Tuesday, October 3, 2023

When you use AI to generate unique names

This is what happens when you ask AI to generate unique names based on it's predictions of the baby's life-trajectory after being primed with data about the mother and father.

D’Orodentition

Aglenguo

Sophmoro

D’Apsberger

Lapinbrdr

Ferlhord

Fecalinguist

Taxburro

R'Petefafo

Wadaf

Please feel free to add more in the comments

Fine Art Tuesday

Luca della Robbia born 1399 in Florence, Italy died 1482.

Luca della Robbia was the Henry Ford of late-Renaissance sculpture. He made multiple copies of some of his sculptures in terra cotta (cheap pottery) and figured out how to up-market with glorious glazes that made them more durable and attractive.







Our life and times

"...then that beotch, the Little Red Hen triggered me when she asked "And who will eat the Bread?""


 

The fish gets the worm, and then it gets the hook (Fiction)



"Copperhead Cove" is on the east side of the Cumberland Plateau which is deeply dissected by "hollows" or valleys. The elevation drops 1000 feet in two miles as one heads east toward the Tennessee River.
 
“Come with me” Sig said to Blain without preamble as Blain was wiping the last smear of blackberry jam off of his plate with the last bite of cornmeal pancakes.

Blain licked his fingers and followed without comment, pulling his knit cap out of his pocket and pulling it over his head. The mornings were cold and misty in late-November at 1800 feet of elevation.

Sig set a rapid walking pace as they headed north, away from the cluster of buildings.

“Yer probably wondering why we let you join us. Yer probably figuring you going to have to earn your keep. If you were, yer right” Sig said even as Blain tried to keep up with him.

“It did cross my mind” Blain allowed.

Sig stopped where the picked cornfield ended. “Field” is probably too ambitious of a word. Each household was allocated a truncated wedge of land to garden. The wedges were shaped much like canned, chunks of pineapple. The point of the wedge usually, but not always, was near where the gardeners lived. Without a frame-of-reference, Blain had a hard time guestimating how large each parcel was but if he had to guess, he would have estimated them to be about half the size of a typical city-block.
 
Blain had learned from Lliam that it was up to each household to “manage” their parcel.

Outward from the relatively level (though rolling) gardens the slope of the ground broke and rapidly became more sloping. That land was in coarse pasture grasses. A stone’s throw away from them a cow was tethered to short picket line and she was contentedly grazing. A fifteen-foot long lead led from the picket line to the collar of the cow. The distance between the stakes was about thirty feet.

“Things are getting crazy out there” Sig said.

Blain nodded in agreement.

“That means that everybody and their dog will be showing up on our doorstep expecting us to take them in” Sig said. He didn’t bother to hide the bitterness in his voice.

“Most of them, we will turn away. This is a hard land and it is grudging in what it yields” Sig continued.

To Blain, it sounded as if this was something that Sig had personally experienced.

“Hard land makes for hard men” Sig said.

“But some we cannot turn away. Family. People who stood by us when things were difficult” Sig said. “We might be poor but we have honor.”

Blain was silent. He knew that Sig was going somewhere with this.

“In a year, there will be twice as many people living here as there are now. None of them will be slackers, but the point is that they cannot plant gardens in the middle of the woods.” Sig said.

“First, you will work with us cutting down the trees. But then you will be working alone; dragging branches and staking them into gullies so they don’t wash away. Burning brush and stumps. Collecting manure and spreading it” Sig said.

Sig shot Blain a sidelong glance.

“Will I have equipment or will I be doing this all by-hand?” Blain asked.

“I ain’t gonna candy-coat it. It will be by-hand” Sig said. “Sun-up to sun-down, six days a week.”

“You are going to learn how to stabilize gullies by working for Sally for three days. He knows his business. Pay attention because that is what you are going to do when you get back here” Sig said.

“Will I get paid?” Blain asked, referring to the work he was going to be doing for Sally.

“You already did. He brought your stuff up here, didn’t he?” Sig pointed out.

Blain was on the verge of arguing when he realized it would have taken him three days to lug all of his stuff up here and he would have been on miserable roads with no shoulders. Besides, Sally was a colorful character and working for him was likely to be more enjoyable than working for Sig.

Sig was sure Blain was going to bail out. He was clearly a city-kid and 60 hour work-weeks in return for a place to sleep was pretty poor wages.

