TWA: Billiards

The recent posts have underlined to me that we don’t have enough non political posts. So here is the start (he says optimistically) of a series. TWA stands for Time Wasting Activity, and I define a TWA as some hobby or pursuit that, well, wastes a lot of time. If regulars have a TWA they want to talk about, feel free to contact me at the kitty’s address.

And below the fold, billiards!

While I had played pool in bars, usually with while drinking too much beer. Then when I lived in Spain, my girlfriend liked to play pool, and when I first came to Japan, I hung out with a few Brits and we played a lot of pool, though they missed playing snooker. Later, I discovered a small place that had pool and 3 cushion and a lot of time was wasted.

I’m not sure how it came up, I think I was reading the Guardian and started following links about Ronnie O’Sullivan, a snooker player. Interestingly, Chinese are really into snooker, so much so that they would like to move the venue that holds the world championship of snooker, the Crucible Theatre, to China. In and among the Chinese playing, there were also a number of Korean names and I come to find out that Koreans also love pool.

When I was playing pool and three cushion, there was no internet, but now, you can see players on Youtube. On one level, I’m thinking ‘yeah, I want to do that’ on another, ‘sheesh, who am I kidding?’.

Anyway, some information and thoughts about the various games. I list the games in order of difficulty, though someone could be good at a ‘harder’ game yet not be able to win in an ‘easier’ game because the different games require different mentalities.

Pool is table game with numbered balls on the table. The tables are relatively small and the pockets are wide, There are a number of variations, from straight pool (Paul Newman and Jackie Gleason in The Hustler) to 9-ball (Paul Newman and Tom Cruise in the Color of Money) as well as a number of other variations.

Two YouTube videos from the same series, for your viewing pleasure. I like the series a lot, it’s an ‘average’ pool player trying to make some very famous pro shots and he discusses how he learns to do it. These two shots are by Efren Reyes, who is astonishing.

The Famous Z shot

Called bank and carom of the stopped cue ball
I think this is a bit too flashy, but the fact that he knew how much spin to impart to the cue that would impart opposite spin to the object

Next is snooker, which is played on a bigger table with tighter pockets and smaller balls. The bigger table means more strategic play, smaller balls means more precise aim is required. Watching pool on Youtube is ok, but the announcers are not really interesting. However, with snooker, you get great accents. An example, I think this is Dennis Taylor (Irish) and Clive Everton (Welsh).
A match between Liang Wienbo and Ronnie O’Sullivan

Ronnie O’Sullivan is probably the greatest snooker player ever and here is is with the world’s fastest clearance

Last is three cushion, which Donald Duck tried. Here’s some recent great shots, one of the problems is that the camera work for 3 cushion is not as good as it is for snooker, but this video has some overhead shots. The greatest player of 3 cushion is/was Raymond Ceulemans, but his greatest time was before youtube, but I did find this video him and Efran Reyes in an exhibition of 71.2 balkline.

I mentioned how pool was ‘easier’ than ‘snooker’, but you have to allow for different mentalities and styles of play, and this series, called American Hustle, has Ronnie O’Sullivan going to the states and playing pool and losing (though I don’t think he’s trying his best) Here’s the first episode.

Anyway, if any regulars have a TWA you want to introduce, drop a line to the kitty. Hope to hear from y’all.

144 thoughts on “TWA: Billiards”

  1. Wait a minute. Isn’t ObWi our favorite TWA?
    I mean, chess is all right. And I have happily wasted tons of time recently, learning to program an Arduino. But the time I truly enjoy wasting is … well, this very moment.
    Human beings spend their time trying to either:
    1) Save time, or
    2) Waste time.
    My considered opinion is that both are rewarding pursuits.
    –TP

  2. Wait a minute. Isn’t ObWi our favorite TWA?
    I mean, chess is all right. And I have happily wasted tons of time recently, learning to program an Arduino. But the time I truly enjoy wasting is … well, this very moment.
    Human beings spend their time trying to either:
    1) Save time, or
    2) Waste time.
    My considered opinion is that both are rewarding pursuits.
    –TP

  3. Wait a minute. Isn’t ObWi our favorite TWA?
    Yup. Not even close . . . although curling up with a book is a pretty good second.

  4. Wait a minute. Isn’t ObWi our favorite TWA?
    Yup. Not even close . . . although curling up with a book is a pretty good second.

  5. It’s certainly mine – although actually, I’m not so sure I agree it’s time-wasting. I mean, apart from anything else, it’s astonishing the number of acronyms I’ve learnt (lbdg is my favourite so far, although I now can’t remember: that might be dglb).

  6. It’s certainly mine – although actually, I’m not so sure I agree it’s time-wasting. I mean, apart from anything else, it’s astonishing the number of acronyms I’ve learnt (lbdg is my favourite so far, although I now can’t remember: that might be dglb).

