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Monday, March 30, 2015

April Fool's Day is coming...

techhug.net
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...Be warned.

In case you need a reminder, read about 100 examples of what people have done to 'celebrate' it: "Top 100 April Fool Hoaxes of All Time." Here's another list from geobeats:
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The spaghetti-tree hoax really happened and had real results.

For this year, USA Today tells us to go tech with our pranks and leave the whoopie cushions at home.

On the other hand, John Oliver of Last Week Tonight wants us to pledge "no pranks." Watch the video below to see why.
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To prank or not to prank, that is the question.

-- Marge


Friday, March 27, 2015

Cartoons: Cruz news and a robin

So...Cruz is running for president. Why am I not surprised.

It looks like cartoonist John Cole doesn't like him much.
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image: cartoon by John Cole
John Cole, The Week
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Cruz, a Tea Party guy, does have a history with the Republican Party.
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image: cartoon by John Cole
John Cole, The Week
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The media is ecstatic.
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image: cartoon by Rick McKee
Rick McKee, The Week
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And, finally, a robin for spring, such as it is (NOAA: Departure of average temperature from normal [in degrees F], Feb 2015).
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image: cartoon by Gary Markstein
Gary Markstein, The Week
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-- Marge


Wednesday, March 25, 2015

DIY: your basic tool kit

What better way to get ready for summer than to set up your toolkit? Two sites have good articles on how to do that: lifehacker and diyNetwork.

I particularly like this portion of the lifehacker article: "The Cheapskate/MacGyver-ish Toolbox." Quoting the article:
According to Clint Eastwood's character Walt Kowalski in the movie Gran Torino, you can do half of your household chores with just three things: WD-40, a vise grip (adjustable pliers), and a roll of duct tape. As the Art of Manliness points out, the vise grips can stand in for pliers, a pipe wrench, wire cutters, a clamp, a ratchet, and, in a pinch, a hammer. Meanwhile, WD-40 has over 2,000 handy uses, and you know duct tape is an essential tool for every would-be MacGyver.
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If you're not sure what some of these tools even look like, take a look at the slideshow from diyNetwork's "Setting up a basic DIY toolkit." Here are locking pliers (AKA vise-grips or mole grips). Personally I find channellock pliers fast and easy to use.
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image: photo of locking pliers/vise-grips
locking pliers/vise-grips, DIYnetwork
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If you're a crafter, your tools are usually specific to the craft at hand. But here's list--"Crafting 101: Basic Toolkit"--from BipolarGurl at Persephone Magazine that may be helpful.

-- Marge

Monday, March 23, 2015

Animal villages

image: photo by Rex Steyskal
Rex Steyskal, Baboon Family
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This is one of my all-time favorite photos; not only does it show a mother's devotion and her child basking in her embrace, but it also shows 'auntie' looking on fondly. And these are baboons, not people. It's commonly said "it takes a village to raise a child." Scientists are finding that some species of animals understand this well.

The scientific term for "non-maternal infant care" (Wikipedia) is allomothering and a number of species practice it, particularly mammals and birds. The article "Mothers and Others" gives insight into the challenges ape mothers face in raising their young and includes an anthropological view. Elephants, known for practicing allomothering, have a strong social structure as well.
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image: Herd of elephants in south Kenya
Nairobi123, Herd of elephants in south Kenya, Wikimedia Commons
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Many birds may be small and easy prey for larger birds and other animals, but they, too have their defenses.  Check out this article--"Some Birds Become 'Maiden Aunts' to Defend Relatives' Chicks against Cuckoos"--for more.

According to The Telegraph, honey bees practice consensus for decision-making.
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image: Two bees cling to a thistle blossom
Two bees cling to a thistle blossom Photo: AP, The Telegraph

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And here's an interesting article from Psychology Today: "Can animals work for the common good?"


-- Marge


Friday, March 20, 2015

Cartoons: looking for sunshine

This was Sunshine Week (surprise to me).  As usual news and the media decry the lack of it; but one article, "Government undermining 'right to know' laws," by Gary Pruitt, CEO of Associated Press, is very revealing. One of his revelations:
To its credit, the U.S. government does not routinely overcharge for copies of public records, but price-gouging intended to discourage public records requests is a serious problem in many states.

Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, billed the AP $135 an hour for nearly a day's work merely to retrieve emails from a handful of accounts about the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. That was roughly 10 times the cost of an entry-level Ferguson clerk’s salary.

