With the weekend almost here, it's time for black and white overnight. Or at least black and white Friday night.
Dorothy Kilgallen was What's My Line's tortured soul. She had her emotional ups and downs, to put it mildly, worsened by drug abuse which finally led to her early death. Fiercely competitive at the silly little game, she once cried to fellow panelist Bennett Cerf that she hadn't guessed an occupation for three whole weeks.
So it's a pleasant change to see this November 18, 1956 episode where Dorothy's father, then-famous reporter James Kilgallen, appeared as a mystery guest. After a lot of stumbling around by the panel, the blindfolded Dorothy finally identified her daddy. A nice moment for all concerned.
If you want to know more about James Kilgallen, this newspaper story is worth a look. He sounds like a Ben Hecht character (yes, I'm dating myself) fresh out of The Front Page. Raffish, funny, wisecracking, almost a stereotypical old-time newspaperman. That was back when they printed newspapers on dead trees. Boy, I'm really dating myself.
Friday, June 28, 2013
Fridaygram: Street View in the sky, robot carp, restored shuttlecraft

By +Scott Knaster, Google Developers Blog Editor
This week we launched Street View images showing what it’s like inside (and outside) the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. We love taking Street View places it’s never been, and now we’ve added two firsts: the first collection in the Arab World, and the first one to feature a skyscraper.
As if it’s not enough to visit the 163rd floor of the world’s tallest building, or ride an elevator traveling at 22 mph, we thought it would be fun to send our Street View camera outside the 73rd floor in a maintenance unit for a breathtaking view of the surrounding cityscape. So don’t miss that view, as long as you’re OK with heights.
We go from high above the Earth to under the sea for news of the world’s first robot carp. A team of scientists in Singapore studied these freshwater fish and designed an autonomous underwater exploration vehicle. They plan to use this robofish to study tight spaces in underwater places, such as pipelines or the lost city of Atlantis. The researchers used cameras to record carp doing their thing, then created a mathematical model of carp movements to trigger actuators in their robot.
Finally, let’s journey beyond even the Burj Khalifa, out into (pretend) space, where the Galileo Shuttlecraft served Captain Kirk and the crew of the U. S. S. Enterprise in the original Star Trek universe. This prop was originally considered too expensive for the production company to build, so Federation personnel had to make their way to and from planets by transporter instead. But the craft was eventually built and appeared midway through the first season, in 1967 (or stardate 2821.5, if you prefer). In the years since then, the ship has deteriorated. But now Star Trek fans and a shipwright are restoring the Galileo to its original glory, to be enjoyed by fans everywhere. Magnifico!
Whether on the surface of the Earth, way down below the ocean, or in space, Fridaygram is always your ticket to fun nerdy stuff. Speaking of space (and Star Trek), it looks like Voyager 1 has still not left the solar system, although it has entered a previously unknown area, far out there. This weekend, go and explore something new on your own!
Labels:
Fridaygram,
Street View
Location:
Mountain View, CA, USA
More innovation from African developers
By Chukwuemeka Afigbo, Outreach Program Manager, Sub-Saharan AfricaCross-posted from the Google Africa Blog
Developers play a crucial role in making the Internet relevant for Africans. This is why fostering a vibrant African developer ecosystem is very important to Google. Developers and tech entrepreneurs from across the continent joined thousands of their peers from all over the world to explore the latest tech innovations at Google I/O 2013 in San Francisco. Several of them were members of the Google Developer Groups in countries such as Algeria, Burkina Faso, Egypt, Kenya, Republic of Congo, Togo and Uganda.

Hassan Nsubuga, Lead for GDG Mbale,Uganda with Google SVP Vic Gundotra at Google I/O
Luckily, participation was not limited to those who could make it to San Francisco’s Moscone Center. Developers back home were also able to get in on the action with more than 67 I/O Extended parties hosted by Google Developer Groups and Google Student Ambassadors across the continent where talks were streamed live to an excited audience.
