Shallow Thoughts
Akkana's Musings on Open Source Computing and Technology, Science, and Nature.
Tue, 21 Oct 2025
The Los Alamos No Kings protest on Saturday went well. I won't try to estimate how many people showed up (I haven't seen estimates in the papers, either) but there was quite a variety of signs and people were having a lot of fun.
Read more ...
Tags: politics
[
09:25 Oct 21, 2025
More politics |
permalink to this entry |
]
Fri, 17 Oct 2025
I just updated to Firefox 144 and discovered that when I narrow my
Mastodon window to its minimum size, it no longer fits in the space
between my mail and IRC windows. I suppose I could reduce the IRC window
even further, but I don't want to; the sizes I was using yesterday
were fine.
I ask you, what was the compelling reason that Firefox users had to be
prevented from using a 450-pixel wide window? What is up with Mozilla
developers? (And why do I still put up with random time-wasters like this?
Read more ...
Tags: firefox
[
12:00 Oct 17, 2025
More tech/web |
permalink to this entry |
]
Sat, 11 Oct 2025
My cardiologist wanted me to wear a heart-rate monitor for two weeks.
I'm still hoping I can get the raw data eventually (the company's tech
support promised me it was possible),
but meanwhile, the data available for download
on the medical portal was a text file plus a large TIFF. It turned out
the TIFF had 14 subfiles (which is apparently what you call separate images
inside a TIFF). I don't have any viewing tools that will let me easily
page through TIFF subfiles, so I wanted to split them so I could step
through them easily.
Read more ...
Tags: imagemagick, imaging, linux, cmdline
[
19:51 Oct 11, 2025
More linux |
permalink to this entry |
]
Wed, 01 Oct 2025
On a recent bike ride up at the East Fork trail, Dave had to go back
to the car to get something he'd forgotten, leaving me guarding his pack.
It turned out that was a blessing in disguise. While I waited, looking
up at the spectacular backlit sky high above the ponderosas, I saw
hundreds of little fluff pieces floating by, highlighted and glowing
from the sun behind them. Occasionally, I'd see long filaments drift
past: I assume they were strands of spider web, perhaps with tiny baby
spiders attached, invisible at that distance.
I tried to capture them on phone video, but unsurprisingly,
the video wasn't good enough to capture them, and neither were the
still photos.
Tags: hiking, mtb, bike, nature, New Mexico
[
14:41 Oct 01, 2025
More hikes |
permalink to this entry |
]
Sat, 27 Sep 2025
Someone sent me an alert that my
Galilean Jupiter's moons simulation
and
SatSat Saturn's moons simulation
pages weren't working.
Sure enough, they weren't. The error console said
Loading failed for the script
with the name of a calendar widget I use, along with the CSS it uses,
both loaded from a directory inside /javascript on my website,
the same website where the moon simulations are running.
I checked the logs: sure enough, references to those files were returning
404 in the access log, with nothing at all in the error log. The files
were clearly there, and world readable, so it wasn't a permissions problem.
Read more ...
Tags: apache, debian, linux, tech, web
[
13:29 Sep 27, 2025
More tech/web |
permalink to this entry |
]
Tue, 09 Sep 2025
My Review
of my Specialized Turbo Levo Kids ebike
mentioned that
the Specialized phone app had some fun features,
but also some annoying problems.
(I'm using it on Android. Dave doesn't use the app on his iPhone,
so I don't know how the iPhone version compares.)
Read more ...
Tags: bike, ebike, data, programming, python
[
17:39 Sep 09, 2025
More bike |
permalink to this entry |
]
Wed, 03 Sep 2025
We don't get as many wildflowers here as I'd like, but one reliable bloom
every year in late summer was the snakeweed.
Terrible name. In fact, it's quite a nice plant, which around early
September explodes into a carpet of yellow flowers.
Until 2023-2024, when a severe drought managed to kill it all.
Read more ...
Tags: wildflowers, nature, plants
[
19:01 Sep 03, 2025
More nature |
permalink to this entry |
]
Mon, 14 Jul 2025
(A Toastmasters speech on Jul 14, 2025.)
Humans have told stories of mythical creatures for as long as there
have been humans.
Creatures like mermaids, or unicorns, or fire-breathing dragons.
But of course, today we know that mythical creatures don't really exist.
Or do they?
Let me tell you a couple stories of mythical creatures I've seen -- or not seen.
Read more ...
Tags: nature
[
10:08 Jul 14, 2025
More nature |
permalink to this entry |
]