Friday, December 20, 2024

Taking a Break - Merry Christmas

It's that festive time of the year again and it's time to take a break from blogging. I'll be back here early in the New Year. In the meantime, I hope you enjoy the season and I'll see you again in January.

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year




Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Using the Windows 11 Magnifier

I just discovered that Windows 11 has a magnifier function that you can enable under Settings > Accessibility. Once enabled, you open it with the Windows Key + Plus Key combination. 

By default, it gives you a 200% magnification of the full screen. I don't usually need that much so I have set it to 150%. You can set it to magnify an area around the mouse cursor if you prefer. I now have it set to turn on when I log in and have pinned it to my taskbar. 

Full details on all of the Magnifier settings are on the Microsoft website.  

Monday, December 16, 2024

Featured Links -- December 15, 2024

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

Birds on ice
  • The best science images of 2024 — Nature’s picks. "A breathtaking total eclipse, courageous penguins, volcanic smoke rings and more." There are some truly incredible images here. Best viewed on a large computer monitor. 
  • Google Timeline location purge causes collateral damage. "Privacy measure leaves some mourning lost memories." If you rely on Timeline data more than three months old, you should read this.
  • Miranda’s Last Gift (gift link). "When our daughter died suddenly, she left us with grief, memories—and Ringo." A beautiful and moving tribute by David Frum to his late daughter, and her dog. 
  • Debunking Every Myth You Hear Against Universal Healthcare. "Whether you are politically left or right, you should want Universal Healthcare as a human right—here are the receipts on why."
  • Powerful solar storms are a nightmare for farmers. 'Our tractors acted like they were demon possessed'. "When the sun's fury disrupts high-tech farming, precision turns to chaos." It does make me wonder if the universe really is out to get us. 
  • Alena Tensor—a new hope for unification in physics. "Our new article published in Physica Scripta brings new hope that such a theory exists. It demonstrates that the use of a certain mathematical object called Alena Tensor reconciles various physical theories, including general relativity, electrodynamics, quantum mechanics and continuum mechanics. Will this finally allow scientists to unify descriptions used in physics?" Some highly speculative new physics theorizing. 
  • Refinement of post-COVID condition core symptoms, subtypes, determinants, and health impacts: a cohort study integrating real-world data and patient-reported outcomes. "PCC can be categorized into four distinct subtypes based on ten core symptoms. These subtypes appeared to share a majority of pathogen and host-related risk factors, but their impact on health varied markedly by subtype. Our findings could help refine current guidelines for precise PCC diagnosis and progression, enhance the identification of PCC subgroups for targeted research, and inform evidence-based policy making to tackle this new and debilitating condition."
  • The latest in poker cheats: Tiny cameras that can see cards as they’re dealt. ""Several recent schemes were uncovered, so should players everywhere be concerned?" Only if you're playing $10,000 buy-in poker. 
  • Battery prices continue to drop, lowering the cost of electric vehicles. "The price of lithium-ion batteries in China has decreased by 51 percent in the past year. Lower battery prices make electric vehicles cheaper than fossil fuel cars in many segments, and large-scale battery solutions in energy systems become more profitable."
  • Sunday, December 15, 2024

    Photo of the Week - December 15, 2024

    Here's a seasonal picture for the week. We have had a very mild run up to winter so with only a dusting of snow and temperatures several degrees above normal. That hasn't stopped people from setting up displays for Christmas. I'll have to come by at night to see if they light it up. Taken with my Pixel 8 Pro. 

    Getting ready for Christmas

     

    Saturday, December 14, 2024

    Saturday Sounds - Kensington Market - Avenue Road - Aardvark - Live

    The Kensington Market were a Toronto band that released two superb albums in the late 1960s. From Wikipedia: 

    Named after a downtown Toronto neighbourhood, it was known for 'gentle, lyrical, rock music', masterful musicianship, and for being was one of the first Canadian rock bands to develop a style independent of US and British models

    Their music is somewhat psychedelic, guitar-driven rock with great vocals. The group had middling success but lack of record company promotion and bad lifestyle choices shut down their career after the second album. 

    The albums are long out of print but Spotify has them and they are most definitely worth a listen. 


    I saw them perform twice, once in Sault Ste. Marie in 1968 or thereabouts, and at a reunion gig in Hugh's Room in Toronto in 2010. Much to my surprise, the Hugh's Room gig that I attended and a previous one were recorded and are up on the band's YouTube channel. I'm including a few of those videos here as well. 

    Friday, December 13, 2024

    Is the Atlantic Circulation Collapsing?

    I've posted here several times about the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (which includes the Gulf Stream), a system of currents that is responsible for (among many other things) moderating Europe's climate. There have been reports over the last decade that it may be slowing down or even collapsing, which would have devastating effects on the world's climate.

    The excellent Eye on the Storm blog on the Yale Climate Connection site has just published a two-part article about the AMOC. You may have seen some sensationalist articles in the mainstream press saying that it's collapsing and we're all doomed. If you want to find out what we really know about the AMOC, its current state, and what might happen in the future, then read these articles. This is topflight science journalism. 
    • Atlantic circulation collapse? New clues on the fate of a crucial conveyor belt. "In part one, we looked at observations from the North Atlantic that suggest a gradual weakening in AMOC strength over the last few decades, but only a marginally significant drop over the past 40 years of AMOC monitoring, including the largest near-surface component, the Gulf Stream."
    • How much should you worry about a collapse of the Atlantic conveyor belt? "It’s not yet game over for the AMOC. As we discussed in part one of this post, the actual observations of 3D AMOC flow through the North Atlantic are still too brief to separate natural variations from long-term trends. And a modest decrease observed over the last 40 years has just been revised in an even more modest direction. ... As for now, we’re left with a dystopian, world-changing possibility – but one that’s still shrouded by enough observational and methodological uncertainty to make the answer to “When will it happen?” both less concrete and more worrisome than we’d like."

    Monday, December 09, 2024

    Featured Links - December 9, 2024

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

    TGull on a post