Saturday, September 30, 2017

The Route




















Here is the route we took through Europe.

European Vacation

















As hinted at previously Mari, Mom, Dad and I went on a dream vacation through Europe, guided by Trafalgar. I didn't want to blog about it during, both because we didn't bring a computer and I didn't want to spend my vacation evenings blogging. So the following is a recap now that we are home. Credit for the following pictures goes to all four of us.

We knew we would be on the move a lot so the first mission was to travel light. Seen here is the entirety of our luggage for two weeks of travel. Mari was very creative with finding organizers and travel helpers that made this possible. Those two black squares in the middle are neck hanging wallets for our money, ID, and passports. Yes, from a fashion perspective they were dorky, but they were so handy we didn't care.

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Ambiguity













Inside is a fairly short platformer / puzzle game from an indie developer. Their first game was called Limbo, which I also played but can't find a reference to in past blogging. Fun little game, but as with Limbo there is no dialogue and the plot is definitely open to interpretation, especially the very strange end.

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

Pour It On

















After making the boxes on the second floor they covered them in rebar and last night all of it in cement. This morning it was fun to watch the guys on what looked like miniature hover craft float around. A google search informed me those are ride on power trowels for grinding and polishing. There are three in the picture but it's hard to tell, the easiest to see is the red one near the bottom.

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Streetscapes XII

















These columns in the Bicentennial Mall are supposed to tie it together with Centennial Park, calling to the Parthenon.

Monday, September 18, 2017

Onward

















From thought to action to adventure!

Friday, September 15, 2017

Sat Urn














The Cassini space probe took it's final plunge into Saturn this morning at 6:55am. The end of an amazing piece of machinery and an equally amazing project. Above is an actual picture of Saturn from Cassini, in this instance showing a storm running across the top of the planet. Just another reminder of how beautiful space must be despite all the emptiness.

For posterity here's some info on Cassini from an NPR article:

It's 13-year mission to explore the strange world of Saturn went on nearly a decade longer than planned. It completed 293 orbits of the planet, snapped 400,000 photos, collected 600 gigabytes of data, discovered at least seven new moons, descending into the famed rings and sent its Huygens lander to a successful 2005 touchdown on the surface of yet another moon, Titan.

First, Cassini had to get to Saturn. The year it blasted off, 1997, the "Information Superhighway" was just getting up to speed. By the time it arrived, in 2004, people were fretting over what to reveal on their Facebook profiles.

On its way to the sixth planet, Cassini set about a circuitous course, swinging by Venus twice to get a gravity assist that shot it back past Earth and onward to Jupiter before a final marathon leg to Saturn.

The twin Voyagers swung by Saturn in the 1970s and 80s, giving scientists a rough outline of the planet and its moons. Cassini has filled in many of the details, giving us an unparalleled look.

Much of what Cassini found concerned Saturn's moons. Among other things, the probe discovered water spewing from Enceladus, discovered that Hyperion has a statically charged surface and that Saturn's entire moon system — a virtual mini solar system in itself — exchanges dust and chunks of material with the planet's ring system.

"Two of those moons have been of particular interest," NPR's Joe Palca reports from JPL headquarters in Pasadena, Calif. "Titan, with its methane lakes and Enceladus, with its geysers of salty water. Scientists speculate that both moons may have the right conditions to harbor some form of life, although Cassini did not have instruments capable of detecting life."

One of Cassini's crowning achievements came in April of this year, as it spun through a narrow gap in Saturn's rings, beaming back images and making scientific measurements along the way.

Why end the mission? Although Cassini's main power is supplied by radioisotope thermoelectric generators, or RTGs — essentially nuclear batteries that were still going at mission's end — the fuel supply for the probe's main engine and backup was believed to be running low.

NPR's Adam Cole, who helped produce a video commemorating the spacecraft's life and times, says: "Scientists [were] worried that when [Cassini] loses power, it could crash into a pristine moon, contaminating a place where we might someday search for life."

While Cassini has discovered a lot of interesting things about Saturn, its ring system and its moons, there's one thing it hasn't been able to pin down with certainty — how long a Saturnian day lasts.
"It's a little bit embarrassing to confess, but we don't know how long a day is on Saturn," Michele Dougherty of Imperial College in London, tells NPR's Palca. She's the scientist in charge of Cassini's magnetometer, an instrument that measures Saturn's magnetic field.

Dougherty is hoping that as Cassini spiraled into the atmosphere, the on board magnetometer detected a telltale tilt in the magnetic field that should resolve the uncertainty over the length of a Saturnian day, Joe reports.

Bittner says that in the final moments of Cassini's life, another instrument, the Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometer, or INMS, was to open up, sucking in the atmosphere to figure out what it's made of.

Monday, September 11, 2017

Staying Connected





















I have the best wife ever!

Saturday, September 9, 2017

Break Time
















Finished Quantum Break this evening. I'm not usually a fan of time travel but they did it extremely well, with set rules on how it worked that they stuck to. This game tried something new (to me at least, maybe some other game has done this) by having short, live acted TV episodes between acts. It also had amazing graphics, as you can see above it had some of the best character capture I've ever seen. But as always it comes down to gameplay and story and I really enjoyed both, so I hope this gets a sequel some day.


Thursday, September 7, 2017

Boxes

















The jail continues to grow, after dropping in the plumbing they've started on the second floor.

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

Now And Then: Card Repost

















We got this in the mail after going to Disney World a few years back, it has lived on the side of our refrigerator ever since. Captivating information, I know, but for some reason seeing that each character has a unique signature is something I like. I wonder if the people who play them at the park have to learn that signature.

Friday, September 1, 2017

WOTM

















One month until the big adventure.