Monday, November 30, 2020

Ben Bova, RIP

That damned disease has claimed another victim. SF author and editor, Ben Bova, has died from covid-related causes at the age of 88. 

His first novel, The Star Conquerors, was published in 1959, and I remember reading it when I was still in grade school. He went on to publish many short stories before becoming editor of Analog in 1971. After leaving Analog, he wrote many novels, mostly about space exploration. From Tor.com:
Bova’s best-known works involved plausible sciences about humanity’s expansion into the universe, looking at how we might adapt to live in space with novels such as 1992’s Mars, about the first human expedition to the red planet. He followed that novel up with additional installments, forming the Grand Tour series, which explored all of the solar system’s major bodies. The latest installment, Uranus, was published in July, and was scheduled to be the first of a trilogy. The second installment, Neptune, is scheduled for release next year. The ESF notes that “the straightforwardness of Bova’s agenda for humanity may mark him as a figure from an earlier era; but the arguments he laces into sometimes overloaded storylines are arguments it is important, perhaps absolutely vital, to make.”
File 770 has a longer obituary listing some of his many carreer accomplishments. 

I met him a few times at conventions; he was a regular guest at Toronto's Ad Astra. He was always friendly and generous with his time. He even gave me a short article for my fanzine, Torus, in the late '80s. 

He will be missed. 

Merriam-Webster's 2020 Word of the Year

Merriam-Webster has announced its word of the year. To no one's surprise, it's "pandemic". 

Also, unsurprisingly, there are several pandemic-related words in the top twenty, including "coronavirus" and "quarantine". Other top words relate to this year's political turmoil.  

Merriam-Webster picks its annual word of the year based on a statistical analysis of words that are looked up on its online platforms “in extremely high numbers” and which show “a significant year-over-year increase in traffic.” The company said the first big spike in “pandemic” searches came on February 3, 2020—the day the first American COVID-19 patient was released from the hospital. That day saw “pandemic” lookups rise 1,621% above the previous year.

I would not have predicted the last two words on the list.  

Finding Biological Information In Fossils

It's long been assumed that whatever biological information was in fossils was destroyed by the process of fossilization and deep time. Now some researchers are reporting that may not always be the case.

Paleontologists are lucky to find complete sets of fossilized bones. Sometimes, they get even luckier, finding preserved impressions of delicate features like feathers. Beyond those clues, though, most of the biology of extinct species—their DNA, internal organs, and unique chemistry—has been totally destroyed by the many millions of years that separate us. Except, what if it hasn’t? Some scientists now claim they can tease much more complex biological information out of apparently mundane fossils, including things that most paleontologists don’t expect to survive over millions of years, such as skin and eggshell.

Molecular paleobiologist Jasmina Wiemann has been on the forefront of this exciting research since 2018, co-authoring papers that reveal elements of fossils that cannot be immediately seen with our eyes but can be detected through a series of complex chemical and statistical analyses. Her recent paper, published this summer with Jason Crawford and Derek Briggs, builds upon other, similar research from the past two years. She and her co-authors claim they can determine the chemical signatures of skin, bone, teeth, and eggshell. Even better, they can train anyone else in the field within approximately 20 minutes to find these ancient traces using their techniques. It’s an opportunity they hope will be widely used within museum collections the world over.

If true and verified, this is a major development in paleontology, perhaps the biggest of this century so far. It opens up whole new avenues of research. 

Howard Iron Works Museum of Printing Presses

The invention of the printing press is arguably one of the key events of the last millennium. It opened the way for the mass dissemination of information and was the dominant technology for information distribution until the mid-20th century. 

I've been fascinated by printing technology and printing presses ever since childhood. My father worked for a newspaper and I saw the evolution of printing from hot lead to computerized typesetting and offset printing first hand.  

So I am excited to find out (thanks to BlogTO) that there is a museum of printing presses not much more than an hour's drive away from where I live. The Howard Iron Works Printing Museum and Restoration facility is located in Oakville, Ontario. 

The Howard Iron Works Museum and Restoration facility is a lifelong dream of Liana and Nick Howard. The Howards are custodians of Howard Graphic Equipment Ltd., a company that is a leading edge supplier and rebuilder of printing and converting equipment. The business continues into its 48th year having started in 1967.

The museum's website is a treasure trove of printing lore. Sections are devoted to various types of printing presses in use from the 1830s to 1950s. There is an introductory page that describes the basic features of that type of press and pages for individual examples. The website includes a gallery of letterheads, which are fascinating in their own right. 

Once we're through the pandemic, I intend to head down to Oakville for a visit (by appointment only, according to the website.  

Sunday, November 29, 2020

How People Got Their News

In this era of instant news and information at our fingertips, it may be hard to remember that it wasn't always this way. One or two hundred years ago, newspapers were the primary vehicle for news and great effort went into their production and distribution. 

BlogTO has an article about the history of newspaper production and distribution in Toronto in the 19th and early 20th century. It's worth reading for a bit of perspective on our information-saturated times.

I found this part especially poignant. 

At the tail end of the 19th century, Toronto was a bustling city of just over 180,000 people. A number of papers competed for readers’ attentions.

Newsstands were manned by newsboys and newsgirls. These children were often homeless, eking out a precarious living by selling newspapers, shoelaces, pencils, and shining shoes.

Sometimes, these children would take refuge in cheap lodgings in the downtown core, or at the local newsboys’ home (a charitable institution set up by George W. Allan in the late 19th century). 


Legislation by the Ontario government in 1893 aimed at providing a more stable life for the city’s homeless children by getting them off the streets, but child labour and precarious living persisted well into the twentieth century.

Featured Links - November 29, 2020

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

Saturday, November 28, 2020

Need Advice on Inkjet Printers

OK, hive mind. I need some advice on inkjet printers. Our Epson 835 Artisan printer/scanner is dying. We had the heads cleaned and got new cartridges, and it is still not printing some colours. It's almost 7 years old and I don't want to throw more money at it. I do have an even older Brother black-and-white laser printer that we use for basic printing but it doesn't have a scanner.

I want another inkjet printer than can print good-quality photographs up to 8x10. (The Epson uses six different colours, and the print quality is excellent).  It has to have a scanner of at least 2400 dpi that can handle slides and negatives. Cost should be under $300 if possible.

Suggestions in comments would be welcome.


The Art of Book Covers Before Dust Jackets

Like my friend, Michael Skeet, who pointed me towards this article, I'm not a collector of books as objects. I have hundreds of books on the large bookshelf beside me, but they were purchased because I wanted to read them, not because they were objects of art (although a few of them coincidentally are). 

Back before printed and artistic dust jackets became prevalent, book covers were art objects. 

Inspired by rising literacy rates and advancing technologies, the nineteenth century saw the book transform from a largely hand-made object to a mass-produced product. In this new environment the book cover took on added importance: it was no longer merely a functional protection for the pages but instead became a key platform through which to communicate and sell the book. Prior to this covers had — bar a smattering of highly bespoke one-off creations (e.g. embroidered covers for personal libraries) — mostly been plain leather bound affairs. From the 1820s, with the rise of mechanical bookbinding, these leather covers of old gave way to new cloth coverings which, in addition to being inexpensive, were now also printable. A wide variety of cover printing techniques were employed over the decades: from embossing to gilt to multi-colour lithography. A totally new artistic space was opened up. As you can see in our highlights below it was one in which illustrators and designers flourished, producing a range of covers as eclectic in aesthetic approach as the myriad contents they fronted.

I think this one might be my favourite of the books shown in the article. It's from Frances Trego Montgomery's On a Lark to the Planets published in 1904.



