Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Suns swallow planets

 

Maybe this explains global warming. We're headed for the mouth.

Smoke em if ya got em.

BTW, it's Cronus (Saturn), not Chronos (Time).

Cronus castrated his father and ate his children. Like he's the center of the fucking universe. Oh, it's all about you, Cronus. 


One-Third of Sun-Like Stars May Have Eaten Their Planets (sciencemag.org)10

sciencehabit shares a report from Science Magazine, written by Adam Mann:Like the Greek god Chronos, a good number of stars devour their children. As many as one-third of them have swallowed one or more of their own planets, a new study suggests. The findings could help astronomers rule out stellar systems unlikely to contain Earth-like worlds. The team investigated how often this happens by looking at 107 binary systems containing two Sun-like stars -- akin to the fictional two-sunned world Tatooine in Star Wars. In 33 of these pairs, one of the companions showed elevated levels of iron compared with the other, a sign of planetary cannibalism. These same partners were also rich in lithium, giving further credence to the world-munching hypothesis. Although Sun-like stars are born with substantial amounts of lithium, they burn it away within the first 100 million years of their lives, so seeing it in the older stars in the study sample indicated it likely came from a planet. Using these different lines of evidence, the team was able to model that between 20% and 35% of Sun-like stars consume a few Earths' worth of their offspring. Such events could happen in systems where gravitational interactions among the planets would either fling one into the central star or bring it close enough for the star to slowly vaporize and devour it.The findings have been published in the journal Nature Astronomy.

Monday, August 30, 2021

Atlanta airport human trafficking


Waiting on Uber at the Atlanta Airport, I was approached by a taxi. The driver quoted $15 higher than the Uber fee, then said he could match Uber's price, and ultimately agreed that the final price would match, including tip. When Uber charged $7.25 for cancellation, he instructed me to dispute the charge by claiming the driver didn't find me (which I didn't do). 

Noting his Jamaican accent, I moved the conversation in a more personal direction and learned he was 54 years old, married, and had driven a cab for 35 years. He arrived in Florida through an agriculture program, and worked for Delta for many years, began his cab driving on his off days. He claimed to have met Jimmy Carter years ago. His wife's family includes many in law enforcement, police and FBI. When I mentioned the crime in Buckhead, he told a story of police he knew who were attacked in their vehicle and ended up breaking the assailant's arm and throwing him in a ditch, emphasizing the snapping and asking if I know the sound of bone breaking. He told how FBI agents he knew would drive around with a bottle of Hennessy in the car, drinking. 

I don't recall exactly how the conversation changed, but he had been continually explaining how he would make as much as his wife makes all day in 3 hours. I was trying to charge my phone and in the next moment he began showing a photo of a Filipino woman with her legs spread, saying how he wanted to connect with these women, and the trajectory of the conversation continued in kind.

He then told how he knew the madame who ran the massage parlor that was shot up recently, that she was a long time friend and customer, how Joe Biden showed up on site after the shooting, speculating that it was important because the parlor generated so much revenue. When I suggested that the story of that situation was being spun as an Asian hate crime for political reasons, and that the shooter was a disturbed religious zealot with a sex addiction, he didn't want to continue because he said he would become emotional. He bemoaned how that spa had been one of his best customers and that he'd make $50 per customer, totaling $250 for a carload of five on a regular basis.

He explained how easy it was set up an LLC and bring women from DR and that it was easy to pimp them and have them do whatever you want under the guise of a cleaning service, stating that it wasn't really human trafficking because everyone was happy with the arrangement as long as they women had regular meals, a comfortable bed to sleep in, nice clothes and lingerie. 

