Thursday, May 21, 2026

Wordle 1797 Hint

 Hint: When it comes to today's Wordle, I concur.

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First Letter: A

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Semi-Annual Inclement Motorcycle Environment Time

If you don't live in the Gulf coast area, you may not be familiar with Plecia nearctica, usually called the "love bug."


Lovebugs
No machine-readable author provided. Wikifrosch~commonswiki assumed (based on copyright claims). Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

One conspiracy theory has it that the bug was genetically engineered at the University of Florida, right here in Gainesville, as a mosquito countermeasure, but in fact it's been around for some time -- originating in Central America and observed in Louisiana more than a century ago before eventually making its way to Florida.

Anyway, twice a year the love bug emerges from larval form, takes flight, mates (continuously, for days, while flying), and dies. I don't know how many millions or billions there in an overall swarm, but in each individual "flight" there can be hundreds of thousands.

The semi-annual swarms annoy automobile drivers. A moving car's windshield can get completely covered, with dead love bugs and become largely opaque in minutes. They can gum up the cooling fins on radiators, vents and intakes, and their pH levels can be acidic enough to damage paint if not quickly washed off.

They can do all those things to motorcycles, motorcycle helmet visors, etc., too. Last year, I was out and about when I ran into the first signs of the swarm. By the time I got home, I had to completely wipe down and clean my helmet and wash my bike, too.

I know car drivers who avoid driving unless absolutely necessary during the swarms, and that's also my policy for riding a motorcycle.

The current swarm has been ongoing for several days, so I'm hoping today is the last of it (I seem to be seeing fewer bugs in the area, after sweeping thousands of bug corpses off my porch yesterday because I thought it was over then).

Wordle 1796 Hint

 Hint: A ruin (often of a ship), or the event that created its condition.

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First Letter: W

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Pleased to Report ...

 ... that my app gripe from last week has resolved itself.

Or, rather, someone, but not me, resolved it.

InoReader (not an affiliate link) is no longer freezing up. Maybe there was a problem with the app itself and they fixed it, or maybe there was a problem in MX Linux that got fixed on an update, or maybe there was a problem in Microsoft Edge that got fixed in an update (I never spent enough time in other OSes or browsers to troubleshoot where the problem was).

So now InoReader is back to being, so far as I can tell, flawless and the absolute best RSS reader solution available anywhere.

Wordle 1795 Hint

 Hint: First name (with, for example, Springfield, Hill, or Rhodes).

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First Letter: D

Monday, May 18, 2026

The Ultimate One-Paragraph Case for Free Trade ...

... comes in fictional form, and from a "moderate left-wing" TV show, The West Wing. I've always loved the scene, and was glad to see Jake Scott do the work of pulling the monologue text at the Foundation for Economic Education. Here it is:

You want the benefits of free trade? Food is cheaper. Food is cheaper, clothes are cheaper, steel is cheaper, cars are cheaper, phone service is cheaper. You feel me building a rhythm here? That’s ’cause I’m a speechwriter and I know how to make a point. It lowers prices, it raises income. You see what I did with “lowers” and “raises” there? It’s called the science of listener attention. We did repetition, we did floating opposites, and now you end with the one that’s not like the others. Ready? Free trade stops wars. And that’s it. Free trade stops wars! And we figure out a way to fix the rest!

Mic drop, if that had been a thing back then. Whoever wrote that particular bit should have followed up with a book -- How to Make an Irrefutable, But Not Boring, Argument in 110 Words.

Wordle 1794 Hint

Hint: When you'd really rather not.

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First Letter: L

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Wordle 1793 Hint

Hint: An internal organizational rule.

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First Letter: B

Saturday, May 16, 2026

Applicable(?) Aphorisms #19

"The best revenge is not to be like your enemy." (Stoicism, Marcus Aurelius, Meditations 6:6)

True, false, good, bad, useful, not so useful, etc.? Discuss.

My thoughts:

Good advice, and also in a way yet another rephrasing of the golden rule: If you object to Characteristic X of your enemy's behavior, then Characteristic X is no more moral when you display it than when he or she displays it. It's not a good feeling to find yourself in the situation described by Pogo ("we have met the enemy and he is us").

Wordle 1792 Hint

Hint: The first one enjoys a competitive advantage.

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First Letter: M

Friday, May 15, 2026

Wordle 1791 Hint

Hint: Statement of faith or belief, e.g. Nicene and Athanasian.

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First Letter: C

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Interesting Response to the Linux "Age Verification" Nonsense

It's called Ageless Linux. Brief description:

Software for humans of indeterminate age. We don't know how old you are. We don't want to know. We are legally required to ask. We won't.