Friday, November 27, 2020

The Long-Term Effects of Zoom Culture

A couple of years ago, I'd never heard of Zoom. At work, when we had a virtual meeting, we used Google's Meeting software (or whatever it's called this week). Since I retired, I've used a variety of platforms for virtual meetings with doctors, bankers, family, and friends, but Zoom now seems to be the default for many people. Workspaces are becoming virtual as are many entertainment events.

For one example, see this post about how businesses in Toronto's PATH network that rely on office workers are suffering because 95 percent of office workers are now working from home. Yes, people will go back to the office, eventually, but not all of them. On another from, we're now paying to watch concerts online. What happens to concert halls and theatres? 

We need to think about these effects, as this article points out

So, while we absolutely sh\ould be thankful for the way in which Zoom has helped us maintain some semblance of connection and productivity throughout 2020, we must also take a hard look at the many pressing needs this experience has uncovered. These issues will have to be dealt with — and soon.

Already a necessity, broadband access is going to become ever more crucial for participating in society. OpenVault, a company that provides broadband software and tracks Internet usage pointed out that an “average US home in September used 384 gigabytes of data, up slightly from 380 gigabytes in June, but up 40% from September 2019.” The growth — whether it is driven by people working from home, shopping online, getting on-demand delivery, or cord-cutting — indicated that the future got here in a hurry.

Earlier this month, Leichtman Research reported that “the largest cable and wireline phone providers in the U.S. — representing about 96% of the market — acquired about 1,530,000 net additional broadband Internet subscribers in 3Q 2020.” In the trailing twelve months, these companies added 4.56 million subscribers, which represents “the most broadband net adds in a year since 3Q 2008-2Q 2009.”

Shifts this significant have permanent ramifications. We should cast aside any belief that we will return to our previous understanding of normalcy. Many people have tasted the future, and despite its challenges, they seem to like what they have seen.


Spaceflight Does Weird Things to the Body

I recently watched and enjoyed a documentary on Netflix about astronaut Scott Kelly's almost-year-long mission to the International Space Station. Kelly, and his twin brother who stayed on Earth, were extensively studied to see how the extended period of zero gravity would affect his body.

The results are in and are quite interesting, and not necessarily in a good way.  

The researchers highlight six biological changes that occur in all astronauts during spaceflight: oxidative stress (an excessive accumulation of free radicals in the body’s cells), DNA damage, dysfunction of the mitochondria, changes in gene regulation, alterations in the length of telomeres (the ends of chromosomes, which shorten with age), and changes in the gut microbiome. 

Of these six changes, the biggest and most surprising one for scientists was mitochondrial dysfunction. Mitochondria play a critical role in producing the chemical energy necessary to keep cells—and by extension, tissue and organs—functional. Researchers found irregular mitochondrial performance in dozens of astronauts and were able to broadly characterize these changes thanks to new genomics and proteomics techniques. Afshin Beheshti, a bioinformatician at NASA and senior author of one study, says mitochondrial suppression helps explain how many of the problems astronauts experiment (like immune system deficiencies, disrupted circadian rhythm, and organ complications) are actually holistically related to each other, since they all rely on the same metabolic pathways.

“When you’re in space, it’s not just one are or organ that’s affected, it’s the whole body that’s affected,” says Beheshti. "We started connecting the dots."

Thursday, November 26, 2020

Iceland Does It Right

Iceland has done a good job of controlling COVID-19, despite keeping its borders open because of the country's heavy reliance on tourism. This article from Nature explains what Iceland has done and details some of the findings that researchers there have made about the disease.  

In a nutshell, they relied on extensive testing, contract tracking, and quarantines of people who tested positive. Some lockdowns were necessary, but are being relaxed as infections decline.

I found this especially interesting, and concerning.

In early spring, most of the world’s COVID-19 studies focused on individuals with moderate or severe disease. By testing the general population in Iceland, deCODE was able to track the virus in people with mild or no symptoms. Of 9,199 people recruited for population screening between 13 March and 4 April, 13.3% tested positive for coronavirus. Of that infected group, 43% reported no symptoms at the time of testing. “This study was the first to provide high-quality evidence that COVID-19 infections are frequently asymptomatic,” says Jade Benjamin-Chung, an epidemiologist at the University of California, Berkeley, who used the Iceland data to estimate rates of SARS-CoV-2 infection in the United States. “It was the only study we were aware of at the time that conducted population-based testing in a large sample.”

Two decades of pandemic war games failed to account for Donald Trump

A smaller population study, carried out in an Italian town, came to similar results on asymptomatic infection months later. When a 78-year-old man died in the northern Italian town of Vo’, Italy’s first COVID-19 death, the region’s governor locked the town down and ordered that its 3,300 citizens be tested. After the initial round of government testing, Andrea Crisanti, head of microbiology at the University of Padua in Italy, asked the local government whether his team could run a second round of testing. “Then we could measure the effect of the lockdown and the efficiency of contact tracing,” says Crisanti, who is currently on leave from Imperial College London. The local government agreed. On the basis of the results of the two rounds of testing, the researchers found that lockdown and isolation reduced transmission by 98%, and — in line with Iceland’s results — that 43% of the infections across the two tests were asymptomatic.

That would certainly explain why there is so much community spread and reinforces the message to "wear a mask". 

Some News About The Expanse

Amazon has announced that season 6 of The Expanse will be its last. Given that season 5, to start December 16, covers books 5 and 6 in the series, season 6 will need to cover the events of the final three books (the last of which hasn't yet been published). 

Also, Cas Anvar, who plays Alex, won't be returning in season 6. 

Amazon Studios announced in a press release that the streaming platform has given The Expanse an early renewal for season six, which Deadline first reported would be the final season. This comes a few weeks before the show is set to return on December 16 with season five, which sees the Belters rising up against Earth and Mars. However, Cas Anvar, who’s played Alex since the first season, will not be joining them for the final season—following a string of sexual misconduct allegations earlier this year. As of now, it’s unclear how much Anvar will be present in season five or how the series will address his departure in the final chapter.

Hopefully, the writers and producers will do a better job of concluding the series than those of Game of Thrones.

Wednesday, November 25, 2020

A Good Site for Vision Information

I'm always interested in information about vision problems and Vision Center is a good one. 

It has several major sections dealing with eye conditions, eye glasses, contact lenses, and LASIK surgery. Each section has subsections with more detailed information. For example, the section on eye conditions has topics ranging from the relatively benign, like eye twitching, to the serious, like macular degeneration. 

As far as I can tell from personal experience and my educated layman's perspective, the information seems accurate and clearly presented. The site's disclaimer does say that all topics are reviewed by a licensed optometrist. 

Vision Center appears to be associated with Zodiac, a "digital healthcare marketplace", whatever that means. There are links in the articles that encourage you to book appointments with their network. 

I would use this site as a first reference, as it's well organized and easy to understand. However, I'd also recommend backing it up with research on another site, like the Mayo Clinic.

 

Upgrading Old Movies

AI technology is making it possible to upgrade old movies to make them look remarkably good, much sharper and smoother than the originals. It even makes it possible to colorize black-and-white films, although the results here are somewhat less convincing.

If you're interested in how this technology works, Wired has an overview of the most common techniques. Several examples are linked in the article. 

ON APRIL 14, 1906, the Miles brothers left their studio on San Francisco’s Market Street, boarded a cable car, and began filming what would become an iconic short movie. Called A Trip Down Market Street, it’s a fascinating documentation of life at the time: As the cable car rolls slowly along, the brothers aim their camera straight ahead, capturing women in outrageous frilly Victorian hats as they hurry across the tracks. A policeman strolls by wielding a billy club. Newsboys peddle their wares. Early automobiles swerve in front of the cable car, some of them convertibles, so we can see their drivers bouncing inside. After nearly a dozen minutes, the filmmakers arrive at the turntable in front of the Ferry Building, whose towering clock stopped at 5:12 am just four days later when a massive earthquake and consequent fire virtually obliterated San Francisco.