I asked about his experience as a driver, when he liked to drive and if he had any problems with passengers. He said the most common problem was with females, that they'd ride in the front passenger seat and if they were drunk, they'd push him for sex, grab his hand and have him playing with them as he drove. He said they were often undercover female cops and that they wanted to satisfy a quota. It makes sense that he would be getting checked on his behavior and apparently it was a regular encounter. He also told how guys drive jacked up trucks so they can see down into the cars of women drivers. That's common knowledge amongst semi truck drivers, but this was also part of his story of what he sees and thinks about on the road.

When I asked if he owned the cab, he said he drove for the Atlanta Airport, or at least a taxi service that was a dedicated account with the airport, and I noticed his employee badge. I'm sure they'd be proud to know he was representing them with such charm and colorful stories.

The take away from this trip is that the taxi drivers from the Atlanta Airport know and facilitate, without a doubt, the inner workings of the human trafficking flowing from this known hub and busiest airport in the world direct to the dealers. More importantly, they are probably a good source for an investigation, and this guy was giddy to tell all.

Contextualize the highly publicized and politicized tragedy at the Asian spa. A police friend of mine who is married with children to a Filipina, made a good point. If someone wants to target the Asian community, there are far more heavily populated Asian venues than a massage parlor. The shooter-sex addict didn't go to H Mart because no one goes to hell for eating too much kimchi.

Further consider the recent proliferation of sexualized Asian profiles appearing on dating apps in conjunction with Bumble's 'stop Asian fetishization' campaign aimed to educate men. Wait a minute, who is doing the fetishization?

Upon arrival home, I wasn't surprised when the driver tried to squeeze out a tip, and I agreed to an extra $5. So, I still effectively paid a total of $12.25 more than what I would have paid Uber, minus the tip.  He talked a little more, asked me to check my email for the receipt from his transportation service, then told me "don't worry, everything's gonna be alright".


Thursday, August 26, 2021

James Hand


Interview NPR

https://www.npr.org/artists/15399295/james-hand

--

Texas country troubadour James Hand, who started playing music in the 1960s but became known throughout the state and beyond when he began making records in the 1990s, died Monday at Providence Healthcare Center in Waco, surrounded by family members. He was 67.

No cause of death was listed in his funeral-home obituary. Services are set for 11 a.m. Friday at St. Mary's Catholic Church of the Assumption in West, a small town along Interstate 35 just north of Waco. (Masks, social distancing and 50% occupancy are mandatory at the service, which also will be livestreamed via the Alderhold Funeral Home website.)

Born July 7, 1952, Hand grew up near West in Tokio and continued to be based there for the rest of his life. He lived about 10 miles from Abbott, hometown of Willie Nelson, who later became a champion of Hand’s music. Nicknamed Slim when he was young for his lean physique, Hand began playing music as a teen and performed regularly for decades at the Tokio Store.

https://www.statesman.com/story/entertainment/music/2020/06/10/texas-country-great-james-hand-dies-at-67/42449765/

Texas country great James Hand dies at 67

Peter Blackstock
pblackstock@statesman.com

Texas country troubadour James Hand, who started playing music in the 1960s but became known throughout the state and beyond when he began making records in the 1990s, died Monday at Providence Healthcare Center in Waco, surrounded by family members. He was 67.

No cause of death was listed in his funeral-home obituary. Services are set for 11 a.m. Friday at St. Mary's Catholic Church of the Assumption in West, a small town along Interstate 35 just north of Waco. (Masks, social distancing and 50% occupancy are mandatory at the service, which also will be livestreamed via the Alderhold Funeral Home website.)

Born July 7, 1952, Hand grew up near West in Tokio and continued to be based there for the rest of his life. He lived about 10 miles from Abbott, hometown of Willie Nelson, who later became a champion of Hand’s music. Nicknamed Slim when he was young for his lean physique, Hand began playing music as a teen and performed regularly for decades at the Tokio Store.

Eventually he began playing venues across the state, including Austin haunts such as the Broken Spoke, Hole in the Wall and White Horse. Hand finally released his first album, “Shadows Where the Magic Was,” when he was in his mid-40s.

