Friday, May 31, 2024

Amazing info about the Oxford English Dictionary

I remember being so amazed the first time I saw the OED but I never would have guessed how long it took to reach the word "ant". From: Nice News "It took the editors of the Oxford English Dictionary five years just to reach the word “ant.” If you think reading the dictionary sounds exhausting, try writing one — largely by hand, no less. That’s what the editors of the original Oxford English Dictionary had to do after the Philological Society of London deemed existing dictionaries “incomplete and deficient” in 1857. They had their work cut out for them: In 1884, five years after beginning what they thought would be a decade-long project, principal editor James Murray and his team reached an important milestone — the word “ant.” That year, they began publishing A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles (as it was then known) in installments called fascicles, with the 10th and final fascicle seeing the light of day in 1928." The last word in the OED is: Zyzzyva /ˈzɪzɪvə/ is a genus of South American weevils, often found on or near palm trees.[1] It was first described in 1922 by Thomas Lincoln Casey Jr., based on specimens obtained in Brazil by Herbert Huntingdon Smith.[2]: 2, 369 

Thursday, May 30, 2024

Baseball and life

Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose, sometimes it rains. Separator icon Ron Shelton Known as America's pastime, baseball is a game full of superstitions and stories. This quote is given by a fictional pitcher, Nuke LaLoosh (played by Tim Robbins), in the movie “Bull Durham,” written by screenwriter and director Ron Shelton. A former minor leaguer himself, Shelton accurately spoke about the unpredictability of the game — and life itself. Sometimes the ball bounces your way, sometimes the better team loses, and sometimes, it rains.

Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Dinner at Minerva's

We had a super dinner with Donna at Minerva's last night. We always enjoy our food there and we have dinner for tonight as well. A good deal all round.

Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Pencils

I guess I never really wondered what HB stood for.
From: Trivia Scoop 'The degree of hardness of a pencil is printed on the pencil. The degrees of hardness of pencils are roughly divided into four groups: B stands for "black". These pencils are soft. H stands for "hard". HB stands for "hard black", which means "medium hard". F stands for "firm". Sometimes the alphabetic characters are preceded by numbers. They make an even more precise statement about the degree of hardness or color intensity of the pencil. The higher the number, the harder, softer, or blacker the pencil is.' Source: Eberhard Faber

Monday, May 27, 2024

Top baby names

"Janice" never seems to be on any list and "James" seems to always be on the list. From: Nice News Top baby names in the US in 2023 Liam and Olivia led the rankings for the fifth consecutive year. Mateo made the list for the first time. A table lists the top 10 most popular baby names in the United States for boys and girls. Table with 2 columns and 10 rows. Boys Girls 1 Liam Olivia 2 Noah Emma 3 Oliver Charlotte 4 James Amelia 5 Elijah Sophia 6 Mateo Mia 7 Theodore Isabella 8 Henry Ava 9 Lucas Evelyn 10 William Luna Source: US Social Security Administration, 2023 data released May 10, 2024 Table: Catherine E. Shoichet, CNN

Sunday, May 26, 2024

National Wine Day

It seems it was National Wine Day yesterday. From: Nice News "Traditions for National Wine Day all revolve around indulging in and celebrating with wine! Friends and family get together and uncork their favorite bottles of wine. Splurging on expensive wine is also the norm today, so treat yourself to that fancy vino you’ve always wanted to buy. Wine tasting events are hosted, where wine lovers and connoisseurs enjoy different flavors and varieties of wine. Wine bottles are aesthetically pleasing, so reusing them for a DIY project, or making a rack from scratch to display them are also go-to celebratory traditions for National Wine Day."

Saturday, May 25, 2024

Mona Lisa

I didn't know this. I still remember the big crowd around the painting when we saw it.
From: Nice News Leonardo da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa” has been on display at the Louvre Museum since 1804, but before that it hung in a rather less accessible location: the bedroom of French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. After Leonardo died in 1519, the “Mona Lisa” eventually passed into the possession of the artist’s patron, King Francis I of France, and it remained the property of the French monarchy for more than 250 years. During the French Revolution (1789 to 1799), the painting was requisitioned by the rebelling public and officially became the property of the French Republic. However, this did not mean that the average French citizen was able to view Leonardo’s masterpiece. Napoleon Bonaparte, who rose to power in revolutionary France, had become enamored with the mysterious woman in the portrait — he even took to referring to her as “Madame Lisa” and the “Sphinx of the Occident.” In 1800, he ordered that the painting be transferred to his private bedchambers at Tuileries Palace in Paris. Since Napoleon was, well, Napoleon, nobody argued with him, and he enjoyed the privilege of having one of the world’s most famous works of art hanging by his bedside for four years. In 1804, the “Mona Lisa” was transferred from Napoleon’s bedroom to the Grand Gallery of the Louvre Museum, and since then no individual has had the audacity (or power) to add it to their private collection. It remains on public display to this day.

