Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Google Launches Search Profiles


















This looked interesting when I read about on June 4, the day it was released.

From the announcement:

......................................

We're launching Search Profiles, a new way for publishers and creators to shape their presence on Search.

Search profiles give publishers and creators a central place to showcase their latest articles, videos, and social posts.

People can easily follow sources from profiles.

Publishers and creators with a sizable following on at least one major social or video platform can claim their Search profile and customize it.

I got all excited thinking I'd have my own easily found customized results page.

Not so fast.

Up top, the requirements for having a Search profile.

Looks like I struck out: I have 10,000+ YouTube subscribers but the minimum is 100,000.

I'll check back from time to time to see if Google has lowered its minimum subscriber requirement for creating a Search Profile.

Why are lip movements and words out of sync on my TV/phone/iPad?
















I've only noticed this asynchrony in recent years and it's getting worse.

It happens when I watch sports/movies/shows/news: everything.

I'm certain I'm not the only person to have noticed this: I'd be very surprised if a lot of — if not most — people have the same problem.

I asked Perplexity Pro for an explanation: it follows.

............................................

Lip‑sync problems are almost always timing mismatches somewhere in the chain: the video and audio are being processed, transmitted, or decoded on slightly different schedules, and your eyes can easily see a delay of even 40–80 ms.[tcl +1]

Below is what’s actually going on and why you’re seeing it so widely across sports, movies, TV, and on different devices.

Core technical causes

Modern TV, streaming, and mobile playback is a pile‑up of separate digital processes: encoding, transmission, decoding, image processing, and audio processing.[fpdvision +1]

Common low‑level causes:

Video processing is slow, audio is fast: TVs do heavy work on video (upscaling, motion smoothing, noise reduction, HDR tone‑mapping), which adds extra milliseconds of delay, while the audio often goes through a simpler path and arrives earlier.[tcl +1]

Or audio processing is slow: Soundbars/receivers may spend extra time decoding Dolby Digital/Atmos, applying room correction, or virtual surround, so sound comes late relative to the picture.[sony +1]

Different paths for audio vs video: Example: Apple TV → HDMI into TV (video), with audio sent via HDMI‑ARC/eARC to a soundbar; each hop can add its own delay and they rarely match by default.[whizz-experts +2]

Even when everything “works,” those few tens of milliseconds difference are enough to make speech look off, especially on sports where you see lips and impact sounds (bat hitting ball, ball hitting rim) very clearly.[fpdvision +1]

Source/broadcast side problems

Sometimes the desync is already baked into the feed before it ever reaches your devices.[tablotv +1]

Broadcast or stream encoding errors: A TV channel, live sports stream, or DVR/streaming back‑end can have corrupted frames or misaligned audio/video timestamps, which pushes audio ahead or behind video. This is documented with certain OTA DVR streams where bad signal corrupts the multiplex and blows A/V sync.[tablotv]

Ad insertion and stitching: On some streaming services, the transition into or out of ads briefly throws timestamps off so the program resumes out of sync until you pause/rewind or restart the stream.[facebook]

Platform‑specific bugs: Firmware bugs in streaming boxes, TVs, or apps routinely cause accumulating delay until you restart the app/device.[youtube +1]

Because you’re seeing it across “sports/movies/TV/news” and across devices, at least some of what you’re noticing will be upstream issues you can’t fully fix client‑side.[sony +1]

Device and connection factors

Different device/connection choices create different timing behaviors even with the same content.

TV + soundbar/receiver

When a TV sends video to its own panel and audio out over HDMI‑ARC/eARC or optical, paths can get out of sync.[fpdvision +1]

Typical contributors:

ARC/eARC handshake and buffering: The TV buffers audio to send over ARC/eARC; the soundbar then decodes and applies processing, which can add 50–150 ms.[whizz-experts +2]

Audio output mode (Bitstream vs PCM): Bitstream means the TV passes compressed surround formats to the soundbar to decode, which is slower and more error‑prone; switching to PCM often reduces delay because decoding happens once and earlier in the chain.[reddit +1]

“Enhancement” modes: Virtual surround, dialogue enhancement, night mode, or room correction can all increase processing time.[sony +1]

Many TVs and soundbars add a manual Audio/Lip Sync/AV Sync setting so you can delay audio to match the picture, but this only really helps when sound is ahead of video; if the video is behind, those controls can make things worse.[arylic +1]

Streaming boxes and apps (including Apple TV)

Streaming devices have to match the framerate and dynamic range of content to what the TV expects, and that negotiation can affect timing.

