Wednesday, January 06, 2021
While we are waiting for events in Washington to play out...
....I offer a diversion: Google suggested I watch this bit of real estate porn (not normally my scene, but I follow The All Knowing One's recommendations quite often.) It's a pretty new apartment in a very skinny and tall building in New York:
You know the biggest thing that kept crossing my mind while watching it? Those full length glass windows look so dirty. The top of the building is still under construction, oddly, so maybe they haven't got their glass cleaning system going yet; but if I moved into a $28 million (USD) apartment and I was looking through scummy glass windows/walls all the time, I would be annoyed.
Anyway, I still don't care for the idea of being high in the sky and only full length glass walls keeping me from the elements (and falling 43 floors to my death). The next time a sonic boom creating meteor passes over New York, I will feel vindicated.
Monday, January 04, 2021
In a pickle
In December, I bought some red radishes at Mulgowie, and decided to pickle them (the first time in my life I had pickled anything, as it happens.)
There are many ways suggested on the internet, all involving various amounts and types of vinegar and sugar. I went with this recipe, and I thought it worked pretty well. I like eating them on sandwiches for the crunch, moisture and flavour they add.
Oddly enough, no one else in the family thinks they are nice. Now I have gone past the recommended "eat within two weeks", but I suspect any unhealthy growth in them is going to be pretty obvious. (They are also in the fridge.) But lots of sites say "eat within 1-2 weeks after opening". I don't know - seems a tad overly cautious to me.
Nice summary of the American Right
From Peter Wehner writing in The Atlantic:
The problem with the Republican “establishment” and with elected officials such as Josh Hawley is not that they are crazy, or that they don’t know any better; it is that they are cowards, and that they are weak. They are far more ambitious than they are principled, and they are willing to damage American politics and society rather than be criticized by their own tribe. I’m guessing that many of them haven’t read Nietzsche, but they have embraced his philosophy of perspectivism, which in its crudest form posits that there is no objective truth, no authoritative or independent criteria for determining what is true or false. In this view, we all get to make up our own facts and create our own narratives. Everything is conditioned on what your perspective is. This is exactly the sort of slippery epistemic nihilism for which conservatives have, for more than a generation, reproached the academic left—except the left comes by it more honestly.
The single most worrisome political fact in America right now is that a significant portion of the Republican Party lives in a fantasy world, a place where facts and truth don’t hold sway, where “owning the libs” is an end in itself, and where seceding from reality is a symbol of tribal loyalty, rather than a sign of mental illness. This is leading the party, and America itself, to places we’ve never been before, including the spectacle of a defeated president and his supporters engaging in a sustained effort to steal an election.
The tactics of Hawley and his many partisan confreres, if they aren’t checked and challenged, will put at risk what the scholar Stephen L. Carter calls “the entire project of Enlightenment democracy.” This doesn’t seem to bother Hawley and many in his party. But what he should know—and, one hopes, does know, somewhere in the recesses of his heart—is that he has moved very far away from conservatism.
Friday, January 01, 2021
Thursday, December 31, 2020
Another old movie review no one asked for
Wednesday, December 30, 2020
Sunday, December 27, 2020
Proving the world is round (from sea level)
It occurred to me today that, although I have stayed in ocean view apartments before, I had never tried very hard to check out the old proof of the world being round by watching closely how a tall ship disaplears from view. The problem is, of course, that you need to spot a ship going in the right direction away from the coast, and not just parallel to it. This is likely the reason I hadn't done this before
This was exciting: a ship heading away by about a 45 degree angle. It did go behind a tree for about 20 to 30 minutes.
Thursday, December 24, 2020
Christmas 2020
I don't recall reading about the first Christmas card before, but this is it. Smithsonian magazine explains that it was privately produced for one family in England in 1843, and it does contain the surprising detail of young children apparently being given wine to drink. And to think both of mine have now reached adulthood and I never gave that a try.
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Fancy
This video is more or less an ad for Otis elevators, but the imagery it presents of the re-vamped Empire State Building is still pretty pleasing. (I see now that this renovation has been open for a year or so, but this is the first I have heard of it.)
Monday, December 21, 2020
Conjuncted
Sunday, December 20, 2020
Some beautiful videos from the far North
A month or two ago, Google suggested I watch an 8 minute BBC video about Svalsbard, the island up north of Norway which used to be Spitzbergen. Its legal status is pretty unusual, as Wikipedia explains:
Svalbard (/ˈsvɑːlbɑːr/ SVAHL-bar,[3] Urban East Norwegian: [ˈsvɑ̂ːɫbɑr] (listen); prior to 1925 known as Spitsbergen, or Spitzbergen, (lit. Sharp Peaks; Russian: Шпицберген) is a Norwegian archipelago in the Arctic Ocean. Situated north of mainland Europe, it is about midway between continental Norway and the North Pole. The islands of the group range from 74° to 81° north latitude, and from 10° to 35° east longitude. The largest island is Spitsbergen, followed by Nordaustlandet and Edgeøya. While part of the Kingdom of Norway since 1925, Svalbard is not part of geographical Norway; administratively, the archipelago is not part of any Norwegian county, but forms an unincorporated area administered by a governor appointed by the Norwegian government, and a special jurisdiction subject to the Svalbard Treaty that is outside of the Schengen Area, the Nordic Passport Union and the European Economic Area.
