crossword, and now here we encounter
it in the story; this whole story is satisfyingly interwoven."
The puzzle's kinda weird, tho. The book takes place in England,
most of the characters are English. But the central-theme
crossword puzzle uses American-style
definition clues, not British-style cryptic clues.
The book explains the reason thusly: The protagonist doesn't
think of himself as smart enough to solve cryptic clues; the
quest-giver knew this, and wanted the puzzle to be solve-able.
But but cryptic clues are just a small part of why
British-style puzzles can be difficult. A much bigger problem
is that their grids are "sparse"; not every square is part of
of an across-word and a down-word. In an American-style puzzle,
if you don't know the across answer, the first name of
whazzerface Świątek you might still be OK: Maybe you'll know
the down-answers that intersect. But in a British-style grid,
even if you have all the intersecting answers, you don't have
all the letters.
A British-style crossword grid from Wikipedia
Maybe you're looking at S□A□E and you're not sure
whether it's
SCALE,
SHADE,
SHAKE,
SHAME,
SHAPE,
SHARE,
SLATE,
SNAKE,
SPACE,
SPARE,
STAGE,
STATE, or what-have you.
If the clue is British-cryptic-style, you have some hope: the clue
has two halves: one definition, one wordplay. If the definition is
so vague that you're not sure whether the answer is SHAPE
or SPACE, probably the wordplay will clear things up. (oh,
a "change" of phase, ok)
So… our not-amazing-puzzler protagonist has to solve
a crossword in a British-style grid and doesn't have an answer
key, so he has to just hope that he picked the right words,
that □E□T□E might be CENTRE or KETTLE…
Also, one of the crossword clues is wrong: it points you at a noun,
but the answer is the verb form of that noun. It's weird that
one clue was wrong. In a novel structured around a crossword,
I either expect no mistakes (a puzzle nerd trying their hand
at novel-writing) or many mistakes (a novelist who doesn't know
the rules of crosswords but nevertheless wants to incorporate one).
Here's my best hypothesis: The author's first draft of this novel used
a British-style crossword with cryptic clues. The author was delighted
when an American publisher picked up the novel: His work would reach
a big audience! But the publisher imposed a condition: Those cryptic
clues had to go; you couldn't expect Americans to understand them.
The author, gnashing his teeth at this slight to his culture, swapped
out his cryptic clues for grudgingly-written defintion-clue replacements,
not noticing that he'd messed one of them up.
Oh? What's that you say? What did I think of the book?
It was OK. It did a great job of structuring the story around
the crossword. If the crossword had been a mistake-less cryptic,
maybe I'd be calling this book masterful.
Permalink
2024-11-20T21:59:34.077030
Much of the internet runs on ads; but maybe it's a house of cards.
Apps, web pages, other content-thingies show ads to defray
their costs. Advertisers want to show their messages to
potential customers, and pay to do so. Everybody wins.
Except it doesn't always work so smoothly. A small business
might want to show their ads on news sites and phone games
and Google searches and other places; but maybe doesn't want
to keep track of how their ads are doing at all those different
places. So maybe the small business signs up with a couple
of intermediary services, each service promising to show the ad to some
desired demographic. Maybe everything's working fine? Maybe it's not?
It's hard to tell.
The small business starts getting billed for ads.
Thanks to creepy surveillance, that phone game thinks it knows
its players' demographics, and thus will show the ad to the
right people. But what if it has the demographics wrong?
Or what if the intermediary service messed up and asked for
the wrong demographic? Or what if the intermediary service
is crooked, never actually places any ads, just sends a
plausible-looking bill? Or what if…
It turns out, a lot of this stuff is pretty opaque.
Publishers and advertisers have to take a lot on faith.
We know ads aren't always shown to the right people, but
we don't know how often.
We know there's fraud out there, but we don't know how
much.
The book's author compares the situation to the subprime
mortgage meltdown: We know there are some bad assets out
there. We know the rating system has incentive to be lazy
about seeking out that badness. Is it all about to fall apart?
Maybe. That could be darned bad news for news sites; even
if the advertising markets only crash for a short while, it
might be long enough for shoestring news organizations to go under.
Permalink
2024-11-15T23:47:32.464406
November 5, 2024, I once again volunteered as a poll clerk for a
San Francisco election. I clerked at
the same garage as
2022, and it was still swanky: building owner Jay served up
espresso drinks, Italian soda, donuts, snacks.
