Sunday, May 10, 2026

Schrödinger's Laundry



















In 1935 physicist Erwin Schrödinger proposed what has come to be called "Schrödinger's cat," a thought experiment which, 91 years later, is still confounding.

His purpose in doing so was to show that the then-new science of quantum mechanics as a theory of reality was incomplete.

According to Schrödinger, one could, in principle, create a superposition in a large-scale system by making it dependent on a quantum particle that was in a superposition.

He proposed a scenario with a cat in a closed steel chamber, wherein the cat's life or death depended on the state of a radioactive atom: whether it had decayed and emitted radiation or not.

According to Schrödinger, the position taken by fellow giants Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg on quantum theory's application in this instance could only be that the cat remains both dead and alive until the state has been observed.

Schrödinger did not wish to promote the idea of simultaneously dead and alive cats as a serious possibility; on the contrary, he intended the example to illustrate the absurdity of Bohr and Heisenberg's interpretations of quantum theory.

But I digress.

The other day I decided to address a couple orange stains on one sleeve of my bathrobe that have been there for a while, from what I have no idea.

I tried to remove them with K2r Spot Lifter because it doesn't require that you wash the article after application.

It lightened the spots but they're still present.

Today I'm gonna go nuclear, as it were, and bring in Zout.

Zout's directions:

• Spray to completely cover the stain. Rub in.

• Wait 1-5 minutes.

• Launder in warmest water per fabric care instructions.

That seems easy enough: here goes...

... 20 minutes later...

Now, what the heck does Schrödinger have to do with laundry?

I was wondering when you'd ask....

After the warm water wash of my bathrobe was completed, I did something I'm betting very few — if any — people would (or would not) do: with my eyes shut so I couldn't peek even inadvertently, I put the bathrobe in the dryer and turned it on.

It takes two dryer cycles of my 1996 Maytag dryer (still chugging along as well as it did the day it arrived, never having required any service) to completely dry the very heavy terry cloth, so after the first cycle I cleaned the lint trap and, after shutting my eyes and sticking my hand in to confirm it was still damp (it was) I turned it on for a second spin.

Upon removing it, with my eyes open, I espied this:






















As you can see, faint orange areas remain. 

But here's my point: while the bathrobe was drying — because I didn't know whether or not the spots had come out —I could indulge in the fantasy that they did come out, which made me happy as I did this and that while the drying proceeded.

If, like most if not all normal people, I'd immediately looked at the sleeve in question once I'd removed it from the washing maching only to see the spots were still there, I'd have been disheartened as I proceeded to stick the bathrobe in the dryer.

Doing it my way, I got the frisson of delight that would have come if the spots had come out, even though an hour later my optimism was crushed by reality. 

If you adopt this sort of delayed outcome approach and apply it everywhere, you life will be better. 

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

Qué pasó?


Helpful Hints from joe–eeze: Duct Cleaning — Good idea, or just a lot of hot air?

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Jeanne Huber visited the duct space in a Washington Post Home section Q.&A. which was most informative; it follows.

    Duct Cleaning: Good Idea, Or Just a Lot of Hot Air?

    Q. Is duct cleaning for furnaces a good idea or, in most cases, an unnecessary scam?

    A. In most cases, it's unnecessary.

    The Environmental Protection Agency has been saying this at least since 1997, and the American Lung Association echoes the advice.

    Yet the duct-cleaning industry continues to grow.

    John Schulte, executive director of the National Air Duct Cleaners Association, says that one study found that of the $15.9 billion that Americans spend each year on indoor air services, $4 billion goes for duct cleaning — equal to what's spent on asbestos and lead abatement, and more than the $3.4 billion spent on remediation, such as fixing leaks that lead to mildew growth.

    Clearly, something is out of whack.

    Either the officials' message isn't getting through or consumers don't believe it.

    The idea that ducts need to be cleaned seems to makes sense, especially when you realize that forced-air heating systems run as a loop unless they are equipped with heat-recovery ventilators or other devices that automatically vent some of the stale air and replace it with fresh outside air.