Friday, May 24, 2024

A quiet leaf blower

I hope this invention catches on. Jill Rosen / Published May 14 MEDIA INQUIRIES The challenge before Johns Hopkins University engineering students: Take a leaf blower, but make it quiet. Make it work as powerfully as ever, but do not allow it to emit the ear-piercing caterwaul that has gotten leaf blowers banned in some communities and cursed in many others. Shocking their sponsors, their advisers, and even themselves a little, the students did it. Their improved leaf blower drops the overall noise level by nearly 40% while almost entirely erasing the most obnoxious frequencies. The design is patent-pending and Stanley Black & Decker expects to be selling them in two years. From: The Hub

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Celebrating the baguette

I don't think I'll ever forget the experience our first time in Paris going to the bakery and getting a baguette warm from the oven. Now, that is fresh.
What a great idea! Agence France-Presse in Paris Fri 17 May 2024 20.24 BST Share The French Post Office has released a scratch-and-sniff postage stamp to celebrate the baguette, once described by President Emmanuel Macron as “250 grams of magic and perfection”. The stamp, which costs €1.96, depicts a baguette decorated with a red, white and blue ribbon. It has a print run of 594,000 copies. According to the Parisian shop Le Carre d’encre, which sells it, the stamp has a “bakery scent”. The ink used on the stamps contains microcapsules which provide the fragrance. It was released for sale on Friday, after a launch on Thursday, the day of Saint-Honoré, the patron saint of bakers and pastry chefs. “The baguette, the bread of our daily lives, the symbol of our gastronomy, the jewel of our culture”, La Poste says on its website. “This scent is encapsulated. We buy it from another manufacturer,” Damien Lavaud, printer at Philaposte, told France Bleu. “And the difficulty for us is to apply this ink without breaking the capsules, so that the smell can then be released by the customer rubbing on the stamp.” The French baguette was given Unesco heritage status in 2022. https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/article/2024/may/17/french-post-office-releases-scratch-and-sniff-baguette-stamp?utm_campaign=mb&utm_medium=newsletter&utm_source=morning_brew#img-1

Tuesday, May 21, 2024

A lovely lunch with Donna yesterday

We went to our old standby,the University Golf Club. I enjoyed the shrimp brioche and Jim had the eggs benny. Then we came home to see the Blue Jays winning and they won 9-3.

Sunday, May 19, 2024

Monet and London: Views of the Thames

I would love to see this exhibit.
From: The Smithonion Magazine "Claude Monet had planned to display his paintings of the river Thames at a London exhibition in 1905. However, weeks before the show opened, the artist postponed it, believing the works weren’t up to snuff. Nearly 120 years later, the long-awaited exhibition is finally coming together: London’s Courtauld Gallery has reunited many of the original pieces to execute Monet’s vision. The show, “Monet and London: Views of the Thames,” will open this fall. Between 1899 and 1901, Monet created 94 pieces featuring the Thames over the course of three trips to London. These works showed the Charing Cross Bridge, the Waterloo Bridge and the Houses of Parliament at different times of day and in various weather conditions. “Some of Monet’s most remarkable Impressionist paintings were made not in France but in London,” says the Courtauld Gallery in a statement. “They depict extraordinary views of the Thames as it had never been seen before, full of evocative atmosphere, mysterious light and radiant color.” In 1904, Monet presented 37 of his Thames paintings at a show in Paris, where they were a big hit. Building on this success, the artist started organizing an exhibition at Dowdeswell’s, a London gallery on New Bond Street. “I have always wanted to show my Londons here, for my own satisfaction,” the artist wrote in a letter during a trip to England in 1904, per the Art Newspaper’s Martin Bailey. Just months after the show’s announcement, Monet’s big plans started to unravel. The Manchester Courier reported that the artist had delayed the exhibition indefinitely, writing that “Monet is dissatisfied with the quality of the canvases which he intended to show, hence the postponement.”

Saturday, May 18, 2024

Heavy flooding in Italy...wow

I hope they get relief soon. I seem to recall driving from Venice to Nice in a torrential rainstorm. We got some relief from all the tunnels along that route. I generally don't like long tunnels as I'm a bit claustrophobic but was very grateful for a bit of relief from the rain. We thought of turning off and staying the night somewhere but there was so much water on the sides of the road we were concerned the car would be covered in water.