Well over a century later, an artificial intelligence geek named Denis Shiryaev has transformed A Trip Down Market Street into something even more magical. Using a variety of publicly available algorithms, Shiryaev colorized and sharpened the film to 4K resolution (that’s 3,840 horizontal pixels by 2,160 vertical pixels) and bumped the choppy frame rate up to 60 frames per second, a process known as frame interpolation. The resulting movie is mesmerizing. We can finally see vibrant colors on those flamboyant Victorian hats. We can see the puckish looks on those newsboys’ faces. And perhaps most importantly, we can see in unprecedented detail the … byproducts that horses had left on the ground along the cable car’s tracks.

Tuesday, November 24, 2020

Forensic Examination of the Beirut Explosion

The explosion of stored ammonium nitrate that devastated the port of Beirut earlier this year was widely photographed and recorded on video. This has helped a team of forensic architects to model the explosion and determine exactly how it started and why it was so destructive.  

FA launched its probe with an invitation from the Egyptian independent online publication Mada Masr. The research group used publicly available images and videos of the blast, among other open-source materials and documents, to create a 3D model of the explosion and a timeline that reconstructs the events of August 4.

 Through spatial and architectural analysis of the images and videos, FA was able to locate the sources of the smoke plumes, fires, and explosions at the port, and to map the interior of the warehouse where 2,750 bags of ammonium nitrate were haphazardly stored.

The analysis found indications for the presence of flammable materials like fireworks and car tires in close proximity to the cache of ammonium nitrate. According to the investigation, these materials likely helped detonate about half of the 2,700 tonnes of ammonium nitrate inside the warehouse. The analysis also found that many of the warehouse’s doors and windows were shut, creating hot temperature areas that brought the ammonium nitrate to its combustion point.

Gareth Collett, an explosives expert for the UN who consulted FA in its investigation, said that the arrangement of goods within the building was “the spatial layout of a makeshift bomb on the scale of a warehouse, awaiting detonation.”

I highly recommend watching the video linked in the article. It is extremely well done and one of the best examples I have seen of integrating 3D modelling and photographs and videos as well as summarizing all the other information that was made available to the Forensic Architecture team. 



Some Short Video Reviews

Here are some short reviews of videos I enjoyed watching.

Monday, November 23, 2020

Best SF and Fantasy Books of 2020

Each year, the reviewers at Tor.com publish a list of their favorite books for the year, and the list for 2020 is now up. 

It’s been a long and strange year, but one comforting thing that kept us going were the consistently amazing book releases in the genres of science fiction, fantasy, young adult, and beyond. Our reviewers each picked their top contenders for the best books of the year—and they almost all chose different titles! This year’s highlights run the gamut from action-packed science fiction and genre-bending epic fantasy, to neo-gothic horror and powerful anthologies. We’ve got ghosts, we’ve got empresses, we’ve got revolutionaries and superheros and wormholes in retail stores!

From the list, these are the titles that I intend to read or that I think should be worth reading though they don't suit my tastes.

  • Hench by Natalie Zina Walschots
  • Machine by Elizabeth Bear (this is one that I bought)
  • The City We Became by N. K. Jemisin
  • Mexican Gothic by Noémi Taoboda
  • Quotients by Tracy O'Neill
  • Piranesi by Susanna Clarke
  • Unconquerable Sun by Kate Elliot
And I will add to the list a book that the Tor.com reviewers didn't include but I enjoyed, Robert J. Sawyer's The Oppenheimer Alternative. I will also add Kim Stanley Robinson's The Ministry for the Future, which based on reviews and a podcast interview that I've heard, has jumped to the top of to-be-read queue after I finish Peter F. Hamlton's Salvation trilogy. 

COVID-19 Can Cost You Your Sense of Smell

COVID-19 is often thought of as a respiratory disease like the flu, but it can affect other parts of the body and have many other symptoms. One of them is loss of the sense of smell and sometimes taste.

An estimated 80 percent of people with COVID-19 have smell disturbances, and many also have dysgeusia or ageusia (a disruption or loss of taste, respectively) or changes in chemesthesis (the ability to sense chemical irritants such as hot chilies). Smell loss is so common in people with the disease that some researchers have recommended its use as a diagnostic test because it may be a more reliable marker than fever or other symptoms.

One lingering mystery is how the novel coronavirus robs its victims of these senses. Early in the pandemic, physicians and researchers worried that COVID-related anosmia might signal that the virus makes its way into the brain through the nose, where it could do severe and lasting damage. A suspected route would be via the olfactory neurons that sense odors in the air and transmit these signals to the brain. But studies have shown that this is probably not the case, says Sandeep Robert Datta, a neuroscientist at Harvard Medical School. “My gestalt read of the data to date suggests that the primary source of insult is actually in the nose, in the nasal epithelium,” the skinlike layer of cells responsible for registering odors. “It looks like the virus attacks, predominantly, support cells and stem cells and not neurons directly,” Datta says. But that fact does not mean that neurons cannot be affected, he emphasizes.

Most people recover their sense of smell after a few weeks, but in others it can take months, and it may not come back at all or return with unpleasant effects, like everything smelling of drain cleaner. Yet another reason to social distance and wear that mask! 

Sunday, November 22, 2020

Featured Links - November 22, 2020

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

Saturday, November 21, 2020

Dueling Dinosaurs

Fossil hunters have found the first complete skeleton of a T-Rex. Not only is complete, and in good condition, but it's locked in combat with a triceratops, also a complete and well preserved skeleton.


It has been described as ‘one of the most important paleontological discoveries of our time’ – and is the only 100% complete T-rex ever found. Dr Lindsay Zanno, head of palaeontology at the museum, said: ‘We have not yet studied this specimen; it is a scientific frontier.

‘The preservation is phenomenal, and we plan to use every technological innovation available to reveal new information on the biology of the T. rex and Triceratops. ‘This fossil will forever change our view of the world’s two favourite dinosaurs.’

 The 10-year-old in me is jumping up and down and yelling: "I want to see this!"

 

Some Articles About COVID-19

Here are some recent articles about COVID-19 that I thought worth sharing.

Friday, November 20, 2020

Fifty Years Ago My Life Changed

November 1970. I was in my third year of studies at the University of Windsor, taking a major in English Literature, although in reality my major was working at the student radio station and going to as many concerts as I could afford. I'd heard the Grateful Dead, of course; their album, Workingman's Dead, had come out earlier that summer, and I had driven my parents crazy playing Uncle John's Band as loud as my cheap record player would permit (and getting told off for playing a song with "god damn" in the chorus). 

I wouldn't have called myself a Deadhead at the time. I was much more into the Jefferson Airplane, having seen them twice in Detroit by that point. Friends of mine asked me if I wanted to go to Rochester, where some of them were from, to see the Dead at the University of Rochester on November 20th. I wasn't too keen on the idea, but it turned out that the Airplane were playing in Rochester the same night, and they told me the Airplane would probably come over and jam after their show was over. That was enough to get me to drive 300 miles to Rochester with four other people crammed into a Volkwagon Beetle. 

The concert started with a set by the New Riders of the Purple Sage, a psychedelic country band, with Jerry Garcia sitting in on pedal steel. I remember little of their set, other than being blown away by Garcia's playing. 

The Dead were something else. I wasn't a Deadhead when I walked into the gym, but I was after about five minutes of Cold Rain and Snow, their first song. That's all it took. I've heard of people becoming heroin addicts on their first shot. The Dead's music was like that. It hit your mind, your body, and your soul, and filled them all with joy.

