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Not the least cranky sick person ever.
So as long as you don't need me to do anything involving eating, drinking, talking, singing, staying awake for more than four hours at a stretch, thinking about anything complex, or regulating my own body temperature--oh, or walking around or driving, obviously--I'm doing just great.
Which is fine, because it's not like there were things I wanted to do this week other than curling up on the sofa and trying to get and keep something in my system that has more substance in it than cloudberry tisane. Nor did anybody else have anything they might want of me.
Oh wait.
At least the new fella finally gave Mikko the C before Bruno and The Grizzled Veteran took him out behind our beautiful palace of hockey for a come to Jesus chat. (Note: if this sentence is incomprehensible to you, repeat to yourself, "hockey blah blah hockey blah blah blah Mris is pleased," and you will have the gist of it.) Particularly good because there isn't a good lot of space behind the Xcel per se, and I would think that kind of thing might alarm opera patrons.
I do wish they'd have stayed NSP or at least spelled it with an e in it. Because Xcel looks stupid, and what does it mean? Who knows? Whereas Northern States Power was very clear: where were they? Northern States. What service did they provide? Power. So there ya go. Possibly I'm misremembering and what they used to be was Minnegasco, but that, too, was fairly transparent. Harumph harumph harumph.
Rather than hugs or virtual cups of tea, if you could link interesting articles, stories, comics, blog/journal entries, etc. in the comments, I would appreciate it muchly.
Which is fine, because it's not like there were things I wanted to do this week other than curling up on the sofa and trying to get and keep something in my system that has more substance in it than cloudberry tisane. Nor did anybody else have anything they might want of me.
Oh wait.
At least the new fella finally gave Mikko the C before Bruno and The Grizzled Veteran took him out behind our beautiful palace of hockey for a come to Jesus chat. (Note: if this sentence is incomprehensible to you, repeat to yourself, "hockey blah blah hockey blah blah blah Mris is pleased," and you will have the gist of it.) Particularly good because there isn't a good lot of space behind the Xcel per se, and I would think that kind of thing might alarm opera patrons.
I do wish they'd have stayed NSP or at least spelled it with an e in it. Because Xcel looks stupid, and what does it mean? Who knows? Whereas Northern States Power was very clear: where were they? Northern States. What service did they provide? Power. So there ya go. Possibly I'm misremembering and what they used to be was Minnegasco, but that, too, was fairly transparent. Harumph harumph harumph.
Rather than hugs or virtual cups of tea, if you could link interesting articles, stories, comics, blog/journal entries, etc. in the comments, I would appreciate it muchly.
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http://lab.andre-michelle.com/tonematrix
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I can't tell them apart without a program, either. I called Xcel to ask why our gas meter was making a squeaky sound. The person I talked to said that we simply had a noisy regulator, but they could send somebody out to make sure it was not planning world domination instead. Then she couldn't find our account, because we don't get natural gas from Xcel, we get it from Centrepoint. She had the number for THEM right there, too, interestingly enough.
P.
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http://www.newscientist.com/
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And if you've got a certain kind of warped sense of humour you may like My First Dictionary.
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It sounds like it might almost be a sincere attempt to understand, though of course the source looks partisan. Anyway the concepts are interesting. And reach no solid conclusions, always a good sign I think.
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Thanks for saying what you wanted--one sends hugs because one wants to do something and doesn't know what would be helpful, but knowing to send interesting things to read is good!
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I hope the range of your greatness expands quickly.
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"The much-delayed and maligned Large Hadron Collider has been hit by its most outlandish claim to date - it is being sabotaged by its own future." (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/6318034/Could-the-Large-Hadron-Collider-be-held-back-by-its-own-future.html)
And this caused quite a stir in my library this past winter:
"India to launch cow urine as soft drink." (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/food_and_drink/article5707554.ece)
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We live in a world where recycling gets collected on a TRUCK WITH A GIANT CLAW!!!