    Otherwise, the furnace generates hot air, which flows through one set of ducts to registers in rooms.

    There, the heated air increases the air pressure, forcing some of the rooms' colder air through return grates and back to the furnace.

    Inevitably, the circulating air picks up dust, hair, pet dander, dust mites, and whatever else is lightweight and capable of becoming airborne.

    The furnace filter is supposed to trap most of this before the air warms up for a new circuit through the house.

    But dust still inevitably collects on the registers (especially the return-air grates) and perhaps also in the ducts.

    Schulte says his association's members frequently find ducts padded with two inches of dust.

    "If you're the kind of person who would leave two inches of dust sitting on a desk, you might be willing to leave two inches of dust sitting in your ducts," Schulte says.

    His point: Cleaning away the dust blanket makes sense.

    But does it?

    In the mid-1990s, before the EPA came out with its advice to be skeptical, the agency and the National Air Duct Cleaners Association teamed up on a research program aimed at determining how indoor air quality is affected by duct cleaning.

    In 1997, the EPA released a 16-page handout based on that research, which was last updated in February 2026.

    It's pretty damning.

    "Duct cleaning has never been shown to actually prevent health problems," the report said.

    More: "EPA does not recommend that air ducts be cleaned routinely...."

    "Neither do studies conclusively demonstrate that particle (e.g., dust) levels in homes increase because of dirty air ducts or go down after cleaning. This is because much of the dirt in air ducts adheres to duct surfaces and does not necessarily enter the living space."

    The report went on to say that duct cleaning could be useful if there is visible mold inside ducts, but only if they are metal or other solid material, and only if the cleaning is done properly.

    Ducts with interior insulation can't be adequately cleaned and must be replaced if they become moldy.

    At the time, the EPA noted that the duct-cleaning industry was still in its infancy.

    So while the report noted a lack of evidence to back up the need for duct cleaning, a reader might conclude that evidence would point out the usefulness of the procedure if only the right tests were done.

    Now, though, decades have elapsed, and the evidence still doesn't exist.

    The trade association, which represents 856 companies, publishes standards, sponsors training programs and serves as a referral agency for cleaners who agree to follow the association's protocols unless they inform the client of a change, perhaps because the customer doesn't want to pay for the whole procedure.

    The standards and training do reflect problems that the mid-'90s research uncovered.

    For example, duct cleaners now turn on their vacuum systems before they begin scrubbing at any dust built up inside ducts so that it is siphoned away rather than spewed into the indoor air.

    There is also a protocol to ensure that every part of the system is cleaned.

    Although there has been recent talk about it, Schulte said, the association has not commissioned any studies to answer the basic question of whether the air inside a house becomes cleaner once ducts are cleaned.

    Given that so much money is being made without evidence showing a need, you have to conclude that someone doesn't want to ask the question for fear of getting the wrong answer.

    Or maybe the answer's known, but no one dares to reveal it.

    Which brings us back to the limited circumstances where the EPA says that duct cleaning might be useful: when there is mold within metal ducts or when residents have unexplained allergies or other health problems that might be linked to dirty indoor air.

    Mold, a term that refers to a great many kinds of fungi, grows only on surfaces that are persistently damp, so if you have mold within ducts, there something is clearly wrong with your heating system.

    It could be a humidifier linked to the heating system, an issue related to an air conditioner that uses the same ducts to deliver cold air, or a leak.

    Whatever the cause, your first step should be calling in a heating and air conditioning expert to diagnose the problem.

    Cleaning the ducts won't, by itself, solve the problem.

    And if your ducts are made of insulated board rather than metal, they have fiberglass insulation on the inside and should not be cleaned aggressively because doing so might free the fibers and send them through your house.

    This type of ducting, once moldy, must be replaced.

    The EPA cautions that there is no evidence to support spraying ducts with biocides or encapsulants, which some duct-cleaners recommend.

