2nd May 2025

New ways to find answers

Sometimes we have to admit that education is not an obvious process. The teacher may know more than the student but only the student can learn. By that same principle all of us undergo years of self education. Things are presented to us and with enough time we will learn what is involved. Right now the world is facing something known as AI. There are very few clear answers about what this actually entails. I am at the beginning pages of learning about this technology and I have to find examples that clarify the situation for me. Earlier today I heard that you could take a letter. Think business letter. You could show it to the computer literally. The software would allow the computer to make a decision about the subject matter of that letter. And then offer possible meanings about that subject matter. Nothing very mysterious there people do it every day. But what if your computer could take a letter offer you an identification and as such suggestion about how to use that information. Without further consultation or any need to bring someone else into the process. The whole point of AI is that we will begin to use our computer data more efficiently. Or another example. What if you could use the camera in your cell phone to scan the contents of a drawer filled with other objects. Through the magic of AI because we still see it as magic the articles in that drawer could be identified and classified. And then you could use your computer to find objects that you had filed incorrectly. I’m still stretching here because I do not understand the process fully but it does offer some interesting possibilities going forward. I have for many years use the idea that any object I was missing was probably in one of three locations. It goes back to a system where I stored everything in a drawer. Finally we may have a way to make the process more obvious. No need for me to be standing by when you could scan the drawer with your cell phone and have a I find what you were looking for I want to know where this is going to go because I sense that something important is about to begin.

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1st May 2025

Adaptive clues

Much of my news feed consists of things that interest me. As it should. However another section deals with things that I need to know more about. For example I now receive a lot more information about devices that are marketed for use by those with visual impairment. Some of them are obvious. I own more magnifying glasses then at any other point in my life. I also have a cane which allows me to find my way up and down flights of stairs in the absence of a handrail. I had no need when I was younger but now I do. I have a watch that can tell me the time with a voice. I watched these videos to learn about things that I had not otherwise imagined as useful. If I did more work in the kitchen having a scale that could tell me the weight might be cool. I have learned that you can now buy an oven for your kitchen that will cook the food according to pre recorded recipes and that uses technology that will prevent you receiving a burn either due to working around the oven or putting your food inside. This one I want to know more about. Through the house we have put small visual clues and queues to help me find my limits. The stairs to the basement have strips of bright reflective material that make it easier for me to see the edge of the steps. On certain appliances in the kitchen there are touch dots. Tactile clues to help me through the day. I have learned to do things in a different way. I surprised myself some days. Another sign that the brain is trying to adapt. There is more to do. However if I record another blog post a year from now I hope that I will be able to add to a growing list of ways that I have adapted my behavior in my environment to make things easier.

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30th April 2025

Nuts please

My first visit to a zoo took place a very long time ago. How young was I? I was still a Cub Scout and our group was taken on a tour of a wildlife sanctuary. A very minimal sort of view of a zoo. What I remember from that day was that the largest animal on site was a black bear. Actually a couple of them. In an enclosure. These animals were very used to humans because we were allowed to feed them. Peanuts still in the shell. And what I took away from that was that even animals have their own way of doing things. The bear would take in a peanut chew around a bit spit out the shell and swallow the good part. Probably like we would do if we were a little more wild. No BBQ sauce or salt for these animals. I have no idea what they ate when there were no tourists in front of them. That was not part of the trip although, probably should have been. Feeding berries to a bear might have been fun. Even as keen as we were being young boys we lost interest quickly. One way of controlling the number of peanuts eaten by a bear in a single day. And then we went on to other things like checking out the porcupines or the weasels. As I said this was a very minor sort of zoo. It still exists I think as part of a provincial sanctuary. I doubt that any of the original animals are still around. And since I will not be returning I will have to go with my memories. To a young boy a black bear can seem rather large although these are probably not much more then Cubs size. No threats were made. Not to the bears and not to the boys. Consider it a successful visit on both accounts. And I have no idea who provided the peanuts.

