Monday/ brain man

Daniel Tammet is a savant, but not quite the kindThinkingInNumbersCover portrayed by Dustin Hoffman in the 1998 film Rain Man : he can function socially and describe what he experiences as he performs mind-boggling feats.  In 2004, he recited pi to 22,514 places (it took 5 hours 9 mins).  He learned conversational Icelandic in one week. Check out an interview that Morley Safer did way back in 2007, here :  CBS ’60 minutes’ interview.   Daniel says he sees numbers as colors and shapes.  His book ‘Thinking in Numbers’ has been published recently, and shown here on TV on Monday, and so I am going to buy it.

Sunday/ going solar

Solar Curious
I am in the central/ southeast area of Seattle that’s targeted for the drive from ‘Solarize Seattle’ to increase awareness of solar power, and how to go about installing solar panels.

Businessweek magazine says there are 3,200 utilities (!) that make up the U.S. electrical grid. They sell $400 billion of electricity every year, mostly derived from burning fossil fuels in centralized power stations, and distributed over 2.7 million miles of power lines. (In the Pacific Northwest we generate up to 70% of our energy with hydropower stations).   Says Businessweek : Regulators set the rates, utilities get guaranteed returns, investors get sure-thing dividends.  It’s a model that has not changed much since Thomas Edison invented the light bulb.  And it’s doomed to obsolescense.  There is a confluence of green energy and computer technology, deregulation, cheap natural gas and political pressure that, says David Crane of NRG Energy, poses a mortal threat to the system.    Rooftop solar in particular, is turning tens of thousands of businesses and homes into power producers : ‘distributed generation’.  Of course, it’s going to be a long haul to see how all of this plays out.  But it seems certain that the energy and technology sectors will no longer be supplier and customer.  They will be competing directly with each other.

Electricity Usage
Here’s numbers from a recent electricity bill for my Seattle home. We have CHEAP power in the Pacific Northwest at $0.0466/ kWh. In many other areas in the US, customers pay double that, and even more. Note: my power consumption bounces up and down since I might be out of the house for the better part of a month – or not! When I am home, I try to not have the whole house ablaze in lights at night, and I definitely do not take 45-minute hot showers in the morning!

Saturday/ still running down the drop shots

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My older brother and I on a green clay court at the Miami Intercontinental hotel, circa 1990. It was our first trip to the USA and we were visiting my younger brother, who was playing on the professional tennis circuit (the ATP) at the time.

As a tennis player (ex-tennis player?, since I play so rarely these days), I found this article about little-known 35-year old tennis pro Michael Russell, that Businessweek calls ‘tennis’s #1 loser’, very interesting.  His wife travels full-time with him in a supporting role (picks up his rackets from the stringer, buys groceries, sits in the stands when it’s almost empty).  ‘The sport is basically about how well you can cope with losing’, says Michael.  He can still chase down balls few other humans can, but at 5’8″ is at a disadvantage against tall, lean players.  They mention a weekend trip to Richard Branson’s private island where rich guys pay to play with the pros, and say ‘it was awesome; the only thing is it kind of ruins everything else for you afterwards’. Tennis players don’t have to deal with concussions, but the game is rough on the joints. Michael has had his share of injuries : knee surgery, and has torn his rotator cuff (tendons in the shoulder joint).

Business Week

Friday/ Microsoft’s transition

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Microsoft’s stock price jumped more than 7% on the news that CEO Steve Ballmer is leaving and that they are looking for a new CEO.

I am sure Friday’s surprise announcement of CEO Steve Ballmer’s departure sometime over the next year, caused a buzz in the Microsoft world over on the ‘east side’.  (A reference to the main campus in Redmond and the city of Bellevue east of Seattle across Lake Washington).   Ironically, with the jump in the stock price, Mr Ballmer saw some $700 million added to his net worth.  Yes, the juggernaut is struggling to transition to a ‘devices and services’ company, and Windows 8 has not found traction so far.  But for fiscal 2013, Microsoft reported revenue of $77.85 billion,  6% increase over the previous year.  It sits on a $68 billion pile of cash.  They still have their operating system sitting on 91% of workstations(45% Windows 7, and 37% Windows XP : a product that is now 12 years old to the day).    Will it be a sales guy that replaces Steve Ballmer, or a product guy* (as the late Steve Jobs was)?  I would say the latter, but time will tell.

