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by ceebs Sat Aug 18th, 2012 at 11:12:42 AM EST
Football Returns, Autumn must be sneaking up.
I'll admit that 36°C is rather unusual in the Northern half of the country (25-27 would be an average), even where I come from, it would be called "a hot summer day".
For the moment, it's still cooler in the house than outside, so I'll open the windows later tonight.
The Toulouse region has peaked at 41°C today. Europeans think a hundred miles is a long way. Americans think a hundred years is a long time.
I wouldn't have wanted to be in the streets of Toulouse, though.
People ther are not used to these temperatures and often don't know how to protect themselves (and their houses) from the heat.
It takes a while to figure out how aggressive you must be. Our rules are:
In the evening, after about 7:00 pm, open all the windows and all the doors, and run a fan that circulates air through the house. Also we have overhead fans that circulate the cooler evening air up against the ceilings, to try to cool the attic. Ideally, we would have an attic vent fan.
At night, keep working to get the house as cool as possible, even if you have to sleep under a light blanket. Keep the fans running all night long; the goal is to get everything in the house as cool as possible. The heat capacity of the furniture and walls is a lot higher than the air, so even if the air is cool, it takes quite a while to get the heat out of the solid objects.
With our cool summer nights here in Colorado, we can usually get the interior temperature down to around 20 C most nights.
In the morning, no later than 7:00 am, close up all of the windows and doors. It will seem pleasant in the morning, and you will feel foolish wandering around in you housecoat, and you will want to let in the fresh morning air, but the goal is to keep the inside of the house as cold as possible. You need to go about this with a religious fervor, regardless of how tempting it is to open the windows on a nice summer morning.
Using this method we have--until this summer, at least--managed to keep our interior temperature below about 27 degrees without the use of A/C even on the hottest days, when the outside temperature in the afternoon exceeds 35 C. This summer was bad for a number of reasons, partly because of the unusual heat, but mainly having to do with house guests who lack sufficient religious fervor.
While in Northridge, CA we had insulation blown into the attic and I installed an attic fan with a thermostat that turned it on at 30C. When we installed central air I found that the original attic based heating system had an ~ half meter dia. air intake on the roof. We had an astute HVAC installer and I asked him to incorporate that into the system so that we could draw cool night air into the house, but it was a separate mode that had to be selected manually. It was very helpful so long as we had a marine layer over us at night and in the morning. As the Dutch said while fighting the Spanish: "It is not necessary to have hope in order to persevere."
You can read the followup to this post here. -- I sat down at yet-another coffee shop in Portland determined to get some work done, catch up on some emails and write another blog post. About 30 minutes into my working, an elderly gentleman at least 80 years old sat down next to me with a hot coffee and a pastry. I smiled at him and nodded and looked back at my computer as I continued to work.
You can read the followup to this post here.
--
I sat down at yet-another coffee shop in Portland determined to get some work done, catch up on some emails and write another blog post.
About 30 minutes into my working, an elderly gentleman at least 80 years old sat down next to me with a hot coffee and a pastry. I smiled at him and nodded and looked back at my computer as I continued to work.
"Of course, the logical thing was not the only possibility ... but we used squares. It was something very foolish that everyone in the world has been suffering from ever since."
'A' = 0x41 'Z' = 0x5A 'a' = 0x61 'z' = 0x7A
Only difference is bit 6; a simple bitwise AND or OR allows you to convert from one to the other: simple hardwired logic. Europeans think a hundred miles is a long way. Americans think a hundred years is a long time.
This:
There are 256 characters (0-255) in the ASCII character set, but there is full agreement on only 0-127 (and a few flavors of Unix are not in complete compliance). The extended set (128-255) varies widely by platform (and even by font families within a platform); you can generalize concerning, at most, half of them.
Samsung sold just 1.4m Galaxy tablets while Apple sold 34m iPads, court documents show. Ever since I learnt about confirmation bias I've started seeing it everywhere
It's been a very busy year for me with speaking engagements, travel and work on the new book and I have not been good about keeping you all updated on what's been going on. On August 17, 2012 I had my 111th birthday, and a huge party to commemorate it.
Aged as i am, i find that the trick of saying i was born in 1909 means i get no ads, apparently because i don't fit the demographic. Simple trick, wonderful results.
PS. Most of you are aware i was born many generations before 1909. "Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage." - Anaïs Nin
"Water hyacinth is actually a really great raw material for so many things," says Shana. "We are helping communities in Kenya harvest it and use it to create tools to use in the home and to sell. We are using it to make fuel briquettes for cook fires and turning it into a very effective fertilizer." Village Volunteers is also helping local entrepreneurs produce chairs, baskets, and other pieces of furniture that can be made by weaving together the tough stems and leaves of the hyacinths, as well as biodegradable sanitary napkins. "The hyacinth invasion is an overwhelming problem," says Shana, "but it is becoming a business. And by using only locally available materials and labor--oxen help to harvest the hyacinth, for example--the end result is largely self-sustaining." And while the villages on the shore of the lake can't eliminate the hyacinth all together, they are clearing it away from the immediate shores, helping to improve the quality of their immediate water supply, as well as habitats for the fish populations they depend on. "We are helping farmers to not only improve their incomes and livelihoods, but also to make, at least a small difference on their local surroundings. They are turning a devastating situation into a life improving situation."