  7. My immediate reaction was like the above: I was “wasting time” in the Internet, with Obwi as one of my stops!
    As for other “wasters”—reading, I suppose. Sailing. My husband bought a sail boat so I am agood sport and go sailing now.

  8. My immediate reaction was like the above: I was “wasting time” in the Internet, with Obwi as one of my stops!
    As for other “wasters”—reading, I suppose. Sailing. My husband bought a sail boat so I am agood sport and go sailing now.

  9. Why sure I’m a billiard player
    Certainly mighty proud I say
    I’m always mighty proud to say it
    I consider that the hours I spend
    With a cue in my hand are golden
    Help you cultivate horse sense
    And a cool head and a keen eye
    J’ever take and try to find
    An iron-clad leave for yourself
    From a three-rail billiard shot?
    But just as I say
    It takes judgment, brains, and maturity to score
    In a balkline game
    I say that any boob can take
    And shove a ball in a pocket
    And I call that sloth
    The first big step on the road
    To the depths of deg-ra-day–
    I say, first, medicinal wine from a teaspoon
    Then beer from a bottle!
    An’ the next thing ya know
    Your son is playin’ for money
    In a pinch-back suit
    And list’nin to some big out-a-town jasper
    Hearin’ him tell about horse-race gamblin’
    Not a wholesome trottin’ race, no!
    But a race where they set down right on the horse!
    Like to see some stuck-up jockey boy
    Settin’ on Dan Patch? Make your blood boil?
    Well, I should say
    Now, friends, lemme tell you what I mean
    Ya got one, two, three, four, five, six pockets in a table
    Pockets that mark the diff’rence
    Between a gentlemen and a bum
    With a capital “B,”
    And that rhymes with “P” and that stands for pool!
    And all week long your River City
    Youth’ll be fritterin’ away
    I say your young men’ll be fritterin’!
    Fritterin’ away their noontime, suppertime, choretime too!
    Get the ball in the pocket
    Never mind gettin’ dandelions pulled
    Or the screen door patched or the beefsteak pounded
    Never mind pumpin’ any water
    ‘Til your parents are caught with the cistern empty
    On a Saturday night and that’s trouble
    Yes you got lots and lots of trouble
    I’m thinkin’ of the kids in the knickerbockers
    Shirt-tail young ones, peekin’ in the pool
    Hall window after school, ya got trouble, folks!
    Right here in River City
    Trouble with a capital “T”
    And that rhymes with “P” and that stands for pool!
    The Music Man, Meredith Wilson

  10. Why sure I’m a billiard player
    Certainly mighty proud I say
    I’m always mighty proud to say it
    I consider that the hours I spend
    With a cue in my hand are golden
    Help you cultivate horse sense
    And a cool head and a keen eye
    J’ever take and try to find
    An iron-clad leave for yourself
    From a three-rail billiard shot?
    But just as I say
    It takes judgment, brains, and maturity to score
    In a balkline game
    I say that any boob can take
    And shove a ball in a pocket
    And I call that sloth
    The first big step on the road
    To the depths of deg-ra-day–
    I say, first, medicinal wine from a teaspoon
    Then beer from a bottle!
    An’ the next thing ya know
    Your son is playin’ for money
    In a pinch-back suit
    And list’nin to some big out-a-town jasper
    Hearin’ him tell about horse-race gamblin’
    Not a wholesome trottin’ race, no!
    But a race where they set down right on the horse!
    Like to see some stuck-up jockey boy
    Settin’ on Dan Patch? Make your blood boil?
    Well, I should say
    Now, friends, lemme tell you what I mean
    Ya got one, two, three, four, five, six pockets in a table
    Pockets that mark the diff’rence
    Between a gentlemen and a bum
    With a capital “B,”
    And that rhymes with “P” and that stands for pool!
    And all week long your River City
    Youth’ll be fritterin’ away
    I say your young men’ll be fritterin’!
    Fritterin’ away their noontime, suppertime, choretime too!
    Get the ball in the pocket
    Never mind gettin’ dandelions pulled
    Or the screen door patched or the beefsteak pounded
    Never mind pumpin’ any water
    ‘Til your parents are caught with the cistern empty
    On a Saturday night and that’s trouble
    Yes you got lots and lots of trouble
    I’m thinkin’ of the kids in the knickerbockers
    Shirt-tail young ones, peekin’ in the pool
    Hall window after school, ya got trouble, folks!
    Right here in River City
    Trouble with a capital “T”
    And that rhymes with “P” and that stands for pool!
    The Music Man, Meredith Wilson

  11. A friend of mine has a suffleboard table in his basement. I donโ€™t spend a lot of time in general playing it, but when I do, hours can go by unnoticed. You might even find yourself leaving the house as the sun is coming up. I think thereโ€™s a wormhole involved somehow.

  12. A friend of mine has a suffleboard table in his basement. I donโ€™t spend a lot of time in general playing it, but when I do, hours can go by unnoticed. You might even find yourself leaving the house as the sun is coming up. I think thereโ€™s a wormhole involved somehow.