Other organizations, including BuzzFeed, were told they would have to pay unspecified thousands of dollars for emails and memos about Ferguson's traffic citation policies and changes to local elections. 
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image: cartoon by Mike Keefe
Mike Keefe, The Week
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This cartoon sums up the current state of GOP candidacy for the presidential election pretty well, in my view.
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image: cartoon by Gary Varvel
Gary Varvel, The Week
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While the Secret Service has taken fire for a number of lapses in the last year or so, consider what it's like to protect the first 'black' president. A president that the House Republicans hate so much they've set themselves up as a barricade to any action he accomplished or attempts.  Think about the 56 times they voted to repeal or undermine some or all of the Affordable Care Act (ObamaCare). Here's an article, "Inside the world of Obama's secret-service bodyguards," written in 2010, that talks about protecting him and his family.
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image: cartoon by Steve Sack
Steve Sack, The Week
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Bibi Netanyahu may have won the election in Israel, but he doesn't have all Jews' hearts, primarily because of his stance against Palestinians.  Here is some history of the Palestine-Israel Conflict written by the Jews for Justice in the Middle East.
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image: cartoon by Steve Breen
Steve Breen, The Week
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-- Marge

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Back in business

So, here I am again, online. Not being able to get online to browse, look up stuff, and play definitely took the light out of my day.  I am certainly a cybernaut; but not necessarily an internet addict. There's an interesting answer to the question "Most appropriate word for someone addicted to Internet" at english.stackexchange.

The tech from our ISP that answered my son's request for service installed a new cable modem and we upped our package. However, Son is still seeing some packet loss. All internet traffic uses packets to transfer the information. You can find a good article on packets and TCP/IP at HowStuffWorks.

If you're wondering how to find out if a site is down, experiencing problems, or if you've lost internet yourself, here's a simple test. Click on the Windows Start button (lower left corner for Windows XP and 7; for Windows 8 check here). Type "cmd" in the search box and press ENTER. In the window that opens type "ping www.google.com" to test your internet connection or "ping <URL>" (no braces) of the site you're having trouble with.  The Google request returns this for me:
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I use Google because it's reliable. But any large site like Facebook, Twitter, or Blizzard would work too. Another test for internet connectivity is using your phone instead of the PC.

But I'm rambling...it's good to be back.

-- Marge


Monday, March 16, 2015

Technical difficulties

It may be my cable modem or computer, or ISP, or reduced bandwidth, or the undersea fiber cable, who knows. But whatever it is, this is what I'm getting repeatedly today...
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This one or the error page that says, "Aw, snap!."

My son says he's seeing a lot of packet loss and is troubleshooting it.

Maybe Wednesday will be better.

-- Marge

Friday, March 13, 2015

Cartoons: bordering on the insane

Politics in America now border on the insane. But you knew that, right? Check out the issues being lampooned below.

For the scoop on this week's low-hanging fruit, check out Washington Whispers' Tuesday edition: Three-Minute Briefing: To Sink Iran Nuke Talks, GOP Uses Faulty Torpedo. Here are the visuals.
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image: cartoon by Steve Sack
Steve Sack, The Week
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image: cartoon by Drew Sheneman
Drew Sheneman, The Week
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Hillary, Hillary, Hillary. Jeb, Jeb, Jeb.
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image: cartoon by Patrick Chappatte
Patrick Chappatte, The Week
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image: cartoon by Gary Varvel
Gary Varvel, The Week
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And then there's Florida. Again.
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image: cartoon by Adam Zyglis
Adam Zyglis, The Week
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-- Marge



Wednesday, March 11, 2015

DIY: Taking a break

image: kitty sleeping on the keyboard
Taking a break, ecopywriting
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I'm so distractible today that it's probably time to take a break. Seems to me there are times when allowing yourself to be distracted is a good thing.  Dr. Loretta Breuning in "Good Distraction/ Bad Distraction" agrees.