Frame‑rate conversion: If a box is outputting everything at, say, 60 Hz while content is 24/30/50 Hz, it has to insert or drop frames; some platforms handle this badly and drift out of sync over time.[whizz-experts +1]

Audio format negotiation: Apple TV, Fire TV, etc. decide whether to send Atmos, Dolby Digital 5.1, or PCM; mismatches between what the box sends and what the TV/soundbar expects can introduce audio lag, especially over ARC.[sony +1]

Wireless audio calibration: Newer Apple TV models rely on an iPhone‑based Wireless Audio Sync calibration to compensate for total chain delay to a TV or receiver; if that calibration is off or never run, you may see systemic lip‑sync error.[youtube +1]

Phones and tablets

On iPhone/iPad/Android, the same principles apply, but the bottlenecks move around.[google]

Software decoding load: Heavy decoding (high bitrate streams, HDR, 4K on some devices) can cause the system to slightly lag either video or audio pipeline.

Third‑party apps and overlays: On phones, additional processing layers (e.g., audio effects, screen recorders, or buggy video players) can throw the streams out of sync; safe‑mode tests are often recommended to isolate app‑level interference.[google]

Because mobile SoCs are doing everything in one integrated system, they will often maintain sync a bit better than a TV plus external audio gear—but they’re still not immune.

Wireless audio (Bluetooth, AirPods, etc.)

Any time the audio leaves the device wirelessly, additional encoding, buffering, and retransmission adds delay.[arylic +1]

Bluetooth codec latency: Standard SBC/AAC Bluetooth adds tens of milliseconds; low‑latency codecs like aptX LL help but are not always supported, and not on all Apple gear.[arylic]

Resync behavior: If packets drop or the RF environment is noisy, the device may slightly resync or rebuffer audio, which can show up as drifting lip‑sync on longer sessions.[fpdvision +1]

Some platforms, including recent Apple TV models, use calibration routines (like the iPhone proximity test) to measure Bluetooth/ARC latency and compensate, but only if you run them.[reddit +1]

Why it feels so universal now

A few structural changes in how we watch content make these issues much more visible than in the analog/broadcast era.

Everything is digital and post‑processed: Old analog TV carried audio and video in one continuous signal chain, with almost no per‑component buffering; modern systems are packets, buffers, and processors stacked on top of each other at every stage.[tcl +1]

Multiple hops and ecosystems: A single viewing setup might involve: streaming app → CDN → ISP → modem/router → streaming device → TV → ARC/eARC → soundbar. Every hop can contribute either jitter or a small fixed delay.[fpdvision]

Bigger, sharper screens: On a 55–77″ 4K panel, we naturally focus on details like lip motion and ball impacts; what was invisible on a 27″ CRT is obvious now.

Live streaming latency tricks: Services will sometimes alter buffering strategies for “low latency” modes in sports, which can affect how they schedule audio vs video at the client.[facebook +1]

So from your perspective, it feels like “everything is out of sync everywhere,” but underneath it’s the cumulative effect of many small, separate timing decisions.

Why it happens on your devices specifically

Given your setup (Apple ecosystem, streaming, sports), the most likely repeating patterns are:

Apple TV + TV + (possibly) external speakers:

TV doing heavy motion smoothing/upscaling for live sports while audio goes through ARC/eARC to a soundbar or receiver.[whizz-experts +2]

Apple TV outputting Dolby Atmos/5.1 while ARC path is marginal, causing extra audio processing delay.[sony +1]

Wireless Audio Sync either not run recently or thrown off by changes in the room/setup.[youtube +1]

iPhone/iPad watching via Bluetooth headphones or AirPods:

Bluetooth codec latency plus additional processing (spatial audio, head tracking, noise cancellation) making the sound lag slightly behind video.[arylic +1]

App/service quirks with sports:

Live sports apps (YouTube TV, ESPN, etc.) occasionally shipping streams with slightly misaligned timestamps or messing up around ad breaks; pausing or rewinding a bit often temporarily “snaps” them back into alignment.[facebook +2]

Put together, it’s not one single “defect” but a series of small mismatches that you, being detail‑oriented and sensitive to timing, are consistently noticing.

