Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Happy New Year!

moon and milky way over beach

If you celebrate the turning of the year today, then Happy New Year! May it find you happy and well, make you so if you aren't now, and keep you thus until it ends.


Saale Nao Mubbarak
Gelukkig Nieuw Jaar
Antum salimoun (اجمل التهاني بمناسبة الميلا و حلول السنة الجديدة)
Shuvo Nabo Barsho
Nedeleg laouen ha bloavezh mat
Schastliva Nova Godyna! (Щастлива Нова Година)
Z novym godam i Kalyadmi! ( З Новым годам i Калядамi)
Gung hay fat choy! Sun nien fai lok!
Chu Shen Tan
Blwyddyn Newydd Dda
Scastny Novy Rok
Godt Nytår
Gelukkig Nieuwjarr!
Head uut aastat!
Aide shoma mobarak (كرسمس مبارک سال نو مبارک)
Onnellista Uutta Vuotta
Bonne Année
Bliadhna Mhath Ur don a h-uile duine
Prosit Neujahr
Kenourios Chronos
Hauoli Makahiki Hou
L'Shannah Tovah (חג מולד שמח ושנה טובה)
Krisamas aur nav varṣ saṃgalamay ho (क्रिसमस और नव वर्ष मंगलमय हो)
Selamat Tahun Baru
Sanah Jadidah
Bliain nua fe mhaise dhuit
Felice anno nuovo
Akemashite Omedetou Gozaimasu
Xin nian hao
Godt Nyttår
Manigong Bagong Taon
Szczesliwego Nowego Roku
Feliz Ano Novo
Karisama te navāṃ sāl khuśiyāṃvālā hove (ਕਰਿਸਮ ਤੇ ਨਵਾੰ ਸਾਲ ਖੁਸ਼ਿਯਾੰਵਾਲਾ ਹੋਵੇ)
An nou ferict - La Multi Ani
S Novim Godom (с новым годом)
Sretna nova godina (Сређна Нова Година)
Nayou Saal Mubbarak Hoje
Subha Aluth Awrudhak Vewa
Próspero año nuevo!
Gott nytt år!
Manigong bagong taon
Eniya Puthandu Nalvazhthukkal
Sawadee Pee Mai (เมอรี่คริสต์มาส และสวัสดีปีใหม่)
Yiliniz Kutlu Olsun
Shchastlyvoho Novoho Roku (Щастлівого Нового Року)
Naya Saal Mubbarak Ho (نايا سال مبارک هو)
Chúc Năm Mới Tốt Lành

Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

By their writing?

So, I saw this quiz on Facebook - Can you identify these 11 languages by their writing? Could be interesting, I thought. But then the questions were like this: "This is a West Semitic language of the Afroasiatic language family. What written language is this? Hebrew, Slovenian, Thai"

Wut? I don't even need to see the writing to answer that.

Or else this: What language is this? Comment allez-vous aujourd'hui French, Italian, Spanish

Guess what? No way to tell from the writing system!

Labels: , ,

2 Comments:

At 12:06 PM, December 31, 2014 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

Sigh... I don't suppose any of the examples (or even any of the multiple-choice distracters) was Portuguese, even though it's the third most-spoken European language in the world.

 
At 8:47 AM, January 01, 2015 Blogger The Ridger, FCD had this to say...

Portuguese was a distractor.

I should also note that at least some of the examples were letters, possibly words, but written in the wrong direction (left to right instead of right to left) and with independent rather than joined forms. Though since the quiz was on the writing system, not the language, I suppose that's excusable.

Here's the link if you want to take it.

 

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Why the difference?

Ari Kohen looks at two similar but different - "totally different" - cases of men with BB guns in Wal*Marts:
In the case in Ohio, the guy was just walking around with an unloaded airsoft rifle and someone called the police, who arrived and immediately shot him to death. In this case, the guys were drunk and actually shooting the guns in the store … and they were calmly, appropriately arrested by police.

So, what accounts for the difference?

I'll guess we'll never know.
Yeah. I guess.

Labels: , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Sunday, December 28, 2014

The Week in Entertainment

Flim: The Imitation Game, which is brilliantly done. Maybe not an accurate portrayal of Turing, I wouldn't know, maybe with a few details changed or moved about in time, but a fascinating film. Into the Woods, also splendid.

TV: The Christmas Story (of course). And The Last Christmas, this year's Doctor Who special. It reminded me a bit of "Amy's Choice" though not as good or as ... portentous. And I wasn't best pleased with the very end of it. (spoilers!)(no, River Song did not show up, thank goodness)\

Read: Spider Circus, first in a planned four-book series and very good. Mystery in White, a 1937 mystery set at Christmas. Began The Goblin Emperor, which is downright mesmerizing.