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29th April 2025

After the election

Time to look back on yesterday. After sleeping well I have had the chance to analyze the national election. Some winners and some losers. A lot of money put back into the economy. Some questions about what comes next. All in all, I am relieved. We have a new Prime Minister who is the same person as the day before. Locally same political party captured all the seats in our area. Sure they replaced the people but the idea is still there. Our government is not on the point of collapse and their dollar is still worth something close to a dollar. I am relieved. What comes next is the inevitable shake up for the political parties. After you spend millions and millions of dollars your members have expectations. In many cases they have not been met. We now go into a long summer of political maintenance. Trying to get some people back into the positions of real power. I had my usual pleasure of listening to numbers that really meant very little. My big take away is that the map has some new names on it. Reflecting changes in population centres. We always need new maps right? For those who were tasked with reporting and analysis, they did well no real moments of collapse. All fitted nicely into a four hour period ending a big night. That magical moment where the government announces which party will be in power went by with all the noise of clouds on a summer day. I am glad in retrospect that no candidate wasted his or her time coming to visit. My voice is backed by one vote and as the numbers grow one is inconsequential. There is one question remaining on the table. In theory we now have a minority government and we have had those before. I imagine that we will return to the polls within a year.

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27th April 2025

Failure to improve

I am fascinated by the concept of curation. That is probably too strong a term. I am curious about the things I have created and then left behind. I have tens of thousands of photographs. Any one of those could be improved by spending some time with the photo editing suite. I have tens of thousands of pages of content that I have written. Any one of those could deal with some careful editing. I have tens of thousands of hours of musical production. Solo and with others. You can probably see where I’m going with this. Too many efforts are done in the context of one and done. If I was more focused on my own creations I would want to make them better. The reality is that I do not. I have to weigh on one hand the value of things I have already created and on the other the time available to create new content. And like most people I am lazy. I’m quite happy with the original effort fully aware that any given instance could be improved. In school we were told to do a draft of a text and then to add the the touches needed I am not as good student as I should be. In photography back in the day any given subject was unlikely to merit a reshoot put that down to the cost of materials and a lack of focus. No pun intended. There are things that I could do with photos and texts and musical efforts to improve the finished content. I probably never will. I have been listening to interviews with others when they try to describe their own creative techniques and this seems to be a generalized state of affairs. We enjoy the original moment of creation but when it comes time to edit and fix we tend to set it aside for a better moment. I believe that our whole educational system has this bias. And I am not the one who will change that system. I remain content that I am still creating new content that others may never see. A good analogy would be the hours spent by any musician in a practice studio. We all know what better means. However we lack the willingness to continue seeking that better.

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26th April 2025

Captured images

So many memories. I am of the age where I have embrace many and each one comes with a clear image. Either in my mind or in a photo album. The photo album was and is the best chance we have to remember what happened before. I come to this with a particular background. My mother had two cameras. A pair of brownie Hawkeye cameras that she had purchased before I was ever born. I was given one of them when I was very young. I cannot say that I made much use of it because the necessary film and processing costs far exceeded my allowance. By the time I arrived at university I had already learned the rudiments of working in a dark room. That interest and knowledge carried me through the next two decades. It is only because of that background that I can look at an old photo album and describe to you the process involved. By 1950 some local photo studios had processing machines. All the photos arrived in very well conceived stop snapshot albums. I think some of them are still in my parents possession. I came along when I could go to a local box store purchase the materials I needed to work in the darkroom go back and spend countless hours transferring from raw film to photos you get to hold in your hand. I believed that I had the key to the knowledge of the world. My sense of pride diminished somewhat when my grandmother explained that she also had done darkroom work a full two generations before my birth. For all of you modern youngsters who think that everything comes out of a digital file, believe me, things were not always so simple.

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25th April 2025

Small and blue

I have not driven a car very much. Through my whole life. I did the Mandatory education in a Driver’s Ed car and I did use my father’s vehicle to go up and down the local streets. But for all of that I depend on others. In the final years of high school my buddy had a car. A small car. A blue car. One with a hole in the roof. Fine German engineering. Built by Volkswagen and marketed as the Beetle or the Bug or both. What set this car apart from other cars was the heating system. I do not think we ever found the control to turn on the heat. And since we lived in a place where winter went on for many many months we learn to freeze. One of the biggest trips we would make was up the highway. As I remember, 17 miles, to a local arena where rock bands would play. And after each concert we would drive home. Waiting to be warm again. I had an important job. I was tasked with keeping the frost off the windows. Allowing the driver to see enough of the road ahead should get us from here to there. This was not the kind of comfort that we now enjoy. The idea of a heated steering wheel was decades ahead. We were tough. That hole in the roof known as a sunroof I think was designed as an escape hatch. There was a program on TV about soldiers in the desert war in small vehicles that had a hole in the roof. The lookout could stick his head out and seek enemy vehicles. And so that is what we did anytime the wind dropped to a point were freezing was not instant. I have no idea what happened to that car. As I said it was small and blue and lacked even the most rudimentary of heating. Fine engineering if you live in the desert I guess. But we didn’t. I think that the car was purchased to replace an earlier vehicle which had been crushed by a snow plow. I saw that instance. The roads were icy and we bumped into the Driver’s Ed car driver. Two cars totalled. Such other things we remember a lifetime later. Being cold and almost being killed.