    If health problems are what are prompting you to consider duct cleaning, the EPA recommends you visit a doctor for help in sorting out the numerous possible causes.

    Whether you have health problems or are just trying to prevent them, certain steps do make sense.

    Get a good furnace filter and change it regularly, or consider investing in an air cleaner.

    If you have a humidifier, make sure to empty and clean the pan regularly, or have a plumber connect it to a drain system so it empties automatically.

    And have a heating and air-conditioning expert check whether your ducts are sealed so that air can't leak out, or in.

    This is primarily an energy-saving measure, but it also can improve air quality because leaky connections can allow insulation fibers to get into the ducts in certain circumstances.

    For more information, "Should You Have the Air Ducts in Your Home Cleaned?" summarizes the Environmental Protection Agency's advice on this issue.

********************

Well, you're already more fortunate than I in at least one respect: most likely you're reading this before, not after, you've paid major money to have your ducts cleaned.

About thirty years ago, in the late 90s, I got a major home–improvement jones and had tons of work done, among other things putting on new copper gutters, painting the outside of the house, retiling and regrouting the bathrooms wherever time had loosened things up, major tree work to open up the view to the mountains and the northwest, and replacing my furnace and heat pump.

Well, after all that and with a brand–new heating and cooling system it seemed only smart to have my ducts cleaned.

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My house was built in 1967 and around thirty years old at the time I had them cleaned; the original owner/builder was a heavy smoker and very frugal and I strongly doubt he ever paid to have the ducts cleaned while he lived here; I'd never had it done since I moved in in 1983.

Long story short: having it done was a huge mistake.

But not for any of the reasons noted in Huber's article.

First of all, the registers and returns very likely had never been removed since the house was built: doing so caused some of them not to be properly seatible again because of the inevitable shifting and settling of the property over time and consequent movement of the attachment screws and all.

But that's trivial compared to the main reason it was a mistake: after the duct cleaning was finished, every time the heat or fan or AC came on there was a tremendous amount of metallic vibrational and rattling noise throughout the house.

By cleaning the metal ducts down to their surfaces and removing the accumulated sound dampening lining, the air moving through them and especially around corners now created a tremendous racket, with the vibration and noise carrying into every room.

Also, the settled positions of the ducts in their mounts was disturbed and thus innumerable new sources of metal–on-metal noise were created.

I am extremely covetous of silence — when I want silence.

I recall reading once that the four most important attributes of a home — or potential home — are space, light, silence, and a view.

So.

My unhappiness from the first time I heard the loud sounds of air moving through my clean ducts lasted — intermittently, because like most things you get used to it — for years, until finally either the ducts became once again insulated with dust and debris or I simply grew accustomed to it.

Now things seem fine and quiet like they used to be.

But I'll tell you what: if you offered me $10,000 cash today to have my ducts cleaned — yes, you read it right, you pay me the money and then do it — I'd turn you away and close the door in a New York zeptosecond.

Or less.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Apocalypse Early Warning System























Created by Kyle McDonald who wrote: "In the event of an imminent nuclear apocalypse, we suspect that people who have access to private jets will immediately take to the skies and escape city centers. This site tracks this indicator in real time. The current emergency level is reported on a scale of 1 to 5 with 5 being an indicator of a likely imminent apocalypse."









Today's Washington Post story about this here.

10 quotes that, on occasion, may be useful

Youladywillpushbutton1


See one, do one, be one.


The bleeding always stops.


It was over before it started.


Look at it in a quantum light.


Money is frozen desire. [James Buchan]


Coincidence is a glimpse of the scaffolding of reality.


The more you know, the less you need. [Australian Aboriginal saying]


A good surgeon never says "oops"; he says "there." [Wiley F. Barker, M.D.]


A client's story never sounds better than the first time you hear it. [Unknown lawyer]


Love is giving something you don't have to someone who doesn't exist. [Jacques Lacan]

The acorn doesn't fall far from the tree




















Watching the British spy thriller series "Treason," I was struck by how much actress Oona Chaplin — Charlie Chaplin's granddaughter — resembles him.