*I should say person and not guy.  For example, there is Meg Whitman leading the charge on Hewlett-Packard’s long comeback trail.

Thursday/ Trader Joe

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We talked about clarified butter Monday night at dinner, and I ran into it by accident on the shelf. This is ‘ghee’, a South Asian version of clarified butter. Clarified butter does not have mile solids in .. so why is this stuff not clear, I wonder? Hmm?
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It’s not October yet (for Oktoberfest), and this not real German beer (it’s brewed in San Jose, California). I would have bought some, but I walked to the store, and the stuff is heavy. Next time.

I like to go to Trader Joe every now and again even though I really cannot claim that I am a foodie. You go .. hey, what’s this? Ooh, let me try it. And this? Got to have some of that as well. They have all the stuff that’s in a regular grocery store, but just not with the mega brand names. So they have their own style of Oreo cookies, or potato chips, and never ever Starbucks coffee or Lipton tea. Those are corporate ‘evil empires’ that will never get their products on the shelves of Trader Joe.

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A painting inside the store that pays homage to Seattle with a ferry that plies the waters of Puget Sound in the foreground, and (of course) the Spaceneedle in the city skyline.

Wednesday/ back to school scare and more

So .. with the school year ak47-tacticalbarely getting underway on Tuesday, a mentally ill 20-year old guy walks into an Atlanta area elementary school with an AK-47 and 500 rounds of ammo.  Who knows what would have happened had a smart, savvy bookkeeper not been in the right place at the right time, and talked him right out of it until the SWAT team came.  In a separate incident that defies comprehension for its pure evil, three Oklahoma teens were rounded up for assassinating an Australian student/ baseball player that was out jogging, in cold blood.  They were ‘bored’, said one.  Some Australians say they should boycott the USA altogether and not set foot here – and who can blame them?

Tuesday/ hype for the Hyperloop

John Oliver from the Daily Show poked fun at Elon Musk’s Hyperloop tonight (the futuristic proposal of a tube for 800 mph/ 30 mins of travel from San Francisco to Los Angeles). ‘It’s a cross between a Concorde, a rail gun and an air hockey table’, says Mr Musk.  He is criticizing the current high speed rail plans as ‘too expensive and too slow’ but says he cannot take on the Hyperloop right now.   He has his hands full with building rockets and Teslas.

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California is finally starting to build out a high speed rail system. Initial funding was already approved by voters in 2008, and in 2012 the Obama adminstration gave the project the green light and put it on a fast track. The projected time from San Francisco to Los Angeles? 3 hrs 38 mins for the 432 miles at speeds of up to 164 mph. (The train stops at many stations). Source : Wikipedia ‘California High-Speed Rail’. 
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Here is John Oliver of the Daily Show tonight calling the Hyperloop the ‘Track to the Future’ (a reference to the 1985 time travel film with Michael J. Fox, ‘Back to the Future’)

Monday/ it’s my birthday – again!

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My name on my birthday card envelope written to show that it can almost – but not quite – be made to look and be read as a palindrome (reading the same back to front, as from front to back).

Monday is probably the worst day of the week for a birthday.  But even though I left it very late to check in with my compadres, we did go out to a restaurant for a bite and a beer. The place is in the Madrona neighborhood, called St Cloud and bills itself as ‘contemporary comfort food in an urban neighborhood setting’.  On the way in we spotted a distinguished guest inside the restaurant : our congressman Jim McDermott.  We sat outside on a deck in what looked like a house’s back yard.  I had the garlic-fried chicken with mashed potato and broccoli (very good) and a white Belgian beer.

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My ‘Blanche De Bruxelles’ white Belgian beer sported the Mannekin Pis from Brussels on the label.  How rude! (but I like it).   