His national renown increased when prominent label Rounder Records issued two of his albums in 2006 and 2009. Hand released two more independently in the past decade and was working on another when he died.

Austin musician Beth Chrisman, who played fiddle with Hand for years, is organizing a livestream tribute event, with details to be announced. She was among many Austin musicians who have shared memories of Hand on social media this week.

“He was such a great friend,” Chrisman noted in a private message, adding that she’d recently found some song demos Hand had left on her voicemail. “He would call me at 3 a.m. and leave me his new songs.”

In Hand’s memory, we’re republishing this profile of him that appeared in the Austin American-Statesman in March 2006.

By Michael Corcoran

When you go to see an act at a record store, you're not expecting musical magic or spontaneity, but a sampler set on the way to the autograph booth. The acoustics are not great, the sun's still out and half the folks are there for the free beer.

But country singer James Hand's March 1 set celebrating the release of "The Truth Will Set You Free," the 53-year-old's first nationally distributed album, just seemed to mean more. With the packed store in full support, he turned Waterloo Records into a moving, stirring, thrilling box full of memories. Remember the ’50s and ’60s heyday of country music? The mournful-voiced Hand is not a throwback, but a continuation.

“We've got time for one more," the native son of "Last Picture Show" Texas said in introducing the up-tempo "Little Bitty Slip" from the new Rounder release. But when that number was over, Hand and band played another one and then another, pulling out a Hank Williams song that Hand rarely sings anymore because he's become weary of comparisons to the tragic country legend.

The crowd, which ranged from couples who could've met at the old Skyline roadhouse on North Lamar to tattooed hipsters, hung on every vocal swoop and moan, cheering Hand on like a marathoner at the 20-mile mark. The lovefest ended with Hand singing an a capella yowler, accompanied only by the tears escaping from his dark, deep-set eyes.

James Hand had done a lot of living, a lot of losing to get to this point. Nobody from Waterloo even considered making the "wrap it up" sign; this true-blue honky tonk original could play as long as he wanted.

A day earlier, Hand sat in a beer joint disguised as the Willis Country Store, near his home in Tokio, about 10 miles north of Waco. Exceedingly polite, answering questions with "yes, sir" and "no, sir" and calling everyone “Mister” or “Miz,” Hand often slid from jovial into gutters of gloom during a three-hour interview. Hand bore little resemblance to a 40-year veteran of country dives and dancehalls who's on the verge of national attention for the first time.

"I don't know if I've been more blessed or cursed," Hand said, looking back at the hard life he sings so beautifully about. "But I've been diversified." He's one of those guys who taps your forearm when he throws out a good line.

In the blessed column he's got the gift for honest, direct songwriting and the voice to match. Hand was raised by a loving family, embraced by neighbors who look after him. He's got the back roads and woods of northern McLennan County as getaways for his soul. He's got Willie Nelson in his corner.

On the cursed side, Hand will tell you — tap, tap — is everything else.

"I just want to feel worthy," he said, staring down at a trio of Coors Light bottles sent over by fellow customers. "Right now, my life ain't worth a damn."

His happiest years, he said, were from 1990 to 1993, when he lived with a schoolteacher and drove a gas truck from 4 a.m. to 1 p.m. for $270 a week. "The straight life suited me just fine," he said. "If they didn't sell the company, I'd still be working there."

Just as at his concerts, when he balances the moments of despair with galloping swing numbers, Hand swings the full emotional pendulum when he's just hanging out. Ol' Slim, as he's known back home, is a constant jokester who recently bought the boys at the Willis Country Store a round by announcing, "Country music's been very good to me: I made $15 last weekend." When the barflies chuckled, Hand said, "If you think $15 ain't much money, try to borrow it."

En route to Wolf's Bar in West, a favorite hangout, Hand's eyes welled up when he pointed out the farmhouse his parents built on 14 acres of land they bought in 1959. His mother passed on in 2002, his father in 2005, both from lung cancer. Hand lived with them at that house for most of his life. His loneliness thickens the air around him.

