Silicon Soapware #207
Oct. 28th, 2011 11:30 pmSilicon Soapware #207 is out. Se below or look in
http://www.well.com/~bubbles/SS0207.txt
or check out my main page at
http://www.well.com/~bubbles/
http://www.well.com/~bubbles/SS0207.txt
or check out my main page at
http://www.well.com/~bubbles/
SILICON SOAPWARE
wafting your way along the slipstreams of the Info Highway
from Bubbles = Tom Digby
= bubbles@well.com
http://www.well.com/~bubbles/
Issue #207
New Moon of October 26, 2011
Contents copyright 2011 by Thomas G. Digby, with a liberal definition of
"fair use". In other words, feel free to quote excerpts elsewhere (with
proper attribution), post the entire zine (verbatim, including this
notice) on other boards that don't charge specifically for reading the
zine, link my Web page, and so on, but if something from here forms a
substantial part of something you make money from, it's only fair that I
get a cut of the profits.
Silicon Soapware is available via email with or without reader feedback.
Details of how to sign up are at the end.
*********************
It's getting close to Halloween, although the weather is still
summer-like. We've had a milder than usual summer this year, and
although we've had an autumn rainy spell or two it's still mostly warm
and sunny, even as the days have gotten short and the noonday sun has
taken to riding low in the southern sky.
But lingering summer weather or no, I can see signs of change coming: In
at least one store red and green Christmas stuff is starting to appear
along some of the top shelves in the mostly-orange-and-black Halloween
section, like some exotic species of flower that's taken hold in a
neighbor's field and is starting to peek through the fence into my
place.
Part of me might feel tempted to try to hold it back by spraying or
something, but other parts of me know that in the long run it's
hopeless. All I can do it let it run its course, and in due time it
will be gone for another year.
*********************
Christmas is a time when you hear what would otherwise be considered
church music in stores and restaurants and other random places where you
don't normally hear it, and that leads to thoughts of pipe organs. And
that in turn leads to thoughts of little-known pipe-organ stops, such as
Grakltraxl 17'.
With its 17-foot pipe length it sounds roughly a semitone below the more
commonly used 16-foot stops, giving an effect that people accustomed to
modern Western harmonies are not accustomed to. Most people in our
culture don't like it.
So why is it there? Organists like to use it as an excuse not to play
pieces they'd rather not perform.
Since most people who don't play the organ probably haven't given much
thought to how an organist decides which stops to use for any given
piece, organists have secretly gotten together and concocted a tale of
complex astrological calculations involving when the music in question
was written, when that particular organ was built, and in some cases the
natal horoscopes of the composer and performer. It's actually a load of
baloney, but most of the general public doesn't know that. (I don't
know how the organists manage to keep astrologers from blowing the
whistle.)
So all an organist has to do to get out of having to play some
particular composition is to claim that it uses Grakltraxl 17' along
with a couple of 16' stops. Even if the piece does still need to
actually be played every now and then as a demonstration or reminder,
people who have heard it tend to remember and not request that piece
again.
What if that particular organ doesn't have Grakltraxl 17'? Simple.
Just apply some cardboard and duct tape to some otherwise unneeded open
16' rank to lengthen it to 17 feet. You usually don't need to be too
precise about the lengths of the cardboard pieces, and you may not need
to do every pipe in the rank. Most people are easily convinced if you
get it anywhere near close on most of the pipes.
As I've said, you don't have to do this very often. Once word has
spread, all an organist has to do to get out of playing any given
request is to say "That piece uses Grakltraxl 17'."
So it's very handy, even if it seldom sees actual use.
*********************
You may have noticed that some bands like to change keys between verses
of some songs, often by going up a half-step. Most competent guitar and
keyboard players are sort of OK with that, but bagpipers really hate it.
The thought occurred to me that bagpipers could maybe do it by feeding
helium into the bag to increase the speed of sound in the pipes, thereby
raising their pitch. Conversely, you could also lower the pitch by
using a heavy gas such as sulfur hexafluoride.
The tricky part may be getting the amount just right.
But maybe if you put pairs of ultrasonic transducers inside the bag a
known distance apart, along with suitable electronics, you could measure
the speed of sound inside the bag in real time, and adjust the gas feeds
as appropriate.
Some might be worried that a valve might stick open and feed in way too
much helium, causing the pipes to float off into the sky as the player
stands helplessly below, hoping that whoever eventually finds them will
return them. But I think that what with the electronics and valves and
batteries and helium tank and such, the assemblage would be too heavy
for that to be a problem.
This gas-mixture scheme could also be used when a pipe organ is playing
along with an orchestra that doesn't want to tune to whatever pitch the
organ was tuned to. Some orchestras like to tune their instruments
slightly sharp, around 442 Hz, while others prefer the more traditional
440. This would let the organ match whatever tuning the orchestra
preferred.
Are there any Silicon Valley startups working on this?
