Larry Hosken: New

The Page Slow Street folks said they had a new street mural by Matley Hurd, the same artist who did that Lyon Street mural. The mural was close to me, at Page and Masonic. So I checked it out.

mysterious traffic cones atop a street mural detail of a hummingbird from a street mural view of most of the mural. I bet it would look better if a drone took an overhead pic tho view of most of the mural; you can see Hurd's signature

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2024-09-12T20:19:01.663604

Hello! It is not March, but the excellent EnigMarch folks occasionally send out a prompt word nonetheless. Today's prompt word is LETTER, in honor of International Literacy Day. That tells me it's a good time to make a puzzle.

Here we have six five-letter words, written up-down: sulks, Slemp, Nothe, oaten, bread, strut. But we don't have the middle letters right. We guessed they were L-E-T-T-E-R. But it turns out that's wrong. We tried pointing out that Slemp is the person's name behind the Slemp Foundation; and that Nothe is a fine placename in parts of England. But we're looking for different words; and none of their middle-letters are L, E, T, or R.

S S N O B S
U L O A R T
L E T T E R
K M H E A U
S P E N D T

Once you've filled in the correct middle-letters, you'll see something that might let you know that it's time to do something. (make a puzzle or otherwise)

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2024-09-08T01:40:51.968044

I continue to check my little dashboard of San Francisco COVID numbers each morning to figure out whether going into an ice cream shop to procure inessential-but-tasty treats endangers just my waistline or also my lungs, heart, long-term dementia chances, etc, etc.

Lately, the SF numbers have come down enough such that I've resumed indoor inessential activities.

graph charting three numbers: The new reported cases number is low; the test positivity % was high a couple of months ago, but is now low; the COVID in sewers number are still a little above the pretty-safe line, but a couple of months ago were waaaay above that pretty-safe line

About a week and a half ago, while San Francisco's numbers were dipping to pretty-safe levels, I saw posts on my socials that California's overall numbers were at some record high. So I guess some parts of California are having a bad time. But for now, in San Francisco, I appreciate this opportunity to go into the market that carries that brand of hummus I like.

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2024-09-06T11:50:10.722880

Flu shot: acquired

selfie with upper arm in foreground, head kinda blurry in background. upper arm has a band-aid

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2024-09-06T19:32:28.663182

Today I got* a new-to-me pastry: croissant egg tarts (焦糖可頌蛋撻). (Am I the only one who wants to call them craan tat? Anyhow.) Correctly anticipating that eating these would leave a mess of pastry flakes around me, I didn't eat these at home (a place I'd have to clean up). Instead, I went to the bench behind the Parnassus Ave Starbucks, where birds provide pastry-fragment cleanup service.

two pastries (one with a bite taken out of it) sit on the little bags they came in. They look like regular egg custard tarts, except carmelized on top like a flan and their crusts look croissant-darkish instead of pie-lightish photo that's been altered with a circle and an arrow to call attention to something and some text that says 'pastry, i think?'. Original photo had a crow (or raven? I'm not a corvid expert) in the foreground with something in its beak; in the background you can see bits of Golden Gate Park, the Richmond District, the Presidio and a couple of smidgens of the Golden Gate Bridge

*At Pineapple King on Irving in San Francisco.

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2024-08-31T17:16:34.399316

If you use the Luvvly dating app and wonder why there's an influx of users with juvenile humor from San Francisco's Haight area, I wonder if this flyer has something to do with it.

a flyer advertising a dating app that tries to say 'Stop swiping' but it has been torn and now says 'Stop wiping'

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2024-08-24T20:46:07.297601

This new Center for Immersive Arts looks interesting; looks like well-written and -researched articles about immersive art, pervasive games, that sort of thing. IIUC, it's info spun out of Laura E. Hall's work on an Immersipedia, a potentially-big document. E.g., the latest article is an interview with a Sondheim biographer who's specifically writing about Sondheim's puzzlehunts.

This interview got me thinking about the movie "The Last of Sheila," co-written by Sondheim, a mystery story that involves a puzzlehunt. (I'm not the only one who was thinking about that; Hall was inspired to write a post about the movie, focusing on the puzzlehunt's timeline) The interview points out that Sondheim had the sense to playtest his puzzlehunts. (A theater nerd, he referred to playtesting as "dress rehearsal".) The puzzlehunt Game Control guy in "The Last of Sheila," as near as I could tell, didn't playtest his game. His game's first challenge has an awful lot of red herrings; it felt like he could have narrowed things down a bit and still had plenty of challenge left. He seemed surprised at how tough the second challenge was. The first time I saw the movie, I assumed that Sondheim was a feckless amateur puzzlehunt-runner, and wouldn't have considered playtesting. But now… I wonder.

Maybe he didn't playtest because he was cruel. He might have liked the idea that his players were wandering around confused.

Maybe he didn't playtest because… well, for the same reason we, the audience for a heist movie, don't get to see all the planning work ahead of the heist: planning isn't cinematic; we'll have more suspense if we don't know what's coming.

Anyhow, cool stuff, check out the Center for Immersive Arts.

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2024-08-19T23:14:04.446040

I have updated the Phraser words- and phrases-lists. As you recall, these are text files with words and phrases commonly-found in Wikipedia, books, and other places; ranked by amazing-ness.* They can be useful when you're solving a puzzle, have figured out I'm looking for celebrities with surnames that are also colors; it's a little too complex a task for nutrimatic; I should write a little computer script. Every couple of whiles, I grab recent versions of Wikipedia so I can get the freshest phrases. E.g., this new version knows that skibidi toilet is a thing; the old January list didn't even realize that skibidi is a word. Anyhow, download the new "500,000 words" or "5,000,000 phrases" files the next time you're prepping for a puzzlehunt.

*Amazing-ness is an inaccurate but arguably-useful measure of suitability in word puzzles

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2024-08-17T16:43:08.634314

I stumbled upon some new-to-me San Francisco street art today, a ground mural on Lyon between McAllister and Fulton.

When I was next to it, I thought I bet it looks better from an aerial view and when I searched teh internets and found Matley Hurd's (the artist's) instagram, I thought yep.

part of a big ground mural covering most of the width of a street; it shows the Golden Gate Bridge and a parrot another part of a big ground mural covering most of the width of a street; another parrot and a dahlia screen shot of Matley Hurd's instagram page; shows the whole mural, undistorted along with some commentary from fans

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2024-08-12T20:32:24.249457

A specialized unit of distance for San Francisco in Fogust: That crane's swing arm is so long, its alpha channel goes from 80% to 5%.

construction site at Stanyan and Waller streets. Above it towers a crane, obscured by fog. If you're wondering why there are weird objects in the foreground, this pic was snapped from the Waller Street Skate Park, which has accumulated some weird objects for skating on

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2024-08-11T13:32:45.407578

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