His father, a horse trainer, took a turn for the worse in early 2005, just as Hand had finished the basic tracks of "The Truth Will Set You Free," which features several re-recordings of songs from Hand's three previous, locally released albums. With the elder Hand given just a few more weeks to live, Hand headed back to Tokio, with the album 90 percent done and a block of studio time put on hold.

"I sat at Daddy's bed for 60 days in a row," Hand said, then he thought about something. "Well, I done told a lie there. There was one Sunday afternoon I came down to Austin to redo a couple vocals. I hired a policeman friend from Cleburne to drive me down because he could drive as fast as he wanted and not get a ticket."

Before he signed his deal with prominent roots music label Rounder in 2004, Hand wasn't sure he'd ever make another record. But Hand had his champions, such as KUT DJ Tom Pittman, who craved another minor masterpiece like the 1996 debut "Shadows Where the Magic Was." Pittman put Hand's farm-noir sound in the hands of Rounder label head Ken Irwin, who caught an especially frisky Thursday night set at the Saxon Pub and offered a deal.

"Ken asked me, 'How's his business sense?’” Pittman recalled, "And I told him, 'It's the worst you've ever seen.' James is even uncomfortable selling you a CD after a show. He thinks that if you give him $15, he should come over and mow your lawn."

But Hand's "aw shucks" humility is one of the reasons he's probably the most beloved figure on the local country scene since National Guard retiree Don Walser started singing at the short-lived country paradise Henry's on Burnet Road about 15 years ago.

Like Walser, Hand wears his authenticity like cologne. He's as backwoods as moonshine, able to name more rodeo clowns than former U.S. presidents. "I used to drive to West High with a shotgun in my truck and nobody thought nothing ’bout it back then," Hand said. These days that would draw a SWAT team.

Hand is so country he can introduce a song as "one of the bestest I ever wrote" without a tinge of affectation. Who else can look and sound so much like Hank Williams (“You even walk like him,” Ray Price told Hand a few years back) and not come off as a wannabe? When Hand sings “Just an Old Man With an Old Song,” it sounds as if he was born with that tune in 1952, the same year Hank Williams died. There's such a depth of expression in Hand's “If I Live Long Enough To Heal" and "When You Stopped Loving Me, So Did I" that this music is truly his own.

"I've gotta believe that the same forces that moved Hank, also move James," Pittman said of the Hank-like way Hand's shoulders jump to the rhythm.

"I guess I've just been a haunted bastard my whole life," Hand said. He said he knew he was different in the first grade. "They made us put our heads down on a towel and take a nap," he said. "Then they'd play a lullaby and I'd just start sobbing. Nobody could tell me why."

Like Williams, who died at age 29 from drug and alcohol abuse, Hand has tried to negotiate his partying ways with God-fearing beliefs. "I pray every night," Hand said, "but I also like to drink just ’bout every night."

Other true-life honky-tonk outlaws might parlay a weekend in the pokey into "doin' time," but when Hand was asked about his rumored scrapes with the law, he deferred. "Now, when I put on my hat and sing, that's the public's business," he said. "But when a door closes behind me, that's my business."

Records show, however, that Hand was convicted of possession of amphetamines in 1988 and sent to prison, where he served nine months. To not put that marketing bonanza out there is kind of like a gangsta rapper trying to pass off bullet wounds as birthmarks.

Rounder's promotional effort makes good use of Willie Nelson, whose proclamation of Hand as "the real deal" is on the back cover of every Hand CD. The two met in 1980 when a 27-year-old Hand was a bouncer at Wolf's and Nelson was showing his "Honeysuckle Rose" co-star Amy Irving around his old stomping grounds. "It was Halloween and when they came up to the door I said, ‘Well, if you ain't him, you sure look like him,’” Hand said, "and Mr. Nelson said, 'I'm him.’”

