Saturday, May 23, 2026

Saturday afternoon at the movies: 'They Live'



YouTube description:

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Master of fright, John Carpenter directs this entertaining and darkly humorous 1988 horror film.

Roddy Piper plays Nada, a down-on-his-luck construction worker who stumbles upon a special pair of sunglasses that reveal an awesome global secret — the ruling elite of the world are actually aliens in disguise, their aim being to keep humans in a state of mindless consumerism. 

Wearing the glasses, Nada is able to see the secret messages behind all advertising, and he is capable of discerning which normal-looking people are in fact ugly aliens in charge of the campaign to keep humans subdued.

Now, the battle is on to free the human race from this secret, subliminal tyranny! 

Good fun filled with genuine chills and scares and a bitingly satirical assault on our consumer culture, "They Live" is one of Carpenter's finest achievements.

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Free, the way we like it.

Wait a sec — what's that song I'm hearing?

'What Makes a Hacker' — Steve Wozniak


















Here are the Woz's defining characteristics of a hacker, from his July 11, 2004 keynote address at the Fifth HOPE (Hackers On Planet Earth) gathering in New York City:

A sense of humor

The ability to derive pleasure from jokes and the unexpected

A tendency to strive for internal rather than external rewards

This just goes to show that being a hacker need not require great computer skills: in fact, you don't need any!

In Woz's hacker world there's plenty of room for a TechnoDolt©®™.

I've never met Steve Wozniak; I've never spoken with Steve Wozniak, though I have seen him on TV.

Way back in 2005 he did post a comment on bookofjoe — that was among the top 10 things that happened to me in 2005.

Maybe top 3.

Friday, May 22, 2026

Primal Space — Ewan Cunningham



From Dense Discovery:

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Scottish creator Ewan Cunningham's Primal Space started as a hobby in 2018 and has grown into one of YouTube's most compelling sci-edu channels.

A meticulously animated archive of engineering, science, and history stories.

Videos mostly come in under 10 minutes and pack in a density of fascinating, well-structured storytelling that makes it very easy to fall down a rabbit hole.

Experts' Experts: Scotch Whisky



I'm not a Scotch whisky drinker: I've had perhaps 10 such drinks in my entire life.

Nevertheless, the subject has always interested me, and so when I happened on "Scotch: A Golden Dream" on Apple TV, I watched it.

Fascinating.

The documentary ambles along interviewing master distillers, "noses," writers, and workers in various areas of Scotch production, along with Scottish farmers who grow the barley, wheat, and rye that form the basis of Scotch.

Here are the most useful and interesting — sometimes surprising — things I learned from the film:

• Most experts prefer younger whisky — 6-10 years old, perhaps up to 18 — to much older vintages. They find the sweetness of the young oak barrels preferable to the dominating power of older wood. 

• Nosing whisky in a glass will tell you far more about it than tasting it.

• If you're nosing a flight or series of Scotch whiskies, you will find that without added water, the nose and sense of smell become slightly anesthetized by the 40% alcohol in bottled Scotch.

• In Scotland water is always added to single malt whisky: it dilutes the alcohol, reducing the burn and allowing other properties to reveal themselves.

• On a molecular level, aroma molecules share more chemical likenesses with alcohol than they do with water. As such, they tend to bind with alcohol. Adding water frees up more of the aroma molecules to evaporate into the taster's nose. Appreciation of flavors happens at least as much in the nose as on the tongue.

• Two teaspoons of water in 1.5 oz. of Scotch are the sweet spot for most.

• Older Scotch is rarer because most of it is bottled young. Then more is lost by evaporation, the so-called "angels' share." Thus, you're paying more for its scarcity. 

• Older Scotch, aged 20/30/40 or more years, may have taken up too much flavor from the aging barrels; thus it might be dry, bitter, or woody as a result of being overaged.

FunFact: the director of "Scotch: The Golden Dream" is... wait for it... Andrew Peat.

You could look it up.

Magnetic Paint — Make Any Wall or Surface Magnetic























Steel yourself.