It's just Debian (a major Linux distribution upon which a lot of other major Linux distribution is based), plus a script that "will analyze your system, show you exactly what it plans to do, then modify /etc/os-release and associated system identification files, neutralize the systemd userdb birthDate field, install our AB 1043 noncompliance documentation, and deploy a stub age verification API that returns no data."

Do I expect California authoritahs to fall into the Streisand Effect trap of trying to arrest even one person who produces or distributes Ageless Linux? I'd like to say no, but never under-estimate the stupidity of gummint types.

I don't really see any potential for involvement myself, but if I ever happen to be going to California, I guess I might buy a box of cheap USB drives, set them up with Ageless Linux, make room for them in my luggage, and throw them over an elementary school playground fence or something. That might actually be a little more risky than sending the non-export version of PGP to a friend in Russia, as I did back when they thought they could forbid that, too.

Wordle 1790 Hint

Hint: To become atremble, possibly from uncertainty.

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First Letter: W

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Wordle 1789 Hint

Hint: Versus the current fashion, today's Wordle is frumpish.

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First Letter: D

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Some Thoughts on Meeting Inflation

I don't like meetings very much. I know they are sometimes necessary, and sometimes necessarily long, and I'll do them if I have to, but I mostly try to avoid them. If I need to communicate with others, I prefer to do it by email. That means that not everyone involved has to be paying full attention for a pre-reserved bloc of time, as long as the communications of all involved parties are timely to the matter being addressed. I'm not in the 911 dispatching business or anything like that. Most matters I deal with can be handled over the course of days, or at least hours, not minutes or seconds.

By "meetings," I don't just mean physical get-togethers around a table or in a convention hall. I include their "virtual" equivalents done with video conferencing, phone conferencing, and group messaging. And over time, I think I detect two distinct "meeting inflation" effects from the latter.

While I do very few "meetings" myself, I have family members who seem to spend a lot of time on them for both work and community (e.g. non-profit board) stuff, and they seem to spend a lot more time on them now than they did in 2006 or 2016.

The first "meeting inflation" effect is in the number of meetings. I've seen family members' work "meetings" go from "quick huddle at the beginning of the day, with maybe one a week or one a month for any given big project" to "half the day, every day is spent on four different Zoom meetings, and most of the other half is spent preparing for them."

The second "meeting inflation" effect is in the length of meetings, particularly the community types. They seem to have gone from "this is the agenda, with time assigned to each item, let's get through it" to "count on several 15-minute stream-of-consciousness rambles that seemingly have little or nothing to do with why we're meeting."

I'm a big fan of "work from home"/"telecommute" for people whose jobs can be done that way. It saves commute time. It saves gasoline costs. It means the workplace doesn't have to be a four-story building with 100 offices that must be cooled, heated, and lit 24/7.

Obviously the ability to "meet virtually" makes all that more doable. But if it also encourages dramatically increasing the time spent on, and in, those "meetings," it reduces the benefit.

Wordle 1788 Hint

Hint: Three kinds: Atomic, cuckoo, and grandfather.

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First Letter: C

Monday, May 11, 2026

The Latest App Gripe

I use InoReader (not an affiliate link) every day, all day long. I've used it for years. I've maintained a paid premium account for years. It's well worth the money for someone who needs to see the newest content from a large list of sites on a recurring basis. And while I periodically test other RSS reader apps, it remains my favorite by far.

BUT!

As the app evolves with new features (most of which I don't use, but can see why they'd offer), they also keep screwing with the layout of the user interface. This morning, all of a sudden, a button ("Mark all as read") that I use many times a day, every day, has suddenly been moved halfway across the screen from where my muscle memory "knows" it is.

This kind of thing is not unique to InoReader, it just happens to be the latest instance of an annoying phenomenon that I seem to run into every week or two.

User interface changes in apps that have been out of beta and in regular production for years should be few, far between, and arguably necessary to correct a problem

Adding a new feature? Great -- put the button or form field for that feature somewhere new, too. Long-time users shouldn't have to re-train their minds and muscles on the old features just because the app's dev team needs to report "incremental improvements" to justify their jobs.

On a positive note, a problem I started having with InoReader right about the time I switched from Linux Mint to MX Linux has disappeared -- the site seemed to intermittently freeze then unfreeze, and now it doesn't. Maybe that's a side effect of the same update I'm griping about.

Wordle 1787 Hint

Hint: Very recently (as in "wed").

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First Letter: N

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Saturday, May 09, 2026

Not My Use Case, But Still Pretty Cool

Royal Enfield is rolling out its first electric motorcycle, a take on the WWII military "Flying Flea" model. Its first market will be India at about $3,000 US; it looks like a winner for the US market if they can keep the retail price here in the $5k range.