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

A few winter birds

In the woods and at the marina:

Red-bellied woodpecker
see text

A pair of cardinals
see text

see text

Song sparrow
see text

Phoebe
see text

Robins
see text

see text

Tufted titmouse
see text

White-breasted nuthatch
see text

Coots
see text

Killdeer
see text

Canada geese
see text

Herring gull
see text

Buzzards, aka turkey vultures
see text

see text

see text

see text

Labels: ,

1 Comments:

At 3:30 PM, December 31, 2014 Anonymous Mark P had this to say...

Nice bird shots. The buzzards look like the ones who perch on a water tower near us.

 

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Object lesson

Naming your business after your religion to either push it on others or demonstrate your tribal solidarity is an apparently extremely tempting thing. Here's a graphic demonstration of why that's not such a good thing. Even the photographer called this (#17 in his gallery) "Trust in God Crash":

truck labeled Trust In God Transportation crushes woman against barrier

Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Titmouse

Some, I think, nice shots of a tufted titmouse this afternoon:

tufted titmouse

tufted titmouse

tufted titmouse

tufted titmouse

Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Thursday, December 25, 2014

Ho ho ho

From the sublime to...

Einstein as Santa, mc2=e merry Christmas 2 everyone

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Glad Tidings

Here is Annie Lennox for your Christmas listening:

Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Winter Solstice, Camelot Station

holly

This is one of my favorite poems of all time.
Enjoy it and the day...

Winter Solstice, Camelot Station

John M. Ford


Camelot is served
By a sixteen-track stub terminal done in High Gothick Style,
The tracks covered by a single great barrel-vaulted glass roof framed upon iron,
At once looking back to the Romans and ahead to the Brunels.
Beneath its rotunda, just to the left of the ticket windows,
Is a mosaic floor depicting the Round Table
(Where all knights, regardless of their station of origin
Or class of accommodation, are equal),
And around it murals of knightly deeds in action
(Slaying dragons, righting wrongs, rescuing maidens tied to the tracks).
It is the only terminal, other than Gare d'Avalon in Paris,
To be hung with original tapestries,
And its lavatories rival those at the Great Gate of Kiev Central.
During a peak season such as this, some eighty trains a day pass through,
Five times the frequency at the old Londinium Terminus,
Ten times the number the Druid towermen knew.
(The Official Court Christmas Card this year displays
A crisp black-and-white Charles Clegg photograph from the King's own collection.
Showing a woad-blued hogger at the throttle of "Old XCVII,"
The Fast Mail overnight to Eboracum. Those were the days.)
The first of a line of wagons have arrived,
Spilling footmen and pages in Court livery,
And old thick Kay, stepping down from his Range Rover,
Tricked out in a bush coat from Swaine, Adeney, Brigg,
Leaning on his shooting stick as he marshalls his company,
Instructing the youngest how to behave in the station,
To help mature women that they may encounter,
Report pickpockets, gather up litter,
And of course no true Knight of the Table Round (even in training)
Would do a station porter out of Christmas tips.
He checks his list of arrival times, then his watch
(A moon-phase Breguet, gift from Merlin):
The seneschal is a practical man, who knows trains do run late,
And a stolid one, who sees no reason to be glad about it.
He dispatches pages to posts at the tracks,
Doling out pennies for platform tickets,
Then walks past the station buffet with a dyspeptic snort,
Goes into the bar, checks the time again, orders a pint.
The patrons half turn--it's the fella from Camelot, innit?
And Kay chuckles soft to himself, and the Court buys a round.
He's barely halfway when a page tumbles in,
Seems the knights are arriving, on time after all,
So he tips the glass back (people stare as he guzzles),
Then plonks it down hard with five quid for the barman,
And strides for the doorway (half Falstaff, half Hotspur)
To summon his liveried army of lads.

* * *

Bors arrives behind steam, riding the cab of a heavy Mikado.
He shakes the driver's hand, swings down from the footplate,
And is like a locomotive himself, his breath clouding white,
Dark oil sheen on his black iron mail,
Sword on his hip swinging like siderods at speed.
He stamps back to the baggage car, slams mailed fist on steel door
With a clang like jousters colliding.
The handler opens up and goes to rouse another knight.
Old Pellinore has been dozing with his back against a crate,
A cubical, chain-bound thing with FRAGILE tags and air holes,
BEAST says the label, QUESTING, 1 the bill of lading.
The porters look doubtful but ease the thing down.
It grumbles. It shifts. Someone shouts, and they drop it.
It cracks like an egg. There is nothing within.
Elayne embraces Bors on the platform, a pelican on a rock,
Silently they watch as Pelly shifts the splinters,
Supposing aloud that Gutman and Cairo have swindled him.

