Ages ago, the private motor vehicles of Americas affiliated with the military stationed in Germany were plated with distinctive licenses, as if the major of American cars weren’t already conspicuous enough—with either the prefix HK for bumpers that took the short, standard US tags or AD for bumpers that could accommodate the longer, German style license plates.
These codes, which apparently did not stand for anything, were assigned since no county or city had claimed these particular combinations, e.g. KT for Landkriese Kitizen, M for Munich, S for Stuttgart, HD for Heidelberg, etc. Later, in the name of force-protection, vehicles followed the same naming-convention as their local hosts. With the devolution of the licensing and registration laws in Germany and districting reforms, a whole new slew of possibilities opened up, including the disused HK, that is now reserved for automobiles from County Heide (Landkriese Heidekrise) in Lower Saxony. We noticed this on our way back from Hamburg. The county seat of this area on the Lรผneburg Heath is a town by the name of Bad Fallingbostel. The town is incidentally host to a garrison of the British Army—at least through this year, as the Ministry of Defense (MOD) plans to withdraw, as the Americans are drawing-down, all their soldiers from Germany by 2020.
Saturday, 21 February 2015
vanity-plates
oฮบฮปฮฑฯoฮผฮฑ, ฮฑฯฮบฮฑฮฝฯฮฑฯ
Here is a pretty keen vintage map of the United States of America, printed circa 1927 from a Greek cartographer.
good housekeeping
Friday, 20 February 2015
among others
I don’t know why exactly I forsook reading science-fiction—although admittedly I did not have much of a literary foundation to spring from. I did read the Dune saga and A Canticle for Lebowitz and enjoyed them immensely—especially as the later was partially set in a post-apocalyptic Texarkana, where I was living at the time, per-apocalypse.
mead hall or on tap
five-by-five
grand hotel paradox: a TED talk thought-puzzle on the nature of infinity
symmetry group: stunningly uniform modern architectural faรงades in a Turkish neighbourhood
echo parque: there is a popular attraction in Mexico that simulates the dangers of illegal border crossing
reinventing the wheel: a small collection of ingeniously useful and essential medieval apps
ramifications: happy lunar new year