While I'm not opposed to the idea of an electric motorcycle, this one's not for me, for two reasons: Range and speed.

Royal Enfield claims a range of about 100 miles, a top speed of about 70 miles per hour, and a full charging time of two hours.

Anyone who's ever used an electric vehicle knows better than to trust the maker's range claims. To the extent that they're true at all, they're true for 1) new batteries in 2) ideal situations when 3) the bike is ridden in specific ways. Once you're out in the real world, doing real world stuff, cut them by 25-50%. I suppose Royal Enfield might be the exception, but I won't believe it until and unless I see lots of rider reports on the subject.

As for charging, it's AC only -- the DC fast charging like you can use with modern electric cars isn't a feature. Which means that every x miles, you'd be plugged in for a considerable amount of time ... and that x miles is probably around the same mileage as my small-tank internal combustion bikes, which I can fill up with gas in a couple of minutes.

Since x is, at most, 100 miles, the Flying Flea is effectively good for local riding, or commutes of up to 50 miles if you have a couple of hours to charge it at the far end. Long rides would mean a two-hour break after each hour to hour-and-a-half of riding, even assuming you could count on finding a place to charge at each such interval.

In order for me to switch to electric, I'd have to see:

  • A real-world range of at least 200 miles;
  • A top speed that's well into usual interstate highway territory (80 mph bare minimum, but a burst of 100 mph is desirable for quick movement in emergency situations); and
  • Fast DC charging.
  • A price point similar to this bike.
  • A lot more "public charging" infrastructure so that I wouldn't get stranded in East Asshole, Arkansas while on a cross-country trip.
I don't see that all of that happening in the very near term. The speed probably isn't an engineering problem (a little more motor goes a long way), but longer range requires more battery and apparently the internal infrastructure for fast DC charging is heavy, high-volume, and produces lots of heat, none of which are good things where motorcycles are concerned. Getting there, and getting the costs of being there down, will take time.

But for the right kinds of rider -- someone who lives/works in or near a city and doesn't have to haul a lot of stuff (or additional people, although I understand the Flying Flea does come with an attachable/removable pillion seat for one passenger) around -- it might be very nice. Ride it to work, ride it around town, plug it in at home each night. Probably very low-maintenance. The noise won't annoy your neighbors. Finding parking will be easier than with an SUV. Between gas, maintenance, insurance, etc. cost savings, it might be a financially attractive option.

Applicable(?) Aphorisms #18

"Wherever you go, go with all your heart." (Confucianism, Analects 19:6)

True, false, good, bad, useful, not so useful, etc.? Discuss.

My thoughts:

I'm probably as prone as anyone to forget this recommendation  -- which, in different formulations, seems fairly ubiquitous across human populations (my favorite variation is probably "anything worth doing is worth overdoing").

It seems sound to me. The ultimate human scarcity factor is time. Why waste that resource on stuff that's you only consider important enough to you to do half-heartedly?

Wordle 1785 Hint

Hint: A glossy fabric weave.

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First Letter: S

Friday, May 08, 2026

Interesting (Literally)

While thinking about the news that yet another Trump tariff scam got noticed by a court as illegal yesterday, it occurred to me to ask whether the regime has to pay interest on illegally collected tariffs. The answer is: Yes.

My first reaction was that the rate -- 4.5% on amounts owed over $10,000, 6% on the amount up to $10k -- is far too low. To the extent that interest charges are an incentive to not pull this kind of shit, the higher the better. Perhaps the average credit card interest rate (a little over 20% APR), or even "payday loan" rates (which can approach 400%).

But then I thought a little more about it:
  • Tariffs, as taxes on the import of goods, are initially paid by the importer, but mostly passed on to the final retail customer.
  • Refunds of illegal tariffs are paid to those importers because it would be impractical (in many cases impossible) to track down everyone who paid an extra $5 on a $50 retail purchase.
  • So the importers are getting their money back after having recouped much of that money from their downstream customers.
  • And they're getting it back from those customers via taxation and government borrowing.
So any interest charges would simply be additional costs to those retail customers, not to the government, because the government doesn't really have any money it hasn't stolen in the first place.

It makes more sense for the interest burden on illegally collected tariff refunds to be imposed directly on the person or persons who ordered their collection in the first place. In this case that would be Trump, but if Congress passed an unconstitutional tariff and the president signed the bill, that would split the burden between the members of Congress who voted for it, the president, and maybe one more person (the vice-president, if he or she cast a vote in favor of the bill in the Senate). Garnish their wages and auction off their assets if necessary to collect restitution.