The two talked music for a while, then Hand went home and got his guitar. After he played Nelson a few originals, Willie grabbed a napkin and scribbled on it, "James Hand can record for free."

Several months later, Hand redeemed the napkin at Nelson's Pedernales Studio, where he laid down demos for a couple hours. Nelson has also taken Hand out on tour with him several times as the opening act.

Much more often, though, Hand plays beer joints back home, where it could be anyone playing in the corner. On such nights, when Hand's guitar struggles to be heard over the chatter, the singer sometimes introduces classics as originals, just to see if anyone's paying attention. "Here's another one that done real good for us," he said recently, then went into "Your Cheatin' Heart." His son Tracer, a former bull riding champion, fell out of his chair laughing, but everyone else just kept on yapping.

But when the crowd is enrapt in Hand's performance, such as the Waterloo appearance, the songs can be spellbinding. Every one of Hand's songs is about something that happened to him, every lyric means something, which is why he often cries when he's singing.

"I don't believe that crap about how you have to make yourself happy before you can make other people happy," he said at Wolf's, nibbling on orange crackers from the vending machine. "Until I can make people happy first, then I can't even think about feeling better about myself."

Sunday, August 22, 2021

HIV vaccine trials

 

Moderna Will Start Its First Human Trials of an mRNA Vaccine for HIV (cnet.com)97

CNET reports:Using the same mRNA technology that broke the mold with effective COVID-19 vaccines, Moderna has developed two vaccines for HIV. The first phase of testing for both could begin as early as Thursday, according to a post on the National Institutes of Health website for clinical trials. Phase 1 of the vaccine trial will test the vaccines' safety, as well as measure immunity and antibody responses. If the vaccines prove to be safe, they'll need to go through additional testing for researchers to determine how effective they are...

There were 37.7 million people living with HIV globally in 2020, according to United Nations data.

"There's a pressing need for new ways to prevent infection from viruses like HIV and influenza that conventional vaccines have struggled to address and to treat rare genetic diseases and cancers that kill millions each year," writes a reporter at Axios. "Vaccines and therapies based on messenger RNA hold promise as a solution."

Thursday, August 19, 2021

Writing advice from South Park


Writing Advice from Matt Stone & Trey Parker @ NYU

https://youtu.be/vGUNqq3jVLg

Link actions (beats) with 'therefore' or 'but', rather than '...and then...'

Essentially, the idea suggests storytelling progression is about causality and conflict.

Five tones of writing from Jack Grapes:

1. Conversational

2. Deep - poetic, profound and frilly

3. Rhetoric repetition

4. Abstract, evocative imagery

5. One's own voice

https://youtu.be/Vpd9DJLz7hA

Friday, August 13, 2021

Improve sleep by cutting and using light intentionally


I've considered not using any electronic devices for 30 min. pre-sleep, but never really practice it. Hard to do, but a good idea. I read an article that swore by it and decided to commit to the practice to see if it works. It apparently takes a week to make the change. 

Going forward, I'll likely use the blue light-blocking glasses at sundown if I'm on a computer or phone, rather than waiting until 30 min. prior to sleep, because it's probably the most natural way to allow for normal melatonin patterns to emerge. The alternative is to use blue light-cutting protectors, and I also found light therapy glasses for waking up.

I do find that looking at my phone first thing wakes me up. My problem is really staying asleep, but I think setting a strong signal upon waking up will help.

I'm trying two products for cutting light, and the one for waking up / correcting circadian rhythms and promoting energy.

Blue light filtering clip ons
Cut blue light at night - wear these when the sun goes down if using computer/phone at night:



Amber blue light filtering glasses
Fits over prescription glasses. I've had these before but never used them:



Light therapy glasses - $200
I considered trying light therapy before but light boxes are expensive and impractical. The light is a combination of white light infused with blue light.

