A glowing skull from Disneyland

…is a title I never thought I would use for a blog post. But here we are! It was a busy day and I didn’t take any photos outdoors, but I always take a photo of something, so today it was the glow-in-the-dark skull I bought at Disneyland over 40 years ago. It still glows in the dark, too.

I’m not sure why I bought it. I think it was $8 or $9, which was actually decent money back in the early 80s. And it was heavy. If I remember correctly, I bought it at the end of the evening, so only had to carry it to the parking lot. I was no dumb kid. At least not when it came to transporting heavy, glow-in-the-dark skulls.

Apple September 2023 “Wonderlust” event: My medium-warm takes

Apple held its annual iPhone event today. They showed two new phones and two new watches. This took 82 excruciating minutes. Behold below, my summary written in a magical list as I watched/endured.

First, some alternate titles for the event that Apple didn’t use:

  • Paddedlust
  • Titaniumlust
  • CarbonNeutrallust

And, of course:

  • Magicallust

And now, the event, minute by agonizing minute!

NOTE: Gratuitously bolded words and phrases ahead.
  • The event starts with obnoxiously loud music, as per usual. Seriously, if normal volume is a 1, this is about 100. If it’s too loud for my ears, it is too loud for all of humanity.
  • Before anyone speaks, a sizzle reel!
  • But this sizzle reel is all about feels!
  • Specifically, it is framed around people celebrating birthdays because their Apple Watch called 911 when they crashed/had a heart attack/got kidnapped by aliens, so instead of dying, they had another birthday to celebrate. Teary testimonies all around.
  • LESSON: Buy an Apple Watch OR YOU WILL DIE.
  • Next up: Tim Cook, who says they’ll be covering the iPhone and Watch for the next 78 minutes, though it will seem much longer.
  • First, though, Tim highlights new Macs released in June, quoting Marques Brownlee on how rad they are, because if you can’t trust some guy on YouTube, who can you trust? Also, a plug for the Vision Pro, because it’s still coming and you better start saving now lol.
  • They also use the Vision Pro segment to highlight how great TV shows will look on it (?!) like “The Morning Show”, new season debuting next week on Apple TV+. Synergy!
  • Tim’s voice sounds a bit odd and tinny? Maybe they recorded it using a mic on the drone that was flying toward him.
  • About 10 minutes in, and we are onto the first actual hardware, the Apple Watch.
  • Jeff Williams appears, and he is dressed weirdly in a mismatched dark blue button-up shirt and light gray pants, like they were the only clean clothes he had.
  • Another sizzle reel with Stupidly Loud™ music.
  • The Series 9 watch…looks exactly like every other Apple Watch.
  • But it’s “next level”. They say this.
  • S9 chip, so it’s faster.
  • After 8 years, it still has 18 hours of battery life (lol). But it does more now! Like find your iPhone precisely. But only if you have the newest Watch and newest iPhone. Start saving for these, too!
  • It goes from 2,000 nits down to 1 nit. I have nothing to offer on this.
  • Jeff is walking like a badly programmed robot. This is somewhat unnerving.
  • New feature: Double Tap™ to allow one-handed (hehe) use for times when your other hand is busy or absent. (Note: This was already an accessibility feature, it’s just official™ now).
  • Another sizzle reel, this time for Double Tap. Use Double Tap to take a phone call while rock climbing. Safe! (This was actually shown in the sizzle reel.)
  • Now in pink aluminum! The Apple Watch, not the sizzle reel.
  • Like Tim Cook, Jeff Williams also cannot pronounce the word “important” for some reason. But they each pronounce it differently. Diversity!
  • And now the Apple 2023 Carbon Neutral Sideshow and Revue, starring Tim Cook and Octavia Spencer. It is now safe to go use the potty, have lunch, take a bath, whatever you like, because this is going to drag on FOREVER.
  • This isn’t a sizzle reel, it’s like a little very long sketch going on (and on) about Apple 2030, which is when the company plans to be fully carbon-neutral.
  • Your expensive watch is now made out of recycled everything!
  • God, this won’t stop. Mother Nature is depicted as a sarcastic grump. It’s not offensive because Mother Nature is make-believe, like elves, unicorns or owls.
  • We are now 23 minutes into the event and they are still talking about how great Apple is with the environment. Now you get bullet points in the bullet points:
    • No more leather (which was previously mentioned, but hey, why not mention it again?)
    • FineWoven™ instead! It’s the new leather, but without any cows involved.
    • Jeff is still walking like a robot.
    • Hermes bands, still super expensive, but now without actual leather!
    • Nike bands with recycled bits of stuff in them that make each one unique (and ugly).
  • They mention Double Tap AGAIN. It’s magical. You know, like everything else Apple has manufactured in China using cheap labour. Magical!
  • 30 minutes in, the Watch Ultra is mentioned. It’s more Ultra! It’s Ultra 2!
  • A rehash of everything that is in the Series 9 goes here.
  • But the Ultra goes to an Ultra bright 3000 nits.
  • A new watch face! More about software because THERE IS NOTHING ELSE NEW ABOUT THE WATCH.
  • It lasts 36 hours, just like before. In eight years it will still last 36 hours.
  • Now they combine their two favourite things about the event: Recycled junk and titanium. The Ultra has recycled titanium. It’s the best!
  • No dark titanium model. If you had that on your Apple Event bingo card, too bad.
  • No price changes on any of the three models. Reasonable!
  • We are now 35 minutes in. It feels like 350.
  • iPhone! Yes, they are now going to spend the next 47 minutes talking about iPhone. Please stand to insure your legs get circulation.
  • Sizzle reel time! Stupidly loud music? Check!
  • iPhone 15 is “absolutely incredible” (probably magical, too1See below), says Tim.
  • Dynamic Island™ added to it. Now maybe devs will do something with it? Or maybe not!
  • It “feels magical2A hundred thousand years from now Apple will still be describing things as magical.” If everything is magical, isn’t everything actually not magical?
