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A mostly personal-interest feed; tech, science and some weird humor thrown in --- just for fun.
Monday, April 29, 2013
Friday, April 26, 2013
BostonMarathon Aftermath
I finally completed the task I set out to to on the day of the Marathon --- to do some banking at a branch that happens to be almost precisely at the marathon's finish line.
Boylston Street was closed for a week. (See http://fredlanga.blogspot.com/2013/04/boston-morning-after.html ) It reopened for residents and business owners a few days ago, and is now almost fully open.
This is the site of the first blast. On the surface, it looks almost normal, except for the extra cops still stationed there.
Look a little closer and you can see that the worst damage still is unrepaired.
This is the site of the second blast; the one I was across the street from. (See the series of photos: http://fredlanga.blogspot.com/2013/04/bostonmarathon-pix-series-seconds-after.html )
Note the newly-planted tree. The original tree was damaged in the blast from the backpack bomb placed right next to it. You can see the still-smoking remains of the backpack next to the tree in this photo I took last week:
There's some fresh plywood at that blast site, too.
But life is almost back to normal for those not directly injured by the bombs. And today, the sun was out, the flowers were blooming and the birds were singing. Life goes on.
Boylston Street was closed for a week. (See http://fredlanga.blogspot.com/2013/04/boston-morning-after.html ) It reopened for residents and business owners a few days ago, and is now almost fully open.
This is the site of the first blast. On the surface, it looks almost normal, except for the extra cops still stationed there.
Look a little closer and you can see that the worst damage still is unrepaired.
This is the site of the second blast; the one I was across the street from. (See the series of photos: http://fredlanga.blogspot.com/2013/04/bostonmarathon-pix-series-seconds-after.html )
Note the newly-planted tree. The original tree was damaged in the blast from the backpack bomb placed right next to it. You can see the still-smoking remains of the backpack next to the tree in this photo I took last week:
There's some fresh plywood at that blast site, too.
But life is almost back to normal for those not directly injured by the bombs. And today, the sun was out, the flowers were blooming and the birds were singing. Life goes on.
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Monday, April 22, 2013
Saturday, April 20, 2013
Boston, morning after
I walked down Boylston this morning trying to get to my bank, which is right at the Marathon finish line. Nope. The streets there are still a crime scene, and closed off.
The next shot looks down Boylston, towards the finish line. If you look closely, you can see small piles of swept-up debris in various places on the street. All the debris --- much of it ordinary trash --- was gathered into small piles, and circled with orange fluorescent paint on the pavement. I assume it was or is all going to be painstakingly analyzed, bit by bit.
There were TV trucks from NY and Phadelphia and many other places; reporters setting up for noon on-scene livebroadcasts.
The next shot looks down Boylston, towards the finish line. If you look closely, you can see small piles of swept-up debris in various places on the street. All the debris --- much of it ordinary trash --- was gathered into small piles, and circled with orange fluorescent paint on the pavement. I assume it was or is all going to be painstakingly analyzed, bit by bit.
There's still a heavy police presence, augmented by military police (in Humvees) and federal agencies, like this ATF truck.
So, things aren't fully back to normal here. Not yet, anyway.
Friday, April 19, 2013
Right now, on the streets of Boston
This is at the intersection of Boylston and Brookline; hundreds of happy college kids chanting USA USA (which is a little silly, as the bombing suspects were citizens) and BPD BPD (for Boston Police department; which makes more sense.)
The kids ended up blocking the road, so the cops did come for crowd control, but were greeted with high fives and handshakes.
Happy night here in Boston. :)
The kids ended up blocking the road, so the cops did come for crowd control, but were greeted with high fives and handshakes.
Happy night here in Boston. :)
Update Re: my #BostonMarathon bombing pix
Yesterday, the FBI sent 2 agents to my apartment to get full-resolution
copies of the pix I posted earlier this week on my blog.
http://fredlanga.blogspot.com/ I'd previously sent in low-res versions
to the FBI's digital submission page, but I guess they wanted the
full-res, because I was so close to the second blast location.
I also learned (just today) that the HuffingtonPost used a bunch of my
photos last Tuesday:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/16/boston-marathon-explosion-pictures_n_3095317.
copies of the pix I posted earlier this week on my blog.
http://fredlanga.blogspot.com/ I'd previously sent in low-res versions
to the FBI's digital submission page, but I guess they wanted the
full-res, because I was so close to the second blast location.