I don't remember a lot of the concert, due to the mists of time and various substances consumed that night. I do remember being able to get right up close to the band as they were playing in a gym on a low, makeshift stage. I remember dancing - you could not sit still during a Grateful Dead concert. I remember the third set (or maybe an extended second set) with Jorma Kaukonen from the Airplane. It finally ended sometime around 2:00 a.m. Word was that the Airplane wanted to do a set, but the university security people shut them down. Considering the concert had started around 7:30 the previous evening, I can't really blame them.


(I am pretty sure this picture is from the Palestra concert-note the basketball hoop. Jorma is just to Bob Weir's left).

The Dead became a part of my life that night, and never left. I'm listening to an episode of the Good Ol' Grateful Deadcast as I type this, an episode about the recording of American Beauty which had just been released in November 1970. And I become a tape trader and amassed a sizeable collection of concert recordings. Their music became the soundtrack to my life.

I saw them eight times. Each concert was different and each was magic in its own way. Their July 4, 1986 concert in Buffalo was probably responsible for my current marriage, as Nancy was one of the group I drove down to Buffalo with, and it was the first time I really got to know her. 

Thanks to the magic of Maxell (or maybe it was Ampex) and the bearded guy with the reel-to-reel tape deck in the middle of the floor, a tape of the concert survives and you can download or stream it from the Grateful Dead's section of the Internet Live Music Archive. By modern standards, it's not the greatest quality recording and there are cuts and dropouts, but it's good enough. There's a review of the show here that describes it as "raw and thrilling", which is pretty accurate. It probably won't change your life the way it changed mine, but you might get lucky.

 "Once in a while you get shown the light in the strangest of places if you look at it right." - Grateful Dead - Scarlet Begonias




How to Avoid Social Media Phishing Scams

I'm sure most of us are aware of how to avoid email phishing attacks (at least, those of us who still use email). But phishing also occurs on social media platforms. Here's a good article on what to watch out for on platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn. 

Facebook is the third most commonly impersonated brand for phishing attacks. With over 2.6 billion users worldwide, it’s easy to see why. The platform offers a plethora of profiles and messages teeming with personal information for phishers to exploit.

Attacks on Facebook are often targeted towards consumers and not as much on big organizations. Phishers use social engineering to lure unsuspecting victims into exposing their data.

They will pretend to be from Facebook and send emails to users about a security alert, for example. From there, users are instructed to log in to their Facebook profiles and change their password. They’re then sent to a fake Facebook login page where their credentials are harvested.

Thursday, November 19, 2020

Arecibo To Be Decommissioned

After 60 years of service, the giant Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico will be decommissioned after a series of cable failures rendered it inoperable and unsafe to repair. The news was announced today, and from what I can see on my social media feeds, it has been met with a chorus of sadness.  

Also, after the incident engineers determined the weight it bore was only at 60% of its minimum breaking strength, and it was a calm day (no wind). Apparently the problems in the cable were deeper than suspected. This also raises concerns that the remaining 11 cables may be worn more than previously thought. No one knows if the other cables are damaged or not, or if they can carry the designed load for much longer.

After consideration and an investigation by an engineering team, the NSF concluded that there is no way to fix these problems while still maintaining the safety of any crew who would do the work. Stabilizing or replacing the cable may also accelerate the collapse. The NSF therefore decided to decommission the telescope.

It's not clear what might have damaged the cables. They were very old, and moisture seeping in over the years may have contributed to the problem. Also, Puerto Rico has been battered by hurricanes which strain the structure, and a series of earthquakes near the observatory struck late in 2019 as well. Any or all of these may have been part of the issue.

While it's possible that a new telescope could be built on the same site, there's currently no funding in place to do that. Given the anti-science mood that seems to be prevalent these days, I'm not holding my breath.  

How the Pandemic Has Changed Life In Toronto

The pandemic has had a huge effect on all of our lives. That's especially true in Toronto. Using statistics from Google, the folks at BlogTo.com have been able to quantify some of the effects

The ways in which we all get around, procure food and spend our leisure time in particular have all seen significant shifts since the pandemic first hit in March, according to newly-released data from Google Maps

"The world has changed in 2020, and so has the way that we navigate it. From where we spend our time to how we get there - and everything in between," wrote the tech company in a release announcing its findings.

"As we head into the final months of 2020, Google Maps dove into Popular Times, traffic and search data to see where and how Torontonians have changed their patterns during the pandemic (March 2020 - October 2020)."

First up, transportation: Google saw a 53 per cent uptick in people looking at "cycling directions" for map routes, year over year, compared to the same time period in 2019.

This is, perhaps, unsurprising to people who regularly hit the roads, as bike traffic has been increasing not only since the pandemic, but steadily for more than a decade alongside a booming population and worsening congestion.

I suspect that many of the changes outlined in the article would be common to most large cities, especially in Canada.  

Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Why COBOL Is Still Around

Although the most popular computer languages are relatively modern, like JavaScript, C#, C++, Go, and PHP, many of the world's largest financial systems run on COBOL, which has been around since the 1960s. There are good reasons for that, as this article points out

There are an estimated 240 billion lines of COBOL out there, and they're the backbone of your financial life — 95% of the time when you swipe your bank card, there's COBOL involved, and every night when the work-day is over, the massive mainframe farms of big banks leap into action, using COBOL to balance the day's books.

Why is COBOL — which debuted in 1969 — still so crucial to everyday life? The online finance magazine Wealthsimple asked me to write about that, so I talked to tons of COBOL folks, including some programmers who wrote bank routines in the 1980s that are still being used today — they're long retired, in their 70s, and their banks still call them up to ask them to maintain the stuff.

There are lots of reasons COBOL's still around, but one that's intriguing is that three-decade-old code is stable as hell. You have code in production that long, it's been debugged within an inch of its life; and they've had decades to tweak the compilers — which turn the COBOL into instructions for the machine — for massive efficiency.

This turns the new-new-thing hype of Silicon Valley on its head, of course. It's a sector obsessed with the hottest, latest thing — but as any programmer can tell you, the hottest, latest thing that just got shipped at 2 am is gonna be a rickety kluge of buggy code. That old COBOL, though? In service since the days of early MTV? It's tough as old boots.

During my time as a technical writer, I've been involved in several projects that aimed to either replace COBOL code, or bolt on a snazzy new front end written in the hot language of the day. Guess what. That legacy code is still running, although the mainframe may have been replaced by more modern hardware and the front-end software has been rewritten or replaced several times.

How The Atlantic Fact-Checks Articles

I've been reading The Atlantic on and off for a long time and this year I've read almost all of their excellent pandemic coverage (which they have generously put outside of their paywall). Recently, a friend gifted me a subscription, so I can now read more than a handful of other articles each month. 

Why do I read The Atlantic? One reason is that they hire great writers and their articles are almost always eminently readable. Another reason is their journalistic reputation. They have a well-deserved reputation for accuracy, and their articles are thoroughly fact-checked. 

And I do mean thoroughly. Here's an article that explains how one fact-checker worked on an article about ISIS in 2015. As a technical writer/editor, I'm used to checking that my work, or material that I edit, is accurate, but this is a whole other level of work.

  1. Get familiar with the material. I read the piece a few times and educate myself on the topic. Then the author either annotates the piece with sources in footnotes or simply walks me through it. This gives me a sense of how the piece was put together: What or who are the sources? Who might be difficult or sensitive to deal with? What did the author read? Then I ask the most important question: What is the author most worried about? Often it is the understandable fear that a highly sensitive source might not want to cooperate with the checking process. More on that soon.
  2. Break down the piece with a red pencil. Every checker has a different system but I’m old-fashioned and still work on paper. I format the piece with wide margins so I can clearly keep track of which source is responsible for which fact. Months later, I need to be able to see the backup for everything. I then underline all the facts that have to be checked in red pencil. Proper names are highlighted. Legal sections are noted in red marker with lots of circled stars to indicate a need for triple-checking. Anything that I have confirmed gets a check mark through it—and, oh, the lovely satisfaction of making a check mark! The checked text disappears into the background, allowing me to focus on the lingering unchecked text. If I’m worried about a detail and want to discuss with the author, I’ll highlight it in yellow, and list possible solutions on a sticky note. After Graeme and I agreed on a change, I circled it with a red pen.