  13. 1. Echoing Marty and byomtov about the song and the good luck to dr. ngo.
    Just the other day in the grocery store, the person who was checking me out got sidetracked by a request from another direction, and she looked at me and she said, “We got trouble with a capital T!”
    I sang it all the way home.
    2. Whist is my TWA, but only sporadically because it’s a family activity, and we’re not all together that often. When we are….hours at a time.
    Reading, otherwise.
    ObWi, of course.
    3. Nigel: how about a guest post about cricket, esp. cricket for the clueless, in easy lessons. ๐Ÿ™‚

  14. 1. Echoing Marty and byomtov about the song and the good luck to dr. ngo.
    Just the other day in the grocery store, the person who was checking me out got sidetracked by a request from another direction, and she looked at me and she said, “We got trouble with a capital T!”
    I sang it all the way home.
    2. Whist is my TWA, but only sporadically because it’s a family activity, and we’re not all together that often. When we are….hours at a time.
    Reading, otherwise.
    ObWi, of course.
    3. Nigel: how about a guest post about cricket, esp. cricket for the clueless, in easy lessons. ๐Ÿ™‚

  15. Plus, Michael Cain, I think I need a trigger warning if you’re going to write about Freecell. Along with a couple of other internet addictions (sudoku above all, but also jigsaw puzzles, to which IIRC I was originally turned on by Doctor Science, right here, many years ago), once I start I can’t stop.
    It’s got to be total and cold turkey with me. My BIL does one Freecell puzzle a day. I can’t seem to manage that. So I try to make sure I don’t start, or I then spend months trying to climb back out of the muck.
    With some notice, I’ll try to be somewhere with no internet while a Freecell thread is going on. Ha ha, but I’m only half kidding.

  16. Plus, Michael Cain, I think I need a trigger warning if you’re going to write about Freecell. Along with a couple of other internet addictions (sudoku above all, but also jigsaw puzzles, to which IIRC I was originally turned on by Doctor Science, right here, many years ago), once I start I can’t stop.
    It’s got to be total and cold turkey with me. My BIL does one Freecell puzzle a day. I can’t seem to manage that. So I try to make sure I don’t start, or I then spend months trying to climb back out of the muck.
    With some notice, I’ll try to be somewhere with no internet while a Freecell thread is going on. Ha ha, but I’m only half kidding.

  17. Years ago, actually more like a couple of decades ago, my mother-in-law gave me a game called Age of Empires. So long ago that it’s running on an HP computer that doesn’t even connect to the Internet. It can still suck me in for an hour or two. Frequently.

  18. Years ago, actually more like a couple of decades ago, my mother-in-law gave me a game called Age of Empires. So long ago that it’s running on an HP computer that doesn’t even connect to the Internet. It can still suck me in for an hour or two. Frequently.

  19. Nigel: how about a guest post about cricket, esp. cricket for the clueless, in easy lessons. ๐Ÿ™‚
    Going to have to work up to it, as Iโ€™m still suffering from shock at England winning today, but yes, Iโ€™ll try to make time next weekend.

  20. Nigel: how about a guest post about cricket, esp. cricket for the clueless, in easy lessons. ๐Ÿ™‚
    Going to have to work up to it, as Iโ€™m still suffering from shock at England winning today, but yes, Iโ€™ll try to make time next weekend.

  21. ….So long ago that it’s running on an HP computer that doesn’t even connect to the Internet.
    My father in law had one of the first Macintoshes back in the 80s. I remember staying up until dawn plying Strategic Conquest several nights running (as the game progressed, it took the computer several seconds to make a move). My first experience of virtual worlds.
    And I canโ€™t begin to count the amount of time I wasted playing all night bridge at university. Often with a bottle of malt, and getting a taxi to obtain a fresh packet of Marlboro in the early hours…
    Now that really was wasting time.

  22. ….So long ago that it’s running on an HP computer that doesn’t even connect to the Internet.
    My father in law had one of the first Macintoshes back in the 80s. I remember staying up until dawn plying Strategic Conquest several nights running (as the game progressed, it took the computer several seconds to make a move). My first experience of virtual worlds.
    And I canโ€™t begin to count the amount of time I wasted playing all night bridge at university. Often with a bottle of malt, and getting a taxi to obtain a fresh packet of Marlboro in the early hours…
    Now that really was wasting time.

