The Wall Street Journal of Wednesday listed the following 12 ‘tech fails’ as the most annoying –
Never-ending Notifications (messages)
Battery Life Is Too Short
Updates Bog Down Old iPhones
Waiting for Android Updates
Privacy as a Luxury
Printers Are Still Terrible Die, Passwords, Die
Kickstarter Isn’t a Store
Inaccurate Fitness Biometrics
App Addiction Email: Older, but Not Wiser
Baffling Bills
I highlighted my two un-favorites in bold. Passwords is a major nuisance. I must log into the systems I work in a good 20 to 30 times a day. The automatic lock-out typically kicks in after 15 minutes, and I cannot change it. The abuse/ wrong is of e-mail is next on my list. Sending a Reply All message that says ‘Thanks’. Or not replacing the subject of a forwarded message for an e-mail that is about something completely different !
Hmm. So count me anong the sceptics, wondering if Apple will indeed sell a projected 15 million Apple watches this year. I doubt I will get one. After all, it will have to replace my cheap but beloved Seiko watch that I bought in Tokyo a few years ago and to which I have grown attached to.
But here I am, browsing through the models they will offer on apple.com, after Tim Cook’s press conference of yesterday. My favorite is this little black number with its Milanese loop in stainless steel and with the magnetic closure on the strap.
The Alaska Airlines flight this morning from Seattle to San Francisco left out of Terminal A this morning – all the way at its very end where gates A13 and A14 are located.
It’s official (say I) : we had no winter here in the Pacific Northwest. Yes, there was a little snow in November, as I noted in this post, and a few cold nights and mornings in December – but that was it. Check out the gorgeous blue sky from this picture on Saturday, as I walked down John Street to the gym, the temperature approaching 60 °F (15 °C).
The 2015 Iditarod dog sled race (link here) had its ceremonial start in Anchorage, Alaska, on Saturday. The race starts officially on Monday, but a little to the north of Anchorage. It is just the second time in 43 races and the first time since 2003, that officials had to do that, to find suitable trail conditions. There is simply not enough snow on the ground around Anchorage. Hey, and I learnt a new word while checking out the website : musher, the driver of a dogsled.
There was a beautiful full moon visible from between the trees, and perched on a rooftop, as I walked back from the grocery store on Thursday night.
In medieval times the moon was blamed for craziness or aberrant behavior (such as people turning into werewolves.. remember the 1981 movie An American Werewolf in London?). That’s why the word lunatic comes from the Latin luna, for moon.
What a crazy day .. jam packed with meetings and emergency e-mails (‘Can you send it right now? On a phone call; I need it right away’) and conversations. Forget about lunch – no time; had to leave at 1.30 pm to make my 3.45 pm flight. At 1.45 pm I got up, yelled at my colleague (his flight was later). ‘Pack it up! We’re leaving !’. We ran into some some traffic on the way to the airport, and at the Hertz Car Rental return, the attendant noticed a big scrape on the back wheel well. ‘What’s this?’ she asked. Shocked, I said ‘I have no idea when that happened or who did it’. I filled out a form to admit to the damage (a good thing that American Express insures our corporate car rentals), signed it, and now I had to make a run for the security checkpoint at International Terminal A. ‘Can I still check my bag?’ I asked at the check-in counter. ‘Yes, but they started boarding 5 minutes ago and we cannot guarantee that it will make it onto the plane’. Please check it, I said. (Thinking : the overhead bins are sure to be full by the time I get there. I could gate-check the bag at the plane, but then I’d have to throw out the toothpaste and shaving cream and a few other items to get it through security. Not doing that.) Anyway .. made it onto the plane with time to spare, and my bag made it onto the plane as well. I love Alaska Airlines.
Here is a Boeing 787 Dreamliner from China Southern Airlines that I spotted at the gate next to ours as we arrived into San Francisco Airport. There is a mesh screen on the window that I took the picture through, unfortunately (the black dots in the picture). Click on the picture to make the Moiré pattern brought on by the reduced picture size below, disappear.
P.S. The cat is out of the bag regarding former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s e-mail address that I wondered about .. it is hdr22@clintonemail.com (or it was – it is most likely an account that is deactivated by now).
It was revealed today by a report in the New York Times that the presumptive 2016 Democratic nominee for President – Hillary Clinton – used a personal e-mail account throughout her entire tenure at the State Department as Secretary of State. This raises many questions. 1. Why? It’s sort of against the law. 2. Was the e-mail account secure? I am not even allowed to send work e-mail outside our encrypted e-mail system. And I don’t deal with state secrets. 3. Why has this not been raised before? By her aides, her advisors, by people receiving her e-mail. 4. Will this turn into a scandal that undermine her (as-yet-unannounced) bid for the White House in 2016 ? 5. What I want to know most of all : what was the account’s name? Presumably more formal than hillary@yahoo.com, right?
I sometimes take the No 43 bus to the University District to go to the bookstore there, and just to check out the joint .. and so that is what I did on Sunday.
There is a whole shelf of Soduku books. I am a Scrabble addict, but so far the Soduku bug has not bitten me. Per WIkipedia, Soduku was introduced in Japan by Nikoli in the paper Monthly Nikolist in April 1984 as Sūji wa dokushin ni kagiru (数字は独身に限る?), which also can be translated as “the digits must be single” or “the digits are limited to one occurrence.” The Times of London began featuring Sudoku in 2004.
The number of classic 9×9 Sudoku solution grids is approximately 6.67×1021 .. so players can rest assured that it will be a long, long time before they exhaust all the possible permutations !