It goes on through seven steps. 

I can't imagine how the author and other fact-checkers and editors at The Atlantic must feel when their magazine is described as "fake news". 

Tuesday, November 17, 2020

The Last Dangerous Visions, Finally?

J. Michael Straczynski, acting as the executor for the estate of Harlan and Susan Ellison, has announced that The Last Dangerous Visions will be submitted to publishers in April 2021. 

This is a major piece of news for the science fiction field. The Last Dangerous Visions was to be the third in a series of ground-breaking anthologies edited by Harlan Ellison. The first two, Dangerous Visions and Again Dangerous Visions were published to great acclaim in 1967 and 1972, respectively, but the third volume never appeared. 

In an open Patreon post, Straczynski said:

Over a hundred stories written in the early 1970s were slated to be part of TLDV. As the years passed, a number of them were withdrawn by the writers and published elsewhere, and it makes no sense to republish stories that are otherwise available. Some of the remaining stories have been overtaken by real-world events, rendering them less relevant or timely, and regrettably will be omitted, but many more are as innovative, fresh and, in some ways, even more relevant now than when they were first written. These are rich, compelling stories by some of the best known science fiction and fantasy writers to work in the genre that deserve to be seen by the world.

The rights to the few stories from the original batch that will not be included in this volume will be freely and formally returned to the writers and/or their estates so that they can be allowed to see the light of day elsewhere.

Previously unseen artwork by the phenomenal Tim Kirk commissioned for the original volume

He will also be soliciting new stories from a wide range of authors to appear in the anthology. It will be interesting to see how the stories originally submitted almost fifty years ago compare with the newer stories. 

This will probably be a major publishing event and some publishers have already indicated interest in the project. I will certainly buy it as soon as it becomes available.  

Straczynski is soliciting contributions to help defray costs of getting the anthology ready for publication. See his Patreon post for details.

So if there are any fans of Harlan’s work or SF in general who would like to help defray some of those costs in return for the exclusive opportunity to see The Last Dangerous Visions come together in real-time, there is a tier here that will only remain online for five months, through April, when the book is slated to be completed. 

Patrons will be the first to know the names of the authors contributing to TLDV, first to see partial manuscripts and story excerpts before the book is published, and will be given peeks at Tim Kirk’s amazing art. Beat by beat, they (and other Patrons operating at that level or above) will be a part of the process of finishing one of the most discussed and eagerly anticipated books in the history of modern science fiction.

It starts right here, right now, today.


Text-Mode News Sites

I have been reading news on the CNN website rather more than usual recently and find the experience less than enjoyable (especially on my phone) due to the autoloading videos and annoying ads. It turns out that there's a solution. 

CNN has a text-only version of their website. Open the page and you get only a list of hyperlinked stories. Each story opens in a text-only page. It's wonderful.

NPR has an equivalent text-only site that works exactly the same way. 

I assume that these sites were created for visually-impaired users who rely on screen readers or for users with severe bandwidth limitations.

This page has a list of news sites that have text-only versions as well as instructions on how to use your browser's reader mode (assuming your browser has one). 

I am surprised that more major sites don't have text-only versions. It would be simple enough to set up in a content management system. They could even include text-only ads. 

Thanks to the excellent Recomendo newsletter for the tip.


Monday, November 16, 2020

Interview with Charlie Stross

One of my favourite authors, Charlie Stross, has a new book out. Dead Lies Dreaming is set in the same alternate history fantasy setting as his other Laundry Files books, but with a new set of characters that aren't part of the Laundry.

If you're baffled by what I'm saying, then read this interview with Stross

Santa is being shackled to a cross outside Hamley’s Toy Shop on London’s Regent Street by four elven warriors who are intent on executing him in the first paragraph of Edinburgh author Charlie Stross’ new novel.

The gruesome scene opens his latest novel, Dead Lies Dreaming, in which the parallels between the dystopian world of the writer’s Laundry Files novels and the one we find ourselves living in today are disturbingly familiar. It’s a point not lost on the Broughton-based sci-fi author, but then the action and characters in his books are “extrapolated from our current lived reality”, he explains.

 Dead Lies Dreaming is set in a grimly dystopian future where magic is widely accessible and a government called the New Management bears as much ill-will as some of the nastier Tories, except they are competent, and yet, people are reading it as consolatory escapist fiction because our current reality is so horrible. That is the scariest part of it for me,” says Stross, adding, “Imagine what the consequences would be if magic was a thing that was accessible and all the horrible ways it could go wrong. For example, can you imagine if Boris Johnston had the magical power to compel people to believe everything he said at least for 15 minutes?”

Set in the world Stross established in his award-winning Laundry Files series, Dead Lies Dreaming, a political satire, is a great jumping on point for anyone unfamiliar with the previous books in the series and like those that have gone before, it’s written for an adult audience.

I have read almost everything Stross has published and certainly will be reading Dead Lies Dreaming at some point. If Lovecraftian fantasy isn't to your taste, I highly recommend his alternate-history Merchant Princes series, which has a solid grounding in history and economics. 

The Best Science Writer in America

Ed Yong, a staff writer for The Atlantic, is the best science writer in America right now. His continuing series of articles about the pandemic is essential reading if you want to understand the progress of the pandemic–not just what is happening, but why.

I was happy to find out that he has a personal website where most of his articles are collected. I hadn't realized just how much he's written and how widely. There are articles for National Geographic, Scientific American, New Scientist, Aeon, Wired, and the New York Times, to name a few. 

There are also links to talks and interviews that he's given and much else to browse through.

If you haven't read any of his work yet, you are missing out on some of the best science writing today. Here are links to a few (non-pandemic) articles that piqued my interest.

Sunday, November 15, 2020

Crew-1 Abort Modes

With NASA's Crew-1 mission scheduled to launch this evening, I thought it appropriate to post a link to this article that describes the various abort modes for the mission. These would be used in case of a booster failure just before launch or during ascent to orbit.


With each new crew launch from the U.S. comes the inevitable questions: Why all the weather rules?  What are the vehicle’s abort modes and how will it perform a launch abort and aim itself to a predetermined location in the Atlantic Ocean stretching from the Kennedy Space Center across to the western Irish coast?

The Crew-1 mission of SpaceX’s Dragon 2 capsule is contending with these questions, with its launch already delayed from Saturday because of weather.  The mission is currently set to launch at 19:27 EST (00:27 UTC) on Sunday, 15 November (Monday, 16 November UTC) from LC-39A in Florida to bring Mike Hopkins, Victor Glover, Shannon Walker, and Soichi Noguchi to the International Space Station.

Why do NASA, the 45th Space Wing of the Space Force, their safety officers, and all launch providers make such a big deal about the weather?  Who cares if it’s raining 18 km from the pad when the safety rules say rain cannot be closer than 18.5 km?  Isn’t that close enough?

The answers to these questions lie in U.S. rocket history and the sometimes painful ways we have learned the lessons of what happens when launch officers don’t listen to the weather and what the vehicle is built to handle.

Featured Links - November 15, 2020

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

Saturday, November 14, 2020

The Merril Collection At 50

This year is the 50th anniversary of the Merril Collection of Science Fiction, Speculation and Fantasy (originally the Spaced Out Library), one of the Toronto  Public Library's special collections. 

Because of the pandemic, there won't be an official ceremony, but the TPL website has put together a collection of anecdotes and memories from some of the librarians. 

What is the strangest or most memorable patron request you ever received?