It's less of a surprise when you look at his actress daughter Geraldine Chaplin.

Friday, May 8, 2026

This Is Lacquer Like You’ve Never Seen It | Mine Tanigawa’s Japanese Urushi Sculptures



YouTube description:

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

This film follows her meticulous process – from watercolour sketches and digital refinement to the careful layering, curing, and polishing of lacquer. 

Her work captures urushi in motion, expressing its fluid nature through forms inspired by flowing water, drifting clouds, and the landscapes of southern Kyoto.

We also visit Tsutsumi Asakichi Urushi, a traditional lacquer supplier, to see how raw sap is refined, coloured, and prepared using time-honoured techniques and machinery.

Once limited to just five natural colours, modern urushi now offers a rich palette, yet remains deeply rooted in tradition. 

Each sculpture takes around three months to complete, with countless layers, polishing stages, and precise environmental control required to achieve its flawless finish.

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

See this piece in the "Urushi Now: Contemporary Japanese Lacaquer" display at the V&A South Kensington in London until April 30, 2027.

BeyondTheMedspeak: Door Gym

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I have long believed that gravity is, in the end, the thing that brings us down.

Now, prolonged periods of weightlessness are no one's best friend: witness the state of astronauts and cosmonauts when first they return to Earth after sustained periods in orbit — they need to be carried from their spacecraft, so weak have they become as a result of the absence of gravity to work against.

The inexorable pull towards the center of the planet from the moment we stop growing, allowing that downward movement to proceed unopposed, causes all sorts of havoc.

Pinched nerves, the result of narrowing of the outlets between the bones of the spine wherein lie the motor and sensory conduits of motion and sensation, are a result of gravity.

The first line of treatment is thus to open up those narrowed channels: traction — stretching the spine so as to elongate it — is successful in a surprisingly large percentage of cases involving the cervical (neck) vertebrae.

I speak from personal experience: I had a terrible cervical disc problem about 15 years ago.

I could not sleep, I could not think straight, the dull, throbbing pain and ache were 24/7.

Medications left me woozy.

My hand was numb and weak which meant the clock was ticking: after a certain period of time nerve damage is permanent.

Surgery to relieve the nerve compression (it was at C3/C4 on the right, if you must know) seemed imminent.

I visited Dr. John Jane, the chairman of Neurological Surgery at UVA Medical School.

He examined me, told me what I had, sent me for an MRI to confirm it (which it did) and prescribed cervical over–the–door traction, four times a day, 15 minutes per session.

Long story short: you buy a kit at CVS or wherever containing a big plastic bag, a rope, a harness for your chin and head, and a pulley that rests on top of a door.

You fill the bag with 20 pounds of water (there's a red line that indicates that amount as well as lesser volumes), put the harness under your chin and skull, sit down in a chair, and let the weight — via the rope and pulley — exert a steady pull upward under your head.

That's it.

Nothing happened until about the fourth day, when I suddenly noticed that the pain seemed less intense while I was sitting there.

And it stayed diminished after I was done.

With each subsequent session it got better.

After another week or so the pain and ache were gone and strength started to return to my hand.

I asked Dr. Jane how something so simple could have so profound an effect.

He told me that nerve compression — or its absence — is a matter of fractions of a millimeter: the tolerances at the level of function vs. pathology are that critical.

Stretching the spine just enough to open up that tight space just the tiniest amount was enough to relieve the problem and allow healing.

Which brings us all the way back around to the door gym (above and below).

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I don't use mine to do pull–ups: rather, I simply dangle from it for 5–10 seconds whenever I'm nearby.

It feels great and I believe it provides relief from the day–long assault of gravity on the spine and the rest of the body.

I have one upstairs and one downstairs.

I'm 5'9" tall and the bar itself is 6'4" above the floor so I can't fully extend when I dangle: I try to let my spine and shoulders and hips get as loose as I can, then bend my knees so my feet just touch the floor while I hang there.