 

Sunday/ hello, my name is Willem

My block here on Capital Hill had IMG_7980 smits annual Block Party today. We block off the street and socialize for a few hours with each other. It was well attended, and of course I shocked some people on the block when I told them I have been living in my house for 11 years.  (Well .. I travel a lot, and I use the back entrance, I say every time).  So it was nice to make new acquaintances and renew old ones.   I learned that the husband of a couple on the corner is from Australia.  He survived adjusting to the Seattle weather, and they still travel to Australia regularly.  He noted that Qantas hands out pyjamas to their first class and business class passengers .. which prompted me to search for it online.  (It’s gray with a black Qantas kangeroo on).  And I found a report from the Australian Herald Sun about a couple in first class that held up a Qantas A380 flight from Los Angeles : there were no extra-large pyjamas available for them.  They got off the airplane and went out on a flight the following day. The pyjamas are designed by Akira Isogawa, one of Australia’s most prominent contemporary fashion designers. Got to have ’em!

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A sneak peek out of my window onto the street below in front of my house. I spent a good two hours getting acquainted and re-acquainted with some neighbors on my block.

Friday/ eat your quinoa

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The little seeds in the brown rice is quinoa.

What the heck is quinoa? I wondered, but nevertheless bought a bag of rice with quinoa at the grocery store. I cooked it Thursday night for dinner. It’s good! and so I had to read all about it on Wikipedia. The plant was first domesticated by the Andean people some 3,000 years ago. It’s becoming very popular in the USA, China and Japan. In its natural state it has saponins, a mild eye and respiratory irritant.  Most of that is removed for consumption outside of its indigenous countries, though.  And finally, The United Nations declared 2013 is the International Year of Quinoa, in recognition of the ancestral practices of the Andean people.

Thursday/ that’s not a lion!

This is from a news clip that was carried on CNN, and also posted on Yahoo.  Chinese state media in the city of Luohe in Henan tried to pass off a big hairy dog as a lion.

'Lion'
The African ‘lion’ in a zoo in Luohe in Henan province in China is really a Tibetan mastiff. The big dog gave the ploy away when it barked at on-lookers.  Aw. (Yes, that mane looks a little too manicured and mono-colored!).
Red-Tibetan-Mastiff
Here is a different picture of a red Tibetan mastiff that I found on-line, all fluffed up. A beautiful dog, but man! how much food does it need every day? The Tibetan mastiff is one of several ‘giant breeds’ of dogs.  Some others that come to mind are St. Bernards and Great Danes. 

Wednesday/ will ‘Three Friends’ stop another Eastern Interconnection Blackout?

It was 10 years ago to the day on Wednesday that the Eastern Interconnection Blackout left 50 million people out of power for some 48 hours.  A series of uncorrected problems in northern Ohio (tree limbs falling on power lines, operators not getting information quickly enough and not acting quickly enough)  developed to a point that a cascading blackout of the entire eastern grid became inevitable.  So what is an ‘interconnection’, and have we started to address some of the vulnerabilities in the grid?  Interconnections are collections of electricity utilities that are electrically tied together during normal system conditions that operate at a synchronized frequency.  These interconnections can in turn be tied to each other with High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) power transmission lines, or with variable frequency transformers.   The construction of the Tres Amigas Superstation was announced in 2009 and is about to be put into operation.  The goal of tying together three major power grids is to increase the reliability of the national grid, and to make it easier to accommodate the transmission of renewable power from one region to another.

Cascade Sequence
A diagram of the cascade sequence from the ‘Interim Report: Causes of the August 14th Blackout in the United States and Canada’, November 2003
Tres Amigas Superstation
The Tres Amigas (‘Three Friends’) Superstation is located in Clovis, New Mexico.
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A rendering of the major elements of the Tres Amigas superstation.

 

Tuesday/ green tea, and black

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The teabag is a pyramid-shaped fine nylon mesh, and that’s roasted rice with the green tea. And check out the tag, designed to latch onto the rim of the teacup. How fancy is THAT?
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I haven’t tried the black English Breakfast tea yet. The cute little guy on the packaging reminds me of a ‘jelly baby’. (A gummy candy that has been around the UK and South Africa forever, but that never really caught on in the USA. I wonder why not?).