“I got a few questions” Blain said.

“What?” Sig said.

“Are meals included or will I have to do my own cooking?” Blain asked.

“Meals included. Sarah, Lliam’s mother agreed to feed you. This is her plot we are standing on now and this is where you will start working” Sig said.

Blain realized that Sarah must have been the woman who had served the pancakes and was the author of the delicious, blackberry jam.

When Blain had started eating the pancakes, he had covered each of the cakes in the stack with a lavishly thick layer of jam. As he was wolfing them down, he heard Lliam sternly directing his younger sister to not be a pig.

The young girl had accurately mimicked the amount of jam Blain had spread on is flap-jacks. Looking over at Lliam’s plate, he saw that Lliam had spooned out a meager portion onto his plate and was dabbing the bottoms of the cut pieces of pancake in the jam...barely moistening them with jam where they would touch his tongue.

When in Rome… The second hot stack of pancakes Blain got saw Blain carefully following Lliam’s example.

Try as he might, Blain could not pull up a mental picture of what Sarah looked like. He could hear the swish of her skirts and the sound of her footsteps on the wooden floor. He had the impression that she was tall...perhaps even as tall as he was. But her face was so plain and forgettable that she would have become invisible in a crowd of three women.

Blain looked at the plot of land with renewed interest. It didn’t matter if Sarah was plain and tall, she was the boss along with Sig. She was his meal-ticket.

He could see the start of at least one wash-out.

Following his gaze, Sig said “The last hurricane dropped six inches of water in 8 hours.”

Blain could see why addressing the gullies were such urgent business. If untended, and if the coming spring was wet, then it would cut deeply into Sarah’s garden.

“What were your other questions?” Sig asked.

“Is there any reason I couldn’t bring the cow out? I have worked with cows before and it wouldn’t be a big deal” Blain asked. “Whoever owns the cow can milk it in the morning before I take it out and milk it when I bring it back.”

Monday, October 2, 2023

Never give up

The old saw is that if you want to get something done, give the task to somebody who is busy.

That appears to be the case. I find my discretionary hours reduced while caring for Quicksilver. If you are married and of a certain age then you might notice that sometimes you are going to assorted medical appointments with an increased frequency. And in the lulls when you are not going, your spouse is.

Such has been the case over the last few weeks. If Mrs ERJ were a vehicle, her chassis was worked on, the motor tuned up, all of the moldings detailed and Armor-alled, the paint buffed-and-waxed, the electrical system had the codes pulled and zeroed out...and so on and so forth.

So, I have had Quicksilver a little bit more than originally envisioned. Not a big deal but it kicked me out of cruise-control.

For one thing, I need to move more. So, this morning I stuffed Quicksilver into the backpack and put a pack on Zeus with necessities and we went for a walk at first, full-light.

It was a short, shake-down run. "Stop while we are still having fun" is the way to grow an activity. We walked a scant 3/4 mile down the road and returned. We made it ten minutes before I had to start feeding Quicksilver kibbles of Purina People-chow that Zeus had generously been carrying for us.

Tomorrow we will shoot for a mile-out and a mile-back. My goal is to get up to three miles on the days when the weather is favorable. It makes a grand start to the day.

Miscellaneous pictures

Some Romaine lettuce that I cut and forgot about. The leaves wilted even as new leaves ventured forth from the crown. Never give up!  I like the play of the different shades of green.

Lon Rombough, a plant-geek from Oregon (sadly, now deceased) once shared the opinion that a transplant is not dead until it has been dead for at least two years. This pecan seedling was girdled the winter I transplanted it and it did NOTHING the first summer. But look! It lives. Never give up.


Trucks of a feather flock together (Fiction)


Terrain similar to the fictitious Copperhead Cove compound. The circled regions are relatively flat and suitable for agriculture. Horizontal legs of "E" are very vulnerable to erosion. Approximately 48" of silty-loam over shale bedrock.

Blaise (henceforth known as Blain, a change of name to make it harder for authorities to track him down) asked Sig if he could ride along on the next trip to town so he could pick up his “kit” at the campground.

“We don’t drive to town” Sig said. “You gotta hitch a ride.”

Blain’s face must have showed his surprise.

“The trucks ain’t registered or insured” Sig elaborated. “We drive them off-road.”

“But they have plates?” Blain said.