  23. Mention of the early Macs triggered a memory, but when I thought about it, it turned out to be a memory of an Apple II game called Snakebite.
    It was barebones in those days. You moved the head of a snake around eating dots, and as you ate the dots, the snake got longer. If the snake’s head crashed into the “wall” or its own tail, kaboom, back down the levels you’d go. (Or maybe you had three tries on each level? It was a long time ago.)
    There were 28 levels. On the last level, chance trumped skill, in that if you didn’t guess the correct direction for the snake the instant play started, you were dead.
    Having played obsessively for weeks, I quit cold turkey and never found out what grand prize would have come my way if I had persisted. Beating the game by guessing was not a satisfying conclusion.
    *****
    My ex, father of my children, bought an original Nintendo for Christmas when our son was 3. The box was supposedly for the adult, but my son was allowed a very rationed amount of time on it. His favorite game was Castlevania — ever so much fancier by 1988 than the Snakebite on my Apple II. It involved several kinds of motion — jumping, moving forward, cracking a whip at moving objects, etc. — and the 3-year-old used to play it while jumping on the couch.
    A couple of years later an optometrist tried to get us to spend $500 on glasses for the then 5-year-old on the grounds that his eyes weren’t “tracking properly.” The pediatrician said the optometrist was pushing what was essentially a scam, and the ophthalmologist said the kid didn’t need glasses.
    Which tracked (pun noted) with my feeling that a kid who could beat the Castlevania game while jumping on the couch was having no trouble tracking things with his eyes.

  24. Mention of the early Macs triggered a memory, but when I thought about it, it turned out to be a memory of an Apple II game called Snakebite.
    It was barebones in those days. You moved the head of a snake around eating dots, and as you ate the dots, the snake got longer. If the snake’s head crashed into the “wall” or its own tail, kaboom, back down the levels you’d go. (Or maybe you had three tries on each level? It was a long time ago.)
    There were 28 levels. On the last level, chance trumped skill, in that if you didn’t guess the correct direction for the snake the instant play started, you were dead.
    Having played obsessively for weeks, I quit cold turkey and never found out what grand prize would have come my way if I had persisted. Beating the game by guessing was not a satisfying conclusion.
    *****
    My ex, father of my children, bought an original Nintendo for Christmas when our son was 3. The box was supposedly for the adult, but my son was allowed a very rationed amount of time on it. His favorite game was Castlevania — ever so much fancier by 1988 than the Snakebite on my Apple II. It involved several kinds of motion — jumping, moving forward, cracking a whip at moving objects, etc. — and the 3-year-old used to play it while jumping on the couch.
    A couple of years later an optometrist tried to get us to spend $500 on glasses for the then 5-year-old on the grounds that his eyes weren’t “tracking properly.” The pediatrician said the optometrist was pushing what was essentially a scam, and the ophthalmologist said the kid didn’t need glasses.
    Which tracked (pun noted) with my feeling that a kid who could beat the Castlevania game while jumping on the couch was having no trouble tracking things with his eyes.

  25. It dawn’s on me that there are three games I spent hours playing. Of course the original Zelda was amazing at the time.
    There was a game called Baseball Stars that you could win points to make your players better that we would spend whole weekends playing.
    But by far the most mindless TWA for a while was Snood.

  26. It dawn’s on me that there are three games I spent hours playing. Of course the original Zelda was amazing at the time.
    There was a game called Baseball Stars that you could win points to make your players better that we would spend whole weekends playing.
    But by far the most mindless TWA for a while was Snood.

  27. If the Music Man lyrics were texted, emailed, or tweeted by a teenager or a 20-something or other, we’d have trouble, alright, but it wouldn’t be capitalized.
    My 28-year old son and I have had a Stratomatic Baseball League … 20 teams, 162 games each … going since 2008.
    This time-wasting you speak of, I no comprehend.
    IMHO, Frederick Winslow Taylor and his acolytes have wasted more human time than anyone since Sisyphus.
    They interrupted daydreaming at work.

  28. If the Music Man lyrics were texted, emailed, or tweeted by a teenager or a 20-something or other, we’d have trouble, alright, but it wouldn’t be capitalized.
    My 28-year old son and I have had a Stratomatic Baseball League … 20 teams, 162 games each … going since 2008.
    This time-wasting you speak of, I no comprehend.
    IMHO, Frederick Winslow Taylor and his acolytes have wasted more human time than anyone since Sisyphus.
    They interrupted daydreaming at work.

  29. Vladimir: ร‡a a fait passer le temps.
    Estragon: il serait passรฉ sans รงa.

    I spent the weekend at a bridge tournament. I feel that somehow that shouldn’t count as a TWA, but I don’t see why not.

  30. Vladimir: ร‡a a fait passer le temps.
    Estragon: il serait passรฉ sans รงa.

    I spent the weekend at a bridge tournament. I feel that somehow that shouldn’t count as a TWA, but I don’t see why not.

  31. Between mentions of sudoku, to which I went through a period of addiction, and older computer games, I was reminded of my Minesweeper addiction from years back. Sudoku and Minesweeper require very similar forms of logic and may have satisfied the same craving in whatever region of the brain.
    I played Minesweeper without using flags, just to make it harder. I like to live on the edge.