From websites:

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Magnetize-It! magnetic paint & primer is a grey acrylic latex water-based paint that turns any wall into a magnet-receptive surface.

Apply top coat of any color without lessening magnetic function.

A great alternative to cluttered refrigerators, ugly pushpin holes, and tape marks.

Useful for:

• School classrooms

• Home workshop

• Planning board

• Bulletin board

• Art projects

• Dorm room

• Photo walls

• Work walls

• Play areas

• Office

• Gym

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Half-quart (16 oz.): $14.93.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Treasures of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City — in 3D


[Armor of Henry II, King of France (reigned 1547-1559)]

From Colossal: "In the age of the internet, we're fortunate to have virtual access to museum collections around the world, thanks to objects in the public domain and programs like the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Open Access Initiative. Thanks to the Met's continued emphasis on imaging, we can now experience every detail in 3-D renderings of over 140 significant objects in its holdings."

Helpful Hints from joe-eeze: How to stir

Uuykulu6yu6ktu6t5u66

We don't need no education.

Robert L. Wolke, the Washington Post's longtime "Food 101" columnist, addressed this topic.

    Q. I've been told you should always stir with a spoon's rounded side down, rather than holding the spoon vertically. Is this true? If so, why?

    A. If the spoon is large and held vertically, vigorous stirring might slop some liquid over the rim and out of the pot. But if the spoon is held horizontally with the curve down, it will sail smoothly through the liquid, creating a whirlpool effect that enhances efficient mixing.

[photo via Julie Appleton]

'Rams' : Documentary Streams Free Until 12 Noon EST Today



I only happened on this news last evening which is why I'm posting it with such short notice.

Nevertheless, this documentary about one of the greatest designers of the 20th century will play here for the next 4 hours.

Free, the way we like it.

Dieter Rams was 94 yesterday: "It's become a tradition that every year on his birthday we stream the documentary Rams free worldwide."

Don't want to watch it at work or can't get free during this morning's window?

Not to fret: you can buy/rent it on Apple TV for $14.99/$3.99.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Binge-Watching FTW



For the longest time I dutifully watched multiple-part series streaming on Apple TV/Prime Video/Netflix etc.

When I first encountered the term "binge-watching" it was in reference to peeps locking themselves in for a weekend to watch whole seasons of old favorites.

I noticed that each week's new multiple-part series episode required that I watch "Last week on XYZ" to remind myself exactly where it had left off.

But that got annoying over time — I wanted to get right to the new episode.

Besides which, as I'm getting older my memory's not nearly as good as it used to be: I've noticed myself more and more often watching a movie and then realizing part way through that I watched it years previously, though I can't go beyond that fact: I don't remember what happened in the movie, so it's like watching it for the first time in terms of enjoying it.

Likewise, a week's hiatus from a multi-episode series sometimes renders the previous episode a vague scrim.

I started waiting until a series had broadcast its final episode and only then started watching it from the beginning on a daily basis, making it more like a multi-part movie.

The more I did that, the more I liked it.

Now I wouldn't watch the old one-episode/week way.

I learned to look up how many episodes there would be in total, then I'd work backward from the final episode's air date, allowing for two episodes at a time.

Wikipedia is the quickest way to get this information, BTW.

So, for example, when I read earlier this year that "For All Mankind" Season 5 was all set to premiere  on March 27 on Apple TV, I calculated forward and noted that Episode 10/10 would air Friday, May 29, 2026.

Working backward at two episodes/day, that meant that my binge-watching should begin next Monday, May 25, with episodes 1&2, to finish with 9&10 on Friday the 29th.

I've got my popcorn ready.

When Einstein Met Prince



'Apple: The First 50 Years' — Best book I've read* so far this year























Of course, as a longtime fanboi I'm already biased but never mind that.

*Published March 10, 2026, my copy arrived two days ago — May 7. (I'm writing this on May 9). 

It's 548 pages long, a big fat heavy tome. 

I'm on page 21.