Away from the excitement of I/O ‘13, it has been a busy year for many African developers and tech startups. We added six new apps to our African case studies page:

Away from the excitement of I/O ‘13, it has been a busy year for many African developers and tech startups. We added six new apps to our African case studies page:
- Maji Dashboards and Virtual Kenya from Upande: websites that utilize the power of Google’s Geo tools to make information about Kenya readily accessible for better decision making, development planning, and education.
- ReadyCash from Parkway Projects: a home grown mobile money service from Nigeria with an app that leverages the power of the Android platform to integrate a unique QR code based payment system.
- Matatu is an Android version of a local card game from Uganda.
- ASiM, developed by Olivine Technology, is a real time inventory management solution with an Android client and App Engine backend.
- Asa: an Android tablet app by Nigeria’s Genii Games that brings the magic of African folktales to children of all ages.
Asa (African Folktales)
Flashback!
Remember AfriNolly – winner of 2011 Android developer competition? The app by Fans Connect Online now has over 2 million downloads across several platforms, with a new Android version support for 11 languages launched in May 2013. The Fans Connect Online team also ran a contest for African short films and created a radio show focused on the African film industry.
Keep an eye on our case studies page to follow the exploits of these and many more developers in Africa, as they continue to innovate with Google APIs and platforms.
Do you feel your app should be featured here? Let us know!
+Chukwuemeka Afigbo is a Program Manager in the Sub-Saharan Africa Outreach Team. He is passionate about making the internet more relevant to Africans. He is also an avid football (soccer) fan.
Posted by +Scott Knaster, Editor
Location:
Mountain View, CA, USA
How Bad Will The Heat Wave Be?
There are some interesting elements about the upcoming Northwest heat wave that I wanted to share.
This is NOT going to be an historic heat wave west of the Cascades...but we could well break a daily high temperature record on Monday. So don't expect the high 90s, with peaks about 100F, that we experienced in late July 2009. And there is a chance of some major thunderstorms...but just a chance.
So why will this event be modest? The reason is that the set-up is not correct for one of the big events, because the low-level pressure distribution will be wrong and we won't have sustained offshore flow. Specifically, to get a big heat wave west of the Cascades, we need the upper-level ridge (high pressure) right over us and low-level high pressure to OUR EAST, which encourages offshore flow.
Here is the latest WRF forecasts for the upper air (500 hPa) and sea level pressure (and lower atmosphere temperatures) for Monday at 5 PM. The upper level ridge is centered over Idaho and there is lower pressure over eastern Oregon. There is a hint of a weak thermal trough over the Cascades, but some of that is bogus for reasons I won't get into here. There is on onshore pressure gradient (difference) west of the Cascades, which allows marine air to seep in.
The ridge is so large and strong, and the air is so warm associated with it, that western of the Cascades will still be far above normal: upper 80s to 90 is quite reasonable on Monday and Tuesday, especially away from the water. Eastern Washington, protected from the marine influence and closer to the ridge, will be far warmer: many locations will get to 100-110F. I assume the grapes will like it. Fire danger should be modest because of the recent rains, but the ground will dry quickly with the heat.
Will any records be broken? Well, for Seattle Tacoma Airport I suspect the daily record will fall on Monday. As shown below (look at the second to last column), the record high for Monday is 87F...we have a good chance of exceeding that.
There will be surge of offshore flow near crest level of the Cascades that should result in the highest temperatures that day and Tuesday, but then the pattern will shift subtly after that as a weak system approaches from the west. The result will be increased onshore flow and slow cooling. Into the lower 80s on Wed. and 70s on Thursday, with the return of morning low clouds.
For me a very interesting aspect of this event is the development of very high instability in the lower atmosphere, instability that can lead to thunderstorms. A key measure of the potential thunderstorm "juice" is something called CAPE (Convective Available Potential Energy). Here is the plot for Monday at 5 PM. I don't think I have ever seen such high values here in the NW...reaching 2500-3000. High for us is usually in the few hundred.
The reason the models are not producing massive convection is due to the sinking motion of the high and the lack of strong upward motion necessary to release this instability. In fact, here is the 48-h precipitation forecast ending 5 AM on Wednesday...some convective showers, mainly over the Cascades.