..........................................

Even if half of the above is hallucination, the half that's fact is way more than enough to discourage anyone with a modicum of common sense from fiddling around with the advanced controls and calibrations alluded to.

I've decided to live with the asynchrony because trying to fix so many different possible causes can only lead to catastrophe once I start fiddling around with the specialized settings in all my devices.

I urge you to do the same.

Next slide please....

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Helpful Hints from joe-eeze: Get a belt with a plastic buckle


















Wrote one traveler, "I've spent a lot of time going to places like airports and museums with security measures that often flag innocuous things and make you take them off or remove them from your pockets or bags. Get a belt with a plastic buckle online or from an outdoor clothing store and that's one less pain point."

Zillions to choose from here.

I just bought this one in grey: 45 cents + $4.58 shipping from China = $5.03.

The Society for the Exploration of Confidential Repetitive Envelope Tints























Finally.

From the website:



My Commonplace Book



Back in the day commonplace books and journals and diaries were ubiquitous.

Now historical curiosities. they've been replaced by things like X, Instagram, Facebook, blogs, TikTok, YouTube videos, and their ilk.

Starting when I was in college I cut things out and wrote things down that interested me and put them into a folder for future reference.

When it got too thick I'd start another one. 

I must have a zillion such folders in my basement and attic, none of which I ever look at and all of which I'm sure will be trashed by those cleaning house after I crump.

But I digress.

I will say that those folders came in very handy back around the turn of the century when I wrote my last book: a good part of its content derived from references and quotations I'd amassed over previous decades.

Today my commonplace book equivalent consists of this blog, my posts to X and Hacker News, and uploaded YouTube videos a large majority of which feature my beloved, just recently turned 4-years-old calico cat Vanta (top).

Related — I regularly email items of interest to people who produce my favorite websites, paying it forward as it were; those peeps include:

Charles Arthur of The Overspill

• Clive Thompson of The Linkfest

• Spencer Wright of Scope of Work

• Benedict Evans of Benedict's Newsletter

• Kai Brach of Dense Discovery

• Jason Kottke of Kottke

• Marcin Wichary of Unsung

One more thing: I stumbled on an Amazon page recently that said that I've given 660+ gifts since Amazon started — and received 3.

That sounds about right: I love giving presents but alas no one I know is like me so I never receive surprise gifts.

I just love doing stuff for people that makes their lives easier/better/etc.

If only I had a friend like that....

Monday, June 15, 2026

(please click the button)



Well?

Are you game for what happens if/when you do?

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

FunFact: over 1 billion views since it was uploaded 16 years ago.

'A Remarkable Place To Die'


I stumbled on this 4-part 2024 crime thriller on Amazon Prime: turned out it's one of the best things I've watched in a while.

Each episode is around 90 minutes long, equivalent to a full length feature film.

I wonder why the creators chose to take that approach as opposed to the more conventional 8-part/45-minute-long route.

Great cast, none of whom I'd ever seen before.

It's set around Queenstown on the South Island of New Zealand and it's total eye candy: spectacular vistas and surroundings.

Six-part Season 2 is scheduled to premiere later this year.

FunFact: I went to New Zealand for three weeks in 1982 and was dazzled by its beauty and its emptiness: it was rare to see another car on rural roads and highways.

I doubt that's still the case: 44 years passing will do that.

Sweet: Orange-Pineapple Minute Maid Zero Sugar FTW!




I'm a huge fan of Minute Maid's line of zero sugar drinks because they're amazingly like sugared iterations: somehow the chemists in the Minute Maid skunk works have figured out how to make no-calorie drinks that taste good.

They started with Lemonade in 2020 and over the years have brought forth Fruit Punch, Pineapple, Mango Passion, Strawberry Lemonade, and now Orange Pineapple.