Friday, May 17, 2024

The many works of Alice Munro

From: Russell Books "Canada, and the world, lost a legend in the literary community. This towering stack is just a few of the works of Alice Munro (1931-2024)"

Thursday, May 16, 2024

Time Zones

From: Interesting Facts
"Before 1833, local time was all over the place; communities set their clocks to noon when the sun was highest in the sky, which led to at least 144 different local times in North America. This wasn’t a huge deal when people were traveling slowly by foot and horseback, but with trains, people could suddenly travel across wider distances more quickly — and train operators needed consistent schedules to coordinate. Even small miscommunications about time could lead to missed connections and accidents. Railroads established a four-time-zone system in 1833, and used it for decades before the U.S. government officially established time zones in 1918."

Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Alice Munro

She was a wonderful writer and I was so thrilled when she won the Nobel literary prize. Perhaps time to re-read some of her wonderful stories.
By Associated Press Nobel laureate Alice Munro, the Canadian literary giant who became one of the world’s most esteemed contemporary authors and one of history’s most honored short story writers, has died at age 92. A spokesperson for her publisher confirmed the death of Munro, winner of the Nobel literary prize in 2013, but did not immediately provide further details. Munro had been in frail health for years and often spoke of retirement, a decision that proved final after the author’s 2012 collection, “Dear Life.”

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Pet Portrait

I really like what he does to bring pets alive in his portraits. "New Pet Portrait with referrence photo. My pet portraits are different but who wants something that looks like it was done from an instructional booklet and is the same as everything out there. If u want your pet done send me a message and I'm sure we can work something out!" Mark Prosser

Monday, May 13, 2024

A wonderful Mother's Day with Richard

In the afternoon, these wonderful gifts arrive..flowers, cookies, chocolates, Amsterdam Breakfast tea, and a notebook. Then we had dinner together and watched the hockey game. And he helped us with all sorts of tech stuff. We are blessed with a wonderful son.

Sunday, May 12, 2024

A lovely dinner with Donna

We were at the University Golf Club last night. We always enjoy our time together.Thank you so much, dear friend.

Saturday, May 11, 2024

National Wildflower week

I'll never forget the first time we drove though the desert when we were in Palm Springs at the height of wildflower season. So amazing to see wonderful blooms in such a landscape. From: Nice News "It’s National Wildflower Week, and what better way to celebrate than taking in this stunning photo from Idaho’s Lemhi Pass. We encourage you to seek out some springtime blooms before the week is over (or maybe just listen to Tom Petty’s “Wildflowers”)."

Friday, May 10, 2024

Hazukido has closed down

I guess we missed our chance to get a great croissant. Perhaps we'll need to go to Paris now :)
From: Vancouver is Awesome "Despite an opening with much fanfare, the first Vancouver outpost of global croissant sensation Hazukido has closed down in silence. The well-appointed bakery-cafe at 280 Nelson St in Yaletown opened its doors in October 2022, marking the Taiwanese franchise chain's first foray into Metro Vancouver. The brand is known for its Japanese-inspired baked goods, in particular sweet and savoury croissants."

Thursday, May 09, 2024

Olympic torch in Marseille

I would have loved to have been there and enjoying a bouillibaise.
"OLYMPICS | FRANCE Lighting the way The Olympic torch arrives in the port city of Marseille today after crossing the Mediterranean aboard the Belem, a three-masted sailing ship. Accompanied by more than 1,000 boats, it will dock on a pontoon designed to resemble an athletics track. This will mark the first stage of its three-month journey across the country towards the capital. The flame’s arrival will offer an early indication of what we can expect from Paris 2024."

Wednesday, May 08, 2024

Award winning fish and chips

I'm pretty sure we visited Gourdon and had some wonderful fish and chips. From: Scotland Now "We are already one week through May, which means summer is hurtling towards us. If you are keen for a sunny day trip in Scotland before the busy holiday season, time is running out. Fortunately, even during the peak of the summer, there are still plenty of secluded spots all over the country you can visit that many Scots haven't even heard of. One of these is the lovely little destination of Gourdon, which the Daily Record has picked as our latest Village of the Week. Sitting along Aberdeenshire's breathtaking coast, it is the ideal spot for a short getaway. Whether you're travelling alone, with your other half, or with the whole family, Gourdon is perfect for those looking to escape the hustle and bustle. Framed around a picturesque working harbour that dates all the way back to 1820, Gourdon may be less than 40 minutes from Aberdeen by car, but it feels like its own peaceful little world. There is plenty to see and do in the village, with the highlight being the Maggie Law Maritime Museum. However, the star of the show is the spectacular trails that you can set out on for some jaw-dropping coastal scenery. Once you're done, you can head back to the village for some well earned rest and relaxation. In terms of food, Gourdon is home to a multi-award winning fish and chip shop that has been described by visitors as a "little gem"."

