Thursday, April 2, 2026

BeyondTheMedspeak: Don't trust if you can't verify














Once upon a time, in the anesthesiology department at UCLA, after finishing my cases for the day, I'd wheel my anesthesia cart back to the workroom and line it up alongside all the other carts to be cleaned for the next day.

Except I did something none of my fellow residents did, namely, I cleaned my own cart and then set it up for the next day's cases.

Everyone else set up their carts in the morning: I liked to do the setup the night before because:

1) It was quiet and peaceful as I was all alone

2) I could set up my syringes just so and fill them with the various drugs I'd be using for the next day's cases

3) Most importantly, because I'd done my setup the night before, I could sleep in an extra 15 minutes, then upon arrival simply wheel my cart into my O.R. without having to be part of the hurly-burly of 20 anesthesiology residents buzzing around the workroom looking for what specialized equipment they'd need for their cases: I'd already done that the night before.

All well and good and I never caught any flak for doing things my way nor did my methodology ever result in a problem.

But I would never do today what I did then.

Why?

It only occurred to me recently — nearly 50 years later — that someone could have easily switched drugs in my pre-filled syringes and put succinycholine, the ultra-fast-acting paralytic agent I used on a daily basis, into any of my drug syringes, such that when I injected what I thought was fentanyl or ephedrine or droperidol, instead I'd be giving a potentially lethal dose of a paralytic.

Then when the patient suddenly stopped breathing in the middle of a case, I'd never have thought of the actual cause but rather would have pursued an entirely different set of differential diagnoses which could well have resulted in patient harm or death.

Almost all the cases of nurse and doctor-related murders over recent decades — and there have been many — involved surreptitious administration of drugs.

Today I wouldn't use drug-filled syringes if they hadn't been in sight since being filled.













Note red cap used to warn of potentially fatal drugs.

TuneJourney























"Discover, listen to, and stream free internet radio from around the world."

"With over 70,000 radio stations in over 11,000 locations, TuneJourney is one of the largest free online radio catalogs on Earth."

But wait — there's more!

"TuneJourney is more than just a radio station aggregator: it's an AI-powered smart player that analyzes live streams as you listen."

"Enable AI talk detection to automatically skip talk and switch stations, keeping the music uninterrupted."

But wait — there's even more!















"



"Explore Radio Garden by rotating the globe."

Fair warning: there goes the day.

Postscript: if stuff like this had been around when I was a kid I would never have gone to sleep!

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Theo Jansen's Latest Strandbeests


Strandbeests are kinetic machine sculptures that move under their own power along a beach.

Some of the latest versions are very fast and can even tow humans behind them. 

Theo Jansen's YouTube description of his creations:

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

Strandbeest Evolution 2025 provides an update on the evolutionary development which has been ongoing since 1990.

Every spring I go to the beach with a new beast.

During the summer I do all kinds of experiments with the wind, sand, and water.

In fall I grow a bit wiser about how these beasts are can survive the circumstances on the beach.

At that point I declare them extinct and they go to the bone yard.

What's old is old again — but still kinda fun to play with



























Since forever I've been charmed by Apple's 11" MacBook Air (above), which made its debut in 2011 and was retired — to use Deckard's choice of words in "Blade Runner" — in 2015.

Note the lighted Apple logo on the back of the screen, a feature from back in the day that Apple retired in 2015.*

Such a small device compared to all the increasingly large screen laptops appearing every year.

When the Neo came out recently I noted comparisons to the 11" MacBook Air in terms of dimensions: in length and width they're very similar.

Sure, the Neo's a zillion times more capable and has a better screen etc. and costs $599 compared to the $999 11" MacBook Air's debut cost (BTW that's $1,440 in 2026 dollars).

Anyhoo, I noodled around on eBay and found a 2012 11" MacBook Air said to be in good condition and working for $40 so I took a flutter.

It just arrived and it looks brand new; I plugged it in to power and waited overnight to see if it actually turned on: YES! 

It made the classic Apple sound and started right up.

I played around with it for a while adjusting the settings etc. to my preferences. 

