Friday, May 03, 2024

Producing a Newspaper in the 1950s

If you ever wondered what it was like working for a newspaper in the 1950s, have a look a the pictures in this Facebook post, showing the premises of the Sault Star in the early 1950s. 

My dad worked in the composing room, using linotype machines to produce lead slugs that were laid into beds of type from which the paper was printed. He's in the second picture below, second from the right. I used to have a lead slug with my name on it that he had made me. By the time he retired, the printing technology had gone went from hot lead type, to photo offset, to fully computerized typesetting. Dad had to take a typing course when he was fifty (Linotype machines didn't have a standard keyboard). 

If you look at the other pictures, you'll see that there is no computerized technology at all. The most advanced machine in sight is a dictaphone being used by a typist. Desks are cluttered by piles of paper. The paper would have had teletype machines but fax machines hadn't been invented at the time these pictures were taken. The accounting office might have had IBM tablulators or their equivalent but not computers. (Alogoma Steel had a mainframe in the late 1960s; that was the first computer I saw during a high school visit). 

Thanks to the Sault Ste. Marie Museum for posting these pictures. They bring back some memories.


Working on the Linotype machines

The Sault Star composing room in the 1950s







Wednesday, May 01, 2024

Movie and TV Reviews - April 2024

Movies and TV shows that Nancy and I watched in April. I do these posts mainly so I can keep track of what we've been watching, so the reviews are cursory. The next few months will probably be sparser than usual because ... baseball.

Movies

  • Steve MARTIN!: A Biography in Two Parts. I've been enjoying Steve Martin's comedy ever since the days of Saturday Night Live and Roxanne, and now Only Murders in the Building. This revealed a lot about his early life and career that I wasn't familiar with. He's a very complex man, and yes, still funny. (Apple TV+)
  • Snatch: We missed this when it came out in 2000 and since we like Guy Ritchie's movies (mostly his older ones) and Jason Stratham (ditto), we decided to rent it. I'm glad we did. Ritchie is at his flashy, kinetic, best and Stratham hasn't turned into a dull action-film hunk. The cast is solid and Brad Pitt brilliant as a completely unintelligible gypsy bare-knuckle fighter. (Prime)
  • The Beekeeper: Since we had just watched an early Jason Stratham movie, we decided to watch his latest outing. It's a competent enough movie, but I am getting tired of the over-the-top superman action hero trope. (Prime)

TV Shows

  • Whitechapel (season 4): This moved away from the police procedural into full suspect with a strong horror element. Definitely not for the squeamish. (Prime)
  • Constellation: This starts out as a more or less straight space disaster movie and turns into something much deeper and complex. I enjoyed it but it could have been shorter. (Apple TV+)
  • Celebrity Antiques Road Trip (season 1): This doesn't work as well as the original series. If you're British and know the celebrities, it would probably be more enjoyable. (PBS)
  • Hope Street (season 3B): The second half of the season ratchets up the relationship tensions in the show more than the police procedural element. (BritBox)
  • Beyond Paradise (season 2): This is a spin-off from Death in Paradise but lacking the Caribbean setting. Too light for my taste. (BritBox)
  • Fallout: This was a big spend for Amazon and given the popularity of the game, it'll probably be a big hit. But neither Nancy or I have played the game and the show didn't click with us. We gave up after two episodes. (Amazon Prime)
  • The Reluctant Traveler (seasons 1 and 2): Follow Eugene Levy to exotic locations around the world. If you want to see what a $7,000 a night hotel room looks like then this is your show. (Apple TV+)
  • The Tower (seasons 1 and 2): A good British police procedural. The first season reminded me of Line of Duty with cops investigating cops. (BritBox)
  • Antiques Road Trip (season 1). Now working our way through the early episodes of this show. (PBS)
  • Shogun: I had to turn on subtitles to watch this because of the Japanese dialog, which is not my favourite way to watch a show, but worth it in this case. I can't vouch for the historical accuracy, but it is compelling drama and very well made. (Disney+)

Monday, April 29, 2024

2024 Aurora Award Nominations

The nominees for the 2024 Aurora Awards have been announced by the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association. The winners will be announced on August 11.

These are the nominees for Best Novel.

  • Bad Cree, Jessica Johns, HarperCollins Canada
  • The Marigold, Andrew F. Sullivan, ECW Press
  • Moon of the Turning Leaves, Waubgeshig Rice, Random House Canada
  • Silver Nitrate, Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Del Rey
  • The Valkyrie, Kate Heartfield, HarperVoyager



  • Featured Links - April 29, 2024

    Links to things I found interesting but didn't want to do a full blog post about:

    The marina has yet to wake up

    Sunday, April 28, 2024

    Photo of the Week - April 28. 2024

    I suppose that one of these days the city will come along and remove this tree, though perhaps not if it manages to produce a few leaves again this year. Taken with my Pixel 8 Pro.