Lorna: On my first day of work, a patron ran in and demanded "that book you have on UFOs, with the chart so that people can distinguish between the ones with round lights and the ones with square lights." Other memorable questions included the Madonna of Lourdes as a UFO phenomenon, the possibility of pregnancy for vampires, Victorian era fiction involving carnivorous plants, transhumanism, etc. A recurring favourite question was the quest for H.P. Lovecraft's Necronomicon. Apocryphal books were always in demand. 

People tend not to remember the authors or titles of short stories. More patrons than I could count over the years wanted to know the title of the short story where someone travels back in time to hunt a dinosaur and kills a butterfly and everything changes. "The Sound of Thunder" by Ray Bradbury was probably the most requested short story ever.

I should note that my wife, Nancy, worked there as a library technician for a couple of years before we had our first child. We were both part of the Building Committee that helped plan the new library where the collection now resides. We visit there every chance we get and I encourage you to do the same once the pandemic settles down. 

Friday, November 13, 2020

An Ode to Brokedown Palace

Of all the songs performed by the Grateful Dead, "Brokedown Palace" may be the most poignant. Written by Robert Hunter, the Dead's lyricist one afternoon in London, it first appeared on their album, American Beauty, 50 years ago this month.

Here's a fine article about the song from Here Comes the Song

The broken palace is our fallen, material world away from which the narrator crawls on hand and knee, a metaphor for his impending death. Participants in the recording of American Beauty remark on the mournfulness hanging over the sessions. Garcia, who composed the music, had just lost his mother, and Phil Lesh, the bassist, had only recently sat with his dying father. A key to the Dead’s allure, both on vinyl and on stage, was their ability to intermingle shared fears and anxieties with a numinous sense of purpose and hope, something the band members experienced themselves. Brokedown Palace evokes this magic as well as anything else the Dead performed.

The band excelled playing live and indeed built a prodigious reputation on 30 years of relentless touring. No two performances of any song were the same. The Dead’s commitment to improvisation was reason enough for varied outings, but equally important was its response to unspoken communication between the band and audience at each show. Unlike much of the band’s other live offerings, however, Brokedown Palace remained much the same. What did change was the emotional resonance of Garcia’s vocal timbre and lyrical emphases, as he and the band responded to different audiences and moments, and to the effects of their own ages and sybaritic lifestyles. Nearly all of 220 known performances were taped and can be found in the Grateful Dead section of the Internet Archive (www.archive.org).

 

Bad News for British Musicians

I've posted here before about the (possibly unintended) consequences of Brexit on the British economy. Most of what I've seen is about what's going to happen to the British economy because of the hassles of getting goods into Britain after Brexit. 

But there are problems going the other way, particularly for musicians, artists, dancers, and other creative types.

Here's a Twitter thread about how much more complicated life is going to get for British musicians who want to get gigs in Europe. 

Dear fellow musicians, performers, technicians etc. Here’s a thread about how our lives are going to change re touring/working in the EU in 50 days time. Think of it as a kind of Bad News Advent calendar. Here goes 1/

First things first, you’ll need a passport with at least 6 months left on it. And you’ll need full travel/third party/health insurance, since if you get ill or have an accident every penny of your care will have to be paid for 2/

To work or do a gig you’re going to need a work visa, just like you do for the USA. But here’s the thing. Work permits & visas and the conditions attached are a matter not for the EU but for the member states themselves 3/

Yes, every member state controls who comes in and who doesn’t and what the rules will be for work and residency. It’s almost as if the Brexiters have been lying about this ALL ALONG. EU members CONTROL THEIR OWN BORDERS 4/

So you’ll need to get a work permit for every country you’re intending to work or gig in and the rules are often different, as are the rules on eg taxation of that work (eg Spain has a withholding tax, France does not) 5/

It goes on and it gets worse - what if you are a band travelling with your own equipment or a classical musician travelling with an instrument? The paperwork required is ... insane.

The British government has been making noises about how things will be better for the British fisheries industry. The music and arts industry, in economic terms, is more than an order of magnitude larger than fisheries, and they've made life exponentially more difficult for them. 

 

 

 

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Word Gets a New Design Feature

Microsoft has added another feature to the online version of Word. It's called Designer and is based on the tool of the same name that's been part of Powerpoint for some time. It's a partially automated way of improving the layout of your document by applying formatting from a template suggested by Designer. 

Office Watch has an article that describes Designer and has some tips on how to get the most out of it. Based on the article, it sounds like Designer has some features that might make it easier for unskilled users to produce a clean-looking document. 

In all our tests of Word Designer, the same dozen templates kept appearing.  At the moment, Designer is merely a showcase for a very limited set of templates.

That makes it very different to PowerPoint Designer which takes the current content and suggests slide designs based on that content. There are underlying slide templates but there’s a least variation and machine intelligence involved.

No matter what we tried, all Word Designer offered were the same twelve templates.

Users have to apply their own structure (Headings, sub-headings and Normal text) for Word Designer to have any effect.  The top line of a document is assumed to be ‘Heading 1’ but beyond that, styles need the human touch.  Keep in mind with the impressive demos (that are sure to come) that the document needs formatting structure first.

Formatting Fixes is a good idea for enforcing structure and a welcome new tool.

Designer isn't yet available on my Word Online so I wasn't able to test it myself.  I'll try it again at some point and will update this post or write a proper review. 

Wednesday, November 11, 2020

Track Your Risk of Getting COVID-19 at an Event

Scientists at the Georgia Institute of Technology have created an interactive map that lets residents of the United States and some European countries track the risk of contracting COVID-19 at a gathering or event in their area. From the IFLScience article about the tool:

The risk level is estimated by working out the chance of at least one Covid-19 positive individual attending an event in a county given the size of the event. The information is all backed up by data obtained via serological surveys from each population to estimate real-time circulating infection rates.

“The site estimates the risk that one (or more than 20) individuals may have Covid-19 in events of different sizes. Which means that it's up to us to take steps to reduce that risk, by reconsidering attending events, physical distancing, or wearing a mask when physical distancing is not feasible,” they added. 

So, for example, let’s take a look at a few different locations. You’ll see that the current risk (as of November 10, 2020) of attending a small event of 10 people in Norton County in Kansas is over 99 percent, according to the map. That means there’s over a 99 percent chance that someone attending that event has Covid-19. Alternatively, currently attending an event of 50 people at Palm Beach County in Florida is 56 percent, meaning there’s a 56 percent chance that someone attending that event has Covid-19. 

Some of my US and European might find this useful. It's possible that they will update it to include Canadian data at some point, but in the meantime, if anyone reading this knows about a Canadian equivalent, please post a link in the comments. 

Why Machine Learning Won't Generate General AI

It's been a common trope in science fiction that a general AI, that is, an artificial intelligence that can understand the context of what it's looking at, will arise out of our current machine learning tech. (Let's leave the question of consciousness out of this for the moment). 

In his latest Locus column, Cory Doctorow has some thoughts on this and why it won't happen that are worth reading.  

Machine learning operates on quantitative elements of a system, and quantizes or discards any qualita­tive elements. And because it is theory-free – that is, because it has no understanding of the causal relationships between the correlates it identifies – it can’t know when it’s making a mistake.

The role this deficit plays in magnifying bias has been well-theorized and well-publicized by this point: feed a hiring algorithm the resumes of previously successful candidates and you will end up hiring people who look exactly like the people you’ve hired all along; do the same thing with a credit-assessment system and you’ll freeze out the same people who have historically faced financial discrimination; try it with risk-assessment for bail and you’ll lock up the same people you’ve always slammed in jail before trial. The only difference is that it happens faster, and with a veneer of empirical facewash that provides plausible deniability for those who benefit from discrimination.