Turns out it's just as fast as my MacBook Pro M4 from November 2024 — but it can only access a few websites; most say they're not compatible with my 2011 11" Air running Lion OS 10.7.5 from 2012.

For example, my MacMail doesn't work at all.

Here's a video — "Using Mac OS X Lion in 2025" — that echoes my experience: no YouTube, no Wikipedia, no X, etc.

I tried and failed to update the OS to 10.13.6 El Capitan, which appeared in 2018 and was the final version of OS X before Apple switched to MacOS.

But that's kind of irrelevant since it turns out that my 2011 MacBook Air 13" running El Capitan 10.13.6 (I bought the machine new and updated its OS faithfully over the years), when I tried to create a boj post with it, appeared to do it correctly albeit slowly but to my dismay it turned out that the post as displayed on my 2024 MacBook Air was different from how it looked on the 2011 machine: the spacing of the text was all wrong.

It's hard enough using Blogger to create posts: as I remarked earlier, it now takes me 2-5 times as long to create a new boj post with this setup than it did with Typepad.

Like tears in rain... but I digress.

So, good-bye to using either of these 2011 legacy machines for boj.

Still, good fun for $40.

*Back story here.

Niche Museums — Find Tiny Museums Near You




















***THIS IS THE PLACE***


About Niche Museums

I love seeking out and exploring tiny and niche museums.

Why niche museums? So many reasons:

  • Once you start looking, there are museums about everything. And they are everywhere!
  • If someone cared enough about something to create a museum, that thing is interesting.
  • The smaller the museum is, the more likely you are to meet the person who founded it. These are people you definitely want to meet.

My aim is to add a new museum to this website on a regular basis. The most recently added museum is always the first item on the homepage.

The source code for this website is available on GitHub. You can read more about how it works in niche-museums.com, powered by Datasette.

Simon Willison - @simonw

Monday, March 30, 2026

The City That — From The Air — Looks Like a Person



















Wrote Kottke:

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

Photographer and drone pilot Pio Andrea Peri captured this overhead photo of the Sicilian city Centuripe, a town of about 5,400 people on the island of Sicily in southern Italy. 

Set in the hills between the Dittaino and Salso rivers, some 2,400 feet (about a half mile) above sea level, Centuripe's humanesque form developed organically over centuries along the natural contours of the landscape.

Perched atop hilltops, the city looks like a person from above — even on Google Maps.

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

[via daily overview]

How a Tiny Enamel Portrait Miniature is Made: Painting With Glass and Fire



YouTube description:

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

How was an enamel portrait miniature made in the 18th century? In this video, watch enamel artist Ruth Ball painstakingly recreate a portrait miniature of Queen Charlotte, based on an original painted in 1781.

Enamelling is the delicate process of firing finely ground coloured glass powders onto a thin metal base. Layer by layer, the glass is fused in a kiln to create luminous, durable images. The copper sheet used for the base is less than 1mm thick — just strong enough to support the enamel while preventing warping during firing.

Despite the passage of more than two centuries, the meticulous techniques used to create enamel portrait miniatures have hardly changed since they were first developed. Watch the full process unfold, complete with unintentional ASMR sound — from grinding enamel powders to the final reveal of the completed portrait.

'Enthusiasm as a Form of Love' — E.M. Cioran

There are pure, limpid forms of life undisclosed to those living under the sign of despair. Those whose life flows without obstacles reach a stage of delightful contentments in which the world appears charming and full of light. Enthusiasm casts a bewitching light over the world; it is a specific form of love, a way of forgetting oneself. Love has so many faces, so many aspects, and so many deviations that it is hard to find a typical form for it. Any science of love will look first for love's original manifestation. As one speaks of love between the sexes, love of God, for nature or for art, one can also speak of enthusiasm as a form of love. Which form is the essential one from which all others derive? Theologians maintain that it is the love of God and that all other manifestations are but pale reflections of this fundamental love. Pantheists with esthetic tendencies believe that it is the love of nature, and pure esthetes, the love of art. Similarly, for biologists it is pure sexuality without affection and for metaphysicians it is the feeling of universal identity. Yet not one of them will be able to prove that the form he defends is the most typical, because in the course of history that form has varied so much that nobody today could define it with any certainty.