So pleasant and, I believe, good for things that don't yet — and who knows, may never — ail you.

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From a number of websites:

    The Door Gym mounts in one second in your doorway, making pull–ups possible

    • No fasteners required

    • The simple device uses the weight of your body leveraged against the door frame and requires that you have a doorway with trim

    • When used properly it will not damage doorway and can be installed and removed in 1 second.

    • You can also do deep push-ups with the Door Gym by placing it on the floor

    Door Gym door size requirements:

    • Face molding around door: minimum 1-1/2" — maximum 3-1/2"

    • Molding distance from wall: minimum 1/4" — maximum 3/4"

    • Wall thickness: minimum 4-1/4" - maximum 6-1/4" (trim to trim)

    • The Door Gym has been designed to fit residential (framed) wooden doorways 24" to 32" and support up to 300 lbs.

********************

An excellent investment in terms of cost vs. potential benefits.

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$34.99.

Spy thrillers and phones


As I watched the 2022 five-episode British spy thriller series "Treason" on Netflix, a clue phone of sorts started ringing in my pea brain.

Without phones the whole thing would collapse.

Every couple minutes someone picks up their phone to send a message/receive one/make a call/receive one/track someone's location/listen to what surreptitious recording devices are picking up/watch live or recorded security camera footage etc.

How did it happen that there were great spy thrillers* long before mobile phones?


One more thing: the cast of "Treason" is excellent with one exception: the lead actor, Charlie Cox [above in the thumbnail], is completely miscast: he's a total lightweight and in no way, shape, or form plausible as assistant chief and then C at MI6.

He looks and acts more like the towel guy at a fitness gym.

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

*"The Third Man," starring Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Alida Valli, and Trevor Howard, directed by Carol Reed with a screenplay written by Graham Greene,  premiered in 1949.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

One iPhone Stand To Rule Them All




















I bought this accessory many years ago and it's still as effective as it was the day it arrived.

No flaws: it's perfect, a beautiful piece of industrial design.

Heavy steel base keeps it rock steady; easy to adjust precisely to hold your phone firmly with and without a case without marring it.

Instantly and smoothly moves from portrait to landscape.

It's a pleasure to interact with this tool because it's so well designed.

$54.99-$69.99 depending on finish and color.

On the fence? Watch


the video.

Just published: A biography of my sensational calico cat VANTA














This new novel was published last month.

Copies will go fast so don't dally: get yours here.

More VANTA?

Your wish is my demand.

WikiArquitectura























"The world's largest architecture encyclopedia."

Search by Buildings/Architects/Places/Dates/Typologies.

Fair warning....

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

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Underwater Volcano Eruption in the Solomon Islands



YouTube description: "We went on an expedition to capture Kavachi — one of the world's most active underwater volcanoes — erupting beneath the Pacific Ocean in the remote Solomon Islands."

"Steam explosions, sulfur-rich plumes, and superheated sea water collide in one of the most extreme environmments on our planet."

All possible love to Perplexity Pro


Above, what no amount of time over the past few years spent asking Apple Support how to sync my MacBook's Chrome bookmarks with Chrome on my iPhone could achieve: simple, understandable instructions that worked!

The more I use Perplexity (Pro costs $17/month and works on both phone and computer) the more I appreciate it, as it takes what used to be endless deadening iterations of Google Search and compresses them into nearly instantaneous answers that far surpass Google's results, in terms of precisely addressing the question asked and providing clickable sources and references.

You can talk to it and it's like talking to a person who's smarter than all the people you'll ever know — combined.

It responds in a manner indistinguishable from a real person using your choice of voices.

I've even had long conversations — 30-40 minutes — while out running: nice change from hearing the same old songs for the zillionth time.

I'm learning a lot about the Roman emperors that we didn't cover in high school Latin.

But I digress.

Just as Google Search seemed magical in its early days, so does this AI now.