  32. Between mentions of sudoku, to which I went through a period of addiction, and older computer games, I was reminded of my Minesweeper addiction from years back. Sudoku and Minesweeper require very similar forms of logic and may have satisfied the same craving in whatever region of the brain.
    I played Minesweeper without using flags, just to make it harder. I like to live on the edge.

  33. Old computer games, you say?
    I’m still keeping alive an old HP mini-tower PC purchased in 1999 with Windows 98 on it. I loaded Windows 2003 on it in 2004. The original monitor died in 2006 and I replaced it with a used Sony CRT monitor that is now on its last legs. The external speakers still work great, though.
    And why do I keep this relic alive? Because it plays a more satisfying game of Windows PINBALL than any other computer I have ever owned.
    I became something of a pinball-holic as a student, when there was a pinball room next to the 24-hour coffeehouse in the old MIT Student Center. Late-night study breaks for my roommates and me consisted of a coffee, a bagel, and 50 cents worth of pinball — which got to be longer and longer because we could generally score high enough to rack up several free games.
    That was back in the 70s. By the turn of the millennium, virtual pinball on Windows was my only pinball fix. Once I established that I could keep a single game going forever (300M+ points) by steadily accumulating extra balls, wasting time THAT way stopped being fun.
    So I switched to playing it like golf — seeing how FEW points it would take me to go up through all 9 levels. My best result was around 14M points, which must correspond to about 10 under par in 9 holes of golf.
    I have found more efficient ways to waste time in recent years, but I do still occasionally fire up that old PC for a game of pinball-golf.
    –TP

  34. Old computer games, you say?
    I’m still keeping alive an old HP mini-tower PC purchased in 1999 with Windows 98 on it. I loaded Windows 2003 on it in 2004. The original monitor died in 2006 and I replaced it with a used Sony CRT monitor that is now on its last legs. The external speakers still work great, though.
    And why do I keep this relic alive? Because it plays a more satisfying game of Windows PINBALL than any other computer I have ever owned.
    I became something of a pinball-holic as a student, when there was a pinball room next to the 24-hour coffeehouse in the old MIT Student Center. Late-night study breaks for my roommates and me consisted of a coffee, a bagel, and 50 cents worth of pinball — which got to be longer and longer because we could generally score high enough to rack up several free games.
    That was back in the 70s. By the turn of the millennium, virtual pinball on Windows was my only pinball fix. Once I established that I could keep a single game going forever (300M+ points) by steadily accumulating extra balls, wasting time THAT way stopped being fun.
    So I switched to playing it like golf — seeing how FEW points it would take me to go up through all 9 levels. My best result was around 14M points, which must correspond to about 10 under par in 9 holes of golf.
    I have found more efficient ways to waste time in recent years, but I do still occasionally fire up that old PC for a game of pinball-golf.
    –TP

  35. The external speakers still work great, though.
    My wife bought my MiL a Gateway desktop back in the mid to late 90s. It came with a pair of Harman Kardon speakers. I now/still have them. I keep them in my bedroom to listen to my 2nd generation iPod Nano.
    Old stuff is funny.

  36. The external speakers still work great, though.
    My wife bought my MiL a Gateway desktop back in the mid to late 90s. It came with a pair of Harman Kardon speakers. I now/still have them. I keep them in my bedroom to listen to my 2nd generation iPod Nano.
    Old stuff is funny.

  37. my current TWA is a game called SpellTower. it’s a combination of Boggle and Tetris. games can last weeks, if i’m patient and lucky.

  38. my current TWA is a game called SpellTower. it’s a combination of Boggle and Tetris. games can last weeks, if i’m patient and lucky.

  39. Pokemon Go.
    Itโ€™s a good excuse to go for a long walk.
    (And I am emotionally attached to Pokemon, the game having more or less taught my youngest to read back in the day.)

  40. Pokemon Go.
    Itโ€™s a good excuse to go for a long walk.
    (And I am emotionally attached to Pokemon, the game having more or less taught my youngest to read back in the day.)

  41. Perhaps time wastes us.
    At least the time we waste is not like the plastic and other garbage floating in ghastly ocean-going islands of pelican-strangling glop.
    Time is biodegradable. There is residue ….. regret …..yes, that causes longing at the cellular level.
    If only and a little hole in the heart gives way.

  42. Perhaps time wastes us.
    At least the time we waste is not like the plastic and other garbage floating in ghastly ocean-going islands of pelican-strangling glop.
    Time is biodegradable. There is residue ….. regret …..yes, that causes longing at the cellular level.
    If only and a little hole in the heart gives way.

  43. Living’s mostly wasting time
    And I’ll waste my share of mine
    But it never feels too good
    So let’s don’t take too long

    Townes can Zandt

  44. Living’s mostly wasting time
    And I’ll waste my share of mine
    But it never feels too good
    So let’s don’t take too long

    Townes can Zandt

  45. I sometimes fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way, often while kicking around on a piece of ground in my home town.

  46. I sometimes fritter and waste the hours in an offhand way, often while kicking around on a piece of ground in my home town.

