The Required Amount at the Prescribed Rate (Handcrafted From the Finest Corinthian Leather)
Dave Speculates on (Probably) the Dumbest Use of a Quantum Computer (It's All Probabilistic)
Some Things That Are Completely Different
If you're looking for some batshit crazy apocalyptic sci-fi, I highly recommend Robert Charles Wilson's novel Spin-- I won't even try to explain all the consequences of the "spin membrane" that is mysteriously placed around the earth (by a mysterious superior alien race that scientists refer to as The Hypotheticals) but the stars go out early in the book and then some very well-depicted political and psychological and scientific chaos ensues-- and the book really makes you think about time, as a concept-- the book is the first in a trilogy (but apparently the other two books are not as good, so I'm going to skip them) and if you've read or watched The Expanse series then you'll find some familiar themes-- and if you're looking for a batshit crazy surreal almost sci-fi movie, you might like I Saw the TV Glow, a mesmerizing story about two disaffected teens in the 90's who share an obsession with a strange supernatural TV show called The Pink Opaque . . . the fictional world of the show begins to bleed into the "reality" of the of Owen and Maddy's constrained suburban lives-- and Maddy's complete and utter acceptance of this alternate reality sends her on a quest to find her true identity and gender, a quest that Owen is reluctant to embark on or even comprehend-- it'sa film full of weird imagery, awkward moments, and fragmented horror.
It's Already Thursday!
Dave Carries On Carrying On
Yesterday, on the last day of 2024, the usual themes unfolded-- I was sore from my second shingles vaccine but I went and played pickleball anyway-- wearing my knee brace of course and some KT tape on my Achilles tendon-- and I'm glad I went because even though I was a little sluggish, for one brief moment I was quick and coordinated, and I chased down a very wide ball and hit a crisp and perfect "around the pole" shot-- and then I took a much-needed nap, but still felt kind of lousy from the stupid shingles shot, but rallied enough to drink some mezcal at the neighborhood New Year's Party . . . so while I'd like to make some 2025 Resolutions here, things such as: I'm actually going to change my diet and lose weight; I'm actually going to start stretching every day and do all the recommended exercises to preserve my body and I'm going to give up alcohol during the week, at this point, realistically, these things are probably not going to happen so this year I'm just going to try to do the same shit I did in 2024, and continue to rinse and repeat until things really get Yeatsian and truly fall apart.
The Books Dave Read in 2024
1) The Dreaming Jewels by Theodore Sturgeon
2) More Than Human by Theodore Sturgeon
3) They Walked Like Men by Clifford D. Simak
4) Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz
5) Welcome Home, Stranger by Kate Christensen
6) All Systems Red (The Murderbot Diaries #1) by Martha Wells
7) Artificial Condition (The Murderbot Diaries #2) by Martha Wells
8) Dark Rivers of the Heart by Dean Koontz
9) The Charm School by Nelson DeMille
10) Everyone Who Is Gone Is Here: The United States, Central America, and the Making of a Crisis by Jonathan Blitzer
11) Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
12) The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham
13) Disillusioned: Five Families and the Unraveling of America's Suburbs by Benjamin Herold
14) The New Analog: Listening and Reconnecting in a Digital World by Damon Krukowski
15) Case Histories by Kate Atkinson
16) The Fifties by David Halberstam
17) Outside the Gates of Eden: The Dream of America from Hiroshima to Now by
Peter Bacon Hales
18) A Year in the Life of Shakespeare:1599 by James Shapiro
19) One Good Turn (Jackson Brodie 2) by Kate Atkinson
20) Sentient by Jeff Lemire and Gabriel Walta
21) Faithful Place by Tana French
22) Age of Revolutions: Progress and Backlash from 1600 to the Present by Fareed Zakaria
23) The Detective Up Late by Adrian McKinty
24) When Where There Be Good News? by Kate Atkinson
25) The Word is Murder by Anthony Horowitz
26) The Man in the Flannel Gray Suit by Sloan Wilson
27) A Line to Kill by Anthony Horowitz
28) Banal Nightmare by Halle Butler
29) The Sentence is Death by Anthony Horowitz
30) Perfect Little Children by Sophie Hannah
31) The New Me by Halle Butler
32) The Twist of a Knife by Anthony Horowitz
33) Close to Death by Anthony Horowitz
34) Horror Movie by Paul Tremblay
35) The Cabin at the End of the World by Paul Tremblay
36) A Head Full of Ghosts by Paul Tremblay
37) Between Two Fires by Christopher Buehlman
38) Medieval Horizons: Why the Middle Ages Matter by Ian Mortimer
39) Fuzzy Dice by Paul Di Filippo
40) The Age of Illusions: How America Squandered Its Cold War Victory by Andrew Bacevich
41) Supernova Era by Cixin Liu
42) Long Island Compromise by Taffy Brodesser-Akner
43) The Wych Elm by Tana French
44) Spin by Robert Charles Wilson
And We're Back . . .