"Water hyacinth is actually a really great raw material for so many things," says Shana. "We are helping communities in Kenya harvest it and use it to create tools to use in the home and to sell. We are using it to make fuel briquettes for cook fires and turning it into a very effective fertilizer." Village Volunteers is also helping local entrepreneurs produce chairs, baskets, and other pieces of furniture that can be made by weaving together the tough stems and leaves of the hyacinths, as well as biodegradable sanitary napkins.
"The hyacinth invasion is an overwhelming problem," says Shana, "but it is becoming a business. And by using only locally available materials and labor--oxen help to harvest the hyacinth, for example--the end result is largely self-sustaining." And while the villages on the shore of the lake can't eliminate the hyacinth all together, they are clearing it away from the immediate shores, helping to improve the quality of their immediate water supply, as well as habitats for the fish populations they depend on.
"We are helping farmers to not only improve their incomes and livelihoods, but also to make, at least a small difference on their local surroundings. They are turning a devastating situation into a life improving situation."
--Yeah mate, so sorry for making your life really crappy after you took a courageous and moral stand. If we'd known then or anytime in the the subsequent decades what we (sorta) know now, we might have been nicer to you. Hah, but better late than never, particularly when the one threatening our comfy white, privileged elite can no longer speak. Well, time to move on and take down the latest Aussie that's not behaving. --
In an act as appropriate as it is overdue, the Australian House of Parliament is issuing an official state apology Monday to the country's late, great sprinter Peter Norman. Norman won the 200-meter silver medal at the 1968 Olympics, but that's not why he's either remembered or owed apologies. After the race, gold and bronze medalists Tommie Smith and John Carlos bowed their heads and raised their fists on the medal stand and started an international firestorm. Many see the iconic image and assume Norman was just a bystander to history, or as he would joke, "the white guy." But he was standing in full solidarity with Smith and Carlos, wearing a patch on his chest that reads, "Olympic Project for Human Rights."
I understand fully why there is joy among Peter Norman's family and friends, and yet I can't help wonder. If Peter Norman were still alive, it is very possible that this stubborn, principled man, would tell the Australian Government to take their apology and stick it down under. I wonder if he'd point out that Australian Olympic boxer Damien Hooper was almost sent home last month for wearing an Aboriginal flag on a T-shirt and the Australian Olympic Committee gave him no support, condemning him for his actions.
Paul Ryan's love of Rage Against the Machine is amusing, because he is the embodiment of the machine that our music has been raging against for two decades. Charles Manson loved the Beatles but didn't understand them. Governor Chris Christie loves Bruce Springsteen but doesn't understand him. And Paul Ryan is clueless about his favorite band, Rage Against the Machine. Ryan claims that he likes Rage's sound, but not the lyrics. Well, I don't care for Paul Ryan's sound or his lyrics. He can like whatever bands he wants, but his guiding vision of shifting revenue more radically to the one percent is antithetical to the message of Rage. I wonder what Ryan's favorite Rage song is? Is it the one where we condemn the genocide of Native Americans? The one lambasting American imperialism? Our cover of "Fuck the Police"? Or is it the one where we call on the people to seize the means of production? So many excellent choices to jam out to at Young Republican meetings!
Paul Ryan's love of Rage Against the Machine is amusing, because he is the embodiment of the machine that our music has been raging against for two decades. Charles Manson loved the Beatles but didn't understand them. Governor Chris Christie loves Bruce Springsteen but doesn't understand him. And Paul Ryan is clueless about his favorite band, Rage Against the Machine.
Ryan claims that he likes Rage's sound, but not the lyrics. Well, I don't care for Paul Ryan's sound or his lyrics. He can like whatever bands he wants, but his guiding vision of shifting revenue more radically to the one percent is antithetical to the message of Rage.
I wonder what Ryan's favorite Rage song is? Is it the one where we condemn the genocide of Native Americans? The one lambasting American imperialism? Our cover of "Fuck the Police"? Or is it the one where we call on the people to seize the means of production? So many excellent choices to jam out to at Young Republican meetings!
The U.S. economic recovery has been anemic by almost any standard. But for Americans with just a high school degree or less, it's been worse than anemic. It's been non-existent. This week, Georgetown University's Center on Education and the Workforce published a new report breaking down job growth during and after the Great Recession by education levels. And as it illustrates in the graph below, employment has been essentially flat since January 2010 for adults who never went to college. (The center's analysis only extends through February, but according to similar data from the BLS, employment has barely budged for the demographic since).
The U.S. economic recovery has been anemic by almost any standard. But for Americans with just a high school degree or less, it's been worse than anemic. It's been non-existent.
This week, Georgetown University's Center on Education and the Workforce published a new report breaking down job growth during and after the Great Recession by education levels. And as it illustrates in the graph below, employment has been essentially flat since January 2010 for adults who never went to college. (The center's analysis only extends through February, but according to similar data from the BLS, employment has barely budged for the demographic since).
Progressives take note: THIS is how to debate the role of the public sector, retirement security and job creation. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayJnDb4K08M&feature=youtube_gdata_player ...
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