"Hostile Volume is a simple and maddening game where you need to hold the audio volume level at 25%, which gets increasingly difficult with each level."
Fair warning: there goes the day.
Wait a sec — what's that song I'm hearing?
[via Kottke]
"Hostile Volume is a simple and maddening game where you need to hold the audio volume level at 25%, which gets increasingly difficult with each level."
Fair warning: there goes the day.
Wait a sec — what's that song I'm hearing?
[via Kottke]
Bill Hammack, aka The Engineer Guy, is an amazing engineering educator and in this video he explains how duct tape is designed to simultaneously do three things well: “a) adhere with light pressure, b) stay in place, yet c) be removable”.
Controlling the stickiness of tape is of utmost importance. In fact, a key element of engineering tape is controlling its stickiness — and only by doing that can tape be wound into a useful roll. If the tape sticks too tightly to itself, we could not use it.
I love the ramp & ball test for tape stickiness near the end… a very elegant and simple bit of engineering:
Pressure sensitive tape predates much of the most elementary molecular understanding of adhesion; tape has been mass produced since the early twentieth century. That engineers developed and refined tape without this knowledge is no surprise — recall that the purpose of the engineering method is to solve problems before we have full scientific knowledge.
....................................
[via Kottke]
"The html review is an annual journal of literature made to exist on the web"
Fair warning: there goes the day.
"Only gold and platinum are corrosion-free. All others metals require nuanced techniques to protect them." — Stewart Brand, in his excellent new book "Maintenance of Everything: Part One."
The Rust Store carries over 1,000 items dedicated to preventing and removing rust.
More
here.
Wait a sec — what's that album I'm hearing?
YouTube description: "In this episode I test your knowledge of 20 of the most famous guitarists by playing an isolated single note (or bend) from their famous solos."
Miller surfs year-round on the St. Lawrence River. In winter, he tests his skills among the ice floes and chilly current.
"This fully functioning brass compass guides you to the Olive Garden in Times Square."
Limited edition.
Super-slow versions of three classic video games:
• Pong
• Breakout
• Missile Command
On the slowest setting you have to constantly remind yourself not to close your eyes and fall asleep.
Wait a sec — what's that song I'm hearing?
[1960s Ruffles]
The other day while I was out running and engaging in a wide-ranging discussion with Perplexity Pro on my phone about any number of things, I asked "Who invented Ruffles potato chips?
To my surprise I learned it wasn't Frito-Lay, the company that makes them, but rather one George Ronald Pierce.
From the Douglas County (Nebraska) Historical Society and Wikipedia:
In the late 1940s, George Ronald Pierce began working for Industrial Electrics, owned by Bernhardt Stahmer, at 15th and Chicago Streets.
There he had a hand in several different products, perhaps the most noteworthy of which was a slicer for potato chips.
In 1948, he put the machine on a trailer behind the family car and drove east, showing and selling his company's invention in several states.
He called the chips that it made "Ruffles," a name taken from the ruffled lace collars in fashion in the 16th century — the chips resembled little corrugated waffles.
The uneven surfaces were said to make the resulting chips sturdier and better for dipping.
Stahmer, the company's owner, trademarked these ridged chips as Ruffles in 1948.
He sold the rights to the Frito Company in 1958.
Find out here.
If you're anything like me this question keeps you up at night all too often.
I'm here to bring you the answers you need: isn't that why you pay me the big $$$ to read boj?
But I digress.
Long story short: Your charger's wattage matters a lot when the device's battery is 0-50% charged; higher than that, less so.
TMI?
You don't recall what wattage is from your high school physics class?
Perhaps you should've been paying attention rather than passing notes....
"Over four years, Belgian photographer Barbara Iweins took a photo of every single thing in her house, 'from my daughter's torn sock to my son's Lego, but also my vibrator, my anxiolytics... absolutely everything.'"
12,795 photos of 12,795 objects.
"Explore the entire archive here, indexed and classified by color, material, frequency of use, room, and 'what I would save in a fire.'"
Fair warning....
Wait a sec — what's that song I'm hearing?
[via Kottke]
Back in the day (1917) they comprised the first paragraph of the Kansas City Star Copy Style Sheet.
Then Kansas City Star reporter Ernest Hemingway credited them for teaching him "the best rules for the business of writing."
Wait a sec — what's that song I'm hearing?
"Each London Underground line has its own distinctive sound. Can you tell them apart?"
Wait a sec — what's that song I'm hearing?
How's your classical Greek?
