Old songs are the best.
What’s been on your mind? Got something you’d like to share? A topic to discuss? It’s Tuesday Night Open Thread.
Who wants to start?
Old songs are the best.
What’s been on your mind? Got something you’d like to share? A topic to discuss? It’s Tuesday Night Open Thread.
Who wants to start?
This is a reposting of one of Harvey’s classics. There’s a link to the book in the sidebar. — The Editors
Welcome to Fun Facts About the 50 States, where – week by week – I’ll be taking you on a tour around this great nation of ours, providing you with interesting, yet completely useless and probably untrue, information about each of the 50 states.
This week, we’ll be recklessly running Amish buggies off the road for fun as we visit Pennsylvania. So let’s get started…

That wraps up the Pennsylvania edition of Fun Facts About the 50 States. Next week we’ll be trying desperately to locate Quahog on a map as we visit Rhode Island.
Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m gonna go buy some Revolutionary-War-related souvenirs.
NOW STOP QUESTIONING MY PATRIOTISM!
[The complete e-book version of “Fun Facts About the 50 States” is now available at Amazon.com. If you don’t have a Kindle, you can download free Kindle apps for your web browser, smartphone, computer, or tablet from Amazon.com]
Walmart’s Secret “Flower Pot” Device Will Sit in the Home To Monitor Your Family’s Health — And Even Track Diseases
Daily Mail UK / 9/29/2019
No.
No, I can assure you: it won’t.
Still in the prototype stages, this medical device is set to ‘observe bodily movements and functions’, and is capable of monitoring the progression of certain diseases.
Remember, the Supreme Court has affirmed the right of Congress to force you to purchase health insurance. Therefore, by no great leap of logic, “medical devices.”
“Disguised as a flower pot, the omnipresent detection system can observe bodily movements and functions, such as heart rate, gait, and ultimately the progression of certain diseases, to help prevent negative outcomes that may be costly or worst, fatal,” Barclays analysts wrote in a note following the event.
It seems at-home health monitoring devices are the wave of the future, as earlier this year, scientists unveiled high tech ‘smart’ pajamas that monitor heartbeat, breathing and posture could soon be available. The cotton nightwear is equipped with sensors that can detect the sleep quality of the wearer but will cost between £75 and £150 ($100 to $200). Five self-powered sensors sewn into the shirt’s lining will provide continuous monitoring of breathing patterns and the amount of REM sleep the person gets.
REM sleep occurs at intervals during the night and is characterized by rapid eye movements, dreaming and bodily movement.
Four of the sensors measure pressure, or a body pressed against a bed. The fifth, is positioned over the chest and senses rapid pressure changes, which provides information about heart rate and breathing. [The UK’s Ministry of Unnecessary Commas provided no explanation for the comma after the word “fifth.”]
“Smart apparel with embedded self-powered sensors can revolutionize human behavior monitoring…” said associate professor Dr. Trisha Andrew at the University of Massachusetts. [… widely acclaimed for her impersonation of Dr. Strangelove. . . .]
Algorithms Help Robot Dogs Trot More Like Real Animals
engadget.com | 09/29/2019The result is a mechanical canine that can walk, run and trot with more grace and speed than usual. Cameras and LiDAR are also present to help robots avoid collisions. This doesn’t require dramatic changes to the bots themselves, at least. The test units are Ghost Robotics designs augmented with sensors to test the new algorithms.
What’s the endgame here? Except for some disabled people who might conceivably be assisted, and I suppose the military and law enforcement, is there really a huge market for gracefuller and speedier autonomous metal dogs?
I mean, I have a low enough opinion of people who load their houses with all sorts of electronic snooping devices that can be hacked, but I can’t believe they’d go so far as to want agile ones with metal teeth. On duty 24 hours a day. . . . Watching . . . watching . . .
As with cats, robots can never replace the real thing anyway.
.
As an aside:
CEO of Robotics Inc.: “Gentlemen, what we really, really need is a sketchier name for our company.”
Frankenemployee: “How about ‘Ghost Robotics’?”
CEO of Robotics Inc.: “You’re promoted!”

I used to watch these guys. Are they still on?
Years ago, when I cut cable and started streaming everything on TV, I didn’t find a good replacement for the news channels. This was well before Sling TV came out in 2015 and carried live channel feeds like you get on cable. I had already become used to not watching news on TV. And I still don’t.
So, now with all these streaming services — Sling TV, Hulu + Live TV, YouTube TV, AT&T TV Now, Philo, etc. — I now have the chance to subscribe to a live streaming package and watch the news again. Okay, not Philo. They don’t carry news. Maybe that’s why I like it. But you get the idea. It’s now available.
I’m wondering, though, is it like a TV show? Do I need to catch up on what’s been going on so I don’t get lost in all the characters on TV?
You can help me out. So, I dropped cable in January 2011. Has anything important happened since then? Anything I need to know about?