But the models would not have to be very wrong for something very interesting and severe to happen. Need to watch this.
One more thing...does it feel unusually humid outside....reminiscent of the eastern U.S.? Well, it is! Check out the latest dew point temperatures, shown below. (Note dew point is a good measure of the amount of moisture in the air. Starts feeling sticky in the 60s).
Lots of values in the 60s, some in the upper 60s...this is relatively unusual around here and it occurring because today is warming up substantially with a lot of recent rains and wet ground. All the water is evaporating into the air.
This is NOT going to be an historic heat wave west of the Cascades...but we could well break a daily high temperature record on Monday. So don't expect the high 90s, with peaks about 100F, that we experienced in late July 2009. And there is a chance of some major thunderstorms...but just a chance.
So why will this event be modest? The reason is that the set-up is not correct for one of the big events, because the low-level pressure distribution will be wrong and we won't have sustained offshore flow. Specifically, to get a big heat wave west of the Cascades, we need the upper-level ridge (high pressure) right over us and low-level high pressure to OUR EAST, which encourages offshore flow.
Here is the latest WRF forecasts for the upper air (500 hPa) and sea level pressure (and lower atmosphere temperatures) for Monday at 5 PM. The upper level ridge is centered over Idaho and there is lower pressure over eastern Oregon. There is a hint of a weak thermal trough over the Cascades, but some of that is bogus for reasons I won't get into here. There is on onshore pressure gradient (difference) west of the Cascades, which allows marine air to seep in.
The ridge is so large and strong, and the air is so warm associated with it, that western of the Cascades will still be far above normal: upper 80s to 90 is quite reasonable on Monday and Tuesday, especially away from the water. Eastern Washington, protected from the marine influence and closer to the ridge, will be far warmer: many locations will get to 100-110F. I assume the grapes will like it. Fire danger should be modest because of the recent rains, but the ground will dry quickly with the heat.
Will any records be broken? Well, for Seattle Tacoma Airport I suspect the daily record will fall on Monday. As shown below (look at the second to last column), the record high for Monday is 87F...we have a good chance of exceeding that.
There will be surge of offshore flow near crest level of the Cascades that should result in the highest temperatures that day and Tuesday, but then the pattern will shift subtly after that as a weak system approaches from the west. The result will be increased onshore flow and slow cooling. Into the lower 80s on Wed. and 70s on Thursday, with the return of morning low clouds.
For me a very interesting aspect of this event is the development of very high instability in the lower atmosphere, instability that can lead to thunderstorms. A key measure of the potential thunderstorm "juice" is something called CAPE (Convective Available Potential Energy). Here is the plot for Monday at 5 PM. I don't think I have ever seen such high values here in the NW...reaching 2500-3000. High for us is usually in the few hundred.
The reason the models are not producing massive convection is due to the sinking motion of the high and the lack of strong upward motion necessary to release this instability. In fact, here is the 48-h precipitation forecast ending 5 AM on Wednesday...some convective showers, mainly over the Cascades.
But the models would not have to be very wrong for something very interesting and severe to happen. Need to watch this.
One more thing...does it feel unusually humid outside....reminiscent of the eastern U.S.? Well, it is! Check out the latest dew point temperatures, shown below. (Note dew point is a good measure of the amount of moisture in the air. Starts feeling sticky in the 60s).
Lots of values in the 60s, some in the upper 60s...this is relatively unusual around here and it occurring because today is warming up substantially with a lot of recent rains and wet ground. All the water is evaporating into the air.
Bean Drafting: A 7 Wonders Card-Drafting Variant for Bohnanza [Monsoon Market]
Art students in the renaissance would often be instructed to directly copy the work of classical masters. The idea was that by following their brush strokes, the student would examine their techniques beyond the surface detail. With that foundation, the student can go on to produce original work.
I thought I'd give that a shot here while tinkering with Monsoon Market. See my previous post on Monsoon Market from way back in January. To recap, players run sea ports along the independent Indian Ocean trade routes that extend from Africa to China for hundreds of years before European contact. It's an evocative theme with familiar elements in an unfamiliar setting. Just what I like.