San Fransokyo is the futuristic (fictional) city where the animated Disney movie ‘Big Hero 6’ plays out : our Saturday night home movie at the Bryan-and-Gary Cineplex. We liked it a lot. These 3D animated movies take monstrous computing power to animate and render fluidly. Check out the notes about this in the Wikipedia entry.
A software program called Denizen was used to create over 700 distinctive characters that populate the city, another one named Bonzai was responsible for the creation of the city’s 250,000 trees, while a new rendering system called Hyperion offered new illumination possibilities, like light shining through a translucent object (such as the robot Baymax’s vinyl covering). Development on Hyperion started in 2011 and was based upon research into multi-bounce complex global illumination originally conducted at Disney Research in Zürich. Disney in turn had to assemble a new supercomputing cluster just to handle Hyperion’s immense processing demands, which consists of over 2,300 Linux workstations distributed across four data centers (three in Los Angeles and one in San Francisco). Each workstation, as of 2014, included a pair of 2.4 GHz Intel Xeon processors, 256 GB of memory, and a pair of 300 GB solid-state drives configured as a RAID Level 0 array (that is, to operate as a single 600 GB drive). This was all backed by a central storage system with a capacity of five petabytes*, which holds all digital assets as well as archival copies of all 54 Disney Animation films. Pixar’s RenderMan was considered as a ‘Plan B’ for the film’s rendering, if Hyperion was not able to meet production deadlines.
*A petabyte (PB) is 1015 bytes of data, 1,000 terabytes (TB) or 1,000,000 gigabytes (GB).
I had to make a run for my flight at San Francisco airport today after my meeting in downtown but I made it. I took a brisk walk from Beale Street to the Embarcadero BART station, which took my right into the international terminal in SFO airport. Luckily I could use the expedited lane through security (besides being stuck in traffic, this is the other place where one gets tripped up when one is short on time!).
[From WIkipedia] The F Market Line (historic streetcar service) in San Francisco, opened in 1995, runs along Market Street from The Castro to the Ferry Building, then along the Embarcadero north and west to Fisherman’s Wharf. This line is run by a mixture of PCC* cars built between 1946 and 1952, and earlier pre-PCC cars.
I have a meeting tomorrow at our client’s head office in downtown San Francisco, and so I am staying over in downtown (instead of over on the east Bay side in Walnut Creek). The pictures are from around Market Street in the Embarcadero district.
More and more robots are installed in factories (and by 2025 in homes, and offices and – the coffee shop?), says the Wall Street Journal in an article on Wednesday. Apparently the experts are still split over the question whether robots will eventually decimate or elevate the economy, since they have the potential to steal even the remaining jobs that humans are still better at. Machines have stolen our jobs ever since the Industrial Revolution, of course. (Already taken : bank tellers, travel agents, translators .. next up : neurosurgeons, taxi drivers, cooks, warehouse stockers?). Well, we will have to wait and see. A simple task such as folding laundry takes enormous computing power and dexterity, for example.
Here’s the Year of the Ram table advertisement for TsingTao beer (say ‘Ching-Dow’, advises the sign) at the Jade Garden (Chinese) restaurant where we had lunch today. It was a wild day, and I may have looked a little like this ram at the end of it .. and just very happy to get out of the office and call it done !
We had the Disneyland plane again to San Francisco on Monday morning. By now I can probably make my way out of San Francisco airport blindfolded!, I thought as I walked out to go to Hertz to meet my colleagues and pick up the rental car.
I had the Academy Awards on on Sunday night while I made dinner and watched some of it, saw Patricia Arquette get her Oscar for
Best Supporting Actress in Boyhood. We had watched it on Saturday night, and so I was rooting for it for Best Film (which went to Birdman with Michael Keaton). Meryl Streep and others jumped up when Patricia Arquette said ‘to every woman who gave birth to every taxpayer and citizen of this nation, we have fought for everybody else’s equal rights‘ .. ‘it’s our time to have wage equality once and for all and equal rights for women in the United States of America’. But as TIME magazine reports soon after that Arquette was being attacked on social media by people who said she was prioritizing the rights of white women over those of LGBTQ people and people of color.
Seattle’s State Route 99 boring machine* (Bertha) ran into trouble while boring through sloppy old tide flat dirt and fill material. Some of the water and abrasive material made it past the seals designed to keep it out and into critical bearings for the cutters on the head of the boring machine, causing it to overheat. So a big hole had to be dug to get to the cutter head, lift it out, and repair it. (The stoppage occurred in December 2013, and the project is now some two years behind schedule).
At midday Thursday, the top portion of the SR 99 tunneling machine’s cutterhead broke through the southern wall of the access pit. It will be several months before boring can continue, and there is still a long way to go.
*A tunnel boring machine with a cutting head that is 17.5 m (57 ft) in diameter.
I had some business downtown on Friday, and managed to escape from my conference calls and work only at 4 pm. I hopped on the bus so that I could avoid dealing with rush-hour traffic (the bus driver still has to deal with it, of course!). We have balmy winter weather here in the Pacific Northwest, even as the brutal cold and snow storms continue to batter the Northeast of the USA.
So is it the Year of the Sheep or the Year of the Goat? Or even the Year of the Ram? One sees different interpretations. Apparently they are all correct, depending on the context, or even one’s own preference. I will go with goat – since that is what the Chinese word yang meant in ancient times. Check out the National Public Radio on-line article Whatever Floats Your Goat.