As for me, I believe that the quintessential form of love is that between a man and a woman, not only sexuality but a rich network of affective states. Has anyone ever committed suicide in the name of God, nature or art? Love grows in intensity when it fastens on the concrete; one loves a woman for what makes her different, unique in the world: nothing can replace her at the height of passion. All other forms of love, though tending toward autonomy, participate in this essential form. Thus one generally does not place enthusiasm in the realm of love, when in fact its roots penetrate deep into the very substance of love, its emancipating tendencies notwithstanding. There is in the enthusiastic man a universal receptivity, an ability to gather everything with a surplus of energy which spends itself just for the pleasure of acting. The enthusiast heeds no criteria, makes no calculations; he is all abandon, restlessness and devotion. The joy of achieving and the ecstasy of efficiency are the essential characteristics of the man for whom life is a leap toward heights where destructive forces lose their negative intensity. We all have moments of enthusiasm, but they are too rare to stamp us permanently. I am referring to people in whom enthusiasm is predominant and constitutes the essential mark of their personality. They do not know defeat, because it is not the goal but the initiative and pleasure of acting that attracts them; they throw themselves into action not because they have meditated upon its consequences but simply because they cannot help it. Although not altogether impervious to success, the enthusiast is neither stimulated by it nor defeated by its absence. He is the last one to fail in this world. Life is more mediocre and fragmentary than we think: isn't this the reason for our decline, the loss of our vivacity, the hardening of our inner rhythms, the gradual slowing down of our vital flow? This process of waste destroys our receptivity and our willingness to embrace life generously and enthusiastically. The enthusiast alone preserves his energy until old age; all others, if not already born dead like most people, die before their time. How rare the true enthusiast! Can we imagine a world in which everybody will love everything, a world of enthusiasts? Such an image is even more alluring than the image of paradise, because its excesses of generosity surpass any of those born in Eden. The enthusiast's ability to be constantly reborn raises him above life's demoniacal tempations, the fear of nothingness, and the torments of agony. His life has no tragic dimension, because enthusiasm is the only form of life totally opaque to death. Even grace — so similar to enthusiasm — has less of this irrational ignorance of death. Grace is full of melancholy charm; not so enthusiasm. My tremendous admiration for enthusiasts stems from my inability to comprehend how there can be such men in a world where death, nothingness, sadness, and despair keep sinister company. It makes one wonder, to see people who are never desperate. How can the enthusiast be so indifferent to success? How can he act by virtue of excess only? What kind of strange and paradoxical form does love take in enthusiasm? The more intense love is, the more individualized. Men who love truly and passionately cannot love several women at once: the more intense the love, the more important its object. Let us imagine a passionate love without an object, a man without the woman on whom to concentrate his love: what would it be but the plenitude of love? Are there men with a great potential for love but who have never loved in this primordial, original way? Enthusiasm is love with an unspecified object. Instead of orienting itself toward others, enthusiastic love expends itself lavishly in generous actions, with a sort of universal receptivity.

Enthusiasm is a superior child of Eros. Of all the forms of love, enthusiasm is the most free of sexuality, much more so than mystic love, which cannot shed its sexual symbolism. Thus enthusiasm is spared the anxiety which makes sexuality play an important part in the human tragedy. The enthusiast is preeminently an unproblematic person. He understands many things without ever knowing the agonizing doubts and the chaotic sensitivity of the problematic man. The latter cannot solve anything, because nothing satisfies him. You will find in him neither the enthusiast's gift of abandon, his naive irrationality, nor the charming paradox of love in its purest state. The biblical myth of knowledge as sin is the most profound myth ever invented. The enthusiast's euphoria is due to the fact the he is unaware of the tragedy of knowledge. Why not say it? True knowledge is the most tenebrous darkness. I would gladly exchange all the harrowing problems of this world for sweet, un–self–conscious naiveté. The spirit does not elevate; it tears you apart. In enthusiasm, as in grace and magic, the spirit does not oppose life. The secret of happiness lies in this original nondivision of an impenetrable unity. If you are an enthusiast, you do not know that poison, duality. Life usually preserves its fecundity and productiveness through the tensions and oppositions of an agnostic struggle. Enthusiasm overcomes it, and accedes to a life without tragedy and a love without sexuality.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

ohjoeyjoey@yahoo.com












Two days ago just for lulz I had my Crack Research Team©®™ see if they could excavate my late 20th century Yahoo email and get it working again.