It's always more difficult working from a blank slate, so just to get things started it can be useful to make variants for existing games. In this case, I needed a deck of cards that had variable quantities and thus variable set values. The Bohnanza deck was just the thing! So here's my amateurish first sketch based on the Antoine Bauza's 7 Wonders and Uwe Rosenberg's Bohnanza.
------
SETUP
Get a deck of Bohnanza cards, fully shuffled.
Each player needs a special card unique to themselves, representing their ship. You can use a magic card, playing card, whatever you like, as long as it's unique.
Deal each player is 14 cards face-up.
Each player decides which seven to place in their own public tableau. This represents their goods they have for trade to visiting ships.
Each player places the remaining cards in his or her hand, along with his or her ship card.
PLAY
The game is effectively a card-drafting game in the model of 7 Wonders, with a few twists. The game lasts three rounds, with seven simultaneous turns each.
First, each player passes his or her hand to the player on the left, including the ship card. As hands pass around the table, they're still technically "owned" by the originating player, as noted by the ship card.
Second, after receiving a hand, you may trade one card from your tableau for one card from the hand. It must always be a 1:1 trade. Keep your selection face-down until everyone has made his or her choice, then reveal simultaneously.
Then pass the hand to the left again. If you ever receive your own ship, you may trade with it as normal.
Continue this for seven turns. After which, the round is over. All players should reclaim their ships and any cards on them. Thus, each player has seven cards in their tableau and seven cards in hand. Merge these cards together as one group, then points may be scored as noted below.
SCORING POINTS
You may score any matching set or sets of your bean cards for victory points as shown on the card. After scoring a set, the cards from that set into the deck.
CASHING IN
Alternatively, you can convert cards into gold coins. Simply turn over the bean card so the gold coin is visible and set it in a separate supply. In subsequent rounds, you can trade a goods card from a ship for a gold coin, or vice versa, on a 1:1 basis. Simply keep the gold coin side facing you so it's clear that a gold coin is being used, not the goods on the other side of the card. (Note: Gold coins are worth 1pt for every four coins, which is better value than some beans, but less valuable than others, so trade carefully!)
KEEPING GOODS
Any goods that you have not scored or cashed in remain in your tableau.
EACH ROUND
After scoring or cashing in, draw new cards from the deck until you have a total of fourteen cards.
In the second round, you'll pass cards to your right. In the third round, you'll pass to the left again.
VICTORY
After three rounds, the game is over. Each player tallies their point totals so far. Each player gets 1 bonus point for every four gold coins in his or her supply. The player with the most points wins!
-----
So where to from here? Obviously this needs some more tweaks to make it more than just a 7 Wonders/Bohnanza mashup. I'll need to retheme the cards, of course, and revise some basic mechanics to fit the naval trading theme.
I think giving each good a direct cash value would be useful, so you can upgrade your sea port and earn unique player abilities based on your particular tableau.
Making each ship unique would also be interesting, perhaps adjusting the exchange rates during trades? Perhaps even recruiting captains to join the ship! Lots to work with there.
I also think each port starting with some super-rare commodities would reflect the theme quite well. The Swahili coast was the network's major source of raw bulk goods. China provided finely crafted silks and other treasures. India was the centrally located hub for the whole route.
Playing on hypergamy
Once you know how female tickers tick, it's not difficult to start them ticking. And it is those who are running cons of their own that are the most vulnerable to being conned:
It's also significant that all three women were relatively ambitious and successful. The more materialistic a woman is, the easier it is to play her without even trying. Intelligence is no defense, because the combination of high IQ and materialism only means that her rationalization hamster is going to be that much more capable of producing credible excuses for any perceived inconsistencies between the desired perception and the reality.
I was at a nightclub in Roppongi one night after a female friend had happened to stick a shiny woman's circular broach in my jacket lapel earlier that evening. I have no idea why she did that; alcohol was involved. I didn't care, I just left it there. Now, this right around the time that the Billionaire Boys Club was in the news due to the murder trial and the TV miniseries, so when a women in the club came up to me and asked what the thing in my lapel was, I said it was a BBC pin.