I rank them as follows, most favorite to least:

 Pineapple

• Orange Pineapple

• Mango Passion

• Strawberry Lemonade

• Fruit Punch

• Lemonade

Try 'em all!

At stores everywhere.

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Heartfelt



Q. What do you see?

A. What do you want to see?

Drag and drop an image on this page and experience it through a rainy window.

Fair warning....

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

Hats That Look Like... Bread?

Neatorama brings them to us in all their glory.

Wrote John Farrier:

..........................................

Kent is a craftsman in Japan who makes hats that look like loaves of bread, cakes, and other foods.















The felt hats are remarkably realistic.

They look like warm loaves fresh out of the oven.

But don't bite down on one — especially if it's being worn at the time.

In addition to bread hats, Kent makes cake hats.
















I appreciate the details in the frosting that add color and texture to form.

He provides videos that illustrate how he makes each hat by carefully shaping the felt with tools and steam.

Kent's extraordinary attention to his work makes each piece of headgear a delicious treat.

..........................................

[via Clive Thompson's Linkfest]

Frustrated Magnetism


Back story here.

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Controlling the speed of time passing




















For many years now my sense of time passing has been that it's steadily accelerating: on Thursdays it seems as if I put out the trash bin for last Thursday morning's pickup (always around 5:30 am with a lot of banging and grinding and noise to make sure everyone in the neighborhood knows it's happening) a moment rather than a week before.

Days whizz by, all of a sudden it's time to get ready for bed.

The months pass so fast I only turn the calendar over every other month.

I've been thinking about this for years without gaining any traction understanding why this is happening.

Yes, everyone has always said time passes faster as you get older and I've always just taken that as a given since the sentiment seems universal.

Then I changed my running routine last month so as to get it done as early as possible in the morning before the 95° sun and humidity make it unbearable.

My heat tolerance as I get older isn't close to what it used to be: I used to welcome it and revel in the sweatfest.

So, off I went in the morning before it got really hot, same 2-3 miles daily as always.

But after the third straight day doing this it struck me that things had changed as I moved through the day: I no longer spent the bulk of the day procrastinating about going running (which activity I dislike doing and have always disliked), instead doing things I like to do like reading and posting to boj — which has, since inception in 2004, always put me into a flow state that can last many hours where time passes very quickly.

Now, though, since switching things up to run first and do other stuff later, time feels like it's back to normal, the way I felt it passing when I was much younger.

The flow state still happens but it doesn't feel like I've had to avoid doing something I'd rather not do to get there.

All in all, a huge improvement in my quality of life.

TMI


















For many years I looked at the final item on The Guardian's website, its list of "Most viewed" articles.

Earlier this year they added a second column headed "Deeply read."

For a while I took the time to look at both but then one day I thought, "This is a chore, not at all something I'm liking."

I no longer bother looking at either.

Note to editor-in-chief Katharine Viner: Less is more.

Wait a sec... where have I heard that before?

Maybe here?

Quantum Dishwashing














UNLEASH THE QUANTUM LEAP

Finally.

100 years after the formulation of quantum theory, it's been applied to something we can all use.















$14.49 for 48 tablets; at stores everywhere.

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

Friday, June 12, 2026

Ask An Astronaut




"Find your question among hundreds of astronaut interviews aboard the International Space Station: 333 hours of Q&A footage."

10,132 questions answered to date.

Wait a sec — what's that song I'm hearing? No, not that one, silly billy....

Perplexity Pro FTW!


















Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses have been sold out since they were released on September 30, 2025.

Ten months have passed and they're still scarce as hen's teeth.

I did find many pairs available on StockX, where current prices are around $830, not much more than the retail price of $799, though when they first appeared on StockX at the end of January they sold for $1,300.

In recent months I've occasionally used Google to search for a store near me that has them but no dice.

Just for lulz I asked Perplexity Pro to help me find a place to buy them one day last month.

It took the AI just under 9 minutes to finish its deep dive into the internet and report the results pictured up top.

Much more than I've been able to learn after hours of frustration trying to get this information via Google Search.

Lagniappe: It was fascinating watching the AI display its "thought" process onscreen as it went down myriad internet rabbit holes.