Use upon waking; can use with prescription glasses, 20-60 minutes daily. Suggested noticeable improvement in energy ranging from a week to four weeks.

Many academic articles supporting light therapy (and combined with dark therapy) for correcting circadian rhythms, improving mood and libido, reducing food cravings, etc.





Other considerations for sleep improvement

Temperature: Set temperature to cool before bed - I prefer 73-74 degrees.

White noise: Find a white noise option without music and loop it on phone or tablet. I plug my iPad into logitech speakers beside my bed.

I use two tracks from Amazon music, also available from most streaming music services, combined in a looping playlist. 

Over time, I adjusted the volume for maximum effect, starting with what felt right, then actually increasing for effect, then reducing slightly:



There are also series for wakefulness and learning. I have a compilation of gamma waves that are good for working from 'Complete Brainwave Therapy System'. Read to learn about how various waves are used and find the ones that serve your purpose.




Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Trojan horse discovery

 https://www.jpost.com/international/did-archaeologists-just-find-the-trojan-horse-676349

Amazon Awarded Secret $10 Billion NSA Cloud Computing Contract

 

Amazon Awarded Secret $10 Billion NSA Cloud Computing Contract (thehill.com)43

The National Security Agency has awarded a cloud computing contract worth up to $10 billion to Amazon, Nextgov reported Tuesday. The Hill reports:The contract, named "WildandStormy" according to protest filings obtained by the outlet, appears to be part of the NSA's attempts to modernize its repository for classified data. The award is being challenged by Microsoft, according to Government Accountability Office records. A Microsoft spokesperson confirmed that it is filing the protest "based on the decision." "We are exercising our legal rights and will do so carefully and responsibly," they added.

Matter Generated By Collisions of Light

 

Physicists Detect Strongest Evidence Yet of Matter Generated By Collisions of Light (sciencealert.com)63

omfglearntoplay shares a report from ScienceAlert:According to theory, if you smash two photons together hard enough, you can generate matter: an electron-positron pair, the conversion of light to mass as per Einstein's theory of special relativity. It's called the Breit-Wheeler process, first laid out by Gregory Breit and John A. Wheeler in 1934, and we have very good reason to believe it would work. But direct observation of the pure phenomenon involving just two photons has remained elusive, mainly because the photons need to be extremely energetic (i.e. gamma rays) and we don't have the technology yet to build a gamma-ray laser. Now, physicists at Brookhaven National Laboratory say they've found a way around this stumbling block using the facility's Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) -- resulting in a direct observation of the Breit-Wheeler process in action.The research has been published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

Facial recognition master key faces

 Researchers have demonstrated a method to create "master faces," computer generated faces that act like master keys for facial recognition systems, and can impersonate several identities with what the researchers claim is a high probability of success. In their paper (PDF), researchers at the Blavatnik School of Computer Science and the School of Electrical Engineering in Tel Aviv detail how they successfully created nine "master key" faces that are able to impersonate almost half the faces in a dataset of three leading face recognition systems. The researchers say their results show these master faces can successfully impersonate over 40 percent of the population in these systems without any additional information or data of the person they are identifying.


The researchers tested their methods against three deep face recognition systems -- Dlib, FaceNet, and SphereFace. Lead author Ron Shmelkin told Motherboard that they used these systems because they are capable of recognizing "high-level semantic features" of the faces that are more sophisticated than just skin color or lighting effects. The researchers used a StyleGAN to generate the faces and then used an evolutionary algorithm and neural network to optimize and predict their success. The evolutionary strategy then creates iterations, or generations, of candidates of varying success rates. The researchers then used the algorithm to train a neural network, to classify the best candidates as the most promising ones. This is what teaches it to predict candidates' success and, in turn, direct the algorithm to generate better candidates with a higher probability of passing. The researchers even predict that their master faces could be animated using deepfake technology to bypass liveness detection, which is used to determine whether a biometric sample is real or fake