I just invoked SlowRead©®™ because it's so good I want it to last a loooong time.

Hold on a sec, lemme do the math: 21 pages read over 3 days (May 7/8/9).

Let's see, that's 7 pages/day.

7 goes into 548 78 times.

Minus 3 days/21 pages in: that means at this rate I'll finish it 75 days from today = 10 weeks + 5 days = Thursday, July 23, 2026.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The Hidden Reason Screwdriver Handles Look Like This


Pruning Drop Cloth














I like it.

From the very finest horticultural engineers on the planet comes this not earthshaking but, rather, ground–protecting breakthrough.

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From websites:

    It's Like Taking Your Plants to a Barber

    It's nearly impossible to pick up all those clippings that result from trimming your hedges and pruning your shrubs.

    You have to rake — which is time-consuming and can damage ground cover — and you never get it all.

    With the Pruning Drop Cloth, you can protect your costly ground cover, mulch, topsoil, etc., and eliminate tedious cleanup.

    It's akin to how your barber or hair stylist protects your clothing from your hair clippings.

    Just wrap the large 7 ft. x 7 ft. canvas cloth around your outdoor shrubs or indoor plants to catch trimmings, then fold and shake over a garden cart or trash can.

    Canvas cloth edges are hemmed and stitched to last.

    Makes cleanup a snap.

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Now, there are those of you out there — yes, you —  saying to yourselves, just a flippin' minute!

"I could do that with an old blanket or sheet or a piece of plastic."

You could.

The choice is yours, to paraphrase the guy in the classic Fram oil filter commercial: you can buy one here now or make your own later.














16.95.

Helpful Hints from joe-eeze: How to get the smell of cigarette smoke out of your hair














From Michelle Hainer, this Q&A which appeared in the Washington Post:

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Q. I was at a smoke-filled bar last night. This morning my hair still smells like an ashtray. How can I get rid of the smell before work?

A. Fabric softener sheets leave your laundry smelling fresh, and they'll do the same for your tresses, according to Norbert Ansellem, owner of Norbert Hair Designers in the District.

Simply run the sheet over your head to remove the offensive odor.

If you don't have one handy, a dusting of lavender baby powder will also temporarily mask the smell of smoke, says Lauren Bourland, a hair stylist at Toka Salon in downtown Washington. She recommends Johnson's Lavender & Chamomile Baby Powder.

To camouflage powder residue, follow up with a quick spritz of hair spray.

Monday, May 18, 2026

Experts' Expert: Cheese Management





















From Cooks' Illustrated comes the following Q&A with Mary Keith, food and nutrition agent at the University of Florida Extension Service.

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    How to Deal With Moldy Cheese

    Q. Aside from cheese that contains cultivated mold [Cabrales, Gorgonzola, Roquefort, Stilton et al], is it safe to eat cheese that has grown mold as long as I first cut off the affected area?

    A. According to Keith, hard cheeses can generally be salvaged, but soft cheeses cannot.

    The toxins in the types of mold that grow on cheeses are mostly water–soluble, so they usually cannot travel far beyond the surface of harder cheeses with low moisture levels.

    To remove surface mold from a hard cheese such as cheddar, the general rule is to cut off all visible mold as well as an inch of the surrounding area, being careful to keep the knife out of the mold itself to prevent cross–contamination of other areas of the cheese.

    Of course, this works only if you have a big piece of cheese.

    Small pieces on which the mold has grown on multiple sides should be discarded.

    Soft cheeses such as goat cheese, Brie, or Camembert and wet, curd–like cheeses such as ricotta or cottage cheese should never be consumed once mold appears.

    Because most of the toxins produced by these uncultivated molds are water–soluble, they can easily travel beneath the surface of these high–moisture cheeses and contaminate the rest of the product.

    Cheeses that are injected with mold, such as blue cheeses [top], should be discarded once they start becoming slimy or softer than usual or exhibiting strange odors or colors.

    My advice is never to buy more cheese than you can use in one or two weeks; the moister the cheese, the quicker it will spoil.