I also learned (just today) that the HuffingtonPost used a bunch of my
photos last Tuesday:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/16/boston-marathon-explosion-pictures_n_3095317.
Boston waits...
In the last week, I’ve heard a lifetime’s worth of sirens.
Last night’s constant stream of police and emergency vehicles was second only to
that of the hours following the Marathon blasts.
Outside my windows, here in the Fens, the streets are very quiet
now; very light traffic and few pedestrians. It looks more like New Year’s
morning, or some other holiday, rather than a warm Spring Friday.
It’s been hard to get good information. Boston activated its
Reverse-911 outcall system this morning, phoning the landlines of all local residents
with a recorded “shelter in place” advisory. Some of the local TV stations have
been responsible and accurate, but every station has its blowhards and low-IQ
on-air people who say whatever vagrant thought drifts through their mind.
I’ve turned off the TV for now. I’m monitoring online
newsfeeds --- they’re less strident, intrusive, and disturbing than broadcast.
It’s clear this will be over soon, one way or another. A
million people here will breathe a sigh of relief when that happens. And then
maybe life can get back to normal.
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Wednesday, April 17, 2013
4Chan crowd-sourced forensics finds possible #BostonMarathon suspect
It appears to be the same guy in the same location, with and without a black nylon backpack, of the sort the FBI says may have contained one of the bombs.
No idea if it's true, but it's surely interesting.
http://basedheisenberg.tumblr.com/post/48181500129/what-happens-when-you-give-4chan-images-of-the-boston
No idea if it's true, but it's surely interesting.
http://basedheisenberg.tumblr.com/post/48181500129/what-happens-when-you-give-4chan-images-of-the-boston
Monday, April 15, 2013
#bostonmarathon
Could have been worse: 2 more explosive devices found at Boston
Marathon; being dismantled
Jesus Christ, those idiots.
Marathon; being dismantled
Jesus Christ, those idiots.
#bostonmarathon more (cont)
The Marathon is suspended. Boston T's Green line is stopped; the Red
line is bypassing the stations nearest the blast site. All off-duty
police have been called in.
There are reports of a third blast; but that may have been police
detonating a suspicious package. There also was a confirmed fire at the
JFK Library; no one yet knows if it's related. There is construction at
the library, so it might be coincidence.
Oh fuck; TV now says 2 dead. That must have been the first blast, which
seemed larger.
I am so goddam angry right now.
line is bypassing the stations nearest the blast site. All off-duty
police have been called in.
There are reports of a third blast; but that may have been police
detonating a suspicious package. There also was a confirmed fire at the
JFK Library; no one yet knows if it's related. There is construction at
the library, so it might be coincidence.
Oh fuck; TV now says 2 dead. That must have been the first blast, which
seemed larger.
I am so goddam angry right now.
#bostonmarathon more
Thanks to all who have asked --- I'm fine.
I felt both blasts in my chest; there was considerable blast wave. But I
am totally uninjured.
The smoke smelled like gunpowder --- fireworks --- rather than a
high-tech explosive. To me, that suggests some wacko amateur rather than
a professional attack.
I am so angry at the fucking assholes that did this. I can barely type.
Idiots.
I felt both blasts in my chest; there was considerable blast wave. But I
am totally uninjured.
The smoke smelled like gunpowder --- fireworks --- rather than a
high-tech explosive. To me, that suggests some wacko amateur rather than
a professional attack.
I am so angry at the fucking assholes that did this. I can barely type.
Idiots.
explosions at #bostonmarathon
Two gunpowder bombs, probably in streetside trash cans half a block
apart, exploded near the finish line of the Boston marathon today, on
the north side of Boylston Street, at the Pru/Copley Square. They
exploded abour 30 seconds apart.
I was about 200 feet (60m) from the second blast.
The first blast seemed larger, but that might be an artifact of crowd
placement and other variables.
When the first blast went off, most people looked up; there was no
initial panic where I was; no one knew what was happening. The second
blast caused a stampede.