Wordle 1784 Hint

Hint: Today's Wordle is as shady as it gets.

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First Letter: U

Thursday, May 07, 2026

Wordle 1783 Hint

Hint: When you move, or move something or someone else, just a little bit.

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First Letter: B

Wednesday, May 06, 2026

Two Hypotheses on Sudden Delivery Problems

My household has has had a "Walmart Plus" membership for a couple of years now. Since we do probably 2/3 of our grocery shopping at Walmart, the "free delivery on orders over $35" seems well worth the annual membership fee, even setting aside the included streaming media platform subscription (you can choose between Paramount Plus and Peacock). It saves us both extra trips into town and the time we'd spend in the store.

It usually works out just fine. Occasionally an order will be missing an item (and Walmart cheerfully refunds out money). Also occasionally we'll get stuff we didn't order because the driver got mixed up. That's even better because Walmart won't take the stuff back, they just tell you to keep it, and it's usually stuff we do use.

But the last few days have been interesting. We placed an order for delivery Sunday evening, and it didn't arrive. "Delayed due to driver availability issues." Reschedule or cancel.

We rescheduled for Monday evening. Same outcome.

This time we canceled, waited a few hours, and did the same order (plus more stuff we had put on our grocery lists in the meantime) from scratch. I decided to set the delivery time frame to daytime and see if it would actually happen, otherwise we could make a physical evening trip to the store.

It arrived.

Nothing like this has ever happened before with Walmart Plus, for us or for anyone we know who's mentioned using the service. Off the cuff I suspect we've ordered for delivery close to 100 times, with only one "delay" ever and that by only a couple of hours because a driver's vehicle broke down.

What's up with that?

Well, Walmart uses a mix of employee and contractor drivers, and evening delivery seems to lean hard on the contractor end. Considering that, I have two hypotheses:

  1. It's college graduation time in Gainesville, Florida. In fact, University of Florida graduation was last weekend. If a lot of the evening contract drivers are students doing it part-time, there may have been a sudden exodus of graduates (and non-graduates going home for summer) that Walmart couldn't replace in a timely manner. 
  2. Gas prices are up by 50% since Trump shit the bed in the Middle East. Which means the contractors aren't making as much money unless they're either getting bonuses to help cover the higher price of filling their tanks or are able to increase the number of deliveries they make per trip. Late evening delivery is probably less popular than other time frames, meaning less ability to stack a larger number of orders into one trip.
Any other ideas?

Wordle 1782 Hint

Hint: When you point out a resemblance.

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First Letter: L

Tuesday, May 05, 2026

Non Sequitur, Vote By Mail Edition

Los Angeles Times letter to the editor headline (paywalled, so I can only go with that headline claim, not any other facts of the writer's situation:

I’m in my 90s and I’ve given up driving. Voting by mail is my only option

Yep, only option.

Except for Uber.

Or a taxi, if those still exist in the writer's area.

Or asking a friend or relative for a ride to the polling place.

Or calling up the local party organization or political campaign of your choice, if they haven't already called you (in urban areas, election day is usually characterized by multiple phone calls offering voters transportation to the polls).

If you're 95 years old, there's a very good chance you live in some kind of "retirement community," ranging from "people have their own houses/apartments but there's infrastructure to support their needs" to full-on "nursing home." Many, maybe most, of those places provide transportion on both an individual basis ("I need to go to the doctor for my appointment") and group basis ("the van leaves for the mall at noon and returns at 3pm") as part of the package.

So it's highly unlikely that this writer's only option is to vote by mail. It's the most convenient. It's the least expensive. It's arguably more secure. But it's not the only option.

Interesting Easement Situation

As I mentioned recently, our household decided to switch from Starlink to Cox fiber Internet. I was happy with Starlink, but the gamers in the house wanted higher speeds and lower latency.

On the initial installation attempt, the contractor said we were just too far from the main node to connect, so we thought it was over. No biggie. But then another contractor came back and said "no, it's fine." He ran the fiber from the node to our house and told us they'd be back to bury it later.

Yesterday, there was a knock on the door that I missed, so I hopped on my motorcycle to go see if they were working on it down at the main road. They were, kind of ...

The gentleman who lives at the corner was telling them they couldn't bury the fiber because the path was on his property.

They kept trying to explain that they were burying it right at the edge of the road, well within the utilities easement.

He insisted that there WAS no easement, that in fact the road ran through his property but belonged to him, and that he just allowed the 10 or so households down it to use it out of the goodness of his heart, but that they couldn't bury the fiber there.