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24th April 2025

Mixed by hand and foot

Back when I was still employed our company had a slogan. We were told that learning was a lifetime activity. And I concur. With that in mind I have been watching content that will help me to learn about things that were until now mysteries. At the basis of everything there is food. I come from a culture where bread is important. I have made bread in different ways with different recipes and with very different goals. So today I came across a video that talked about how bread was made just over a century ago. In England. At the time when industry got into the game. I learned a lot of things that I had never considered. I have made bread one loaf at a time. The company in this video made several 100 loaves a day. By hand. In a coal-fired oven. And because everything in industry revolves around cost I learned that sometimes you cut corners. You employ ingredients that are suspect. I had never considered the idea of adulterating flour with chalk. But others did. I learned that offering loaves that were too small upset the clients so probably the only thing that was closely regulated was making sure that the loaves were as large as listed. I also learned that when you do not have machines you do things by hand. Or by foot. In this case they would mix the flour using their bare feet. Night after night because the bakery tended to be open after sundown to reduce the ambient temperature. I learned that people like their white bread to be white and that there are minerals that you can add to your flower that increase the illusion that’s your bread is of the proper colour. There was more but I have no reason to make this into a script. Just take it from me that we are better fed now then we used to be. My bread is probably fit to eat.

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23rd April 2025

No flying automobiles

I now believe that winter is at an end. High on the list of things to get done is the swapping of the tires. This is something that we could do at home given that we have two complete sets but decision was made many years ago to support the local economy. Going to the garage at the corner and getting the tires swapped affirms our belief that they are an important institution. If we were to never go there then we will be at a bad place if we ever needed their expert assistance. I am not a mechanic. Just a thought but I could probably seriously damage the car if I was to head out there and play with my tools. I am sure that many feel the same way. But there are others who have this mistaken belief that they know best no matter what the situation. That probably works well if you never drive on a public road. It is not that long ago that the car was introduced to the province. The history is out there. And like with any new technology very few people became involved in the care and feeding of the car. Locally we have a garage that remembers in the historical sense the days of the first cars in the area. It is a family garage that has moved from father to son to grandson. In fact they started their business around the same time that my grand father was a practicing blacksmith. Putting wagons back together and fixing broken wheels. There has been an obvious evolution. But the basic fundamentals are still there. Using the right tool for the job was as important to my grand father as it is to my local mechanic. Both of them understood that a hammer had a purpose. The range of tools has increased but the mechanics underneath are related. Knowing that advanced knowledge allows for solutions to problems is what keeps me from wanting to repair my own car. Promised flying cars a long time ago. They are not yet available but when they are I will still abstain from wanting to repair the chariot. I will rely on the wisdom of those who have put their lives into making things work for others. It is a mindset with value.

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22nd April 2025

Living dangerously

A lot of changes took place in the century before my birth. That means that I was not a witness but I lived with the technology advances. And because people become accustomed to technology they take shortcuts. Ones that involve safety. Our home had a fuse box with those round screw in fuses that would burn out in case of something going wrong. Of course none of us understood the why so if a fuse burned out we went to her pants pocket and pulled out a penny. Turns out that a penny does a proper job of bridging a burnt out fuse. The problem goes away and to those on site it all seems normal again. I lived in the period where asbestos was a common building material. We put the stuff on our roofs and all the walls of our home another floors and anytime insulation was needed we could always find a bag a fibers. No idea of what was going to happen going forward. In fact I can remember picking up broken asbestos shingles and cracking them in half because to a 10 year old boy they seem like a cheap substitute for a knife. Go figure. We heated our homes in part with oil and putting in proper pipes seemed like overkill so we had a funny drip system where a gallon of fuel oil simply dripped away into the pan below and made it to the stove. Not something you can do anymore I imagine. Getting back to electricity plugs coming from the companies sometimes had a third prong. We did not know why and so faced with a plug that only had two holds we remove that third problem it worked and the problem was solved. Actually I have seen someone jury rig an automobile to drip fuel into the carburetor when the pump stopped working. Nothing exploded but it certainly could have. I can probably find other examples but this serves as a starting point. A reminder that in my day we lived dangerously.

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