Thursday, April 30, 2009

More Robert Plant

I'm still convinced that Apple engineers are toying with me. I'm currently at work, listening to tunages on my iPod. Five songs into a 1470-song playlist (this is the playlist that excludes songs played in the past four months), I hear a Led Zeppelin song from the early 70s (Robert Plant, lead singer). Song seven is from the Honeydrippers from the 80s (Robert Plant, lead singer). I know that statistically it's possible this was a truly random occurrance but I'd rather believe that Apple engineers toyed with the iPod random function. I'm gonna keep an eye on them because it's the kind of thing I'd do and I know that I can't be trusted.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Yep, Spring Has Sprung


Well, for today.

This picture is from Sunday afternoon, April 5, 2009, 5:10PM. The picture in the previous post was taken this morning at 7:30. It was 28° and by 9:00, we had 2" of new snow (all since midnight). Now, it's 50° and there is only the slightest hint of snow in the shaded areas.

There's a chance of snow tomorrow but that should be it for the season. We hope. Not placing any bets on it or anything.

Spring Has Sprung?


Sunday morning, April 5, 2009. There was no snow on the ground yesterday.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

I Know Something the Writers on 'Jeopardy' Don't Know

'Jeopardy' got an answer wrong and I'm happy to bore you with the right one.

I was watching the 'Jeopardy' show from Febuary 16, 2009, yesterday. Yes, I'm a little behind - so what? This was the clue: "Also the title of one of the best-selling albums of all time, it was first seen in Russian photos taken in 1959."

What is "The Dark Side of the Moon?"

Wrong.

While it is true that Pink Floyd's 1973 album "The Dark Side of the Moon" is one of the best selling albums of all time (I own a copy), and it is true that a Russian camera probe swung around the moon in 1959, it is not true that the dark side of the moon was first seen by human eyes or cameras in 1959. The dark side has always been visible to us on Earth.

The moon is orbit locked around Earth - it presents the same side to us at all times. The moon revolves around the Earth so at any given time, 50% of the moon is illuminated by the sun and 50% is dark. That 50% moves because the moon is constantly in motion even though the same half of the moon always faces Earth. Measured in days, the dark side and the light side swap positions 1/28th or 3.5% every day. We see that shift as the phases of the moon.

If you want to see the dark side of the moon, just look to the sky. Unless it's a full moon, where the side facing Earth is fully illuminated, you will see at least a sliver of the dark side. During a new moon, you'll see ALL of the dark side, but it's sometimes tough to make out details because it's, you know, DARK.

So, what did 'Jeopardy' do wrong? They confused dark and far. That Russian camera probe was actually notable for first photographing the FAR side of the moon, not the dark side. Perhaps we can blame Pink Floyd for perpetuating a misnomer. Maybe the song and album should have been "The FAR Side of the Moon." It doesn't matter. All that matters is I'M RIGHT and THEY'RE WRONG!

Ubiquitous

What is it with the word ubiquitous? I've been seeing it everywhere lately.