    As for storing most leftover cheese, I have found that wrapping it in parchment paper and then in foil is the most effective method, but a sealed zipper–lock bag is a very close (and much easier) second.

    Whichever method you choose, the cheese is best kept in the crisper drawer of the refrigerator.

    One more thing: Freezing doesn't kill mold.

    While freezing might slow down the mold's growth, it will not destroy any of the toxins the mold has already produced.

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I recall my introduction to soft cheese management, back when I was in college: I loved Camembert and Brie but after a couple days I'd notice a sharp ammonia smell when I opened the package: that was a sign that was obvious even to me.

What is it?











Peeps be asking what happened to this long-time feature?

Your wish is my demand.

Hint: Bigger than a bread box (when properly deployed as pictured above).

Another: No moving parts.

Answer here this time tomorrow.

Once upon a time on the internet...


























































































[via Annie Rauwerda]

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Mars Rover Perseverance's 6th Selfie — Just In


















From PetaPixel:

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NASA's Perseverance rover sent a selfie from Mars taken against the sweeping backdrop of a region scientists call the "Lac de Charmes."

Since landing on Mars five years ago, Perseverance has been analyzing minerals as it travels west across the dry terrain of the Red Planet. On May 12 NASA released the latest selfie taken by the rover — its sixth since landing on Mars in 2021.

Assembled from 61 individual images, the selfie shows Perseverance pointing its mast toward a rocky outcrop in the foreground after creating a circular abrasion patch. During the abrasion process, the rover grinds away part of a rock’s surface so the science team can study material beneath it. The image was captured on March 11 during the rover's farthest push west beyond the crater since arriving on Mars. The western rim of Jezero Crater can be seen stretching into the distance behind it.

Perseverance took the selfie using the WATSON (Wide Angle Topographic Sensor for Operations and Engineering) camera mounted at the end of its robotic arm, which made 62 precision movements over approximately one hour to build the composite image.

NASA says the broad expanse of ancient Martian terrain visible in the selfie is known as the “Lac de Charmes.” Scientists consider the region some of the most scientifically important terrain Perseverance has explored so far.

"We took this image when the rover was in the 'Wild West' beyond the Jezero Crater rim — the farthest west we have been since we landed at Jezero a little over five years ago," Katie Stack Morgan, Perseverance's project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, says in a statement. "We had just abraded and analyzed the 'Arethusa' outcrop, and the rover was sitting in a spot that provided a great view of both the Jezero Rim and the local terrain outside of the crater."

Alongside the selfie, Perseverance also used its Mastcam-Z camera system to capture a mosaic of the "Arbot" area in Lac de Charmes on April 5, or Sol 1882. The panorama (below), made from 46 images, provides one of the mission's most detailed geological views, showing a windswept landscape filled with different rock textures.






NASA says the image gives scientists a clearer guide for studying the ridgeline and the area’s ancient rock formations, including what appear to be megabreccia — massive rock fragments, some as large as skyscrapers, that were thrown out by a huge meteorite impact on the plain known as Isidis Planitia around 3.9 billion years ago.

"What I see in this image is excellent exposure of likely the oldest rocks we are going to investigate during this mission," Ken Farley, Perseverance’s deputy project scientist at Caltech in Pasadena, says.

If the Casio F-91W were a dish rack this would be it


















This simple bamboo sinkside accessory is ubiquitous.

I owned my first one when I was in college and have had several since.

They're very sturdy and long-lasting.

The reason I'm mentioning it here is that I saw one prominently displayed in Zendaya's new movie "The Drama," finally streaming.

From now on I'm gonna consciously clock this well-designed piece of kit when it pops up on screen.























You can too!

$25.95.

Halupedia




































Halupedia is an encyclopedia covering topics that have received insufficient attention in mainstream reference works. Coverage spans historical events, scientific disciplines, geographical features, notable persons, organizations, treaties, academic disputes, and cultural phenomena. 

Articles are generated on demand and stored permanently upon first requiest.