Success!

It costs $5/month (after a 14-day free trial) to enable mail forwarding, which is the only way to get email without visiting Yahoo's still crazy-cluttered site.

Those under 15 (about half my readership) will have no idea what Yahoo is unless they've seen "Back To The Future."

BeyondTheMedspeak: My Rule of Thumb for Expired Meds


My rule of thumb for expired meds: every year after the expiration date = 10% loss of efficacy.

So, a 5-year-old Rx = half as effective (5 x 10% = 50%) as when you picked it up from the pharmacy: take twice the prescribed dose.

This is a rough estimate: that's why it's called a Rule of thumb.

For example, when I broke a bone in my foot last year, it really hurt, so much so that I couldn't sleep.

The urgent care doc where I got an x-ray wouldn't prescribe narcotics; she said to use Motrin/Advil etc.

Ha — what a joke.

At home in the back of a cabinet I found some expired hydrocodone from a 2019 tooth extraction.

Just to be on the safe side, I took one as prescribed back in 2019: it decreased the pain but didn't eliminate it.

A second one did the trick.

Chinese Cigarette Museum






















The site's grand panjandrum explains why it exists:

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


I've been fascinated by Chinese cigarettes for years — the sheer variety of pack artwork, the regional brands, the history embedded in each design. Walking through a Chinese convenience store is like visiting a gallery.


But there was nowhere online to actually explore this world. No beautiful directory. No way to discover what exists, compare brands, or track what you'd tried. Everything was scattered across obscure Chinese forums or buried in e-commerce listings.


So I built it. A proper archive — thousands of SKUs, full imagery, translated descriptions, ratings data. Something that does justice to how visually rich this world actually is.


If you're a collector, a traveler, or just curious — this is for you.




Saturday, March 28, 2026

Self-Leveling Furniture Glides























Very clever!

Something seemingly simple — the little doohickies you put on the bottom of chair and table legs — gets an upgrade.

The inventor created a two-component furniture slider that lets each leg independently find its level position and smoothly glide on indoor or outdoor surfaces.

These sliders automatically adjust for angled or uneven legs and adapt their gliding surfaces to match floor and patio irregularities.

Safe for hardwood floors, wood decks, brick, concrete, linoleum, parquet, and tile.

Eliminates chair and table wobbles.

Set of 4: $9.99.

Picture of the Day
















Taken at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport.

LIbrary of Juggling



My heart leaps with joy when I stumble on an old-timey-style site like this.

No cookies opt out/in, no banner ads, no flashing lights, no sounds, no dark patterns.

WYSIWYG.
























N.B. The most recent additions were on June 13, 2015.

"The Library of Juggling is on an indefinite hiatus, which means no new tricks will be added. Existing content will continue to be hosted for the foreseeable future."

Friday, March 27, 2026

1999























Wrote Prince:























From "Prince: The Beautiful Ones," published in 2019.

He was 24 when he wrote "1999" in 1982.

You know what song I'm hearing....

Prince was my favorite musician of all time.

I thought he'd be around for a long time: he's the only musician I'd travel to see perform live.

I missed numerous chances.

When he was found dead in an elevator at Paisley Park, his HQ, on Thursday, April 21, 2016, at age 58, I was well and truly shocked.

Antique Hold-To-Light Postcards























I never knew such things existed until I happened on them in Clive Thompson's Linkfest.

From reddit:

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I started collecting these cards several years ago when I was really interested in collecting antique Coney Island postcards.





















Each of the cards has been intricately "carved" out and painted with bright colors allowing those areas to glow when held up to the light, the thicker parts of the paper don't let any light through.






















All of the cards pictured are from the early 1900s, most likely between 1903 and 1910, because two of the cards I have depict the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair, and 2 of the 4 Coney Island cards pictured depict an area of Coney Island called Dreamland which burned down in 1911.