Tuesday, April 30, 2024
Roman Spring: Latin Numerology
Vuelo de Brujas
"Ay, que bonito es volar . . ." — Song lyric.
And, for a somewhat different audience —
See also this journal on the above YouTube date — Aug. 23, 2014 —
in a Log24 search for "Signifying Nothing."
Monday, April 29, 2024
Sunday, April 28, 2024
Emily (Stone) in Paris
Minding the Gap
A design note from April 24 ten years ago —
A rather different design note from the same date ten years ago —
Saturday, April 27, 2024
“Some day I’ll find it, the Rainbow Connection” — Song lyric
" The first Initiation consisted of a class of 171 young women
on April 6, 1922, in the auditorium of the Scottish Rite Temple
in McAlester, Oklahoma. The original name was 'Order of the
Rainbow for Girls.' " — Wikipedia
A Storyteller’s Ending
Cynthia Ozick discusses the life and death of Philip Roth —
Her discussion ends with remarks on Roth's last novel, Nemesis .
That novel was reportedly published on October 5, 2010.
This journal on that date —
Friday, April 26, 2024
Whanganui* Guidance Suggested
* For the title, see posts tagged Whanganui, with a supplementary
tune for X producer Sam Levinson . . .
"Whose barn, what barn, my barn" — Song lyric
Freeplay
"No doubt that by orienting and organizing the coherence
of the system, the center of a structure permits the Freeplay
of its elements inside the total form."
— Derrida in Wikipedia
"How's tricks, dangerous love triangle?"
The Source:
Related reading . . .
Krapp for HYDRA
“Oh-oh, climb a mountain and turn around.”
Thursday, April 25, 2024
Bucharest Quest
"On Thursday, October 10, 2019, the University of Bucharest awarded the honorary title of Doctor Honoris Causa to one of the most important specialists in political science, Professor Daniel Chirot, professor at the "Henry M. Jackson" School of International Studies at the University of Washington, for his entire didactic and scientific activity. Through this distinction, awarded at the proposal of the Faculty of Political Sciences, Professor Daniel Chirot became a member of the academic community of the University of Bucharest." — From the University's website. |
Chirot was a resident of Hurlbut Hall at Harvard, as was I,
in the academic year 1960-1961.
This journal the day after the Chirot award . . .
See also Bucharest in this journal.
Space Trace
The title "Space Trace" was suggested yesterday by Claude.ai.
How classical space leaves a Galois trace:
Time and Chance
As for time … See this journal on the above Sting date.
A professional hallucinator that
some will find more entertaining:
Wednesday, April 24, 2024
Plan 9 for Helen Vendler
Annals of Numerology
The number 1949 in the previous post suggests a musical review —
From an August 23 nine years later . . . A tune for Sam Levinson —
Tuesday, April 23, 2024
Golden Keys
“Chess problems are the
hymn-tunes of mathematics.”
— G. H. Hardy,
A Mathematician’s Apology
|
|
“The key is the cocktail that begins the proceedings.”
– Brian Harley, Mate in Two Moves
"I named this script ocode and chmod 755'd it to make it executable…"
— Software forum post on the OCR program Tesseract
From the author of
The Pearly Gates of Cyberspace:
"Like so many other heroes
who have seen the light
of a higher order…."
Matchless
Design from 1697
Design from 1514
"One of those bells that now
and then rings" — Song lyric
Drama for Taylor Camp: The Wachowski Illuminati
Candle from Sense8, Season 1, Episode 1: “Limbic Resonance” —
"Don't solicit for your sister, it's not nice." — Song lyric
Monday, April 22, 2024
Passover Service
From Post 500 —
http://m759.net/wordpress/?p=500 —
"You've got to be carefully taught." — Song lyric
Dimensions
The dimensions of the "bricks" in the R. T. Curtis
"Miracle Octad Generator": 2×4.
For those who prefer narrative to mathematics . . .
Annals of American Beauty:
Sowing Confusion and Reaping …
Sowing Confusion and Reaping …
For Harlan Kane: The Brick Trick
From a transcript of the film —
— You could be making a killing out there consulting, but you’re laying brick. Why? — Because when I hold a brick in my hand, I know exactly what it is and what it will do. Every single time. Its form is its function. That gives me peace. |
The film is based on a novel of the same title, by an author,
Paul Lindsay, who reportedly died on September 1, 2011.
For some bricks of a different sort, see the "Miracle Octad Generator"
(MOG) of R. T. Curtis in this journal on Sept. 1, 2011 — September Morn.
Sunday, April 21, 2024
“As above, so below.”
Related reading: Theology for Storytellers.
Saturday, April 20, 2024
Night Hunt … Continues.
From posts tagged Night Hunt —
"When the men on the chessboard
get up and tell you where to go . . ."