In keeping with the topic, here's some eye candy for you:
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-- Marge


Monday, March 09, 2015

Is it lust, love, natural selection, or just spring?

image: painting of Helen and Paris by Jacques-Louis David
Jacques-Louis David, "The Love of Helen and Paris," Wikipedia
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An old saw now, Tennyson's assertion in "Locksley Hall" that
In the spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love
may be scientifically true. In the New York Times this article by Natalie Angier "Seasons Sway Human Birth Rates" says
In the new study, the scientists scrutinized birth records of 166 countries, representing tens of millions of births. Studying the United States and Europe and the other countries of the temperate zone in the Northern Hemisphere the researchers found there are two annual conception peaks, which continue today but were especially notable before the era of extensive industrialization.
One statistical spike occurs around the spring equinox, in March, resulting in a spate of births in late December or early January. The second arrives in autumn, around October or November, leading to a slight glut of babies arriving in mid-summer.
A member of the study team, Dr. Roenneberg, adds that "The effects of climate and day length are becoming less effective in the modern world, because we're always indoors, and the lighting and temperature are controlled." You can find a summary of the article at SAGE journals.

This study, and others, raise the question: are we in control of our own passions or controlled by factors outside ourselves? Personally, I would say that few control his/her passions. What we desire just is and you either go with it or run in the opposite direction. Just my opinion.

But if you find you can't stop thinking of a special one, it's probably time to ask yourself--is it lust or love? Dr. Judith Orloff gives some practical advice in "Tips to Identify the Difference Between Love and Lust."

If it is lust, why this particular person? And why am I so confused? Dr. Helen E. Fisher, writing at Dana Foundation, asserts "Brains Do It: Lust, Attraction, and Attachment."

If all this is just too cerebral for you, blame your fatal attraction on Darwin's theory of natural selection. This interesting discussion is taking place at a thread under Reddit's explain like I'm five: If being attractive is an important aspect of sexual attraction, why hasn't natural selection turned us all into super models?.

-- Marge

Friday, March 06, 2015

Cartoons: warped minds and twisted tongues

The voices we're hearing in America right now sometimes bear no relation to reality other than what's in the speaker's own mind. Is tune out and toke a viable remedy?
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image: cartoon by Mike Luckovich
Mike Luckovich, The Week
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image: cartoon by Pat Bagley
Pat Bagley, The Week
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image: cartoon by Walt Handelsman
Walt Handelsman, The Week
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image: cartoon by Gary Varvel
Gary Varvel, Cagle
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-- Marge


Wednesday, March 04, 2015

DIY: color it spring

Here are some projects to bring some color back to your life after the cold, snow, and bleak of winter.

The 36th Avenue by Desirée offers 20 Spring DIY Ideas and Party Time. Among the ideas is a project for putting together a knotted t-shirt headband by Talitha at love, pomegranate house. The Milwaukee and Wisconsin Journal Sentinel also features old t-shirt to headband or bracelet instructions in its Fresh section.
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image: Knotted T-Shirt Headband by Talitha
Talitha, Knotted T-shirt Headband, love, pomegranate house
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At Refinery29, you can find 30 Awesome DIY Projects -- For EVERY Level. In the collection is Grace Bonney's Papier-Mâché Cacti, based on a design by David Stark Design (the D.Stark site's design is, uhm, interesting too).
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image: papier-mache cacti by Grace Bonney
Grace Bonney, Papier-Mache Cacti after D, Stark, Design Sponge
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At BuzzFeed there's 33 Irresistibly Spring DIYs, where #30 is Decorate your computer cords with washi tape by Bri Emery at Design Love Fest.
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image: Bri Emery decorates her computer cords
Bri Emery, Decorate Your Computer Cords, Design Love Fest

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-- Marge


Monday, March 02, 2015

ART: deviantART

Being repeatedly impressed by art found at DeviantArt, I finally signed up. After fulfilling my obligations as a new user, finding art to show you was my first order of business. There are so many categories to choose from, such as digital and traditional art, photography, film and animation (five of 20 categories). Then there are the numerous subcategories and sub-subcategories. You could get lost.

My sampling here includes matte painting (for the backgrounds in films), a game concept building/environment, and two game concept characters, one for a Shadow Days expansion.
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image: matte painting by Marta Nael
Marta Nael, Matte painting: "Lost among the ruins," DeviantArt
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image: a Cathrine Langwagen piece in  Game Concepts & Illustrations / Buildings and Environments
Cathrine Langwagen of Cassiopeia Art, "Eder Terehn," DeviantArt
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image: illustration by Marco Dalidingo
Marco Dalidingo, "Machine Gunner," DeviantArt
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image: character for Shadow Days Expansion by Darkcloud 013
Darkcloud013, "Ice Sword," DeviantART
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-- Marge