A high-drivered engine in Northern Lines green
Draws in with a string of side-corridor coaches,
All honey-toned wood with stained glass on their windows.
Gareth steps down from a compartment, then Gaheris and Aggravaine,
All warmly tucked up in Orkney sweaters;
Gawaine comes after in Shetland tweed.
Their Gladstones and steamers are neatly arranged,
With never a worry--their Mum does the packing.
A redcap brings forth a curious bundle, a rude shape in red paper--
The boys did that one themselves, you see, and how does one wrap a unicorn's head?
They bustle down the platform, past a chap all in green.
He hasn't the look of a trainman, but only Gawaine turns to look at his eyes,
And sees written there Sir, I shall speak with you later.

Over on the first track, surrounded by reporters,
All glossy dark iron and brass-bound mystery,
The Direct-Orient Express, ferried in from Calais and Points East.
Palomides appears. Smelling of patchouli and Russian leather,
Dripping Soubranie ash on his astrakhan collar,
Worry darkening his dark face, though his damascene armor shows no tarnish,
He pushes past the press like a broad-hulled icebreaker.
Flashbulbs pop. Heads turn. There's a woman in Chanel black,
A glint of diamonds, liquid movements, liquid eyes.
The newshawks converge, but suddenly there appears
A sharp young man in a crisp blue suit
From the Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits,
That elegant, comfortable, decorous, close-mouthed firm;
He's good at his job, and they get not so much as a snapshot.
Tomorrow's editions will ask who she was, and whom with...

Now here's a silver train, stainless steel, Vista-Domed,
White-lighted grails on the engine (running no extra sections)
The Logres Limited, extra fare, extra fine,
(Stops on signal at Carbonek to receive passengers only).
She glides to a Timkin-borne halt (even her grease is clean),
Galahad already on the steps, flashing that winning smile,
Breeze mussing his golden hair, but not his Armani tailoring,
Just the sort of man you'd want finding your chalice.
He signs an autograph, he strikes a pose.
Someone says, loudly, "Gal! Who serves the Grail?"
He looks--no one he knows--and there's a silence,
A space in which he shifts like sun on water;
Look quick and you may see a different knight,
A knight who knows that meanings can be lies,
That things are done not knowing why they're done,
That bearings fail, and stainless steel corrodes.
A whistle blows. Snow shifts on the glass shed roof. That knight is gone.
This one remaining tosses his briefcase to one of Kay's pages,
And, golden, silken, careless, exits left.

Behind the carsheds, on the business-car track, alongside the private varnish
Of dukes and smallholders, Persian potentates and Cathay princes
(James J. Hill is here, invited to bid on a tunnel through the Pennines),
Waits a sleek car in royal blue, ex-B&O, its trucks and fittings chromed,
A black-gloved hand gripping its silver platform rail;
Mordred and his car are both upholstered in blue velvet and black leather.
He prefers to fly, but the weather was against it.
His DC-9, with its video system and Quotron and waterbed, sits grounded at Gatwick.
The premature lines in his face are a map of a hostile country,
The redness in his eyes a reminder that hollyberries are poison.
He goes inside to put on a look acceptable for Christmas Court;
As he slams the door it rattles like strafing jets.

Outside the Station proper, in the snow,
On a through track that's used for milk and mail,
A wheezing saddle-tanker stops for breath;
A way-freight mixed, eight freight cars and caboose,
Two great ugly men on the back platform, talking with a third on the ballast.
One, the conductor, parcels out the last of the coffee;
They drink. A joke about grails. They laugh.
When it's gone, the trainman pretends to kick the big hobo off,
But the farewell hug spoils the act.
Now two men stand on the dirty snow,
The conductor waves a lantern and the train grinds on.
The ugly men start walking, the new arrival behind,
Singing "Wenceslas" off-key till the other says stop.
There are two horses waiting for them. Rather plain horses,
Considering. The men mount up.
By the roundhouse they pause,
And look at the locos, the water, the sand, and the coal,
They look for a long time at the turntable,
Until the one who is King says "It all seemed so simple, once,"
And the best knight in the world says "It is. We make it hard."
They ride on, toward Camelot by the service road.