Apparently, this means that you do not need a visa to go work there, which, as the video explains, means that some people go there on a whim to see if they can a living, and end up happy enough:
All Knowing Google, thus detecting I was interested in the place, took some weeks to do so, but eventually recommended the Youtube channel of Cecilia, a (I think) Swedish woman who lives there (with a boyfriend and a beautiful dog.)
I haven't watched them all, and maybe she will soon run out of new things to show, but I have to say that the images she puts up of the place are remarkably beautiful and pretty interesting. (Even just watching her shop in the town's one big store was interesting.)
Anyway, here she is, showing exactly what the midnight sun looks like back in April, at the start of 4 months of permanent sun!:
Her videos are not exactly slick - some of the explanatory stuff goes no longer than necessary - but for an amateur just showing the world the really remarkable and unusual part of the world she lives in, I find it very pleasing. Here she is showing us a spectacular example of the Northern Lights:
I recommend watching them on you big smart TV if you have one.
One other thing that's pretty interesting about the place - it has coal mines. I find it quite surprising that Norway found it economically viable at the start of the 20th century to mine coal in such a frigid part of the world. It's also a big reminder about how much the Earth has changed over its geological history.
I'm not sure I personally need to visit such an isolated part of the world (even though I would love to see Norway generally.) But an amateur vlogger can make you feel as if you're experiencing the next best thing anyway.
Guilty pleasure admitted
I quite the new Spicy Pepper Paneer pizza now in Australian Domino's. It's vegetarian too. In fact, I don't mind their regular Vegorama too.
I get the feeling, reading lots of liberals from America on Twitter, that it's the opposite of hip to admit liking Domino's. But I do.
And in other completely unimportant fast food news: needed a quick lunch yesterday and McDonalds as nearby. I know I have posted about it before - probably this year in fact - but when you haven't eaten anything there for 6 months or so, you can get completely surprised all over again at how their main burger diameters have shrunk so much that they look like toy food or something.
Friday, December 18, 2020
End Times noted
Phil Plait has a fun post up noting that, provided protons do not decay, the last big thing to happen to the universe might be black dwarves (modest size star remnants) exploding a bit like supernovae. But it will take a very, very, very long time:
When enough iron builds up, they too will collapse and explode, leaving behind a neutron star.
But pycnonuclear fusion is an agonizingly slow process. How long will that take before the sudden collapse and kablooie?
Yeah, I promised earlier that I'd explain this number. For the highest mass black dwarfs, which will collapse first, the average amount of time it takes is, well, 101,100 years.
That's 10 to the 1,100th power. Written out, it's a 1 followed by eleven hundred zeroes....
And that's the black dwarfs that go first. The lowest mass ones take much longer.
How much longer? I'm not terribly glad you asked. They collapse after about 1032,000 years.
That's not a typo. It's ten to the thirty-two-thousandth power. A one with 32,000 zeroes after it.
He also points out, though, that at time frames like that, the expansion of the universe will mean that the observable universe is actually pretty small, so that you would have to be lucky to even have one of these explosions observable. (!)
All sound rather implausible - which Plait acknowledges readily, since it seems more likely that protons do decay, this puts a much "shorter" timeframe for everything to disappear.
Anyway, I expect everyone will have moved via black holes into alternative, much younger and newer universes well before this.
Thursday, December 17, 2020
A restaurant worth noting
I've been so busy I have not got around to praising a Brisbane restaurant.
Last Friday night, I was shouted to a fantastic meal at Moda, a tapas restaurant/bar at Paddington, Brisbane. It was not planned ahead of time, we had just headed into Paddington hoping to get into another restaurant without a booking, but of course in this Christmas post-COVID season, a lot of places were full.
I like tapas bars as a concept, but its been a while since I have been to one where I thought every plate was great and good for the price.
Well, let's deal with the price issue first: Moda is not cheap. But - the quality of each and every item we had was fantastic. (Making it simpler, if expensive, we had the $95 a head chef's selection of plates, mains, and desserts. It was pretty much a blow out meal that you probably really only want to tackle if you have missed lunch. Which I had.)
What can I remember of the dishes? A duck liver parfait that was just about the best I think I have ever had; ceviche that was also pretty spectacularly nice; an octopus salad; some pipis in a cream sort of sauce; baked figs with something or other; a couple of croquette type things; some lamb; some beef with something (the details are starting to get fuzzy) and the desserts cake and pastry pieces.
To drink, we had a $60 bottle of Spanish cava - which I continue to say I find to be a more reliably pleasant sparkling wine than French champagne. And a glass of chilled French muscat at the end - it was delicious too.
Service was great, and the food came pretty fast and at pretty much the right rate (a bit surprising especially give that the place was packed inside, while we managed to have a pretty pleasantly quieter time at a table outside).
Honestly, it was the best restaurant meal I have had for years. I wish the place well.
Oh, and now that I look at reviews for it (as I said, we just ended up there by luck, really), it's not just me who thinks it's good:
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
A Senate problem
Greg Sargent's column on Mitch McConnell's attempt to convince every single Senator to not object to the Democrat electors in January explains it as well as any. (He fears that if forced to vote, the Trump base will be able to identify specifically those who have abandoned Trump, and want to punish them.)
I would think it hilarious if dimwit curly hair Rand Paul ruins this plan.
Yes, I certainly have mixed feelings about what China is doing at the moment
I have also been meaning to say this: an unfortunate effect of Australia feeling lucky in its avoidance of COVID 19 (the heavy lifting for which was to a large extent done at State level) is that Scott Morrison is getting approval ratings he really does not deserve.