  • Dynamic Island lets you track a pizza delivery and the big game at the same time. A wonder for the ages!
  • 2000 nits! It’s the Year of Nits! Also, contoured edges! Colour infused throughout the glass! Five colours! All the colours are washed-out pastels because Apple is very afraid of colour.
  • Still has a mute switch! (They don’t mention this, but you can see it in one of the beauty shots.)
  • STILL MORE carbon-neutral talk. Recycled junk inside everything. New iPhones are probably made out of surplus lightning cables.
  • 48 MP main camera. Basically getting everything the 14 Pro had last year, save for the telephoto lens, variable refresh rate and whatever else that is so important I’ve forgotten it.
  • LESSON: Wait one year to get the good iPhone.
  • Portrait mode is better! Switches to it automagically. Even works on dogs and cats. Possibly apes.
  • You can switch focus to a different person/dog/cat/ape in post. This is actually neat if it works.
  • Better night mode, A16 Bionic, better battery (but they don’t say how much better).
  • Wireless features! Uh, wireless features?
  • New UW chip allows for “precision finding” to better stalk people find your friends.
  • Better audio on phone calls for the five people who use their iPhone as an actual phone.
  • Emergency SOS to more countries, roadside assistance via satellite (free for two years).
  • LESSON: Buy an iPhone or be trapped in the middle of nowhere FOREVER.
  • We are now 50 minutes in. How is it possible that there are still 32 minutes to go? But there are.
  • Wired features!
  • Briefly highlighting USB-C and trying to make it sound like they weren’t totally forced to adopt it due to the mean old Europeans.
  • EarPods and AirPods Pro 2 both use USB-C now, but use MagSafe instead, OK? We make a lot more money on those accessories! (Seriously, they start talking about MagSafe during the “wired features” section.)
  • Another sizzle reel with REALLY LOUD MUSIC. So much bass. Please make it stop.
  • $799/$899 (prices unchanged).
  • Back to Tim. Pro models! We are 55 minutes in.
  • Sizzle reel for the Pro models. Titanium, as expected. The music is horrible. This is music for aliens or robots. Or robot aliens.
  • It’s the most pro phone ever. Tim actually says this.
  • Greg (or “Joz”) up next. He’s Apple’s actual marketing shill. And yes, his nickname rhymes with the famous shark, so I do a bit of a spit-take every time someone says, “And now over to Jaws.”
  • Lightest pro model ever!
  • Titanium! Did we mention that?
  • A delight to hold in your hand. We won’t tell you how much less it weighs, though. (I looked it up. The iPhone 15 Pro Max weighs 19 grams less than the iPhone 14 Pro Max, or about the equivalent of 4 U.S. nickels.)
  • YET MORE on titanium. It’s titanium all the way down. Grade 5 titanium! Same as the Mars rover. Maybe The iPhone 15 Pro is made from recycled Mars rovers.
  • Brushed texture, just like that old version of OS X everyone says was the best.
  • Look at these non-colours you can get the Pro in!
  • More repairable, with back glass easier to replace. No reason for the change. Not like there’s pressure to do this from outside forces. Right to repair? Never heard of it! Nope!
  • Pro gets a new Action Button™. Suck it, non-Pro models!
  • Choose from pre-defined actions (looks like nine). One probably allows you to start playing horrible music at the touch of a button.
  • Joz/Jaws is also moving like a robot. What the hell? He shuffles awkwardly when moving left to right in front of the giant display behind him. Is this an Apple event or some covert preview of a new season of Westworld?
  • A17 Pro. It’s even better because they finally dropped that dumb Bionic name. It’s Pro all the way down (unless it’s titanium).
  • Whimsical transition to Apple’s hardware lab. Check your Apple Event bingo card!
  • A17 Pro gets its own bullet points:
    • USB-C but more better. It’s USB 33USB 3.0 came out as a standard in 2008, BTW fast! (10 GB)
    • 3 nm chip!
    • GPU mentioned again. It’s Pro class, in case you were wondering.
    • 20% faster!
    • Ray tracing! Also faster! But only 4x faster.
    • 30 FPS with ray tracing. Don’t ask about 60 FPS.
    • Jaws: iPhone Pro is best for gaming. Candy Crush has never run better! Buy games! Buy IAP! BUY! (I am extrapolating a bit here.)
    • 68 minutes in now. Remember to feed the cat, if you have a cat.
    • Sizzle reel #367: Games, featuring devs from various software companies. Apple is so cute when they pretend to cater to gamers.
  • The cameras!
  • Larger sensor on the main camera, better low light performance. “Feel her emotion” Jaws implores you, while showing a photo of some woman standing around.
  • Zoom: 3x telephoto, Pro Max 5x (120 mm).
  • Better stabilization in case you are taking photos while drunk or riding atop a train.
  • Tetra prism™ design on Pro Max (don’t call it a periscope lens).
  • Ultrawide camera is also more better, with 10x optical (?) zoom range and macro (I think I missed something here, because 10x seems wrong, but I’m too lazy to check.)
  • Fast transfers to your Mac! You have a Mac, right?
  • Record directly to external storage! Just like any digital camera has been able to do for 20 years or so.
  • 4K video at 60 FPS.
  • Hey, you can view your photos on the Vision Pro! Isn’t that handy?
  • Capture spatial video now. You know where you can relive these “magical” memories? That’s right, on your Vision Pro!
  • Thank the merciful lord, that is it.
  • Cut back to Tim summarizing how great everything is.
  • $999/$1199. Pro Max is $100 more, but gets bumped from 128 to 256 GB storage, so effectively the same price as last year with same config.
  • 6 TB and 12 TB iCloud plans now. I bet those will be reasonably priced!
  • iCloud still comes with 5 GB of free storage, the same it came with in 2011, when iCloud debuted. Because storage needs have not changed in the last 12 years, you see.
  • Tim says the following words in conclusion about Apple products: Amazing! Indispensable! Innovative! Essential! And he’s thinking Magical. You know it. We all know it.
  • LESSON: Without Apple products, your life is a worthless sham, and also you are at grave risk from everything around you.
  • 82 minutes later and we are finally done. Tim is now off to wake up members of the press, so they can look at the new phones and watches.

