Friday, December 6, 2024

Best aurora photos

Photographer Tom Rae was honored recently, as having taken one of the most amazing aurora photos ever. 



Sustainable packaging

According to a few published articles (which are so poorly written that I won't bother linking them here), and a video that interviews some higher ups in the company (which is a snooze fest) this company has come up with a plastic film that can be wrapped around a palette of packages - which itself is made of compostable materials and can degrade in a matter of months, rather than many years. 

It's a nice step forward, and should get a little more attention. 

https://packaging-systems.com/sustainability/

If you're having trouble falling asleep, have a look at the video on this link: 

Thursday, December 5, 2024

Watch "Biomedical Scientist Answers Pseudoscience Questions From Twitter | Tech Support | WIRED" on YouTube

This is worth 20 minutes of your day.

My take: think rationally about things, and pay attention to the reality that some "famous person on the internet" is telling you something for their own reasons, usually money or fame.  And that is not science or anything meaningful.  

Be a skeptic!

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Once I built a railroad...

Just after the turn of the 20th century, Henry Flagler was among the world's richest men. He had accumulated his wealth by founding standard oil, and essentially owning the early oil business. 

But he wasn't content to sit on those riches. He wanted to do more - and have more. He decided that he could create a series of hotels for his wealthy friends to winter in, along Florida's coast. 

To do that, he had to snap up some land in the state. He did what any wealthy man of any era might do: he told the state that he would build a railroad along the coast in exchange for free land near the coast. 

Florida was poor for the most part, saw the opportunity, and agreed. (And yes, it's more complicated overall, but that is a quick summary) 

As he agreed, he built the railroads at his expense, and allowed for public use of them. But, he also used them to allow for the wealthy to  travel to his hotels, and (more importantly) for commerce that benefited him. 

He built an opulent hotel in Saint Augustine. He built another palace of sorts in palm beach. And they were successful at bringing people to Florida, as he anticipated. 

Then, he decided to build further south, into the Florida keys. Ideally, he wanted his railroad to go all the way to key west. 

The reasons were strictly for financial gain to him: it has a deep water port, its 90 miles from Cuba and could be conducive to trade, and there was a desire to open trade, given that the Panama Canal was set to open. 

And of course, it was a way to make himself more of a household name. He would be "the guy." 

The railroad, built in the 1910s, reportedly cost $50 million dollars - that's something around $1.6 billion in today's dollars. (Yikes!)

There is a fun story about how the railroad builders wanted to finish early and worked multiple shifts to create the bridge that spanned the seven miles between the middle keys and big pine key. It was done as a sort of a marathon effort. And they named the town to the north Marathon as a result. 

There are also stories about how he treated the people building the railroad. They were paid well, but had moderately tough living conditions. And he imposed his morals on the men working there: no gambling, no drinking, and no women were allowed at his camp. 

I pose to you this question: are the über wealthy of today any different?

We hear about these billionaires who always want more. To control everything. And they bend the rules to their whim and get others to do their bidding. 

It hasn't changed in the 110 years between; it's just that we're more aware of it now. And the bites these guys take are bigger than they were before.  

But the Elon Musks and the Jeff Bezos of the world are in it for themselves, much like Henry Flagler. They want to be "the guy."  The wealthy industrialist who does something grand at the expense of others around him. 

Monday, December 2, 2024

Streaming and exclusivity

I cut the cord some years ago, leaving cable behind.  

Mostly, its been great. But streaming services are so bizarre.  And when it comes to sports packages and special events, its even more bizarre.

Try watching your local sports team without cable.  The major sports (outside of the NFL) have deals with services that are exclusive to cable.  Don't have cable? Can't watch!

And now you're seeing special events - from the Macy's Thanksgiving Parade to specific events that want you to subscribe to a service in order to watch.

Its crazy.

I've experienced not being able to watch English Premier League games on Peacock, because they were being televised on USA (on cable).

And then there's the NFL, which has some games on over-the-air TV, and others on various streaming platforms, so now you have to pay to see some number of games.

But its weirder than that.  On thanksgiving, the early game was on CBS.  I was not near a TV and thought I'd watch it on Paramount+.  Only I couldn't because it required me to signin to my cable provider in order to watch, in spite of subscribing, and this not being some kind of special event.

Its just all so strange.

Friday, November 22, 2024

Oddities with billionaire greed, stadiums, and residents needing help

We turn our attention to the Tampa Bay Rays and their ongoing stadium saga. 

In short, the owner wants a brand new stadium, and wants the city or county to basically give it to him. 

The city of Saint Petersburg had previously agreed to do something like that, had already decided which underserved community to demolish, and was planning to vote on the bonds. 

And then came a hurricane that ravaged the city and the surrounding area. It also damaged the current home of the rays. Which meant that there would have to be repairs made to it in the short term, to be paid for by someone (probably the city), IN ADDITION to paying for the new one. 

The city commissioners took theirs stances on the topic… and wouldn't you know there was an election recently, and two of the commissioners were ousted and replaced with people who think stadium spending is a generally bad idea. And in light of the storm damage, and how peoples lives have been affected, definitely think it is a bad look and worse use of money. 

So there was a commission meeting and on the agenda was stadium funding.  The city councils action were … well, amusing. 

First, they voted  4-3 to approve spending $23 million toward repair of the Tropicana Field roof

Then, they voted 5-2 to put off selling $450 million in bonds for a new stadium and surrounding infrastructure. 

And that's when the owner of the Rays decided to get indignant. He needs that stadium! And if they're not going to vote on it, then he'll move the team. 

A team executive said "our agreement effectively died.  I don't believe we can make the economics around this arrangement work any more."

And that caused the council to vote again, this time 7-0 to undo the vote to spend on fixing the roof, basically giving the ownership the middle finger. 

It's a small (and possibly pyrrhic) victory. 
But it's nice to see a billionaire get a little comeuppance.