Lagniappe: The phone bookmarks even have the favicons present on my computer!

Is my blue your blue?













Find out here.



Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Quantum Superposition Made Simple

















"Said the Queen, 'When I was your age, sometimes I believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast!'" — "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland," Lewis Carroll (1865)

The Rolling Stones Recording of 'Beggars Banquet'





Blast from the Past: Coca-Cola BlāK























On Monday, April 3, 2006, Coca-Cola introduced Coca-Cola BlāK, "a carbonated 'coffee-essence' drink."

It came in glass bottles like the one pictured up top; 45 calories/8 oz serving; a middling amount of caffeine (46 mg/8 oz compared with classic Coke's 23 mg and coffee's 80 mg).

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

Monday, May 4, 2026

8 Things I've Done Once That I'll Never Do Again



1. Ride in a helicopter

2. Ride on the back of a motorcycle

3. Ride Space Mountain at Disney World

4. Ride a Ferris wheel

5. Run the New York City Marathon

6. Set a brand-new pickup truck on fire*

7. Trek to an altitude of 18,000 feet in the Himalayas

8. Eat durian

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

*Age 12 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; I was trying to smoke some ham in the glove box and the wiring caught fire and suddenly I was running for my life!

Eye Contact with a Humpback Whale























Wrote Kottke:

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

I've never seen anything like these photos before.

In October 2024, underwater photographer Rachel Moore had a close encounter with a humpback whale in French Polynesia and took these photos of the whale's eye.

She wrote of the experience: "This moment of eye contact was beyond my wildest dreams. I've never encountered a whale like this one, and it was the most profoundly beautiful experience of my life."



Joist Hanger












Clever.

Also called rafter hooks, these steel grippers have red rubberized plastic handles that let you easily attach or release them from wood joists, beams, rafters, and wall studs of up to 1-5/8" thickness and static loads up to 80 lbs. in your garage, basement, attic, etc.

7"H x 3.5"W

• No moving parts

• Easy to attach or remove

• No tools or fasteners required













• Hang a rod with two joist hangers: instant closet

• Black powder-coated finish for both indoor and outdoor use

• The heavier the weight attached, the more tightly the hangers grip

• For bicycles, garden tools, hoses, extension cords, paint cans, lawnchairs, holiday decorations, fishing gear, pool equipment, luggage, toys, etc.













Set of 4: $10.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

How Homer's 'Iliad' May Have Sounded to its First Listeners



YouTube description:

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

The famous Iliad was composed by Homer or unknown author(s) (800-700 BCE) and was likely orally transmitted before being standardized in the contemporaneously developing Greek script [Robert L. Fowler 2004]. The Iliad by Homer is the oldest European poetic and liturgical tradition, and has been significant in historical linguistics for its striking similarities with the Rigveda of Ancient India and the Gathas of Ancient Persia [John J. Lowe 2015]. 

 This recitation of the Iliad Book 1:1–27 with pitch accents and dactylic hexameter in Homeric Greek is an original reconstruction of ‪@perquunos‬​ which synthesized comparative and diachronic analyses of morphophonetic developments in attested Ancient Greek dialects and reconstructable Proto-Hellenic and Proto-Indo-European stages of the language. 

 The digamma Ϝ/ϝ is reconstructable intervocalically, word-initially and finally but never in clusters with the yod /j/, whereof assimilation yields in geminated /jj/. E.g. PIE *h₃éwi- → PH *hówi- + *ōnós = *owjōnós → PG *ojjōnós → HG ojjōnós (not ojwōnós or owjōnós); PIE *diwjós → PH *dijjós → HG dĩjjos (not dī̃wos!). Additionally, digamma Ϝ/ϝ is not reconstructable where it breaks the meter and when the etymology does not require a digamma reconstruction.

 The phonetic value of Zeta ζ is debated but is metrically always a cluster in Homeric Greek, and is result of PIE *j in certain clusters, e.g., PIE djḗws → PH dzews → HG dzews; PIE h₁jeǵjómh₁nos → PH hjədzómɘnos → HG hadzómenos.