It's a road with a county name and a county street sign, and I showed one of the guys the county works the survey posts where the path for eventual paving are placed (the road as surveyed does not QUITE follow the path cars have actually been traveling, presumably for at least 20 years, but we had our property surveyed last fall and I found the posts in some trees just outside our survey flag).

Which was great, the guy told me, but even if there WAS no actual pre-described "utility easement," there would be an "easement by implication" (due to the long use of the roadway without objection from the property owner) and/or "easement by necessity" (without that road, all those properties would otherwise be "land-locked").

So they ended up running the fiber. Which, presumably, the other guy will never have any reason to notice, since it's buried right along the edge of, and in, the cow path the county says is a "road." So now the kids have their fast Internet (since I use wifi, and it maxes out below the speeds of either Starlink or fiber, the only change I'm seeing is the name of the network I connect to).

Anyway, I can't really blame the guy for objecting if that roadway WAS actually within the survey lines of the lot he bought years ago. But it did seem like a mountain and molehill situation. It's not like they were using a backhoe to trench up the path to his driveway and keep him  from getting in and out for hours. They had a little tracked thing that looks like one of those bomb disposal robots you see on TV shows, and the only evidence it left behind was a thin line in the dirt. Probably blocked his driveway for about 30 seconds.

Wordle 1781 Hint

Hint: It holds the door shut.

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First Letter: L

Monday, May 04, 2026

Wordle 1780 Hint

Hint: What you are when you wake up in the morning.

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First Letter: R

Sunday, May 03, 2026

Hypothesis: If I Don't Have Time, Just Add Weight

Around the beginning of March, I decided to re-commit to walking 10,000 steps a day.

Around the beginning of April, I jumped that up to 11,000 steps a day.

Good results so far. Slightly lower blood sugar and my weight is down by several pounds.

But for the beginning of May, I reconsidered the "add an extra thousand steps a day" formula.

Steps are time, and I already commit around an hour a day specifically to walking (above and beyond the steps I take in the normal course of getting things done). Usually in two 30-minute dedicated outings.

Unless I considerably pick up my pace, which is already fairly brisk, there's a limit to how many steps I can take in x minutes. Once I get below 200 pounds for the first time in 25 years or so, I may try to work some running into my daily step count, but between bad knees and an old lower back injury, I have to get the weight off first for it to be doable.

If I could figure out a way to get work done while walking, heck, I'd walk all day. It's been a few years since I did more than 15 miles or so at a stretch, but I'm sure I still could. I found out in the Marine Corps that I'm a genetic freak in that respect. If I'm in anything approaching good shape I can start walking and not stop until told to, with as much weight as I can carry hanging off me. But absent some kind of cool augmented reality glasses with a bespoke work setup built into them, when I'm walking, all I can really do is, um, walk.

So instead of taking more steps per day, I'm sticking to 11,000 steps ... while carrying  barbell plates in a backpack on those dedicated walks.

Just got back from the first, one-hour, 2.x-mile test walk with 22 pounds (four 2.5kg plates) in the pack. Not only am I none the worse for wear, but the weight tends to correct my posture such that my back is hurting less than usual (good) and my quads are complaining some (good).

Wordle 1779 Hint

Hint: Edemic in appearance.

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First Letter: P

Saturday, May 02, 2026

Applicable(?) Aphorisms #17

"A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step." (Taoism, Tao Te Ching 64)

True, false, good, bad, useful, not so useful, etc.? Discuss.

My thoughts:

A well-known one, and an obviously true one. You can't finish anything without starting it. You can think, dream, plan, but until you actually do the things, starting with the first thing, the things won't get done. I can't think of anything more to say about that, or imagine anything that anything else needs to be said.

Wordle 1778 Hint

Hint: When you go somewhere and take something with you.

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First Letter: B 

Friday, May 01, 2026

I Expect Some Kind of Combat in the Persian Gulf Today

I could be wrong, of course, but here's why I expect it:

  • While the war was wholly, completely, and unquestionably illegal from the start absent a congressional declaration of war, there's a fiction under the "War Powers Resolution" through which a president gets a 60-day free pass to do whatever he wants.
  • That 60-day period ends today.
  • The administration is claiming that the 60-day clock stopped with the declaration of a ceasefire.
  • It's in the Iranian regime's interest to establish that no, the clock hasn't stopped because combat operations are ongoing, and the best way to do that is to do something requiring a US military response.

Wordle 1777 Hint

Hint: Consider solving today's Wordle a feather in your cap.

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First Letter: P

Thanks For Asking! -- 05/01/26

No lines, no reservations required, no waiting ... just ask me anything in comments and I'll answer in, or linked to from, comments (applies to regular people -- pseudonymous trolls/bots are required to ask interesting questions to get answers).