Seriously, the padding of this particular event was downright silly. If brevity is the soul of wit, Apple has no soul and no wit. But they have sizzle reels. Boy howdy, do they have sizzle reels.

Next year’s sizzle reels will be made entirely from recycled titanium. You’re going to love them.

It’s time to look at writing apps again

I have 50 million mice (the computer kind, that is). I have about the same number of keyboards. I have more hardware to write and edit with than any one person would reasonably need. I also have a bunch of software that can be used for said writing. In alphabetical order (I’ve bolded the ones I’ve used recently for actual writing):

  • Apple Notes
  • Bear
  • Craft
  • FocusWriter
  • iA Writer
  • Microsoft Word
  • Notepad
  • Notepad++
  • Obsidian
  • OneNote
  • Pages
  • Scrivener
  • SmartEdit Writer1This used to have the totally metal name Atomic Scribbler before going uttterly generic
  • TextEdit
  • Typora
  • Ulysses
  • WordPad2Until Microsoft carries out its planned execution

I’ve probably forgotten a few, and I’ve omitted some where I bounced off the UI (more on this in another post coming soon™) like yWriter, as well as the multitude of web-based offerings like Novlr, Hemingway and a billion others. That still leaves me with a long list that includes:

  • Full-fledged word processors (Word, Pages)
  • Note-taking apps (Obsidian, Bear, etc.)
  • Writing apps that are more “to the metal” (Ulysses, iA Writer)
  • Writing apps that straddle several of these categories, like Scrivener

So why am I looking at writing apps again? I don’t know. I thought maybe if I wrote about it, the answer would come to me. Maybe I just like trying out new software (I do). Maybe I like collecting things (I do). Maybe I just use the search for writing apps to procrastinate (I do, I do, I do).