*********************
Unrelated to anything else, I've been wondering if YouTube is going to
eventually have to change its name as various non-CRT video technologies
take over and we get a generation of people who may not know what the
"Tube" part of the name refers to.
*********************
Free association on a spelling mnemonic (with minor editing afterwards):
Does the problem have anything to do with the statement that there is "a
rat" in "separate"? Should I call the exterminator?
That word without a rat in it, or with a dead rat, would not be the
same. Would it be "sepe"? Or would it be "sepadeadrate"? In other
words, should you leave the rat carcass in place or remove it? If you
leave it, will it rot and smell bad and attract flies and ants and such?
And would having all that stuff make the word formerly known as
"separate" too messy and stinky to use?
And then if people stopped using the word, what would the shareholders
do? I don't think the financial system in this country is set up to let
people own stock in words, so the whole matter may be academic. Does
"academic" mean that schools own stock in words, and can lose money if
their words don't get used? That might explain a lot. Or it might not.
Do other words have bugs and vermin and such living in them? I haven't
heard anybody complaining about any, so if there are then whatever the
creatures are are probably rather benign, or maybe even beneficial.
But no, I don't think it would be practical to keep pets and landscaping
and such in words. For one thing, it would make the word harder to
spell and read, especially if different people kept different animals
and plants in different words. And what if someone put an animal into a
word that was the name of some other species? If you're not careful you
could trigger an infinite loop. It might even crash the spelling
checker. So if a word has a NO PETS clause in its Terms of Use, it
would be wise to comply.
And be wary of changing a word like "catalog" to something like
"dogalog" or maybe "birdalog" just because you're allergic to cats. If,
for example, you change it to "lobsteralog" but some members of your
audience are allergic to seafood, you may be opening a bigger can of
worms than you realize, even if there do not appear to be any worms in
the vicinity.
*********************
I'm reminded of thoughts I've had of a joke app that randomizes
"its"/"it's" (or maybe the presence or absence of an apostrophe in
general) in a user's postings. That way they'll be right about half the
time, so they won't be thought a snob (for getting it right too often)
or an ignoramus (for getting it wrong too often).
One problem is that users who want it might be ashamed to be seen buying
it. But that hasn't stopped the pornography industry, so it's probably
not really a problem.
*********************
That reminds me of someone on the radio reading an announcement about
some author or story having won the "New Bells" award. He sort of
stumbled over the name, like it was hard to read or something. Was it
actually the Nebula award, and might he have been unfamiliar with the
word "nebula"? Or did someone type it wrong, putting an "s" in place of
the final "a"? The letters are next to each other on the keyboard (at
least the one most commonly used in the US), for what that's worth.
Is it worth anything? The financial pages in the paper don't seem to
list any market activity on the fact that the "a" and "s" keys are
adjacent on the keyboard. That doesn't necessarily mean it isn't worth
anything, but it does mean there may not be any quick and easy way to
invest in it (as opposed to investing in keyboards or their maskers) or
to cash out once you're in. It may also mean the FTC doesn't keep tabs
on it, so you'd best be extra-careful when dealing in such things.
*********************
Here's a thought I've had now and then as a way to revamp the welfare
system: Put time clocks in public libraries (or community centers or
similar places), and pay people minimum wage, no questions asked, to
hang out there.
While you're there you can read, or knit, or draw pictures, or work on
writing a novel, or do your school homework, or whatever, as long as it
isn't destructive or disruptive (maybe have separate sections for people
with young children) or blatantly illegal.
This could take the place of much of the welfare system, with a minimum
of bureaucracy. You may need physical security and maybe tax withholding
and such, but you wouldn't need anything like the means testing in our
present welfare setup. Most of the rich have better things to do than
attend what amounts to study hall, and even if a few do come, so what?
There's only a few of them.
There are probably problems I haven't addressed, but think of them as
creative engineering challenges rather than reasons it can't be done.
If you like this idea, post about it other places. Spread it around.
*********************
[NOTE: This was written for places with dry fallow summers,
where the main growing season is a mild wet winter.]
Winter Construction
We're half the year away
From May.
The dance of the ribbons and the joyful proclamations
Of the season of outdoor frolic
Are but dim memories, distant and unreal.
This is a time for turning inward,
As Nature rebuilds the world.
As the cool rains of winter
Bring new life to the parched land
We gather 'round the hearth
By Jack-O-Lantern light
To welcome back old friends
From the other side of Eternity.
Then we defy the deepest darkness
With strings of artificial stars
And feast on songs of joy
Among loved ones in the here and now.
Finally, as the sun takes its first baby steps back to us
We can begin to look forward
To another season of light,
When Nature once again takes down
Her cold gray Construction signs
And the time of outdoor frolic is proclaimed anew.
-- Tom Digby
First Draft 11:52 Sat October 22 2005
Edited 13:33 Sun October 23 2005
Note added 17:24 Wed October 26 2005
Note edited 14:42 Sun October 30 2005
*********************
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