 The following phonetic values are reconstructable for each Greek character: υ = [ʊ]; ῡ = [uː]; η = [ɜː] ~ [æː]; ω = [ɔː] ~ [ɒː]; ϝ = [w]; j = [j]; ζ = [dz]. 

 This recitation uses four pitch accents namely the acute ά (high), the circumflex ᾶ (falling), the unaccented α (medium) and the grave ὰ (low).

 English Translation is from Anthony S. Kline, William Cowper, Robert Fagles and Augustus T. Murray.

Joanna Stern's great iPhone hack



Joanna Stern was a personal technology columnist for the Wall Street Journal for nearly thirteen years until she dropped the safety net this past February and went out on her own with her new website/newsletter, "NEW THINGS WITH JOANNA STERN."

I immediately subscribed — I mean, it's free, the way we like it! — and happened on a wonderful tech tip toward the end:

"On the iPhone, you can hold the spacebar and it functions as cursor control."

It's TechnoDolt©®™ friendly and it works!

This hack makes it much easier finding the exact spot you want to correct spelling/punctuation/grammar/syntax/whatever before you send out an email or text that makes you look stupid.

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

Caramel Corn Throwdown



I got a caramel corn jones recently and after having Perplexity Pro look into brands and reviews, I chose 5 to try out: 3 widely available (i.e. on Amazon with free shipping) and 2 "boutique" brands — Carroll's Caramel Corn and Berco's Popcorn — sold only by their makers and requiring additional shipping charges.

Below are my ratings, best to worse, along with prices:

1. Werther's Original Caramel Popcorn — $13.00 for 10 oz [$1.30/oz]

2. Popcornopolis Caramel Corn — $6.99 for 9.5 oz [$0.74/oz]

3. Carroll's Caramel Corn — (many large multiple-kernel clusters which I found annoying) $5 for 8 oz [$0.63/oz; additional cost for shipping]

4. Cretors Caramel Corn (huge chunks encompassing multiple pieces required significant physical force to break them down into edible sizes) — $9.99 for 8 oz [$1.25/oz]

5. Berco's Popcorn [self-proclaimed "Best Caramel Corn Ever," it has by far the most expensive and elegant packaging of them all] (same flaw as Cretor's but also way too much caramel; the only brand of the five with old maids (8 in one 8 oz bag!) — $20 for 32 oz — [$0.63/oz; additional cost for shipping] 

Price/oz is proportional to quality with the exception of Cretor's, the second most expensive brand, which came in next to last.

Bottom line: After considering the not-insubstantial additional shipping costs for Carroll's and Berco's — as well as the fact that they were slowest to arrive compared to Amazon — I'm going with Werther's and Popcornopolis.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

'La Cara Oculta' — The Hidden Face




I happened on this 2011 Spanish film while browsing the zillions of films under various "If you liked that, you might like these" headings that Netflix/Prime Video/AppleTV/etc. now feature.

You could spend your whole evening just virtually wandering through all those TV movie and show listings.

Anyway, I added the movie to "My Stuff" and decided to have a look last night.

One great thing about streaming is that you don't feel obliged to sit there and watch the whole thing like in the old days when you bought a ticket at the theater and paid $5 for a box of Whoppers guaranteed to make you wish you'd instead bought Raisinets or Nonpareils (oops, I'm dating myself).

Even if you paid to rent the film, it's not all that painful to abandon it after 10-15 minutes when you're sitting at home all comfy, because you can just go back into the listings and try something else.

Long story short: I rented "The Hidden Face" on Prime Video for $3.99 (same price on YouTube) and it turned out to be very good.

In Spanish with English subtitles, featuring three excellent Spanish actors none of whom I'd ever seen nor heard of and — bonus: 97 minutes long!

The joy when movies are around an hour and half long compared to the increasingly common drawn out contemporary releases that go over two hours, sometimes over two and a half hours... get an editor!