What I can confirm is that my latest search has not really revealed anything new or revolutionary. No surprise, really. I have an embarrassment of riches when it comes to tools for writing. What I really need to do is stop looking and start writing.

Bonus: when I start writing in whatever app I choose, I need to vow to not spend hours choosing just the right font to inspire me. Not that I’ve ever done this3In the last hour, that is.

Run 807: Snakes!

View from Cariboo Dam, pre-run

I hesitated a bit over whether to run today, then decided to, so headed out a bit later than optimal, but it was still morning and thanks to morning clouds, only 17C, which is perfectly cromulent for running. The sun briefly appeared midway through the run, which was actually sort of bad, because the humidity was still 78% and it would have made the run kind of soupy. But it was mostly cloudy, with a nice breeze blowing.

I started out by the Jiffy John™, after using it to make sure I was BladderSafe™ for the run, which meant I conveniently ended my run right by the intersection of the Spruce and Conifer Loops. I’m not sure why this is convenient, actually. Maybe it just appeals to the OCD in me.

I had two false starts, which probably contributed to my low 148 BPM average. The first around the 100 m mark when I paused to answer a text message (I very rarely do this, but since I had literally been running for less than a minute, I chose to), and another about three-and-a-half minutes in. This was snake #1. I haven’t gotten any decent shots of snakes this year, so when this one didn’t immediately slither away, I paused my run to take a photo. It then slithered away before I could get closer. (Snake #2 appeared in the middle of the Piper Mill Trail when I short-turned and was heading back. It was completely unconcerned by my presence. I’m pretty sure I could have taken close-ups from multiple angles, and it would have just laid there, content on the warming gravel. For a brief moment I considered stopping, but I was 3.5 km in at that point and momentum would not be denied.)

These two pauses allowed my heart rate to come down briefly. Enough to affect the overall average? Maybe? But probably only a little. I think I would have been around 150 regardless, conditions were good, and it’s entirely possible I’m getting in better shape!

Speaking of good, the knees didn’t bother me at all. The left hip was even mostly quiet. It was probably the most pleasant run, leg-wise, in several months. The knees did feel a little stiff on the walk back, but feel fine now as I type this. I am cautiously optimistic.

Overall, this run went better than expected. I always feel a little nervous when that happens, but we’ll see what Wednesday brings.

Snake #1

Stats:

Run 807
Average pace: 5:46/km
Training status: Maintaining
Location: Burnaby Lake (CCW, short loop)
Start: 10:53 a.m.
Distance: 5.03 km
Time: 29:03
Weather: Partly sunny
Temp: 17-18ºC
Humidity: 78%
Wind: light
BPM: 148
Weight: 167.3
Total distance to date: 5915 km
Devices: Garmin Forerunner 255 Music, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: HOKA Speedgoat 5 (50/95/145 km)

Birding, September 9, 2023: Broken boats, bewildering bridges and barely birds

Where: Trans Canada Trail, Shoreline Trail (Pitt Meadows)
Weather: Sunny, 25C

The Outing

It was not overly hot today, but with very little shade on the long trails next to the Pitt and Alouette Rivers, it felt hot. I ended the day with over 28,000 steps!

This was mostly new scenery for us, save for one part we’d been to before, and we were curious to see what sort of birds we’d behold.

As it turned out, not many, alas. They probably hid away due to a combination of the sun and us being out around nappy time.

But we did see some, including white crown and Savannah sparrows, various robins, towhees and ducks, including some common mergansers. We saw a few more birds along the Shoreline Trail, which is, unsurprisingly, in a place called Shoreline Park in south Pitt Meadows, along the Fraser River, including a Bewick’s wren.

We also saw probably the most horses ever. With people riding them. And the horses pooping. Nic stepped in horse poop twice (but it was the dry kind).

