We are directed to consider the rather outstanding and preternatural cartographic abilities of another competitive prodigy in the player with the handle Rainbolt who ranks in the top tier of Geoguessr challenges, where one is presented with a random image from Google Street View and tries to surmise its
location, dropping a pin on the globe to where one thinks it might be. Even if our featured contestant were not playing on hard-mode, only allowing the image to flash on the screen for a few seconds without time for study or applying a pixelated filter, there is at first a suspect element—like it’s a gimmick or trick, in the ability to distinguish a seemingly rather nondescript dirt road from another and zero-in on its coordinates in America, India, Botswana or Australia, but like the limited success we’ve had in national or regional versions of the game, especially in city-settings and found urban landmarks to hone in on, context clues emerge on deeper inspection for this champion and spectators. Rainbolt has profited from this success and is using their recognised talent to travel the world and explore those places previously only visited virtually and share some of the hidden markers of vernacular architecture, vegetation and signage that helps pin-point a place. Though internet fame tends to pigeon-hole one’s reputation like so much monotony of holiday snapshots, strangers have approached Rainbolt with old family photographs, hoping to identify where they were taken, and often mysteries were solved—making this game seem important and serving to expand one’s horizons rather than making the world a flatter place. More at the link up top.
Friday, 15 March 2024
terra cognito (11. 424)
symbolics.com (11. 423)
The above domain of the now defunct privately held computer company spun of from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s artificial intelligence laboratory in 1980 that developed and sold the first single-
user workstations utilising a high-level programming language especially fluent for hardware and peripheral integration was the registered on this day in 1985, making it the first of its kind and as it is still active, sold to napkin.com investments, also the oldest. The venerable property now uses AI to rate one’s domain, it appears. Maintained by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, the other core and original generic top-level domains .org, .edu, and .net were registered to the US Department of Defence research and development agency DARPA in January of that year, whose predecessor was responsible for the ARPANET project (see previously) that created the first computing network that allowed communication and resource sharing amongst remote terminals.
6x6 (11. 422)
merica: singular, normalised behaviour of US residents that they’ve become inured to sfx: more mind-blowing short videos from OpenAI’s Sora—see previously
outstanding in the field: highlights from the annual British Wildlife Photo
negative pressure ventilator: an obituary for author, lawyer and polio survivor who used an iron lung for seven decades
getty images: foundation and museum has made over eighty thousand artworks and artefacts from its collect available to the public
free drawing: lessons in illustration from 1925 by Franz ฤiลพek and Hermann Kastner bytedance: users react to app’s uncertain future in the US
synchronoptica
one year ago: assorted links to revisit
two years ago: another MST3K classic, a Roman holiday plus the Doomsday Clock
three years ago: the Ides of March, the Feast of the Holy Lance, more links to enjoy plus a lost and found project
four years ago: the Osaka World’s Fair Expo (1970), a Roman Star Trek episode, disease vectors, antique bills of sale, some blasphemous graffiti plus Scotland’s new bank notes
five years ago: a non-gendered digital assistant, xenophobic dogma, unblurring photos, college admission and privilege plus more links worth the revisit
Thursday, 14 March 2024
7x7 (11. 421)
triple word score: the undisputed champion of competitive Scrabble
boyard cigarettes: unused geisha footage for an Offworld advertising campaign
statutory interpretation: a forthcoming book on the ideology of originalism and its malleability the apprehension engine: custom suspenseful sounds for horror movie incidental music—via Things Magazine
penmanship: the resurgence of cursive—see previously
raktajino: a supercut of Klingon coffee in Star Trek: DS-9
game theory: selfishness and enlightened self-interest through the lens of novelist and philosopher Iris Murdoch
ฯ (11. 420)
As our faithful chronicler reminds, today marks the annual celebration of the mathematical constant pi, expressed in US calendar conventions 3.14 (we also get the chance on the twenty-second of July, Pi
Approximation Day, from the notional fraction known from the time of Archimedes—first observed in 1988 by physicist and curator of the the San Francisco Exploratorium Larry Shaw, and since designated by the US Congress and UNESCO as the International Day of Mathematics. Activities include learning about the irrational and transcendent number and its properties, memorising and reciting its digits, called piphilogy and relies on mnemonic techniques, such as composing so called piems—a portmanteau of the Greek symbol and poem in which the letter count of each word equals the corresponding digit: to the fourteenth decimal place, “How I want a drink, alcoholic of course, after the heavy chapters involving quantum mechanics,” and eating circular foods. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology also traditionally dispatched its college admissions decision letters to applicants on this day.
person-alysis (11. 419)
This 1957 board game from Lowell Toy Manufacturers of Long Island (a prolific maker whose catalogue includes mostly versions tied to contemporary popular culture—Bat Masterson and Steve Canyon and Gunsmoke being among their best-selling) is advertised with the tagline “Everyone’s a psychologist! …” and described as the most original adult game on the market, encouraging amateur psychoanalysis with eighty “ink-blot” cards and an explanation of their interpretations, “lending themselves to an exciting, hilarious and thought provoking game! Arrestingly packaged with attractive accessories.” We wonder how many fights (see also) this caused finding the family sociopath and other undiagnosed personality traits. More from Weird Universe at the link above.
synchronoptica
one year ago: an Albanian Spring Festival
two years ago: assorted links to revisit, Czech and Slovak history plus goblin mode
three years ago: Andorra, the Mir programme, St Matilda plus Nazis erotic toys
four years ago: origins of the Panama Canal, an urban lagoon plus Disney’s White Wilderness
five years ago: end of the broadcasting day, geopolitical narratives, a coin honouring Stephen Hawking plus cross-border commutes
Wednesday, 13 March 2024
the temple of invention (11. 418)
Via tmn, we discover that from 1790 to 1880, the US Patent Office uniquely required filers to include with each application a model of their inventions, which were later curated and exhibited in the agency’s miniature gallery, established ahead of Washington, DC’s other museums as the top attraction of the capital city. Long ago deaccessioned and largely lost (as a form of crowd control), some artefacts have been collected and put on display, including the exquisitely impractical and unmarketable hull of Abraham Lincoln’s boat design with inflatable and evacuatable ballast to improve navigation (6469, the only patent granted to a US president—though I suspect that Trump has registered an unfashionable number of trademarks administered by the same authority) along with dozens of other ambitious artefacts of ingenuity.
synchronoptica
one year ago: the network effect
two years ago: assorted links to revisit plus Saint Ansovinus
three years ago: more links to enjoy, snowdrops plus a classic number from Brewer and Shipley
four years ago: a coup attempt in Germany (1920)
five years ago: the world wide web (1989), noise-cancelling, plant mobility plus more Olympic pictograms
catagories: ๐บ๐ธ, ๐ก, libraries and museums
Tuesday, 12 March 2024
███████ ██ ████████ (11. 417)
In collaboration with the Electronic Free Foundation, Muckrock (previously) has just announced its annual Foilies award winners, recognising the most egregious instances of US government violating the precept of the public record. Ahead of their also recurring Sunshine Week to champion the importance of transparency and access, this tenth iteration really featured some strong resistance to FOIA requests, doubly depressing considering the death of local journalism and advocacy outlets, flouting disclosure requirements of the law. From attempt to tag a cache of email correspondence with the label “NO FOIA” in hopes to keep fraud from the public eye or attempts to reveal corruption and mismanagement met with ingratitude to zealous librarians checking out books themselves to keep them out of circulation while bans for certain literary works were still pending court challenges and politicians trying to keep secret their travel expenses. These achievements, both large and small, have impact, and are not bailiwick of lawyers and reporters, only requiring determination. Learn more at the link above.