Long story short: I've got no interest in driving three hours each way to northern Virginia to do the mandatory in-person demo required before I can purchase them.

At $15/month (down from $20/month when I signed up last year) Perplexity Pro remains the best value for money of anything I've paid for in recent memory.

You can too!

Parallel Cities















Finally.

You've always wanted to know which cities are on the same parallel  (latitude) as yours across the globe.

Now you can find out.



Wednesday, June 10, 2026

'Shape of Dreams' — Zendaya x Spike Jonze



Zendaya co-created a new collection for On, the Swiss fashion company, and Spike Jonze directed this promotional video starring the actress.

Put the speaker by your BAD ear



The penny dropped earlier today as I was listening to some of my favorite songs on my wonderful Marshall portable speaker (above, mission control for boj).

Since forever I've had the speaker near my laptop where it's helped pump up the volume when my MacBook Pro's [not all that bad] internal speakers aren't enough.

Anyhoo, I was about to put it on the right side of my computer where I always site it since the hearing in my right ear is much better than that in my left, a fact I was finally able to document objectively using Apple's AirPods Pro hearing test.

I mean, I've known for many, many years — since I was a kid — that if it was noisy for whatever reason when and where I wanted to go to sleep, I needed to put my right side down into the pillow with my left up uncovered.

But my brain suddenly jumped the usual rails and switched: I thought to myself, "If the hearing in my right ear is better, I should put the speaker on the left side of the computer because my right ear will perceive it as plenty loud while my diminished left ear gets the full blast.

Fantastic: much better sound this way, it's like I got an additional speaker and I'm listening in stereo.

Bottom line: you can teach a geriatric near-brain-dead retired anesthesiologist who breathed far too much unscavenged waste gas during his 38 years in the O.R. new tricks.

Evolution of the Batman Logo
























Wrote Clive Thompson:

.......................................................

I didn’t realize how often DC artists had tweaked the logo for Batman. Here’s a poster by Breen that tracks all the changes.

As the designers write …

The early evolution is slower than you'd expect. From 1939 to the early 1960s, the bat-symbol changed mostly in proportion — wings got wider, then narrower, then wider again. The head appeared, disappeared, grew prominent, shrank back. Artists tweaked wing points from five to seven to nine without much consistency. Printing technology was crude enough that fine details often vanished on the page anyway.

Then 1964 changed everything. The bat landed inside a bright yellow ellipse, and suddenly the logo had presence. The version refined in 1966 — with the wings curving outward to fill the oval — became the definitive Batman emblem for an entire generation. It held that position for over three decades.

There are some super weird ones!

DC's alternate universes — Elseworlds, the Dark Multiverse, one-shot specials — are where the bat-symbol gets truly strange. Batman: Holy Terror reimagines Bruce Wayne as a priest, and the emblem reflects it. Batman: Digital Justice #4, the first fully digital comic book ever made, carries its own distinct symbol. The 2017 Dark Nights: Metal event spawned an entire gallery of corrupted Batman variants — the Dawnbreaker, the Drowned, the Merciless, the Devastator — each with an emblem designed to feel wrong, like a bat-symbol from a universe where Batman lost.

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

The 100 Best Novels of All Time























[The title page of the first edition of "Middlemarch" (1871-1872), named the best novel of all time]

..............................................

The Guardian asked authors, critics, and academics to help compile a list of the best 100 novels of all time.

Selecting a book will show you who voted for it; then click on the voter's name to see their other choices.

I've read 59 of them in their entirety.

I started but failed to finish 7 of the remaining 41 titles, most notably the seven volumes of "In Search of Lost Time," the first volume of which, "Swann's Way," I've begun at least five times, never coming close to its conclusion.

Perhaps I'll give it another try.

4K Video of Cat-5 Super Typhoon Sinlaku


Photographs captured by a Japanese weather satellite in April 2026, remastered and transformed into this video by Seán Doran.

Sinlaku was the strongest tropical cyclone in the Northern Hemisphere since 2021 and the strongest storm overall so far this year.

The Mariana Islands, Guam, and Micronesia all suffered widespread damage and the storm has so far claimed 17 lives.