The crew was:
- Christina (Kristina?): Poll Inspector, fearless leader
- Victoria: We clerked together in the swanky garage in 2022; she didn't bring
crafting stuff this year, but brought some darned-handy office supplies.
- Max and Jack: High school students
- Me: Comic relief
I mention that Victoria returned. Another returner: Kayden, our
2022 high school student volunteer. But he wasn't clerking this year;
he came to vote.
Something new happened this year: We had a paper jam.
This ballot, physically, was four big sheets of thick paper.
(thin cardstock?) Voters marked their sheets with
a pen, tore receipt strips off the tops, then fed the big parts
of the sheets into a scanner to be counted. But but
one voter botched tearing the little receipt-strips off. They had
ragged edges and tore into the ballot sheets. When they fed a sheet
into the scanner, things didn't go great.
The scanner pulled in the sheet, made some unhappy whining noises,
stopped, and displayed an error message on screen.
I was standing next to the machine when this happened.
I knew what to do next: We have a little booklet that explains
the machine's mysterious error codes. Error 1
means such-and-such
went wrong, the fix is this; Error 2
means this-other-thingy went wrong, the fix is this; etc.
So I flipped through the little booklet; it didn't have an explanation
for this error message.
Fortunately, Poll Inspector and fearless leader Christina knew
that our San Francisco Poll Worker manuals contained a second
list of error messages and remedies. This list knew about the error
message we were looking at: Yep, it was a paper jam. There was a remedy:
Press a button to exhort the scanner to expel the jammed sheet.
Alas, pressing this button
caused the machine to give forth no sheet, but instead more whining noises.
We called up the Department of Elections phone hotline to find out
what to do next. A nice Dept-of-E person asked for the error message,
asked us to press the expel-jammed-paper-button again, and when that
didn't work told us to wait for a technician to come visit and clear
the paper jam. Until the technician showed up, we were to tell voters
that they could either wait for the technician, or could hand over their
ballots to be stored in The Auxiliary Bin: a compartment on the side of
the ballot scanner. After the technician unjammed things, one of us could
feed those stored ballots into the scanner.
So I, the clerk standing next to the scanner, had the not-so-fun
conversation with voters: Unfortunately, we have a paper jam. You
can't feed your ballot into the scanner right now. You can wait
for the technician, or I can put your ballot in The Auxiliary Bin for
now and scan it when the technician has fixed things.
To me, this felt sketchy.
I knew that historically, sometimes poll workers are corrupt.
Maybe that clerk by the scanner is lying about the "paper jam".
Maybe if you, the voter, hand over your ballot to be scanned "later," that
clerk will look over your choices, frown, and "lose" your ballot.
(I asked many people to hand over their ballots. I wonder
how many of them grew up in places with
"elections" like this?)
San Francisco has safeguards against this corruption:
poll workers watch each other; an audit will catch sites
that hand out more ballots than get scanned; probably other safeguards, too.
Nevertheless, asking voters to just hand over their ballots felt bad.
And this was during the morning rush—many people wanted
to scan their ballots and then head to work. Now they had to pause and
make a decision.
Most voters handed over their ballots without thinking about it.
Some voters peered at me, thought, and handed over their ballots.
A few hung on to their ballots.
I found these few ballot-hanger-on voters comforting.
They were keeping things honest.
Eventually, the technician showed up.
You, experienced at clearing paper jams from printers might wonder:
Do they really need a specialized technician to clear a simple
paper jam? But this was an election, and this
technician was, basically, tampering with election equipment. Most
of what he did was keeping records. He stayed on the phone with someone
back at Dept of Elections office, telling them "OK, I'm going to break
the security seal. I'm opening up the panel." He spent a lot of time
making sure nobody (including him) was committing election crimes,
very little time clearing out the paper jam itself.
Then I took on my second sketchy task: Feeding those Auxiliary Bin-stored
ballots into the scanner. Anyone walking into the polling place would have
seen me hunched over a stack of ballot sheets, picking them up and feeding
them into the scanner. It must have looked pretty suspicious. I kind of
hope that some voter called up the Dept of Elections to report my actions.
A few days later, I ambled along a local retail street, seeking a
sandwich. I spotted the voter who'd torn the ballot that started the
whole mess. They spotted me at the same time; looked away; seemed
embarrassed. I hope they weren't too embarrassed.
I hope they keep voting, maybe hope they ask for help
tearing off the strips next time. Nobody was born knowing how to do it,
and I don't think standard high school Civics classes cover papercraft.
Permalink
2024-11-11T16:00:09.569051