"BBC, like, in England?"
"No, Billionaire Boys Club. It's just this investment thing."
The response was like getting hit by a tidal wave of pretty young women. My two friends were just about dying with laughter, but they were top-flight wingmen; they took the ball and ran with it. Now, keep in mind that the Billionaire Boys Club was a) a notorious Ponzi scheme, b) defunct, and c) already exposed in every possible way by the mainstream media. No matter. It was something that these women had vaguely heard of as having something to do with fame and money, and it amounted to setting off some sort of nuclear tingle bomb.
Lesson: a man doesn't have to be rich for women to believe that he is a rich man and respond accordingly. Those who desperately want to believe something will believe everything that supports the desired story and ignore everything that contradicts it. And those who say a woman "is only attracted to a man for his wealth" are failing to recognize they are expressing a tautology, because women are very sexually attracted to wealth, or rather, the perception of it.
With his wealth, glamorous lifestyle and friends in high places, Jonathan Price probably seemed too good to be true. Unfortunately for the women who fell for his charms, that’s exactly what he was. The serial conman posed as a rich ‘sugar daddy’ to trap a string of professional women and fleece them for tens of thousands of pounds....Notice how much attractive the one woman pictured is in comparison with the fat, older con man. The "terminal cancer" was a particularly nice touch; all three women no doubt assumed that they'd only have to grit their teeth and suffer his attentions for a year or so, after which time they'd be set for life.
He now faces jail after pleading guilty to fraud totalling £180,000 – leaving three women and their parents without their life savings. Price, from Darlington, told his unsuspecting targets that he had vast sums of money in offshore accounts and was suffering from terminal cancer. His victims included Davina Ward, 32, who runs a florist business in Bournemouth, and Sarah Giles, 39, who worked as a manager at a gun retailer in London. His third victim, a high-flying executive in her 30s who cannot be named, became his wife and was pregnant with his child when he was arrested last May.
It's also significant that all three women were relatively ambitious and successful. The more materialistic a woman is, the easier it is to play her without even trying. Intelligence is no defense, because the combination of high IQ and materialism only means that her rationalization hamster is going to be that much more capable of producing credible excuses for any perceived inconsistencies between the desired perception and the reality.
I was at a nightclub in Roppongi one night after a female friend had happened to stick a shiny woman's circular broach in my jacket lapel earlier that evening. I have no idea why she did that; alcohol was involved. I didn't care, I just left it there. Now, this right around the time that the Billionaire Boys Club was in the news due to the murder trial and the TV miniseries, so when a women in the club came up to me and asked what the thing in my lapel was, I said it was a BBC pin.
"BBC, like, in England?"
"No, Billionaire Boys Club. It's just this investment thing."
The response was like getting hit by a tidal wave of pretty young women. My two friends were just about dying with laughter, but they were top-flight wingmen; they took the ball and ran with it. Now, keep in mind that the Billionaire Boys Club was a) a notorious Ponzi scheme, b) defunct, and c) already exposed in every possible way by the mainstream media. No matter. It was something that these women had vaguely heard of as having something to do with fame and money, and it amounted to setting off some sort of nuclear tingle bomb.
Lesson: a man doesn't have to be rich for women to believe that he is a rich man and respond accordingly. Those who desperately want to believe something will believe everything that supports the desired story and ignore everything that contradicts it. And those who say a woman "is only attracted to a man for his wealth" are failing to recognize they are expressing a tautology, because women are very sexually attracted to wealth, or rather, the perception of it.
Lords of Waterdeep session pics
The three of us had a great game which ended with very close end results. The winner was just a few points ahead of the two other players who both shared 2nd place.
I built the palace which brought the ambassador meeple into play, which proved to be a very dangerous combination with David's lieutenant so I ended up tearing the building down and replacing it with another building using an intrigue card during the endgame to prevent David making a rush for all resources.
The game was a blast!
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)