I'm reminded of Ben Jonson's remark about Shakespeare, to wit: "He had little Latin, and less Greek."
Which, contrary to the common interpretation, was part of Jonson's appreciation of Shakespeare's greatness rather than a dig at him.
But I digress.
The headline up top in English: "For extreme diseases, extreme remedies." — Hippocrates, "Aphorisms" (c. 400 B.C.E.)
All of which serves as a prelude to the introduction of a new pillow which has recently taken over my sleeping space aka bed.
It's the COOP Side Sleeper pillow (above and below).
I've known of its existence for many years but only took a flutter and bought one recently after increasingly broken/inadequate sleep for the past few months with no apparent outside cause.
It took a few nights to get the pillow's firmness right (they give you a big bag of additional original foam cube stuffing
so you can get its elevation just right after taking some time to look at yourself in a mirror in your preferred side sleeping position and adjust the pillow thickness such that your head is perfectly level).
After yet another in a series of fantastic 8+ hour sleeps, I'm here to tell you this tricked-out pillow is no humbug.
$99.
Not persuaded?
Watch
the video.
Wait a sec — what's that song I'm hearing?
I watched this remarkable 2025 film last night.
I find it incomprehensible that leading actress Amanda Seyfried's portrayal of visionary Shaker leader Ann Lee did not receive the Oscar for Best Actress: she wasn't even nominated!
Her performance is staggering.
This morning, not ten hours later, I happened on a scientific paper titled "The neurophenomenology of a self-induced transcendental visionary state: A case study."
Above and below,
brain imaging of the paper's subject before, during, and after her self-induced transcendental visionary state.
Somewhere Ann Lee is smiling.
Wait a sec — what's that song* I'm hearing?
*398 million views since being uploaded to YouTube 15 years ago. Why, that's more than the total of all the views ever of my cat napping!
Two years and one month after Apple's Vision Pro arrived here, I finally bit the bullet and created a boj post using its virtual Mac display feature.
You just read it: the "Liquid Sky" appreciation published earlier today.
Doing so was janky and difficult and unpleasant for a number of reasons.
1) When sitting in a chair, which is necessary if you're going to use the virtual Mac display for typing etc., the Vision Pro even with its long delayed improved head harness is still uncomfortably heavy.
Tim Cook and all the shills and fanbois who say they wear the device all day for work are lying.
2) The power cord to the battery is still annoying when it brushes your shoulder or back
3) The resolution of the virtual display is terrible compared to the physical screen: it's fuzzy even up close, and should you wish to have the screen be many feet wide, which you can, reading letters and numbers requires a lot of effort because of the magnified graininess.
4) If you choose to put up multiple virtual windows simultaneously, you find that they're not all identical: the top bar for Chrome:
File Edit View History Bookmarks Profiles Tab Window Help
for example, only appears on one screen, so when you add a new tab on a second or third or fourth screen, you have to go back with your cursor to the first screen to get the New Tab option from its drop-down menu.
Annoying and clunky.
*With one exception: Watching movies and shows at home. They look magnificent in the Vision Pro's 6k resolution on the giant virtual screen size you choose — up to 40 feet!
The sound is fantastic and one great thing is that while you're listening at full surround sound volume, others in the room can't hear anything.
Lagniappe: using it in the middle of the day is magical, as you close off all the light and commotion and find yourself in a perfectly dark virtual theater with no phones or sounds of eating and talking etc.
The ideal way to watch is while lying flat with your head supported on a pillow; I use my Plufl, which turns out to be perfect for me and enables my cat to comfortably nap on my lap.
I saw this sui generis 1982 film when it came out and was blown away.
I saw it again a number of years later and haven't thought of it since — until March 31 when I read its director's New York Times obituary.
Watch the trailer below.
Up top, the film in its entirety on YouTube in HD — free, the way we like it.
If you don't enjoy it let me know and I will refund three times what you paid to watch it.
From Alex Williams' recent New York Times story:
...............................................
Pedro Friedeberg, a Mexican artist often called "the last Surrealist," most famous for his playful Mano Silla (Hand Chair) from 1962, died on March 5 in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, at 90.
He grew weary of the outsize attention paid to his most well-known creation, a large wooden hand that offers its palm as a seat and its fingers as a backrest.
Over 5,000 have been produced in a variety of materials — mahogany, oak, bronze, plastic — and finishes, including gold and silver leaf.
Some rare, original midcentury versions can fetch tens of thousands of dollars at auction.
Friedeberg told W: "I hate them. They've become like an icon or something."