With fewer birds, we had to rely on the scenery for most of our shots. Fortunately, with the rivers and coastal mountains, the scenery was very nice. The Alouette River is kind of weird. It’s not very wide, it’s also quite calm, so we saw many people kayaking or on paddle boards. Apparently due to a mix of federal and provincial jurisdiction, the river is also a bit of a dumping ground for old abandoned boats, of which we saw more than a few.

It is also, improbably, home to a floating bridge from Washington State that is moored just east of the Pitt River Bridge.

Overall, it was a good day for shooting scenery (for a change), with just enough birds to make it not a washout as a bird outing. But more birds next time will be welcome.

Also, all of my robin shots came out grainy and blurry. I officially hate robins again. For now.

The Shots

The Birds (and other critters)

Sparrows and sparrow-adjacent:

  • Bewick’s wren
  • Black-capped chickadee
  • Cedar waxwing
  • Northern flicker
  • Savannah sparrow
  • Song sparrow
  • Spotted Towhee
  • White-crowned sparrow

Waterfowl:

  • Canada goose
  • Common merganser
  • Great blue heron
  • Mallard

Common:

  • Crow
  • Seagull

Raptors:

  • Turkey vulture

Non-birds:

  • Foul-mouthed children
  • Bees ‘n dragonflies

Run 806: A knee up

View from Cariboo Dam, pre-run

I was thinking about skipping today’s run after feeling some stiffness in my left knee following Wednesday’s effort, but in the end I could not resist the siren song, and headed out.

This run was a bit more conventional in terms of speed, starting out strong (this is fairly easy going clockwise, as the Avalon Trail is flat and straight) at 5:45, gradually getting slower (5:50/km by the third km) before finishing strong again (5:38/km). I had extra incentive to pick up the speed on the last km as some young guy jogged past me. The nerve. Sure, he was probably 25, but still. I tried to keep pace for a bit, then remembered “don’t destroy the knees”. Also. I was pretty close to the end, anyway.

Speaking of knees, they were fine for the run, but both felt a little stiff on the walk back. I will monitor over the weekend, and they will get at least two days off to rest and recover. The left hip, which I am thinking is acting up probably in relation to the knees, continues to make its presence known, but was again more muted, more an annoyance.

Although I headed out later than I wanted, it was still morning and the weather was perfectly cromulent. The trail was busy-ish, maybe a bit more than usual for a Friday, but there were no incidents.

In all, a good run to end the week with.

Bridge over Still Creek, post-run

Stats:

Run 806
Average pace: 5:49/km
Training status: Productive
Location: Burnaby Lake (CW)
Start: 10:56 a.m.
Distance: 5.03 km
Time: 29:15
Weather: Sunny
Temp: 18-19ºC
Humidity: 67-64%
Wind: light
BPM: 155
Weight: 167.0
Total distance to date: 5910 km
Devices: Garmin Forerunner 255 Music, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: HOKA Speedgoat 5 (45/82/127 km)

Pyramid is a fun album

photo of great pyramid of giza
Photo by Simon Berger on Pexels.com

Yes, I used the F word.

Pyramid is the third album from The Alan Parsons Project, released in 1978. It’s one of their best and here’s why, in no particular order:

  • Released at the height of disco, it exists completely outside of disco, achieving a timelessness so many great albums have.
  • At a mere 37:46 minutes long, this is an amazingly compact album (especially by prog rock standards), yet even in its economy it manages to pack in nine songs that include six vocalists, three instrumentals, a choir, tolling bells and a tuba solo.
  • Speaking of tuba solos, Pyramid isn’t afraid to go from the sublime to the ridiculous. The epic centrepiece, “In the Lap of the Gods”, an instrumental featuring the aforementioned tolling bell, choir and lush orchestration, is followed by “Pyramania”, which includes a tuba solo and lyrics like, “I consulted all the sages I could find in Yellow Pages/But there aren’t many of them.”
  • The concept (more a theme, really) comes through more directly here than on other APP albums. Every song echoes fears of death, of inevitability, regret and loss. The one exception is the final instrumental, “Hyper-Gamma-Spaces”, a trippy reprieve that focuses mainly on keyboards.

It’s a zany, mysterious grab bag of doom. Give it a listen on your favorite streaming service and soak in the experience of vocals without autotune.

They call him Flicker

We’ve had a northern flicker come bug-hunting outside our condo for a little while now, and today it seemed like it would stay long enough for me to grab a few shots, so I did. I had to shoot through a dirty living room window, so I did what I could to clean up the shots (they are grainy if you zoom in, alas). And it was almost too close at times to keep in frame. Shot with my Canon EOS M50.

Right side:

Left side: