The story starts more than 40 years ago. In fact it was either 1973 or 1974. The confusion is over the year in which the list was published. What list? A list of the best albums of 1973. I think it was in Playboy, and the list was probably published in early 1974. The top three on the list were…
1. Yessongs - Yes
2. Light as a Feather - Return to Forever
3. Chicago 6 - Chicago
Chicago 6 was one of my favorite albums at the time, and I had to find the two albums that beat it out. I headed down to my local record store, The Wherehouse.
Now, a quick aside…back in 1974, most single LPs were $3.99 at the Wherehouse. A lot of my present collection of LPs were bought around this time, and at this price. In a moment you will see why this is important.
I did not find a copy of Light as a Feather, and it would be a couple more years before I heard Jazz Fusion Supergroup Return to Forever, but I did find a copy of Yessongs. The problem is that Yessongs is a triple LP, and it cost $10.99. That sounds like very little now, but for a 17 year old who worked for $1.90/hour, that was a lot of money. A lot of money for something I had never heard before.
But, I bought Yessongs, and from the moment I heard the strains of the Firebird Suite, which Yes used as an intro to the concerts recorded for Yessongs, I was blown away. I had never heard anything like it, and I loved it.
I want to say that it changed my life, but other than my taste in music, I am not sure that is really true. What I can say is that I have never lost my love for the music of Yes.
Khatru comes from the Yes song Siberian Khatru. I use it as a mark of my love for the music of Yes.
What does Khatru mean? Hell if I know.
Jon Anderson, the vocalist for Yes, who wrote the lyrics, said that it meant "as you wish" in Yemeni. Yemeni isn't actually a language, at best it is an Arabic dialect, and Khatru does not seem to have a meaning anyone can pin down.
Many years ago, my wife found a website that said that Khatru meant Mongoose in Egyptian, or something like that. I do not remember exactly, and I can no longer find the website.
So, back to the question, what does Khatru mean? Khatru means, one who considers the group Yes to be important enough to his life to take a word from a song and use it as part of his online name.
That leaves us with Aude.
Aude is a department in southern France. When I went to France in 1976, Carcassonne in Aude was the first city where I lived. The river Aude flows north from the Pyrenees and turns east in Carcassonne before heading out to the Mediterranean. I spent a month or two in the small town of Limoux, which is also on the Aude.
In latin, Aude means dare, as part of the phrase "Sapere Aude" from the First Book of Letters by the Roman poet Horace. It is my understanding that this is the origin of the French word "audace" and the English "audacity."
That isn't why I picked it, but I like it.
Then recently, I found that Aude is also a french feminine name. I don't remember meeting anyone named Aude while I was in France, but I didn't meet more than a few hundred French during my two years, so I may have been unlucky, or it may have been more commonly used since. This has nothing to do with why I picked it, and it doesn't matter to me now.
Oh, and Aude is pronounced "ode." Just like the type of laudatory poem.
So, that is why Aude Khatru, or more commonly, AudeKhatru.
Saturday, April 14, 2018
Why Aude Khatru?
Labels:
Aude,
Aude Khatru,
AudeKhatru,
Close to the Edge,
France,
Khatru,
Siberian Khatru,
Yes,
Yessongs
Saturday, April 7, 2018
Ingress, Part 2
Okay, so previously
I gave a primer on Ingress, and now it is time to go into a bit deeper detail.
If you get into
Ingress, you will learn that there is a big story that goes with the game, and
that has been playing out for the last five and half years. Niantic has tried to engage the players by
creating a story that is pushed forward by periodic videos that often look like
News Reports. During those five and half
years many things have been added to game, both story and mechanics. You will learn all about that if you play,
and you won't care much if you don't
So, the game
actually plays like this. You drive
around to different portals and hack them, and then attempt to link them to
other portals. Now, you do not do the
hacking and linking while moving…at least
you shouldn't, and in Austin, Texas, where I live, it is actually
against the law (no hand held devices while driving).
Portals are far
enough apart that you will almost certainly have to drive to find more than a
few. The game really should play out by
driving to an area, parking your car and then walking around to hack all the
nearby portals.
As an example, there
are at least a dozen portals within a mile of my house. However, there are only two within 200 yards of my house, so it depends
on how far you want to walk. I find that
most people drive into an area with a lot of portals, and then walk to hack
those portals. Some parks and churches
will have several portals in a small area, so it becomes easy to hack many
portals with minimal effort.
Ingress is largely a
loner game, but not necessarily a lonely game.
You go out hacking when you have time, and that often means you do it
alone. You don't need other people to play
the game. However, there is a Comm
function in the game that allows you to talk to other players. It can be filtered to your Faction and a
distance, so you can talk to local players on your side. That means you can find other players near by
and work together.
The Austin Ingress
community is pretty good, and the Austin Enlightened group even has a webpage,
and they use Google+ and Slack to communicate outside the game. This allows the local group to coordinate
efforts and create local events. There
are also game wide events, which center on specific cities around the world,
usually a few major sites, and then more minor sites. Hundreds of people meet up and compete for
the day.
Lastly, one of the
things I like best is that while the Resistance and Enlightened are rivals,
there is no real animosity between the factions. Though the ingame story pits them as rivals
struggling to control the destiny of mankind, the players are just playing a
game and having fun. That is probably
the best thing about Ingress.
Five and a half
years and still going strong.
Labels:
enlightened,
games,
ingress,
Niantic,
resistance,
Science Fiction,
Shapers
Sunday, March 25, 2018
Ingress
I've been playing
Ingress for four years, and I suppose it is time that I said something about
it. If you want a less personal view on
what Ingress is, head over to Wikipedia.
The article there pretty good though completely cold and impersonal.
Ingress is an
Augmented Reality Science Fiction game.
Here's the story, more or less, as the game creators would tell it.
In 2012, along with
finding the Higgs Boson, the scientists at CERN also found something called
Exotic Matter (XM). What Exotic Matter
is, is hard to describe, but it is pouring in through portals, and it can be
used to effect the minds of human beings.
A small company
developed a scanner than runs on a smartphone that can detect XM. The scanner can also be used to capture the
portal, and to hack the portal. Other
information has come out slowly, about a mysterious alien race called the
Shapers.
The Shapers said
that they had come to help human kind take the next step in their
evolution. Some believed the Shapers and
called themselves the Enlightened.
Others think that the Shapers are coming to conquer and called
themselves the Resistance.
And that defines the
choice you make when you enter the game.
You must choose a side, Resistance or Enlightened…Blue or Green?
As far as game play
is concerned, it is that simple. Either
the portals you capture turn blue, or they turn green.
The game is actually
scored by Mind Control Units…sounds ominous doesn't it?
After you capture
portals, you try to link the portal to other portals. Do I need to say that you can only link to
portals of the same color?
So, the process goes
like this. You use your scanner to hack
a portal. You have to be close to the
portal to hack it or capture it. When
you hack the portal you get gear. The
two most important pieces of gear are resonators and portal keys. You capture a portal by putting a resonator
on the portal. You use the portal key to
link another portal to the one you have a key for.
So, restarting the
process from the beginning, and assuming you found an unclaimed portal. You hack the portal for gear. Then you use the resonator you just got to
capture the portal. Actually, you have
to put 8 resonators on the portal to fully activate it. And, we will assume you got a portal key for
it. Then you travel to another portal,
repeat the process and then you can link portal 2 back to portal 1.
Unfortunately, you
still haven't made any points for your team, though you will have gained Agent
Points (AP). Quick aside, I have heard
them called Access Points as well, but I would swear that they were called Agent
Points when I joined. The player is an
Agent of either the Resistance or the Enlightened. AP are basically the experience points of Ingress, and they work pretty much like XP in every other game ever created. AP is how you level up, and there are perks
as you level up to max at level 16.
Next, you would go
to a third portal and claim that. Now,
if you have three portals and a key for each portal, you can now link them in a
triangle. This creates a field. Technically, the name is a Mind Control
Field. That's right, this is where the
Mind Control Units come from. The field
gets a value, Mind Units (MU), which, at least supposedly has to do with the
number of people who might be affected by the field. Larger areas have more MU, but more densely
populated areas have more MU. A field
covering part of the inner city would have very high MU, while a much larger
area out in the country would probably have fewer.
There is more to the
game, but this is the basics. You can
work with other agents in your area to create larger fields, and to cover more
of your city with fields. You can even
work with far away agents to cover whole states. There have even been links across the
Atlantic.
This post has gone
on long enough, and I haven't really said anything about what I think about the
game. So, stay tuned for a future post
with impressions, and maybe a little more about the reality of game play.
Labels:
enlightened,
games,
ingress,
Niantic,
resistance,
Science Fiction,
Shapers
Monday, March 12, 2018
Never Trust Barbeque Sauce
That's right, never trust barbeque sauce.
And, if you have to trust barbeque sauce, wear a red shirt.