Tuesday, May 07, 2024

More great stuff that AI is doing

"The Rundown: Country music star Randy Travis just released his first new song in over a decade, using AI to recreate his voice years after a stroke left him unable to speak or sing. The details: Travis's new song "Where That Came From" was made by training an AI model on past recordings to generate a voice clone. The voice clone was then layered over guide vocals provided by another singer to craft the track. The 65-year-old Country Music Hall of Fame inductee suffered a near-fatal stroke in 2013 that severely impacted his speech. Why it matters: While the use of AI in music has sparked both excitement and controversy, Travis’ song is a good example of the tech’s potential to unlock new creative possibilities — even for those who may no longer have the ability to physically sing." From: Nice News

Monday, May 06, 2024

California wines beat out French wines

This doesn''t really surprise me. I think part of it is California's climate is more reliable in terms of sunshine.
"In a legendary event dubbed “The Judgment of Paris,” held on May 24, 1976, French wine experts preferred upstart California wines to the finest French ones in a taste test. An English wine shop owner staged the event to drum up business, and everyone assumed a French victory was a foregone conclusion. The nine experts swirled, sniffed, and sipped a variety of reds and whites, then tallied the number of points they awarded to each sample; shockingly, a cabernet sauvignon and a chardonnay from Napa Valley won out, proving that countries besides France could produce the world’s finest wines. A bottle of each winning wine is now in the Smithsonian collection." From: Nice News

Sunday, May 05, 2024

Wow...what a picnic that will be

As I'm composing this post I'm looking at my own red check tablecloth. We have used it a couple of times this year when the sun has been bright and no wind.
"The event on Paris’s Champs-Élysées is open to all - but only 4,000 people will win access to the giant picnic. It’s one of the most famous - and well-trodden - streets in the world and now the Champs-Élysées is set to welcome delighted visitors for an entirely unique event. On Sunday 26 May, the Parisian avenue will transform into an enormous picnic site, hosting 4,000 residents of the French capital as well as tourists. Thought up by the Champs-Élysées committee in collaboration with LG Electronics France, the event will give lucky attendees the opportunity to gather around a giant, traditional red and white chequered picnic rug." From: Nice News

Saturday, May 04, 2024

Wally the support alligator

Just when you think you've heard everything.
Wally, the emotional support alligator once denied entry to a baseball game, is missing By Sydney Bishop, CNN 3 minute read Joie Henney, 65, sits in 2019 with his emotional support alligator, Wally, at his home in York Haven, Pennsylvania. Heather Khalifa/AP CNN — Emotional support animals registrations in the United States reached 115,832 last year, by an industry group’s count. But in the eyes of reptile rescuer Joie Henney, there’s only one: “Wally Gator” – his “gentle” certified emotional support alligator. And now, Wally has gone missing – far from home.

Friday, May 03, 2024

Cutting screen time in France

I'm glad to see France taking the lead in this. I hope other countries follow suit. From: Euronews
"A team of experts commissioned by the French president warned against screen and social media use for children. Children under three years old should not have any screen time and up to age six it should be “strongly limited,” according to an expert panel commissioned by French President Emmanuel Macron. The panel also said on Tuesday that children under the age of 11 should not be allowed a mobile phone and anyone under 13 should not own a phone with internet access. Meanwhile, social media use should be forbidden for anyone under 15 and those above that age should only have access to ethical platforms such as Bluesky."

Thursday, May 02, 2024

It is a lovely bird

A blue rock thrush
From: Nice News "Vancouver, Washington, resident Michael Sanchez inadvertently caused quite a flurry when he photographed a small bird on an Oregon beach last week. Sanchez told KOIN 6 News he initially thought the bird was black, but realized it was actually “blue and chestnut-colored” upon returning home, so he decided to post the pictures on social media to learn what species it was. ​ Local birders soon took notice — it turned out that Sanchez had photographed the first known blue rock thrush sighting in U.S. history. “Now that I know just how rare of a sighting this is, I wish I would have captured more pictures of it,” he said. “However, I’m happy with the photos that I was able to get, and I hope this brings new interest in the fascinating world of birdwatching.” ​ The blue rock thrush is native to Europe and Asia and had only been spotted in North America once before, in Canada in 1997, but that sighting was later written off. Sanchez’s encounter still has to pass through the Oregon Bird Records Committee or the American Birding Association Records Committee to be deemed official, but Oregon Birding Association member Nolan Clements said he’s confident it will be."

Wednesday, May 01, 2024

Yikes...all these people

It looks like a lovely beach but I wouldn't want to be there when the concert is going on.
SOCIETY | FERNANDO AUGUSTO PACHECO Into the groove Madonna mania is sweeping Brazil in the run-up to the pop icon’s free concert in Rio de Janeiro this Saturday. The show, which will take place on Copacabana Beach, is expected to attract a record 1.5 million fans. This has resulted in a mobilisation of a scale not seen since the city hosted the 2016 Summer Olympics. The event will be an important test for Rio, which is due to welcome the G20 summit in November and is eager to attract more international events.