But there’s another important point to make here – the same point I made in “Full Employment” in July 2020: there is no path of continuous, incremental improvement in statistical inference that yields understanding and synthesis of the sort we think of when we say “artificial intelligence.” Being able to calculate that Inputs a, b, c… z add up to Outcome X with a probability of 75% still won’t tell you if arrest data is racist, whether students will get drunk and breathe on each other, or whether a wink is flirtation of grit in someone’s eye.

We don’t have any consensus on what we meant by “intelligence,” but all the leading definitions include “comprehension,” and statistical infer­ence doesn’t lead to comprehension, even if it sometimes approximates it.

 

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

Could We Have a Fusion Reactor by 2025?

Commercial fusion reactors are one of those things that are always 30 to 50 years ahead. They've been that way since the 1970s and nothing has changed much, at least until just recently.

A new design being developed at MIT could be in use by 2025, according to this article. That would put it 20 years ahead of the ITER project, which has been underway in France for close to 20 years. 

If it succeeds, SPARC would be the first device to ever achieve a "burning plasma," in which the heat from all the fusion reactions keeps fusion going without the need to pump in extra energy. But no one has ever been able to harness the power of burning plasma in a controlled reaction here  on Earth, and more research is needed before SPARC can do so. The SPARC project, which launched in 2018, is scheduled to begin construction next June, with the reactor starting operations in 2025. This is far faster than the world's largest fusion power project, known as the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), which was conceived in 1985 but not launched until 2007; and although construction began in 2013, the project is not expected to generate a fusion reaction until 2035.

One advantage that SPARC may have over ITER is that SPARC's magnets are designed to confine its plasma. SPARC will use so-called high-temperature superconducting magnets that only became commercially available in the past three to five years, long after ITER was first designed. These new magnets can produce far more powerful magnetic fields than ITER's — a maximum of 21 teslas, compared with ITER's maximum of 12 teslas. (In comparison, Earth's magnetic field ranges in strength from 30 millionths to 60 millionths of a tesla.)

It does sound promising, but many other projects have made extravagant claims that never materialized. 

Monday, November 09, 2020

How the Ballpoint Pen Changed Writing

I'm old enough to have learned how to write using pencils and fountain pens. Our desks in grade school had inkwells. And we used blotting paper - look it up. 

Ballpoint pens were available then, but too expensive for school kids. I still used a cartridge-based fountain pen when I was in university for formal work, although by that point cheap Bic pens were ubiquitous. And I lusted after the silver Parker pen that was featured in 2001: A Space Odyssey. (I have on now, and it's my favourite pen still). 

The BBC has an article about the history of ballpoint pens that I found quite interesting. I hadn't realized that they go all the way back to World War 2, for example. According to the author they changed writing much the way smartphones have done in our time. 

The new pen had an equally dramatic effect on the act of writing itself, says David Sax, the Canadian journalist who wrote the book The Revenge of Analog. “The ballpoint pen was the equivalent of today’s smartphone. Before then, writing was a stationary act that had to be done in a certain environment, on a certain kind of desk, with all these other things to hand that allowed you to write.

“What the ballpoint pen did was to make writing something that could happen anywhere. I’ve written in snow and rain, on the back of an ATV and in a boat at sea and in the middle of the night,” says Sax. Biros don’t drain batteries, they don’t require plugging in in the middle of nowhere, and even the tightest pocket can accommodate them. “It only fails if it runs out of ink,” Sax adds.

Sunday, November 08, 2020

Featured Links - November 8, 2020

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


Saturday, November 07, 2020

Well, That Was Interesting

So Joe Biden will be the next president of the United States. That is something for which I am profoundly glad. 

I've made no secret here and elsewhere of what I think about Donald Trump and his regime; I believe that as the histories are written, he will be regarded as the worst president in the history of the United States. He and his enablers have done damage to the people of the United States, their environment, their political and judicial systems, and their society that may take a generation to heal. 

All is not rosy. There is still a chance that extremist Republicans could try to steal the election by manipulating the slates chosen for the electoral college, for example. The nation is clearly deeply and almost evenly divided. The pandemic is raging and its full effects have yet to be felt. 

But Biden's win has provided something that was missing for too long: hope.

Merril Collection Has New Website

Toronto's Merril Collection of Science Fiction, Speculation, and Fantasy is one of the world's premiere libraries for the SFF field. It was originally founded based on a donation of Judith Merril's private collection, then known as the Space Out Library, and is now housed on the 3rd floor of the Lillian H. Smith Library in Toronto.


(The two dragons at the front entrance are name after Judy Merril and Lillian Smith. The one with the claws is Judy).

The library is a reference library with closed stacks so you can't just go in and browse the collection, but the friendly librarians there will be happy to bring out books that you are interested in. They also have a circulating collection as part of the branch library that they're housed in, as well as displays of rare books, fannish material, and art. 

Toronto Public Library has recently upgraded the Merril Collection's website and it's worth a look. You can search through lists of some of their materials, like graphic novels, and browse through scanned copies of some especially rare material. 

Friday, November 06, 2020

The Expanding Role of Technical Communication

In over 30 years of working as a technical writer, I've seen many changes in the role. Some of these were technological (desktop publishing, XML, the internet), while others involved learning how to deal with new methodologies (structured authoring, DITA, content management). 

And the changes keep coming. This article summarizes some of them and points out how technical communicators have the skills to take on a variety of roles in the new content ecology. For example:

  • Content Operations: Tools, Workflows, Management
  • Content Engineering: Structure, Platform, Semantics
  • Content Strategy: Audience, Messaging, Segmentation, Calendar, and Audit
  • Analyst: BA, Requirements
  • Content Design: Conversational Design, Information Architecture, User Experience
  • Product: Sales Engineer, Product Manager, Product Marketing and Product Training
  • New Forms of Writing: Microcopy, Linked Data and Semantic Writing, Conversational Dialogues
  • Artificial Intelligence (AI): Natural Language Processing, Natural-Language Generation, and Machine Learning. 

There's a fair bit of corporate-speak to wade through in the article but it does make some good points. I especially like it that they consider structured authoring and object-oriented thinking as key skills.  


Keep An Eye On Denmark

I haven't seen this widely reported until yesterday, but I think it could become a major story. Denmark is planning on culling millions of minks because of a coronavirus outbreak, and this appears to be a new strain of the virus. If it spreads to humans, it could cause a second pandemic. 

Announcing the cull, the country’s prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, said 12 people were already infected with the mutated virus and mink are now considered a public health risk, based on advice from the SSI.

Prof Allan Randrup Thomsen, a virologist at the University of Copenhagen, went further, telling the Guardian on Thursday that while Denmarkwas not “on the verge of being the next Wuhan” there were risks.

“This variant can develop further, so that it becomes completely resistant, and then a vaccine does not matter. Therefore, we need to take [the mutation] out of the equation. So it’s serious.”

Thursday, November 05, 2020

More Bad Climate News From the Arctic

One of the tipping points in runaway global warming is the release of the large amounts of methane stored under the Arctic ice and in permafronst. Methane is especially dangerous because it's about 20 times as potent as carbon dioxide as a greenhouse gas. 

Now a recent expedition has detected high levels of methane in the Laptev Sea near Russia. 

Scientists have found evidence that frozen methane deposits in the Arctic Ocean – known as the “sleeping giants of the carbon cycle” – have started to be released over a large area of the continental slope off the East Siberian coast, the Guardian can reveal.

High levels of the potent greenhouse gas have been detected down to a depth of 350 metres in the Laptev Sea near Russia, prompting concern among researchers that a new climate feedback loop may have been triggered that could accelerate the pace of global heating.

The slope sediments in the Arctic contain a huge quantity of frozen methane and other gases – known as hydrates. Methane has a warming effect 80 times stronger than carbon dioxide over 20 years. The United States Geological Survey has previously listed Arctic hydrate destabilisation as one of four most serious scenarios for abrupt climate change.