That is today's wisdom, and here in Texas, that's important wisdom, because if you do not know the wiliness of barbeque sauce, then you are lost.
And, never trust anyone who was born after the Beatles came to America, 1964. If they weren't born by then they are too young to really understand the important things in life. I may only have been seven, but I remember...well, I had older sisters.
There is only one Star Trek, the original. It isn't Star Trek: TOS, it is just Star Trek, the first, the original, the one that doesn't have to have a subtitle. I remember watching it first run, I was 9...at the start of the first season. I had to beg my Mom and Dad to let me stay up late every Thursday, because it ran 30 minutes past my bedtime.
I remember the moon landing in 1969.
I didn't trust the president then, and I don't trust the president now. Then it was Tricky Dick, and now it is Cadet Bone Spur. One was a dishonest politician, and the other is...should I be nice, or use the "m" word?
In fact, it is a bad idea to trust any kind of sauce. They sit there on your plate, looking longingly at your shirt. I can just imagine the bits of sauce yelling up from the plate at the sauce on your fork...
"Jump! Go on! Do it! Shirt! Shirt! Shirt!"
And then cheering when their fellow sauce bit hits your shirt.
Have I rambled on long enough? No, let's keep going.
Remember to pet your dog and kick your cat. No! Wait! Not kick, what's the word I am looking for...stroke, yes, that's it. Start over.
Remember to pet your dog and stroke your cat. It doesn't take red sauce stains off your shirt, but you'll smile and you won't care as much.
And now, take a deep breath. And another...now cough, you know you want to, and now get up and get another soda from the kitchen.
And remember....
Never trust barbeque sauce.
And, if you have to trust barbeque sauce, wear a red shirt.
That is today's wisdom, and here in Texas, that's important wisdom, because if you do not know the wiliness of barbeque sauce, then you are lost.
And, never trust anyone who was born after the Beatles came to America, 1964. If they weren't born by then they are too young to really understand the important things in life. I may only have been seven, but I remember...well, I had older sisters.
There is only one Star Trek, the original. It isn't Star Trek: TOS, it is just Star Trek, the first, the original, the one that doesn't have to have a subtitle. I remember watching it first run, I was 9...at the start of the first season. I had to beg my Mom and Dad to let me stay up late every Thursday, because it ran 30 minutes past my bedtime.
I remember the moon landing in 1969.
I didn't trust the president then, and I don't trust the president now. Then it was Tricky Dick, and now it is Cadet Bone Spur. One was a dishonest politician, and the other is...should I be nice, or use the "m" word?
In fact, it is a bad idea to trust any kind of sauce. They sit there on your plate, looking longingly at your shirt. I can just imagine the bits of sauce yelling up from the plate at the sauce on your fork...
"Jump! Go on! Do it! Shirt! Shirt! Shirt!"
And then cheering when their fellow sauce bit hits your shirt.
Have I rambled on long enough? No, let's keep going.
Remember to pet your dog and kick your cat. No! Wait! Not kick, what's the word I am looking for...stroke, yes, that's it. Start over.
Remember to pet your dog and stroke your cat. It doesn't take red sauce stains off your shirt, but you'll smile and you won't care as much.
And now, take a deep breath. And another...now cough, you know you want to, and now get up and get another soda from the kitchen.
And remember....
Never trust barbeque sauce.
Labels:
barbecue,
barbeque,
barbeque sauce,
BBQ,
Beatles,
Cadet Bone Spur,
Moon Landing,
Star Trek,
Tricky Dick
Saturday, February 24, 2018
HP Elite X2
My work gave me one
of these a couple of weeks back, and so I thought I would give an early
review. In case you cannot tell from the
picture, the Elite X2 is a lot like the Surface Pro...the latest one. I'm not sure what number they are up to, and
I don't care.
It's a tablet with a
detachable keyboard. The keyboard is
much like the Surface, in that part of can cling (probably magnetically) to the
lower edge of the tablet, the part below the actual screen. This gives it that desired ergonomic, slanted
keyboard.
Now, I have tested a
recent Surface with the slanted keyboard, and I did not really like it. The keyboard is not supported between the
screen and the front edge, and on the Surface, this makes the keyboard bounce
in a way that I found...disconcerting. I
had an original Surface RT, where the keyboard rested flat on the table or
desk, and I got used to the flat keyboard.
I did not really like the new Surface TypeCover for extended typing.
But, you should note
the silver upper side (I keep having to avoid the word "surface" to
avoid confusion), which is a bit sturdier than the plastic upper side of the
Surface TypeCover. I don't know if it is
metal or what, but it is a bit stiffer than the TypeCover, and so typing this
review on it is not disconcerting in the same way as the Surface TypeCover.
So, I like the
keyboard. It should be said that I
really like laptop keyboards. I love the
feel of not having to move the key more than the tiniest bit. I feel like I type faster, even though I have
no objective proof to back that up.
The screen is very
bright, and extremely sharp. It is a 12
inch screen with 1920 x 1280 resolution, and that is the first problem...at
least for me. That is an extremely high
resolution for a 12 inch screen. That is
the same as the resolution on my 24" monitor. Everything is very small, and for a 61 year
old man with less than perfect eyesight, that is a bit much. And, as anyone who has used an LCD
knows...well, at least the ones who have tried to lower the resolution, things
can get a bit fuzzy if you lower the resolution. There are other ways to effect changes in the
size of text on the screen, but even they are less than ideal.
I feel like this
resolution is a downside to this device.
I like the pen, but
I have to admit that I have not used it much.
The kickstand works well, though I have not had a real need to adjust it
from a single position. The kickstand
has a first position with what I would call a soft lock. When you push it out, it goes out a bit and
stops. This position is good for
typing. There is no click at the stop,
but the resistance gets stronger, and from that point it simply requires a
little more pressure to move it along until the screen is nearly level with the
desk surface. This makes it very easy to
snap the kickstand out for writing, and then you can adjust it for other things
you might be doing with your Elite.
There is a tiny
problem with the keyboard, but it is how close it sits to the bottom of the
Windows desktop. It makes it difficult
to touch the icons on the Taskbar. It is
about the smallest of problems, but I am trying to be thorough.
I have not had a
chance to check out the Bang & Olufsen speakers. Speakers can be a problem in a work
environment, especially when you work in a cube with others in close proximity.
I like the Elite
X2. A while back, I looked at the
Spectre X2, which is the consumer version of the Elite. Now, I want the Spectre, which should have
most of the same features at a better price...at least I hope so.
Labels:
Elite X2,
Hewlett Packard,
HP,
HP Elite X2,
PC,
reviews,
tablets,
Windows
Sunday, February 11, 2018
I Have Lost my Voice
I have not done a great job with this blog, and I think I
finally figured out why.
I have lost my voice.
Obviously…well, not obviously to my readers, but still
obviously, I do not mean that literally.
My speaking voice is just fine.
25 years ago, I graduated from college, rather later than
usual for getting a Bachelor’s degree, as I went to three different
universities and in between #2 and #3, I spent about a decade working. During my third set of school days I used to
carry around paper notebooks and during breaks I would write in them on all
sorts of topics. I would call those
topics philosophical in nature, but it was often about defining certain things,
like intelligence.
I have also kept a journal for the last 43 years. I have several bound volumes and the last
decade or so is on computer.
I have done a lot of writing over the years, and yet I cannot
seem to keep up with this blog. I think
that the problem is that I have too many distractions. This ties in with the fact that I do not read
as much as I used to. I used to read
between 50 and 75 books a year. Some
years ago, I set myself the goal of reading 100 books in a year and for three
successive years I met that goal.
Lately, I have been lucky to top 25 books in a year.
I have games on my phone, games on my tablet, and games on my
PC. I have videos on my hard drive,
Netflix, Amazon Prime, not to mention the length and breadth of the
internet. So, I have a vast array of
things designed to help me avoid boredom, but it was that boredom that gave me
time to think deeply, and then write.
One of the problems is that distraction does not really
relieve boredom. It just masks the
boredom. It delays the boredom. Then the video ends, or you finish the game
and the boredom rushes back in and fills the void.
The real question is what, if anything, I am going to do
about it?
I am not sure that I can eliminate the boredom with writing,
but I think it might help, at least a little.
Wednesday, October 18, 2017
Reading "Good" Books
Has anyone ever reached adulthood without having been presented with a list of books that "everyone" should read?
Wait!!
Come on back, I'm not going to bore you with another such list. Maybe later, but it will be well marked, and it is likely to be a list of favorite books, rather than ones that I think are important enough to deserve attention.
My first experience with a book I thought I should read was Moby Dick. I ended up with copy while I was in school, and I tried starting it several times. I couldn't get past the first hundred pages. It was just too boring. It was only years later, when I downloaded a free copy for Kindle that I finally got through it.