The sun is winter-low. Kay's caravan is rolling.
He may not run a railroad, but he runs a tight ship;
By the time they unload in the Camelot courtyard,
The wassail will be hot and the goose will be crackling,
Banners snapping from their towers, fir logs on the fire, drawbridge down,
And all that sackbut and psaltery stuff.
Blanchefleur is taking the children caroling tonight,
Percivale will lose to Merlin at chess,
The young knights will dally and the damsels dally back,
The old knights will play poker at a smaller Table Round.
And at the great glass station, motion goes on,
The extras, the milk trains, the varnish, the limiteds,
The Pindar of Wakefield, the Lady of the Lake,
The Broceliande Local, the Fast Flying Briton,
The nerves of the kingdom, the lines of exchange,
Running to a schedule as the world ought,
Ticking like a hot-fired hand-stoked heart,
The metal expression of the breaking of boundaries,
The boilers that turn raw fire into power,
The driving rods that put the power to use,
The turning wheels that make all places equal,
The knowledge that the train may stop but the line goes on;
The train may stop
But the line goes on.

Labels: ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Happy Holidays

Merry Christmas, Good Yule, Happy Solstice, Midwinter Joy, Happy Kwanzaa, Happy Festivus ... however you celebrate the returning light in this midwinter season, may it fill you with joy.

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Sunday, December 21, 2014

The Week in Entertainment

Movies: Night at the Museum 3: The Secret of the Tomb, which was exactly what you'd expect from the franchise and much better than 2 was. Delightful and a good solid ending to it all. The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, which was ... not so good, really. Could have done without Alfrid. Could have done with about 45 minutes less fighting. Could really have done without the tragic love triangle and the even more tragic backstory they invented for Legolas. The third time someone died ironically by having something fall on him was once too many, and the number of people distracting other people fighting for their lives by yelling their names at them was way too high. Too much broody, crazy Thorin. And why did Azog not let the elves and dwarves carve each other up before he attacked? Did like seeing Elrond and Saruman kicking butt and taking names, though.

TV: A couple of Christmas Carols - I'm not crazy about the ones where Scrooge visits the Cratchitts on Christmas. It just doesn't ring true. The Glass Slipper, with Lesley Caron - not that good a movie, if you ask me.But The Librarians was cool - Bruce Campbell as Santa! Yay! "Architecture is just art we live in. Why doesn't anyone get that?!" "Santa doesn't look like any of the pictures. But all the pictures look like Santa."

Read: Finished Greenstar Season One, including the "extras", a couple of short stories. It's really funny; can't wait for Season Two (it's released in installments in e-book format). Nothing is Impossible, a collection of 'impossible', locked-room short stories by Ed Hoch. Hunting Season (the fourth in "The Twenty-Sided Sorceress" series, ramping up to the big showdown. The Alloy of Law by Brandon Sanderson, quite good. Night Owls, a fresh take on vampires and bookstores. Murder at Mallowan Manor, one of the Libby Sarjeant mysteries.

Labels:

1 Comments:

At 11:52 PM, December 25, 2014 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

On the 25 Dec. "Jeopardy!" program, Alex let slip that he and the staff go over the clues in the morning before the show. So I now agree with you that Alex bears more responsibility than I previously thought for catching inaccuracies in the clues.

 

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->

Solstice Birds

Birds seen today and yesterday at my father's. (Yes, I'm on vacation, hence the sparse posting...) A nice selection!

A Carolina chickadee
see text

A mockingbird who lives in this holly bush
see text

A Carolina wren
see text

There are two wrens - here's one on the Christmas basket
see text

A red-bellied woodpecker
see text

A female Eastern bluebird
see text

A hermit thrush
see text

The yard was swarming with finches. Here is a pair of house finches
see text

A male house finch (red) and a juvenile, probably male, goldfinch
see text

A female house finch (the big one) and a juvenile goldfinch
see text

Three goldfinches, two adults and a streaky juvenile
see text

A handsome American goldfinch
see text

And a very nice juvenile American goldfinch
see text

Here's the female rufous-sided towhee. The male was around but I couldn't get even a halfway decent shot of him.
see text

Here's a brown thrasher
see text

And here he is with breakfast
see text

A visitor from Canada - a white-throated sparrow
see text

A male house finch
see text

A tiny female downy woodpecker
see text

Another winter visitor, a darkeyed junco
see text

A very handsome male American goldfinch
see text

Redbird! (the northern cardinal)
see text

A Carolina wren
see text

A redbellied woodpecker
see text

A song sparrow
see text

A tufted titmouse
see text

A northern (yellow-shafted) flicker
see text

And a small, plump yellow-bellied sapsucker
see text

Labels: ,

2 Comments:

At 1:26 PM, December 27, 2014 Anonymous Kathie had this to say...

Will you be participating in the annual year-end bird census (officially or otherwise)?

 
At 9:55 PM, December 27, 2014 Blogger The Ridger, FCD had this to say...

I will. It's easy - all you need to devote is 15 minutes!

 

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

     <-- Older Post                     ^ Home                    Newer Post -->