The international team onboard the Russian research ship R/V Akademik Keldysh said most of the bubbles were currently dissolving in the water but methane levels at the surface were four to eight times what would normally be expected and this was venting into the atmosphere.

Wednesday, November 04, 2020

A Sad Day

Well, that is not the birthday present I was hoping for. 

I really do hope things go in Biden's favour, though given how polarized the US appears to be right now, I think we are in for a rough ride even if he wins. And if he doesn't, the US is on the road to becoming a failed state. Not this year, not next year, but eventually. 

COVID-19 and Geoengineering

As the detrimental effects of climate change become more apparent, it's likely you'll hear more talk about geoengineering – modifying the Earth on a global scale to mitigate the effects for climate change. The response to the COVID-19 pandemic is showing us that we have to look at more than just the technology when considering global scale projects. 

This article describes five key things that we can learn from our response to the pandemic. 

So what lessons might the COVID-19 crisis offer for ‘solar geoengineering’ – the idea that interventions able to reduce a fraction of incoming sunlight to the planet might be developed to mask rising temperatures? Colleagues and I explored five such lessons in a recent commentary (although here I speak only for myself).

First a caveat: COVID-19 and climate are very different challenges, although both are global crises born of exploitation of nonhuman nature. Global warming is more long term and an entire Earth system out of kilter will be harder to govern than a rogue virus. But emergency responses to both global threats will have to navigate some of the same kinds of uncertainty and the same emerging science-media environment. ‘Pandemic politics’ may have provided a useful glimpse of what solar geoengineering has in store.

 

Tuesday, November 03, 2020

New SF and Fantasy Books for November

If this list from Gizmodo is any indication, the publishing industry hasn't been completely shut down by the pandemic. There are quite a few new science fiction and fantasy books coming out in November. As usual, there are only a few that I'm interested in, but your mileage may vary.

  • The Alpha Enigma by W. Michael Gear
  • The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy edited by Diana Gabaldon
  • This Virtual Night by C. S. Friedman
  • The Saints of Salvation by Peter F. Hamilton 

2020 World Fantasy Award Winners Announced

Per File 770, the winners of the World Fantasy Awards for 2020 have been announced. Usually, the awards are presented at the World Fantasy Convention, but this year's announcement was virtual.

The winners for fiction were:
  • Novel: Queen of the Conquered, by Kacen Callender (Orbit)
  • Novella: Silver in the Wood, by Emily Tesh (Tor.com)
  • Short Fiction: “Read After Burning,” by Maria Dahvana Headley, (A People’s Future of the United States)
  • Anthology: New Suns: Original Speculative Fiction by People of Color, edited by Nisi Shawl (Solaris)
  • Collection: Song For the Unraveling of the World: Stories, by Brian Evenson (Coffee House Press)

Monday, November 02, 2020

I Fear For the United States

Tomorrow, Americans will go to the polls in what is almost certainly the most important election of my lifetime. Turnout is already high in advance voting and it's likely that more Americans will vote in this election than any other in modern times. 

I devoutly hope that sanity will prevail and a Trump and his regime will be soundly trounced at the polls, soundly enough that no matter what his protestations about election fraud (and he will whine, cry, and shout), there is no doubt about the outcome. 

But I have a horrible feeling that all may not go well. Too many people are living in an alternate reality and their views are deeply held.  

The longest conversation I had was with Jim Worthington, a hale 63-year-old who founded People for Trump, a large grassroots organization, and is a member of Mr. Trump’s fitness council (Mr. Worthington owns the Newtown Athletic Club). He organized the Doylestown Trump road rally because Trump supporters were tired of being labelled racists and scorned in supermarkets for wearing MAGA hats; they wanted to be loud and proud.

“I read that over 1,600 cars took part,” I said.

He snorted: They had 6,700 cars, he said, “but the media downplayed it. They said 400 cars.”

No, I said – 1,600. The conversation continued that way: Mr. Worthington would assert something, I’d question it, we’d move on. He claimed that Philadelphia’s 17 new satellite offices, where voters can hand-deliver mail-in ballots, were Democrat-only, unsupervised places in private homes; in fact, they’re in schools and public buildings, and run by state employees.

“Hey, I know a certain percentage of my employees are stealing from me, so what’s to stop someone there from saying, ‘Here’s $20, vote for Joe’?”

“What’s to stop someone from doing the same for Trump?” I countered.

“Republicans don’t cheat,” he replied.

But they lie, constantly and about everything

Born amid made-up crowd size claims and “alternative facts,” the Trump presidency has been a factory of falsehood from the start, churning out distortions, conspiracy theories and brazen lies at an assembly-line pace that has challenged fact-checkers and defied historical analogy.

But now, with the election just days away, the consequences of four years of fabulism are coming into focus as President Trump argues that the vote itself is inherently “rigged,” tearing at the credibility of the system. Should the contest go into extra innings through legal challenges after Tuesday, it may leave a public with little faith in the outcome — and in its own democracy.

The nightmarish scenario of widespread doubt and denial of the legitimacy of the election would cap a period in American history when truth itself has seemed at stake under a president who has strayed so far from the normal bounds that he creates what allies call his own reality. Even if the election ends with a clear victory or defeat for Mr. Trump, scholars and players alike say the very concept of public trust in an established set of facts necessary for the operation of a democratic society has eroded during his tenure with potentially long-term ramifications.

“You can mitigate the damage, but you can’t bring it back to 100 percent the way it was before,” said Lee McIntyre, the author of “Post-Truth” and a philosopher at Boston University. “And I think that’s going to be Trump’s legacy. I think there’s going to be lingering damage to the processes by which we vet truths for decades. People are going to be saying, ‘Oh, that’s fake news.’ The confusion between skepticism and denialism, the idea that if you don’t want to believe something, you don’t have to believe it, that’s really damaging and that’s going to last.”

That has consequences for the United States and for Canada.  

In their book Four Threats, political scientists Suzanne Mettler and Robert C. Lieberman point to four broad issues that have defined every moment of crisis in the history of American democracy: political polarization; conflict over social belonging and political status along lines of race, gender, nationality or religion; high and growing economic inequality which spurs the wealthy to protect their own interests; and excessive executive power. Only now, they argue, have all four of those threats been active at the same time.

There are reasons to believe the Canadian democratic system is better designed and more durable than that of the United States. But no system is foolproof — and centralization of executive power and the overbearing nature of party discipline are longstanding concerns in Canada.

 It's not obvious that our institutions and media would respond effectively to a populist authoritarian leading one of the country's major political parties and trampling democratic norms and rules at will. For that matter, it's fair to ask how well our political system has responded to challenges over the past decade — everything from aggressive parliamentary tactics like prorogation and omnibus legislation to policies that specifically target immigrants and ethnic minorities.

If public cynicism is a concern, there was some solace in survey results released this week by the Samara Centre for Democracy — which found that 80 per cent of Canadians are satisfied with the state of democracy in this country. But significant skepticism remains: 63 per cent of those surveyed agreed that the "government doesn't care what people like me think," while 70 per cent said that "those elected to Parliament soon lose touch with the people."

Canada is not necessarily immune to any of the forces that might be driving what has happened to the United States, including polarization.

As Mettler and Lieberman write, differences across political parties can be good and healthy. There's a downside to fetishizing centrism or bi-partisanship. But the system can start to break down when politicians and citizens view each other as enemies rather than rivals.

What all this boils down to is that too many people have constructed a worldview (or bought into a worldview that has been constructed for them) that doesn't match the real world. A society that ignores climate change, environmental degradation and pollution, science and the scientific method, the effects of economic inequality, and the ways in which a highly contagious virus spreads, cannot last. I am very afraid that the rot has spread so deeply and so far that the foundations of U.S. society will collapse. That will not be good for Canada or for the world.