  47. Sudoku and Minesweeper require very similar forms of logic and may have satisfied the same craving in whatever region of the brain.
    The problem with Minesweeper is that it constantly requires the equivalent of coin tosses without the possibility of backtracking, i.e. it’s not pure logic.
    Btw, I hate it that solitaire has no internal solvability check. About 1 in 5 don’t solve and one can prove it.

  48. Sudoku and Minesweeper require very similar forms of logic and may have satisfied the same craving in whatever region of the brain.
    The problem with Minesweeper is that it constantly requires the equivalent of coin tosses without the possibility of backtracking, i.e. it’s not pure logic.
    Btw, I hate it that solitaire has no internal solvability check. About 1 in 5 don’t solve and one can prove it.

  49. Iโ€™m not convinced, russell.
    Surely one of the notable characteristics of a large subset of TWA is the excessive fascination with incidental detail ?

  50. Iโ€™m not convinced, russell.
    Surely one of the notable characteristics of a large subset of TWA is the excessive fascination with incidental detail ?

  51. The problem with Minesweeper is that it constantly requires the equivalent of coin tosses without the possibility of backtracking, i.e. it’s not pure logic.
    No, it’s not pure logic (though you can’t win without it), but I’d say “constantly” is an overstatement. The coin tosses are concentrated at the beginning and the end. In between, you can avoid taking chances fairly well.

  52. The problem with Minesweeper is that it constantly requires the equivalent of coin tosses without the possibility of backtracking, i.e. it’s not pure logic.
    No, it’s not pure logic (though you can’t win without it), but I’d say “constantly” is an overstatement. The coin tosses are concentrated at the beginning and the end. In between, you can avoid taking chances fairly well.

  53. Tony,
    I never heard of Arduino before, but it looks interesting as hell. I’d love to learn more.
    Are you still at world. etc?

  54. Tony,
    I never heard of Arduino before, but it looks interesting as hell. I’d love to learn more.
    Are you still at world. etc?

  55. Count,
    Richard II is a fabulous play. It seems much underappreciated to me. I also love Henry IV, part 1.
    Can honour set to a leg? no: or
    an arm? no: or take away the grief of a wound? no.
    Honour hath no skill in surgery, then? no.

  56. Count,
    Richard II is a fabulous play. It seems much underappreciated to me. I also love Henry IV, part 1.
    Can honour set to a leg? no: or
    an arm? no: or take away the grief of a wound? no.
    Honour hath no skill in surgery, then? no.

  57. Arduino is big fun if you’re into hobby coding and/or device control and/or robotics.
    I hacked up some simple controller stuff for a buddy of mine who is developing a remote-control music stand. Speaking of TWA….
    Arduino is a really nice, lightweight development environment for getting code to talk to gizmos and make them go. If you have any exposure to C or C++ you no doubt have all the programming language chops you need. If you have any familiarity with the basic lingo of motors etc., you are probably good to go. Lots and lots of freeware libraries to grab and use.
    I highly suspect that Michael Cain has poked around in Arduino-land as well.

  58. Arduino is big fun if you’re into hobby coding and/or device control and/or robotics.
    I hacked up some simple controller stuff for a buddy of mine who is developing a remote-control music stand. Speaking of TWA….
    Arduino is a really nice, lightweight development environment for getting code to talk to gizmos and make them go. If you have any exposure to C or C++ you no doubt have all the programming language chops you need. If you have any familiarity with the basic lingo of motors etc., you are probably good to go. Lots and lots of freeware libraries to grab and use.
    I highly suspect that Michael Cain has poked around in Arduino-land as well.

  59. This should be good, too … it’ll get the base out:
    https://www.thedailybeast.com/mel-gibsons-new-police-brutality-movie-is-a-vile-racist-right-wing-fantasy?via=newsletter&source=DDMorning
    Comforting, this:
    https://www.thedailybeast.com/why-young-men-of-color-are-joining-white-supremacist-groups?via=newsletter&source=DDMorning
    As a politically correct liberal, when the vermin right wing in pathological America gang rapes me and kills me, I hope it’s a rainbow coalition daisy chain.
    Are we fucked up .. or what?

  60. This should be good, too … it’ll get the base out:
    https://www.thedailybeast.com/mel-gibsons-new-police-brutality-movie-is-a-vile-racist-right-wing-fantasy?via=newsletter&source=DDMorning
    Comforting, this:
    https://www.thedailybeast.com/why-young-men-of-color-are-joining-white-supremacist-groups?via=newsletter&source=DDMorning
    As a politically correct liberal, when the vermin right wing in pathological America gang rapes me and kills me, I hope it’s a rainbow coalition daisy chain.
    Are we fucked up .. or what?