The encyclopedia approaches all subjects with equal seriousness regardless of their prominence, scope, or the number of people aware of their existence. Entries follow standard encyclopedic structure and cite relevant scholarly literature throughout.

Minor inconsistencies between entries are a known characteristic of the encyclopedia and fall within acceptable tolerances.



Saturday, May 16, 2026

Learning How to Use My COOP Side Sleeper Pillow

















I've slept on my left side for as long as I can remember.

A few months ago my sleep started getting broken up and I was waking up way too early for no apparent reason.

I thought maybe it was my pillow being no longer right for me, so I had my Crack Research Team©®™ investigate and find out if there have been any new developments in the pillow space since I last looked.

Sure enough, they found the COOP Side Sleeper pillow (top), with an interesting cut-out shape which is clearly designed to have the side sleeper's shoulder rest in the cut-out area.

I ordered one of these pillows and then spent a couple weeks trying different shoulder and head placements.

Two nights ago I finally decided to go all in and ram my left shoulder up into that cut-out area as deeply as possible.

Success at long last!

Best night's sleep in months.

'A Violent Masterpiece' — Jordan Harper




















I saw this new novel, published a couple weeks ago, reviewed somewhere I can't recall and the essence was that it's indeed violent but also impossible to put down.

Then I saw that it's set in today's LA and that was enough for me: any novel or film taking place in LA — preferably in the present but going back decades as well — is must read/watch for me.

Though I lived there 17 years, leaving 43 years ago for Podunkville, Virginia, I loved LA and the things that happened there made an indelible impression.

I'm on page 61 of 368 and I've invoked SlowRead©®™ so as to make it last as long as possible.

Fantastic book jacket.

Boing


 
















Fair warning: there goes the day.

Friday, May 15, 2026

"Apropos of 'Readymades'" — Marcel Duchamp

Gyujyjuyiuyi

In 1913 I had the happy idea to fasten a bicycle wheel to a kitchen stool and watch it turn.

A few months later I bought a cheap reproduction of a winter evening landscape, which I called "Pharmacy" after adding two small dots, one red and one yellow, in the horizon.

In New York in 1915 I bought at a hardware store a snow shovel on which I wrote "In advance of the broken arm."

It was around that time that the word "Readymade" came to my mind to designate this form of manifestation.

A point that I want very much to establish is that the choice of these "Readymades" was never dictated by aesthetic delectation.

The choice was based on a reaction of visual indifference with at the same time a total absence of good or bad taste... in fact a complete anaesthesia.

One important characteristic was the short sentence which I occasionally inscribed on the "Readymade."

That sentence instead of describing the object like a title was meant to carry the mind of the spectator towards other regions more verbal.

Sometimes I would add a graphic detail of presentation which, in order to satisfy my craving for alliterations, would be called "Readymade aided."

At another time, wanting to expose the basic antinomy between art and "Readymades," I imagined a "Reciprocal Readymade": use a Rembrandt as an ironing board!

I realized very soon the danger of repeating indiscriminately this form of expression and decided to limit the production of "Readymades" to a small number yearly.

I was aware at that time, that for the spectator even more for the artist, art is a habit forming drug and I wanted to protect my "Readymades" against such a contamination.

Another aspect of the "Readymade" is its lack of uniqueness... the replica of the "Readymade" delivering the same message, in fact nearly every one of the "Readymades" existing today is not an original in the conventional sense.

A final remark to this egomaniac's discourse: Since the tubes of paint used by an artist are manufactured and readymade products we must conclude that all the paintings in the world are "Readymades aided" and also works of assemblage.

Written in 1961

Auto-On Lighted LED Slippers






















Genius: wear your nightlights.

From websites:

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Lighted slippers give you a leg up in the dark!

Illuminates up to 25 feet in front of you.

Take night time trips to the kitchen or bathroom without searching for and flicking on a switch, disturbing others in the process.

Powerful LED lights operate automatically every time you put them on.













Comfortable and convenient.

Lithium batteries included.

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S/M/L/XL: $23.97.