    Struggling tree on the beach

     

    Saturday, April 27, 2024

    Saturday Sounds - Neil Young and Crazy Horse - San Diego, CA - 2024/04/24

    Neil Young and Crazy Horse started their tour Wednesday night in San Diego and according to Rolling Stone they rocked like nobody's business. Judge for yourself. Here's a few reasonably good quality audience videos from the concert. The final chorus of Down by the River has some SERIOUS crunch. Play it loud!

    Down by the River

    Cortez the Killer

    Powderfinger

    Hey Hey My My

    Friday, April 26, 2024

    I'm Getting Worried About Bird Flu

    I'm getting worried about bird flu (aka H5N1 avian influenza). Calling it bird flu is a bit of a misnomer now, as recent news makes it clear that it is spreading widely in mammals, now including cows. This has been happening for a while now, but it's getting widespread enough that the mainstream media is picking up on it.

    The New York Times looks at recent large outbreaks (gift link), especially among sea lions, that have devastated colonies along the coast of North and South America. 

    What they found was staggering: The virus had killed an estimated 17,400 seal pups, more than 95 percent of the colony’s young animals. 

     The catastrophe was the latest in a bird flu epidemic that has whipped around the world since 2020, prompting authorities on multiple continents to kill poultry and other birds by the millions. In the United States alone, more than 90 million birds have been culled in a futile attempt to deter the virus.

    There has been no stopping H5N1. Avian flu viruses tend to be picky about their hosts, typically sticking to one kind of wild bird. But this one has rapidly infiltrated an astonishingly wide array of birds and animals, from squirrels and skunks to bottlenose dolphins, polar bears and, most recently, dairy cows.

    The worry here, of course, is that the virus may mutate in a way that makes it easily transmissible among humans, where it has a mortality rate of at least 33 percent. 

    In his Ground Truths blog, Eric Topol provides a more detailed summary of what we know about how H5N1 is spreading, starting with this.

    Confirmation of H5N1 infected dairy cattle herds in 8 states. But the FDA report yesterday of commerical milk PCR positivity strongly supports that the cattle spread is far wider than these 8 states. Important to emphasize that (PCR) is testing for remnants of virus, not live virus, which would be unlikely with pasteurization. Other tests, assessing potential evidence for any live virus (egg viability and culture), are to be reported by the FDA going forward. Limited culture tests are all negative to date for any live virus in milk.

     Gizomdo has more details on the spread to cows and the response by the FDA.

    Genetic evidence released to the outside science community on Sunday suggests that the initial spillover event from birds to cows may have occurred as early as December 2023, months before the first known cases were reported by local officials. And, coupled with the discovery of H5N1 in store-bought milk, it’s now looking likely that outbreaks are much more widespread than currently tallied.

    “The dissemination to cows is far greater than we have been led to believe,” Eric Topol, founder of the Scripps Research Translational Institute, told CNN on Tuesday.

    The major worry with avian influenza strains such as H5N1 is that they could someday develop the right assortment of mutations that would allow the virus to spread easily between humans while also causing severe illness in many. So, the longer it’s able to remain in cows, the greater the likelihood that some strains will adapt and become better at transmitting between mammals, humans included.

    I'm not worried about finding genetic material from the virus in milk (pasteurization will kill any live virus), but I wouldn't drink unpasteurized milk (never a good idea even without the threat of H5N1). And keep a good stock of N95 masks around, even if you aren't using them now.


    Wednesday, April 24, 2024

    Windows 11 Annoyances

    There may be people out there who love Windows 11 but I have yet to find one. The prevalent attitude online seems to range from grudging acceptance to outright hate. I fall into the first category but the more I use it, the more I wonder if I should take a closer look at Linux. 

    Kyle Barr reviews computers for a living so he has to use Windows 11, but he's not happy about it. On Gizmodo*, he's compiled a list of the eight things he finds most annoying about Windows 11 along with some suggestions about how Microsoft could make it better.

    Here are the first three items on his list:

    • Microsoft Edge is a Dark Pattern Nightmare
    • It’s Way Too Annoying to Change Default Apps
    • There’s Constant Popups for Microsoft’s Services by Default

    Some of his annoyances relate to his need to constantly install and reinstall Windows, something that most users won't have to do very often. Others, like his complaints about Microsoft Edge, will affect everyone. (Unless you live in the EU where you can uninstall it). 

    I'm surprised the list isn't longer. For example, he doesn't mention the turgid mess that is File Explorer, or one of my pet peeves, how difficult it is to get Windows to resize text and apps away from the default settings. And then there's the Start menu, for which there is Start11, thank heavens. 

    What's your biggest Windows 11 annoyance? 

    * This comment is specific to Gizmodo (and several other sites) who have decided to use a slideshow format for articles like this and don't give users the option to view the article as one long page. Shame on you.