I saw several injured. The wounds I saw were to the legs and lower
bodies of the people nearest the trash cans. Pants legs were shredded
and smoldering, bloody skin beneath. People were concussed and shaken.
Several were on the ground, but conscious.
None of the injuries I saw appeared life threatening, thank god. TV
reports are saying some people lost limbs, but I didn't see anything
remotely that severe.
TV is also reporting the blasts were inside a building. That's also not
what I saw.
More to come.
apart, exploded near the finish line of the Boston marathon today, on
the north side of Boylston Street, at the Pru/Copley Square. They
exploded abour 30 seconds apart.
I was about 200 feet (60m) from the second blast.
The first blast seemed larger, but that might be an artifact of crowd
placement and other variables.
When the first blast went off, most people looked up; there was no
initial panic where I was; no one knew what was happening. The second
blast caused a stampede.
I saw several injured. The wounds I saw were to the legs and lower
bodies of the people nearest the trash cans. Pants legs were shredded
and smoldering, bloody skin beneath. People were concussed and shaken.
Several were on the ground, but conscious.
None of the injuries I saw appeared life threatening, thank god. TV
reports are saying some people lost limbs, but I didn't see anything
remotely that severe.
TV is also reporting the blasts were inside a building. That's also not
what I saw.
More to come.
Explosions at boston marathon
Two trash cans exploded near the finish of the Boston Marathon today. Several people were injured. The explosions smells like gunpowder. I was with in about 200 feet of 1 of. The crowds are frantic. There was a small Stampede. More later when I get home.
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Friday, April 12, 2013
What Were the Top 10 Google Searches of 2012?
#2 was Hurricane Sandy. That makes sense to me.
But I do not understand #1 at all. Sigh.
http://www.chacha.com/gallery/5319/what-were-the-most-popular-google-searches-of-2012
But I do not understand #1 at all. Sigh.
http://www.chacha.com/gallery/5319/what-were-the-most-popular-google-searches-of-2012
Thursday, April 11, 2013
Survey stupidity; Forrester Consulting screws up.
The Boston Globe has been doing good things, including months-long investigative pieces. The newspaper is alive and kicking.
They also have embraced online options, and have a website with full content, and an e-paper "replica edition," which mimics the look and layout of the paper product.
But they're still trying to figure out a non-paper future, so they hired Forrester Consulting to send out a long e-survey to subscribers. (See below.) Almost all the questions revolve around phone and tablet use.
The only problem: the survey is Flash-based, so it can't be viewed or completed on most phones and tablets.
D'oh.
They also have embraced online options, and have a website with full content, and an e-paper "replica edition," which mimics the look and layout of the paper product.
But they're still trying to figure out a non-paper future, so they hired Forrester Consulting to send out a long e-survey to subscribers. (See below.) Almost all the questions revolve around phone and tablet use.
The only problem: the survey is Flash-based, so it can't be viewed or completed on most phones and tablets.
D'oh.
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Yeah, that's how it's done.
@TheOnion: Fast-Talking Computer Hacker Just Has To Break Through Encryption Shield Before He Can Upload The Nano-Virus
Friday, April 5, 2013
Extracting Playable Audio from Pictures of Antique Phonograph Records
Interesting technique resurrects very early recordings from the 1800's,
when all that remains is a printed photograph of the original disc.
http://mediapreservation.wordpress.com/2012/06/20/extracting-audio-from-pictures/
when all that remains is a printed photograph of the original disc.
http://mediapreservation.wordpress.com/2012/06/20/extracting-audio-from-pictures/
Thursday, April 4, 2013
How far Is It To Mars?
Interesting visualization:
http://www.distancetomars.com/
(Props to Joe Hanson:
http://www.itsokaytobesmart.com/post/47084431881/how-far-is-it-to-mars#_=_ )
http://www.distancetomars.com/
(Props to Joe Hanson:
http://www.itsokaytobesmart.com/post/47084431881/how-far-is-it-to-mars#_=_ )
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Used Parachute on Mars Flaps in the Wind
This sequence of seven images from the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter shows wind-caused changes in the parachute of NASA's Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft as the chute lay on the Martian ground during months after its use in safe landing of the Curiosity rover. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona
Animated image, story:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2013-121&cid=release_2013-121
Monday, April 1, 2013
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