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To some degree and depending on the brew style, mead is also a very very long ager. Plenty of stories of finding vessels in archaeological digs - still ready for a sip. I still have some bottles from my first batches of mead back in the 90s, and I have to say, they continue to evolve slightly - especially given how hot they were when I was a beginner.

Similar setup for me as well. Later I copied the rig for a long distance and out-of-country call back system to save money. Loved that modem...

I once saw a man with a notebook and pencil drawing these kinds of diagrams, at the time I saw them as graph theory. I wasn't in an extrovert moment and missed my chance to ask. He seemed to be working recreationally on them. I'm wondering about puzzles that could be easily created using these theories / maths. You, practitioners, any suggestions?


> I once saw a man with a notebook and pencil drawing these kinds of diagrams, at the time I saw them as graph theory.

I have been engaged in some work on s-arc transitive graphs in algebraic graph theory. You'd be surprised how rarely I have to draw an actual graph. Most of the time my work involves reasoning about group actions, automorphisms, arc-stabilisers, etc.

For anyone curious what this looks like in practice, I have some brief notes here: <https://susam.net/26c.html#algebraic-graph-theory>. They do not cover the specific results on s-arc-transitivity I have been working on but they give a flavour of the area. A large part of graph theory proceeds without ever needing to draw specific graphs.


Just added this to my Radar category. Along with ADSB, trains, boats, HeatMap, local weather stations, NOAA's solar weather, power outage trackers, quakes and fire. Anyone have any interesting things they track?


Big ups on that! Not to mention your local library's collection of DVDs. Or, their inter-library loan system for the ultra weird and rare.

One note on Kanopy - they use a ticket system (10-15 tickets per library customer). So if you have a couple people in your household, all of your library card numbers contribute tickets to the login. And, if you have two library systems like we do here (KCLS and SPL) you can double dip on all the cards again. No hack required - Kanopy actually has a very nice way of failing over to other cards as your quota is used up.

And if that's not enough, try Scarecrow Video out of Seattle. They are the masters of physical digital film media right now. It's fun to try to stump them. And they provide mailorder system similar to the old red envelopes of NetFlix.

eBay has DVD collections go up for sale all the time. Fun to buy the "box of movies" for $100 and see what you get.

Another big haul for me is from local thrift stores - usually 50 cents to 2 bucks a disc.


I've been working on mine on and off, tweaking and breaking it for years. I feed mine into a static HTML home page that's roughly based on the original index pages (e.g. Yahoo!)

My general categories are:

Libraries Sounds News Health Radar Shopping Movies School Tools Money

Somehow, these seem to work for me. The automated side is fun to work on, but ultimately, I end up manually updating once in a while as changes are needed. I just added a page linked from the home page - Libraries - that leads to categorized "reading list" of articles, sites, things to follow / explore. That's where the real potential for automation is for me, and where I keep failing to deliver it just right.

I'm going to comb through Linkding for clews to my failure and my ultimate success.



As anyone who is a phan of the bryphyte knows, looking and watching these plants up close it's fascinating to see how they are really forests in miniature. From the tall trees of their sporophytes, to the low protonema that collect debris and spore.


Any other services down for anyone? I've had a credit service portal fail for hours today with a notice of server issues. As well as a credit union login with a similar message. These are all first times for me. Some big black cape / hat pressure testing?

[edit] And FreeUSATax portal. Solar cone today?


Kinda right there at #1. Explanations are one thing, but Humans have to own it. We'll see!

The DoD AI ethics principles adopted 2020

1. Responsible – Humans remain accountable for AI development, deployment, and outcomes.

2. Equitable – AI should minimize unintended bias and discrimination.

3. Traceable – AI systems must be transparent, auditable, and understandable.

4. Reliable – AI must be safe, secure, and perform as intended.

5. Governable – Systems should detect and avoid unintended consequences and be able to be disabled if necessary.


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