  61. russell: Lots and lots of freeware libraries to grab and use.
    Ah, but to waste time properly, writing code from scratch to run a stepper motor with accel/decel ramping is the only way to go.
    BTW, russell: I was thinking of you when I wrote an Arduino program to click a pair of solenoids at different rhythms — 3 against 2, 5 against 3, whatever. Never having been able to drum such patterns myself, I just wanted to hear what they sound like.
    –TP

  62. russell: Lots and lots of freeware libraries to grab and use.
    Ah, but to waste time properly, writing code from scratch to run a stepper motor with accel/decel ramping is the only way to go.
    BTW, russell: I was thinking of you when I wrote an Arduino program to click a pair of solenoids at different rhythms — 3 against 2, 5 against 3, whatever. Never having been able to drum such patterns myself, I just wanted to hear what they sound like.
    –TP

  63. I also love Henry IV, part 1.
    The two Henry IV plays are perhaps Shakespeare’s greatest – the most dramatically satisfying, at least.
    The finest production I saw was at the Santa Cruz Shakespeare back in 2011, outside among the redwoods… sadly only Part 1
    Richard Ziman was a vastly superior Falstaff to the very disappointing Anthony Sher version I saw more recently.

  64. I also love Henry IV, part 1.
    The two Henry IV plays are perhaps Shakespeare’s greatest – the most dramatically satisfying, at least.
    The finest production I saw was at the Santa Cruz Shakespeare back in 2011, outside among the redwoods… sadly only Part 1
    Richard Ziman was a vastly superior Falstaff to the very disappointing Anthony Sher version I saw more recently.

  65. I highly suspect that Michael Cain has poked around in Arduino-land as well.
    I have an Uno here somewhere, but have largely jumped back and forth over the capabilities that the Arduino provides. I used the same ATMega chip in one project, but (for various reasons) designed my own circuit board for that one. Of late, I’ve been doing things where the real-time parts are “soft” but I need a lot more memory and processor cycles. That jumped me up to where a Raspberry Pi was more suitable. The Pis are really quite remarkable little devices if you don’t have hard real-time requirements or need built-in analog inputs.

  66. I highly suspect that Michael Cain has poked around in Arduino-land as well.
    I have an Uno here somewhere, but have largely jumped back and forth over the capabilities that the Arduino provides. I used the same ATMega chip in one project, but (for various reasons) designed my own circuit board for that one. Of late, I’ve been doing things where the real-time parts are “soft” but I need a lot more memory and processor cycles. That jumped me up to where a Raspberry Pi was more suitable. The Pis are really quite remarkable little devices if you don’t have hard real-time requirements or need built-in analog inputs.

  67. Some years back, read a piece in The Economist about the newly reconstructed and opened Globe Theater.
    Of particular interest was that the original format was “theater in the round”, with the groundlings standing, surrounding the stage.
    And how that setting completely energized a performance of Henry V ‘Crispin’s Day’ speech: the groundlings were in the part of Henry’s army.
    Even just reading about it? Chills.

  68. Some years back, read a piece in The Economist about the newly reconstructed and opened Globe Theater.
    Of particular interest was that the original format was “theater in the round”, with the groundlings standing, surrounding the stage.
    And how that setting completely energized a performance of Henry V ‘Crispin’s Day’ speech: the groundlings were in the part of Henry’s army.
    Even just reading about it? Chills.

  69. Lifetimes of topics here….for now I’ll settle for saying that TP‘s rhythm-clicking program sounds great! I never got beyond a passable 3 against 2 on the piano. IIRC in “Genius” it said that Feynman could do 12 against 13…Gack! This is like wanting to be able to dunk a basketball in my next lifetime, or dance like Colin Dunne.
    TP – There will probably never be an opportunity, but if there ever is, I’d love to hear your gizmo do those rhythms.
    *****
    With a few notable exceptions, I am not a hands-on person or a tinkerer…but I thought about exploring Arduino a few years ago because someone close to me has a great deal of difficulty with ordinary keyboards, and I wanted to experiment with other ways of doing it.
    I had pretty quickly to face the fact that I wasn’t going to pick up even the basics without a guide, and even then I probably wouldn’t enjoy it. The programming part — yes. The tinkering part — not so much. I don’t know an ohm from an ampere or a capacitor from a resistor and I don’t really care, so……. ๐Ÿ˜‰
    But one of my work pals still sends me news of inventions in the world of assistive technology. “Tap” was his latest offering — it’s almost exactly what I wanted to invent, a way to tap the fingers anywhere (thigh, lap, table, whatever) to send signals to the computer.
    In fact, I was interested in this for myself, and not just for my friend who has difficulties with chronic pain, computer-exacerbated. It would be nice to be able to sit on the bus, or in a cafe, or just about anywhere, tapping away unobtrusively.
    Reading the Amazon reviews, I decided that Tap is a great idea but not ready for prime time (esp. at $179). One reviewer said it got up to maybe 12 words a minute typing straight text….that’s almost an order of magnitude too slow. But it’s a great idea that I’m going to keep an eye on.