In many ways, Moby Dick is almost more like a documentary essay on whaling than what I think of as a novel. It is only towards the end that the story really takes off and moves quickly towards the end. When you finish it, you may remember as an exciting story, but it is really only the last quarter of the book that is exciting.
Then, I thought that I ought to read some Dickens. Back in school somewhere I read A Tale of Two Cities, and I thought I would move on to David Copperfield...especially since I had moved into the Copperfield neighbor and I was surrounded by streets with names taken from the book.
David Copperfield was even worse than Moby Dick. I still have never finished it. Eventually, I moved on to Bleak House.
I was watching QI, a BBC TV show, and they mentioned the case on which Bleak House is based...supposedly.
Now, Bleak House turned out to be much more up my alley. Some of it told by the very modest Esther, who turns out to be the daughter of someone very famous. If you haven't read it, go get it for free on Amazon and read it. It is well worth the time.
At the moment, I have one of these "important" books on my tablet and another waiting in the wings. What I cannot figure out is why I chose to read Walden first. So far, it is not too bad, though it is rather slow, as one might expect from a book that is basically philosophy with a small bit of autobiography thrown in.
The one in the wings is important to me, and I am told important to America, Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations. From an early age, I have been told that this is the book that lays out the concepts of capitalism that are at the foundation of American business.
I believe that in the 21st Century capitalism has basically run off the rails, though I think that it started to stray from the true philosophy of capitalism with the first Robber Barons, the industrialists who amassed huge fortunes by exploiting their employees.
Unfortunately, I do not have the foundation to back up that thought, and that is why I mean to start with Adam Smith. I want to know what his concepts were before I start really talking about how modern capitalism has strayed from the true faith.
One last thing...these types of books are often boring and hard to get through. The books I have mentioned here were not written for a man born in the midst of the 20th Century and raised on TV. I find I have to read something else to keep me sane. At the moment that is a collection of short stories about Lord Peter Wimsey. I love these stories and have read a fair number of them. They come out of the same period as Agatha Christie's novels and the works of P.G. Wodehouse, another favorite of mine.
Wait!!
Come on back, I'm not going to bore you with another such list. Maybe later, but it will be well marked, and it is likely to be a list of favorite books, rather than ones that I think are important enough to deserve attention.
My first experience with a book I thought I should read was Moby Dick. I ended up with copy while I was in school, and I tried starting it several times. I couldn't get past the first hundred pages. It was just too boring. It was only years later, when I downloaded a free copy for Kindle that I finally got through it.
In many ways, Moby Dick is almost more like a documentary essay on whaling than what I think of as a novel. It is only towards the end that the story really takes off and moves quickly towards the end. When you finish it, you may remember as an exciting story, but it is really only the last quarter of the book that is exciting.
Then, I thought that I ought to read some Dickens. Back in school somewhere I read A Tale of Two Cities, and I thought I would move on to David Copperfield...especially since I had moved into the Copperfield neighbor and I was surrounded by streets with names taken from the book.
David Copperfield was even worse than Moby Dick. I still have never finished it. Eventually, I moved on to Bleak House.
I was watching QI, a BBC TV show, and they mentioned the case on which Bleak House is based...supposedly.
Now, Bleak House turned out to be much more up my alley. Some of it told by the very modest Esther, who turns out to be the daughter of someone very famous. If you haven't read it, go get it for free on Amazon and read it. It is well worth the time.
At the moment, I have one of these "important" books on my tablet and another waiting in the wings. What I cannot figure out is why I chose to read Walden first. So far, it is not too bad, though it is rather slow, as one might expect from a book that is basically philosophy with a small bit of autobiography thrown in.
The one in the wings is important to me, and I am told important to America, Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations. From an early age, I have been told that this is the book that lays out the concepts of capitalism that are at the foundation of American business.
I believe that in the 21st Century capitalism has basically run off the rails, though I think that it started to stray from the true philosophy of capitalism with the first Robber Barons, the industrialists who amassed huge fortunes by exploiting their employees.
Unfortunately, I do not have the foundation to back up that thought, and that is why I mean to start with Adam Smith. I want to know what his concepts were before I start really talking about how modern capitalism has strayed from the true faith.
One last thing...these types of books are often boring and hard to get through. The books I have mentioned here were not written for a man born in the midst of the 20th Century and raised on TV. I find I have to read something else to keep me sane. At the moment that is a collection of short stories about Lord Peter Wimsey. I love these stories and have read a fair number of them. They come out of the same period as Agatha Christie's novels and the works of P.G. Wodehouse, another favorite of mine.
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