“Expired plates” Sig clarified. “They might pass on a public road in a pinch, which is why they are on the trucks. But we don’t go courtin’ trouble.”

Sig then explained that they had a neighbor who drove to town almost every day. They would tie a bandana to a branch the day before they wanted a ride and (usually) the neighbor would stop at the end of their driveway the next morning and give them a ride into town. Depending on the neighbor’s errands the stay in town might be just a couple of hours or it might be almost all day.

Blain met Lliam as the eastern, night-time sky was first starting to lose its blackness. Lliam fired up the old Ford F-150 and let it warm up for a minute before turning on the headlights and easing it down the rocky two-track that served as the driveway.

It was a quarter-mile to the public road.

Lliam was pretty excited to have some time with the “new guy” and was extremely talkative. Lliam, “Short for William. My mom said nobody is ever happy to see a bill” looked like he was all of fourteen years old.

Lliam parked the truck about fifty feet shy of the road, pulling it off the two-track. The truck was surrounded on three sides by thick mounds of thorny brush. Blaise was pretty sure the truck would be invisible to passing vehicles due to its chalky, faded paint and the brush. The road was not the kind of road that was pedestrian friendly (or friendly to bikers). It twisted and turned and rose and fell. It was the kind of road that strongly suggested that the driver not sight-see. Blain rememembered it from biking. It had no shoulders so he doubted there would be too many folks casually walking by.

“Grab the other two gas cans, wouldjya?” Lliam suggested to Blain. The two men carried the four, empty five-gallon containers to the side of the road.

Lliam handed Blain a paper bag. “We generally don’t eat in town. Costs too much money and folks is nosy” by way of explanation.

Blain could hear their ride coming for three minutes before it showed up.

Blain loaded the empty gas cans into the back of the battered work-truck that stopped to pick them up.

Lliam had a few brief words with the driver. Blain was not able to make out what Lliam was saying over the wheezing and rattling motor.

Lliam told Blain “I will let you ride shotgun on the way in and you get to sit in the middle on the way back.”

That seemed fair to Blain and he said as much to Lliam.

“Name’s Salisbury. Most folks call me ‘Sally’” the driver said, reaching across Lliam to offer Blain his hand.

Blain shook it and replied “My name is Blain”

“Pleased to meechya, Blade” Sally said.
 
Blain deduced that Sally's hearing wasn't all that good.

“I been havin’ problems with this old-gurl over-heatin’” Sally said. “Good thing I ain’t got far to go, cause we ain’t getting’ there fast.”

Sally was the most unlikely looking “Sally” imaginable. He was ancient and had a scraggly beard. His cheeks were sunken and his skin was reamed with creases and lines. He smelled of old, stale tobacco smoke and sweat.

Blain had the sudden suspicion that Lliam might have pulled a fast one on him. Riding next to Sally in the heat-of-the-day might be enough to gag a goat.

They rode to town with the windows rolled down and the heater blasting.

“I savin’ up to replace the thermosat” Sally informed Blain. “Runnin’ the heaters sucks some of the heat out of the motor.. a little bit, anyway. It was still a slow ride even though it was down-grade for most of the distance.

Sally let them out at the farm-feed store in Dayton. Lliam walked around to the driver’s side door and had another private conversation with Sally. Blain saw Lliam carefully count money off a book-of-bills held together with a clothes-pin. He watched as Lliam fished around in his pants pocket and pulled out a wrinkled list and handed it to Sally.

Sally looked the list over and nodded. Blain assumed that meant that Sally could read the writing.

Sally put his truck into gear and gently gave it a little bit of gas.

Lliam led the way into the store. Blain followed.

The clerk was already waiting on a customer. Lliam stopped a good fifteen feet behind the other customer but within the line-of-sight of the clerk.

Blain was impressed by Lliam’s patience as the customer hemmed-and-hawed and asked about the price of a dozen different types of feed and worming and fly control products. Lliam stood without complaint or shifting of feet. 

Blain followed Lliam’s lead and stood as if carved from stone.

Lliam did not immediately move up to the counter after the customer concluded his business but waited until the beefy, red-faced man had exited through the door. Only then did he move to the counter.

“Ma’am, how much is a fifty-pound bag of wheat?” Lliam asked, the model of politeness and civility.