Check out my fancy pants green tea that I bought on Monday, along with some black tea.  I’m trying to revive my liking and taste for green tea that I acquired in China.   The green tea is up against serious competition as my favorite hot beverage : black English Breakfast tea and Starbucks’ medium-roast coffee.  The green tea needs to be steeped for only a minute (or even for only 30 seconds).  It’s fun to let it cool down, and then swallow it in three or four big gulps. Its roasted rice/ green tea after-taste sits on your tongue for a while.

Monday/ there may be a meteor shower

Here is the news
Coming to you every hour on the hour
(Here is the news)
The weather’s fine but there may be a meteor shower..   – From the song ‘Here is the news’ by Electric Light Orchestra (1982)
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A shooting star! Quick, Snowy, make a wish! says Tintin. This is on the opening page of Herge’s Tintin book called ‘The Shooting Star’.

 

The Perseid Meteor Shower of 2013 (it comes around every year) is said to be more visible than usual with the moon out of the way.  So late last night I did go outside and tried to see a ‘shooting star’ (a misnomer for a meteoroid), but with the trees and the clouds in the way I had no luck.  I think it will help to have a powerful telescope as well !

Perseid Meteor
Here is a spectacular picture of a Perseid meteor seen from the Mojave desert in California. (Twitter picture from Paul Dellegatto with credit to Wally Pacholka).

Sunday/ back from Hansville

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Here’s a live sand dollar with its deep purple spiny covering. There are plenty of sand dollar shells to be seen on the beach and in the shallow water after the tide had gone out.
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We were treated to a beautiful sunset in the western sky on Saturday night.  This is about 8.30 pm and the sun has just disappeared below the horizon.
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This is on the way back. We’re about to drive onto the Kingston ferry for a short trip across the water to Washington State’s mainland.

We all went out to Paul’s ‘cabin-in-the-woods’ (it’s really a house) in Hansville on Kitsap peninsula and some of us stayed over on Saturday night.   The peninsula is covered with pine trees – very green – and surrounded by water from the Puget Sound. So the tide comes in and goes out, and there are sea gulls, bald eagles, heron, kingfishers and osprey to be seen. (I need a long-range telephoto lens to have any hope of taking nice pictures of the birds, though).

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Here is an outline of our trip. We went out on the Bainbridge Island ferry. Then it’s a 40 minute drive up north to Hansville (purple dotted line). On the way back we went with the Kingston-to-Edmonds ferry, and drove south on I-5 to the city (red dotted line). The Naval Base Kitsap is close by (round marker on the map), but we were not lucky enough to see any submarines come in or go out to the open sea.
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This steel bridge joins the north end of Bainbridge Island with the Kitsap peninsula. It is called the Agate Pass Bridge and opened on October 7, 1950.

 

Friday/ Dr.Tung’s tongue cleaner

Tongue Cleaner
Dr Tung – really? What a fortunate coincidence if the doctor selling tongue cleaners has such a name : ). I found this nifty item on Amazon.

Earlier this week Yahoo’s Daily Shot recommended that we occasionally clean our tongues. Check out Ali Wentworth’s very funny clip with a dentist here.  Alright, I’m sold, I thought.   I’ll go find a tongue scraper to clean my tongue with.  Well, it’s not so easy. My local Walgreens (drug store, or pharmacy as it is called outside the USA) sells two dozen different kind of toothbrushes but no devices for cleaning a tongue.  So I will try another store or two before I resort to the giant on-line store of Amazon that has everything.

Thursday/ ‘Eden of the East’

Eden of the East
Eden of the East is a Japanese anime television series, which was shown on Fuji TV throughout Japan in 2009.
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Here is a street scene, I think this is in Tokyo. The backgrounds are very detailed and realistic. Yes, animated movies from American studios have plenty of detail in as well, but they never seem to play out in real cities. It’s always in imaginary made-up places.

I try to take out a DVD now and again at the 15th Ave video store close to my house .. while it is still there.  It’s probably only a matter of time before it closes its doors due to all the streaming movies that are now available on line and on Netflix.  Still, this store rents out movies that you would have to buy on Amazon to see.  My latest pick was ‘Eden of the East’, a Japanese anime television series.  This is not Disney fare, and don’t be misled by the ‘innocent’ wide-eyed faces on the cover of the Blu-ray box!  There is violence, nudity, risqué humor, alcohol and tobacco use on display.  The movie has an interesting plot : a mysterious Mr ‘Outside’ gives twelve young people almost unlimited power via a cell phone concierge, and the resources of a Power ball lottery winner (¥8 billion, some $US 100 million) to compete with each other and to try to address the general economic and social challenges Japan.   (Exactly what constitutes a problem and what does not, is of course wide open to interpretation and political points of view.  Here in the USA some Republicans now want to shut down the government because 30 million people can now get affordable health care.  It is ‘ immoral’ and unacceptable that the government ‘meddled’ in the private health insurance industry with new laws).  The movie also features 20,000 NEETs (young men with No Employment, Education or Training) and a hikikomori.  This is a person, usually a young man, that refuses to leave the house and interact with society, preferring to play video games or program computers instead.   Anyway : the plot thickens, stuff explodes, people die but then towards the end the plot falls apart a somewhat, and the conclusion of the whole complicated set-up was a little unsatisfying and a little too ‘easy’ and ‘simple’.  But I really liked the art, the animation, and the issues that the movie raised as part of the plot.

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Here is one of the agents using his super futuristic smart phone. Interesting that the phones are all of the ‘clam shell’ form.  Smartphones no longer look like that!  And the days are long gone since Japan was the land of uniquely advanced mobile phones with internet capabilities and lots of other features rarely seen elsewhere.

Wednesday/ another hump day

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The Georgetown Brewing Co. is located just south of downtown Seattle. I see they signed their homepage ‘Manny and Roger’. Manny must be the Manny in Manny’s Pale Ale, and then Roger is the pilsner guy.

Here’s my coaster that matches the beer I had Wednesday night with my amigos in the Columbia City neighborhood.  (No, I did not win the jackpot.  So I will keep my job, write my blog and count my many blessings with regards to health and friends and family).   Check out the GEICO commercial with the camel roaming the cubicles, asking everyone if they know what day it is.

Hump Day
‘Guess what day it is? asks the camel. ‘It’s hump day’, replies Julie in a quiet, resigned voice without looking up.

 

Tuesday/ astronomical odds for a fortune

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Here is what a Powerball lottery ticket in Washington State looks like.  I don’t know what that 1 in 31.8 odds prize is, but it can’t be much ($100?)
Chances
Here is how the odds stack up (against you). The table shows how many ‘white ball’ numbers should match the winning number. Of course, for the Grand Prize, all six numbers and the red ‘power ball’ must match !
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The Powerball web page. Not all states participate, but many do. Check out the ‘Current Estimated Jackpot’ at $425 million.

Whoah. The Powerball jackpot drawing of this Wednesday is up to a staggering $ 425 (Four-Hundred-and-Twenty-Five) million bucks.  So have I bought a ticket?  You betcha!  Ok, I know I should not have, right?   But I was curious to see what a ticket looks like.  (And besides : previous times when jackpot fever had broken out here in the USA, I always seemed to be out of the country, or found myself in the wrong State, one that does not participate in the jackpot).

The odds of winning the Grand Prize is truly astronomical. Since the sun is about 92 million miles from earth, the odds of winning is similar to one mile against the distance from Earth to the sun and back.

Monday/ building metamorphosis

On my walkabout Monday night I saw that the empty Chutney’s Grille on the Hill restaurant building here on 15th Ave is now clad in wood.  The building is ultimately destined to make way for a new four-story, mixed-use apartment building.

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The skeleton of the closed ‘Chutneys Grille on the Hill’ is clad with wooden pallet beams .. best I can tell, it’s meant as outdoor art until the demolition man comes.