Go Eagles?
Timothee Chalamet Should Stay in the Desert
I really hate the idea of a modern musical biopic-- the newest one is about Bob Dylan . . . A Complete Unknown-- because if you want to see a movie about Bob Dylan, just watch Dont Look Back and observe the man himself, not a Bob Dylan impression by someone who wasn't even born when Dylan was the voice of a generation-- I can understand a movie like Amadeus or Lisztomania because there's no film of those folks, but I refuse to see Ray and Walk the Line and Rocketman . . . it's much more fun to see a film about a fictitious band, like Spinal Tap, or a fictitious band that becomes a real band, like The Commitments, than it is to evaluate a musical impersonation for 120 minutes (and the most fun of all is when a tribute band nails all the songs, but looks nothing like the original musicians).
Knee Update (Breaking Knees)
My knee is working pretty well now that they drained the fluid, so I got to play some pick-up basketball with my son Alex yesterday at the Piscataway Y, which is always a blast-- my three-pointer was on and Alex can cut to the basket and use his right or his left, and I know I won't be able to do this forever-- pump fake an outside shot and then pass the ball to my son going to the cup, so I've got to enjoy it while I can-- and then my wife and I headed out to see Nosferatu-- which is fabulously grim and dark and very well conceived, but a bit long-- and since we purchased tickets ahead of time, we thought we were showing up late, after the coming attractions, but it seems no matter how late you show up to the movies, there are always many many trailers-- the 2:30 PM showing didn't actually start until 3 PM . . . so by the end of the movie, my knee was a bit stiff and I limped out of the theater and into the darkness-- when the film began the sun was out but once we left the theater, it was not safe, Nosferatu's shadow lay across the land.
Which Wych Elm?
Christmas Day Stats? Is That a Thing?
The Decline and Fall and Reclining and Icing and Draining and Rising Again of Dave's Right Knee
Right Knee Stuff, Part Two
Thus Endeth the Birthday
These Photos Literally Symbolize the Seasons
You'd Think We've Have Teleportation By Now
You'd think it would be easy to connect your phone to two Bluetooth speakers at the same time, so they play the same music simultaneously-- or let me phrase that, I thought it would be easy to connect my phone to two Bluetooth speakers at the same time, but I'm not a computer engineer so I don't understand how Bluetooth is designed and the limitations of this technology . . . so I Googled this conundrum and here's the problem:
1. Bluetooth's Client-Server Model: Bluetooth operates on a client-server model where one device (your phone) acts as the client and the other (the speaker) as the server. This means your phone can only establish one active connection with a single speaker at a time.3. Bandwidth Limitations: Bluetooth's bandwidth is limited, meaning it can only handle a certain amount of data at a time. When trying to send audio to multiple speakers, the bandwidth might not be sufficient to maintain a high-quality connection to both speakers simultaneously.
4. Latency and Synchronization: Even if you could send audio to multiple speakers simultaneously, there might be a delay in the audio reaching each speaker, leading to a noticeable lag or out-of-sync audio experience.
Seven Things For Reading
Some Compromise . . .
Am I Special? Or Just Gross? Or Neither?
Does everyone else fling little white specks of food onto the bathroom mirror when they floss their teeth, or just me?
The Medium is the Scooter
Canadian communication theorist Marshall McLuhan said: "the medium is the message" and I think this is particularly true in sports: in the 1930s, the golden age of radio-- baseball, horseracing, and boxing were the most popular sports in America and these were the perfect sports to describe in an audio broadcast-- they are easy enough to narrate, there are slow moments either before or during the action so there's plenty of room for anecdote and description (I grew up listening to Phil Rizzuto tell stories about his barber during Yankee broadcasts) but as televisions got bigger and gained higher and higher definition, basketball and football gained popularity-- these are games where everyone is moving around at once and you need to see the action-- and you can choose where to look-- you can check out the defensive formation, or the blocking scheme, or the guy posting up in the paint-- it's impossible to narrate it all so it lends itself to a visual medium . . . and the internet appears to lend itself to sports gambling and fantasy sports, where people don't even bother with the narrative of an individual game but instead watch clips and short videos and consume statistics-- and TV has tried to keep up with this with the NFL Red Zone and such, which is essentially football coverage on crack . . . and who knows what the next medium will be for consuming sports-- flying your own drone over an event or being in a 3-D VR stadium-- and then who knows what sport this medium will lend itself to-- perhaps croquet will make a comeback.