  70. Lifetimes of topics here….for now I’ll settle for saying that TP‘s rhythm-clicking program sounds great! I never got beyond a passable 3 against 2 on the piano. IIRC in “Genius” it said that Feynman could do 12 against 13…Gack! This is like wanting to be able to dunk a basketball in my next lifetime, or dance like Colin Dunne.
    TP – There will probably never be an opportunity, but if there ever is, I’d love to hear your gizmo do those rhythms.
    *****
    With a few notable exceptions, I am not a hands-on person or a tinkerer…but I thought about exploring Arduino a few years ago because someone close to me has a great deal of difficulty with ordinary keyboards, and I wanted to experiment with other ways of doing it.
    I had pretty quickly to face the fact that I wasn’t going to pick up even the basics without a guide, and even then I probably wouldn’t enjoy it. The programming part — yes. The tinkering part — not so much. I don’t know an ohm from an ampere or a capacitor from a resistor and I don’t really care, so……. ๐Ÿ˜‰
    But one of my work pals still sends me news of inventions in the world of assistive technology. “Tap” was his latest offering — it’s almost exactly what I wanted to invent, a way to tap the fingers anywhere (thigh, lap, table, whatever) to send signals to the computer.
    In fact, I was interested in this for myself, and not just for my friend who has difficulties with chronic pain, computer-exacerbated. It would be nice to be able to sit on the bus, or in a cafe, or just about anywhere, tapping away unobtrusively.
    Reading the Amazon reviews, I decided that Tap is a great idea but not ready for prime time (esp. at $179). One reviewer said it got up to maybe 12 words a minute typing straight text….that’s almost an order of magnitude too slow. But it’s a great idea that I’m going to keep an eye on.

  71. wj,
    Great speech, but I’m not as fond of the play as I am of Richard II and the Henry IV plays.
    Probably that’s partly because I’m one of those who dislikes Hal. Dumping his friend, as he always intended (“I shall, I will”); invading France on a pretext, killing prisoners, and so on.

  72. wj,
    Great speech, but I’m not as fond of the play as I am of Richard II and the Henry IV plays.
    Probably that’s partly because I’m one of those who dislikes Hal. Dumping his friend, as he always intended (“I shall, I will”); invading France on a pretext, killing prisoners, and so on.

  73. Henry V. is my favorite Shakespeare play. But I admit that is the one I know best and so this preference may be born of simple ignorance.
    I clearly prefer the Olivier film adaptation and find the Brannagh one lacking in comparision.
    But as far as adaptations go, Kurosawa’s version of Macbeth is difficult to beat.
    And then there are of course The Beatles doing a scene (Pyramus and Thisbe) from A Midsummer Night’s Dream ๐Ÿ˜‰

  74. Henry V. is my favorite Shakespeare play. But I admit that is the one I know best and so this preference may be born of simple ignorance.
    I clearly prefer the Olivier film adaptation and find the Brannagh one lacking in comparision.
    But as far as adaptations go, Kurosawa’s version of Macbeth is difficult to beat.
    And then there are of course The Beatles doing a scene (Pyramus and Thisbe) from A Midsummer Night’s Dream ๐Ÿ˜‰

  75. byomtov:
    Since it’s art, I try not to worry that much about the real-life individuals on which it is based. Just like I can enjoy Hamilton without worrying about whether any of the Founding Fathers could carry a tune.

  76. byomtov:
    Since it’s art, I try not to worry that much about the real-life individuals on which it is based. Just like I can enjoy Hamilton without worrying about whether any of the Founding Fathers could carry a tune.

  77. Iโ€™m with byomtov: Henry V is kind of a dick in the play, irrespective of what he might have been in real life.
    Some stirring rhetoric, though.
    Richard II, thatโ€™s true poetry.

  78. Iโ€™m with byomtov: Henry V is kind of a dick in the play, irrespective of what he might have been in real life.
    Some stirring rhetoric, though.
    Richard II, thatโ€™s true poetry.

  79. Ah, but to waste time properly, writing code from scratch to run a stepper motor with accel/decel ramping is the only way to go.
    I use to write code for indoor radar test ranges. I would waste time finding the stepper motor speed that would match the natural harmonic of the rig to see how hard it would shake.

  80. Ah, but to waste time properly, writing code from scratch to run a stepper motor with accel/decel ramping is the only way to go.
    I use to write code for indoor radar test ranges. I would waste time finding the stepper motor speed that would match the natural harmonic of the rig to see how hard it would shake.

  81. I would waste time finding the stepper motor speed that would match the natural harmonic of the rig to see how hard it would shake.
    Yet more evidence supporting my thesis that engineers are inherently dangerous people. I include myself in that category.

  82. I would waste time finding the stepper motor speed that would match the natural harmonic of the rig to see how hard it would shake.
    Yet more evidence supporting my thesis that engineers are inherently dangerous people. I include myself in that category.

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