“Let me check the spot prices” the middle-aged woman said. “The price has been bouncing around something awful.”

She tapped a few times on her keyboard and then cleared her throat. “It went up some” she said.

“I need $37.34 for a fifty-pound bag and I gotta charge 4% more if you use a credit card” the woman said after checking a couple of screens and typing some numbers into a calculator.

Lliam pulled out his wad of bills and carefully counted them. “I reckon I can afford two of them.”

Blain noticed that there were not many bills left after Lliam pulled four, $20 bills off of the wad.

“Can I pick them up later?” Lliam asked.

“Sure. Just lean them over there by the muck-boots. I’ll make sure nobody bothers them” the matronly woman assured him.

“Mind if I go out and talk to Sheldon?” Lliam asked.

“Suit yourself. Just keep an eye out for the fork-truck” the woman cautioned.

“Sheldon’s one of my buddies” Lliam said to Blain by way of explanation.

“Don’t we have to hustle so we don't miss Sally?” Blain said, worried that Sally might leave them behind.

“Nope. Sally won’t be back for four hours. He is driving over to Athens to shop at the Wally-world. He does a bunch of shopping for neighbors, including us” Lliam said.

Satisfied that his ride back home was assured, Blain tagged along with Lliam as he sauntered to the pole building behind the store-front.

They walked up to a group of idle, young men at a loading dock who were watching a huge, white pick-up truck with horses painted on the doors. The driver of the truck and trailer was attempting to backing up and turn around. Blain recognized the driver as the man who had been in front of them at the counter.

It took a solid four minutes before the driver was able to sort-out the geometry and leave.

“What's with him?” Blain asked. He had never seen anybody so inept at backing up a vehicle.

One of the younger guys chuckled and said “That is one of them smart-trucks. He musta had some mud splashed them sensors. Hadta figure out howta drive it himself.”

Then Blain heard one of the other workers mutter the term “white-top” as if it were a derogatory term.

Lliam and Sheldon went off to the side to converse when the grain-bagger started up again. The other men walked over to their job stations and started working.

Blain asked what Sheldon had been doing and was told that Sheldon had been carrying the filled and sewed bags and stacking the on a pallet.
 
Blain looked over at the next pallet over to see what pattern Sheldon had been using and started stacking the bags to kill time while Lliam chewed the fat.

The other workers assumed Blain was purchasing the next pallet. It didn’t happen very often but sometimes a customer would pitch-in to make things go a little faster. Usually, it happened when the customer had an appointment and they were running behind.

Afterward, when Blain and Lliam were walking from the feed-store to the camp-ground, Blain had a few questions.

“What’s a ‘White-top’?” Blain asked.

Lliam shot Blain a sideways glance to see if he was joking. Clearly, he was not.

“A white-top is a govmint man” Lliam said.

Blain found that puzzling. “Are you saying that the only people who drive white cars and trucks work for the government?”

“Pretty much” Lliam agreed.

Blain frowned. “I don’t follow.” It was certainly news to him.

“Couple years back some scientist figured out how many billion tons of carbon could be saved each summer if every car had a white roof and mirror-tinted windows. Something about air conditioning” Lliam said.

“Before you could say ‘Boo!’ every govmint car had its roof painted white” Lliam said. "Other folks said that white 'lectric cars never caught fire...somethin' about the battery not gittin' as hot. So you almost never see a 'lectric car that ain't white no more."

Lliam spit like the words left a bad taste in his mouth.

“Folks who like govmint or whose paycheck depends on them won’t buy anything except a white car or truck. Its like them big-city kids in gangs, they get beat up if they wear the wrong kind of shoes or wear the wrong color” Lliam said.

Armed with the new information, Blain looked at the vehicles in parking lots with a new eye. The newer, white vehicles were parked in knots while the older, more colorful vehicles were scattered about. White vehicles and the odd white-roofed vehicle were in the majority in just a few of the parking lots but in other parking lots they were conspicuous by their total absence. While in other lots there were just one-or-two of them and they were parked far away from the more diverse vehicles.

“I can’t imagine picking out the color of my car for politics” Blain marveled.

“I can” Lliam said. “If I had $100,000 to spend on a new truck, I sure as hell wouldn’t buy a white one. Goes against my principles!” 

Once they were to Blain's cabin, Lliam was dazzled by the amount of "loot" Blain had had managed to gather in the two months he had been in Dayton.