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Bathsheba Grossman (http://www.bathsheba.com/)
Math and physics art, some via 3-D printing. You may already know her, but I didn't encounter her work until recently. A product quote:
"What is the central problem of beer? That it is contained in a bottle, which is to say a boundaryless compact 2-manifold homeomorphic to the sphere. Since beer bottles are not (usually) pathological or "wild" spheres, but rather smooth manifolds, they separate all of 3-space into two unconnected regions, viz. the region inside the bottle, containing beer, and the region outside the bottle, containing you.
What is to be done? Clearly, the elegant solution is to introduce a non-orientable manifold without distinct sides; indeed with only a single side. The Klein bottle pictured is an example of this class. When brought into proximity with the closed manifold described above, it acts at once to disrupt the closure of the bottle, obviating the outdated, dualistic paradigm of distinction between interior and exterior, thus enabling interaction between the beer and the self.
In summary, we have here a Klein bottle that opens beers. If I do say so, this is fine art."
Tyler Hamilton's blog is called Clean Break (http://www.cleanbreak.ca/)
He's a technology, energy and environment reporter for one of our daily newspapers. A fair bit of it can be exciting stuff. Below are two sample techs that might be interesting.
General Fusion (http://www.generalfusion.com/t5_general_fusion.php) is developing a different path to fusion power.
Clean Break article (http://www.cleanbreak.ca/2009/04/20/fusion-power-on-the-cheap-not-so-outlandish/), an article in the Toronto Star (http://www.thestar.com/Business/SmallBusiness/article/621041), an article in Technology Review (http://www.technologyreview.com/business/23102/?nlid=2235).
Morgan Solar (http://www.morgansolar.com/blog/) Concentrating solar photovoltaic.
recent Clean Break article (http://www.cleanbreak.ca/2009/10/12/renewables-powerhouse-iberdrola-makes-strategic-investment-in-torontos-morgan-solar/), Technology Review article (http://www.technologyreview.com/energy/22204/?a=f).
Lighting is evolving in interesting ways. Ceravision (http://www.ceravision.com/technology.php) has an electrodeless plasma lamp that is getting lab efficiencies of 50%. Luminus (http://www.luminus.com/content1454) has LEDs that integrate photonic lattices to increase extraction efficiency. They've got on chips delivering 4500 lumens (a bit over the equivalent visible light emission of seven 60 watt incandescent bulbs) from 36 mm^2. AVnet (http://www.em.avnet.com/lightspeed), an electronics supplier, has a number of short short articles on various lighting developments. LM21 is on Luminus.
I've been reading, but been lax on commenting. I've been filing thoughts to be expressed in e-mail without actually getting them to you.
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Jenny Crusie, romance writer, talks a lot about process (http://www.arghink.com/) and there are a couple of revisions of a first chapter there. I don't know if you like her books -- I do, because they're sharp and funny and don't make love about surrender -- but it's worth reading her blog anyway.
The Green Room is a college student talking about books (http://tartanwallpaper.blogspot.com/).
Advertising for Love is a blog about American Victorian matrimonial ads (http://www.advertisingforlove.com/).
Missed Connections is a series of drawings (http://missedconnectionsny.blogspot.com/) from modern "missed connections" ads.
And I wonder if you've seen Andrew Rilstone's C.S. Lewis posts (http://andrewrilstone.blogspot.com/search/label/C.S%20Lewis) which are remarkably interesting.
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(If you prefer wallabies or koalas - or scenery - I am in a position to oblige.)
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Belated attempt at cheer
Another web comic I like is Freefall, which is science fiction about Florence Ambrose, a spaceship engineer who gets embezzled by pirates. It starts a little bit too wacky hi-jinks with lovable rogues, but it gets into some interesting things about robots and AI while staying silly in more original ways.
http://freefall.purrsia.com/ff100/fv00001.htm
A popular science thing that is pretty to look at:
http://www.techdo.com/images/largest-know-star.htm
A random weird cute thing:
http://www.petoffice.co.jp/catprin/english/
Re: Belated attempt at cheer