It belatedly dawned on Blain just how short his new community was for cash. A closer look, more critical look at Lliam told Blain just how worn, patched and threadbare his clothes were.

"Ya know, we could take a swing through the lost-and-found" Blain suggested. "They might have somethings we could use back at the Copperhead Cove."

"But those things belong to somebody" Lliam objected. Blain had the distinct impression Lliam would starve to death before he would hop across a fence to snitch an apple. It was a novel thought to Blain.

"We can ask the manager. Most of the folks have packed up and headed out...probably never do check out the lost-and-found."

Blain knew where the manager hung out and the manager was bored and more than happy to have a distraction.

"Take anything you want. Most of the folks who camp here are grandparents. They buy toys and clothes for their grandkids when they visit and then just give them to me when they leave. I hang onto them in case somebody can use them."

Lliam was torn.

"Help yourself. Anything you take will be that much less for me to haul away" the manager said.

When Sally swung by to pick them up, Lliam had two garbage bags filled with kids' clothes and a five-gallon bucket filled with hickory nuts.

All told it was a successful venture for all parties.


---Author’s note---

In early production runs most of the vehicles are painted white because it is difficult for customers to see imperfections (dents, bad paint, creases) on a white vehicle. Conversely, painting a vehicle black is like putting on a tight pair of jeans; every imperfection jumps out at you.

Early production is apt to experience more handling through the process and the surface can be damaged every time it is handled.

The other issue is that good white paint is CHEAP. High-end red or metallic paint is expensive. Metallic paint also has the issue of being difficult to match the lay of the metallic material (usually mica flakes) on repaired parts.

Commercial fleets also like white paint for the same reasons. Commercial fleets used to be identifiable by their custom colors. Every city or company wanted their own unique shade of orange or green or blue.

 The vehicles get banged up in fleets and buyers learned that weird colors were fleet cars. In time, companies learned they could get slightly better prices at auction because they didn't shout "flogged like a rented mule" like custom colors and because the white paint hid minor cosmetic damage better than colored paint.

A final point in favor of white paint vs. custom colors is that body-shops have a difficult time matching the paint when repairing or replacing fenders and other damaged parts. Difficult repair means that it is more expensive to fix them.

 Commercial fleets are all about keeping costs down.

So it is not an implausible stretch to assume that vehicle ownership will consolidate and the winners in the consolidation will A.) Require that all of their vehicles are the inexpensive white and B.) Curry favor with the government by bowing to their whims. 

Next Installment

Sunday, October 1, 2023

Just another Sunday

The beautiful Mrs ERJ and I attended Mass as we do every Sunday unless we are sick or incarcerated.

One of the readings was about two sons. Each was asked to go work in the vineyard. One said "No" but had second thoughts and went to the vineyard. The other said "Yes" but then never showed up.

The editorializing in the tail-feathers of the reading sounded a lot like Jesus didn't have much use for people who signal virtue but don't deliver.

This is where I have to work. It is easy, oh, so very easy to look at Progressives in that light (i.e. virtue signaling). I have to work harder at seeing how this applies to me.

Tidying up

There are only two days a week when we are not watching Quicksilver. So we bent that day-of-rest thing a little bit. We tidied up in the basement today.

That means leaving doors open to make lugging items to better places easier. That is just a non-starter when Quicksilver is awake or napping.

Thanks to Anon

Anonymous, who is my most prolific commenter, noted that I shouldn't be walking places because I am a runner.

Well, golly Anon. I had forgotten that. I went for a short, warm-up run this morning. It was 1.5 miles and I did not time it. I find that I don't listen to my body as well when I am wearing a watch.

Big Black Walnut crop this year

This is an "on" year for many nuts and acorns.

I want to make a special effort to collect a bunch of Sparks 147. It has a decent nut, good resistance to leaf diseases and good timber form. There are no guarantees when planting nuts but it is a comfort to stack the deck as much as is within my ability.

I am not sure regarding the pollen parent but there is a large tree of Drake and one of Elmer Thomas upwind of the biggest Sparks 147 tree.

As a young man I was enchanted with "Carpathian Walnuts" but now that I am solidly middle-age+ I realize that I harvest 100 pounds of Black Walnuts for every pound of Carpathians. Black Walnuts are that much more adapted to my conditions.