Friday, April 19, 2024
Benchmarking Meta.ai
Transcription —
(With one correction … The Meta.ai phrase "the group of 322,560"
was changed to "a group of 322,560" … and one addition — the
acronym MOG was defined. Superscript numerals for missing footnotes
were removed.)
You What is the Cullinane diamond theorem? Meta AI The Cullinane diamond theorem states that every image of D (a 4×4 array of two-color diagonally divided square tiles) under the group G (a group of 322,560 permutations of these 16 tiles) has some ordinary or color-interchange symmetry. Here are some key points about the theorem :
|
Daniel Dennett Dies
Hexagram 39:
Obstruction
Obstruction. The southwest furthers.
(See Zenna Henderson.)
The northeast does not further.
(See Daniel Dennett.)
Graphic Design for Comedians:
The Old Carnegie Hall Joke
The Old Carnegie Hall Joke
For Harlan Kane and Jonathan Wingdings
The Tortured Designers Department
Thursday, April 18, 2024
Summer Solstice Entertainment, 2019
Wednesday, April 17, 2024
Waxing the Dean
The Harvard Crimson "an hour ago" —
Philosophy Professor Sean Kelly To Serve as
Next Arts and Humanities Dean
"Kelly, a philosopher, holds degrees in mathematics and computer science,
and in cognitive and linguistic sciences. Over the course of his career,
he has taught both philosophy and neuroscience.
This story will be updated. " (Log24 link to Kelly added).
Tuesday, April 16, 2024
The Pi Script
The studios, now beholden to much larger companies and financial institutions, became subject to oversight focused on short-term horizons. This summer, I spoke with the head of a film and TV studio purchased by a private-equity firm in recent years. “It used to be there were these big, crusty, old legacy companies that had a longer-term view,” he said, “that could absorb losses, and could take risks. But now everything is driven by quarterly results. The only thing that matters is the next board meeting. You don’t make any decisions that have long-term benefits. You’re always just thinking about, ‘How do I meet my numbers?’ ” Efficiency and risk avoidance began to run the game.
— "The Life and Death of Hollywood: |
Emma Watson turned 34 yesterday.
Monday, April 15, 2024
Art Space Meets Space Art
Click for more World Art Day obituaries.
Art Markers
https://doodles.google/doodle/celebrating-etel-adnan/
http://m759.net/wordpress/?s=Adnan
Life of Pi: Starting Over
"You need to import the NumPy library at the beginning of your script."
— Pi.ai yesterday
Scene from "The Hard Problem ," a play by Tom Stoppard.
“The Hard Problem” (A Tom Stoppard Play)
Sunday, April 14, 2024
Benchmarking Pi
An example of pi.ai's clear and pleasant conversational style
(output format simplified for presentation here) —
Can you help with computer coding problems? Absolutely, Steven! 💻 While I can't guarantee I'll have all the answers, I'll certainly do my best to help you debug and find solutions to your coding conundrums. Which coding language are you working with, and what's giving you trouble? I want to learn how Python can permute sections of a square array. There are several ways to permute sections of a square array in Python, depending on your specific needs. Here are a few examples: Using NumPy's random.permutation() function: python import numpy as np arr = np.array([[1, 2], [3, 4]]) permuted_arr = np.random.permutation(arr) Using itertools.permutations(): python import itertools arr = [[1, 2], [3, 4]] permutations = list(itertools.permutations(arr)) Using custom permutation algorithms: python def custom_permutation(arr): # your custom permutation logic here arr = [[1, 2], [3, 4]] permuted_arr = custom_permutation(arr) Each method has its own strengths and weaknesses, and which one you choose will depend on the size of your array, the number of permutations you need, and your performance requirements. I would like to use python's custom permutation method to permute the four quadrants of a 4×4 array. Here's an example of how to define a custom permutation function in Python to permute the four quadrants of a 4×4 array: python def custom_permutation(arr): # Split array into 4 quadrants q1 = arr[:2, :2] q2 = arr[:2, 2:] q3 = arr[2:, :2] q4 = arr[2:, 2:] # Permute quadrants permuted_arr = np.block([ [q3, q1], [q4, q2] ]) return permuted_arr # Sample 4x4 array arr = np.array([[1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8], [9, 10, 11, 12], [13, 14, 15, 16]]) permuted_arr = custom_permutation(arr) print(permuted_arr) In this example, we've defined a function custom_permutation() that takes a 4×4 NumPy array as input. The function splits the array into four quadrants (q1, q2, q3, and q4), and then uses NumPy's block() function to create a new array with the quadrants permuted. The resulting permuted_arr array has its quadrants rearranged. Of course, this is just one possible permutation of the array's quadrants. You can modify the custom_permutation() function to implement other permutations as needed. I tried the code you gave me and got the error “np name not defined.” Apologies for that! I missed an import statement in the previous example. You need to import the NumPy library at the beginning of your script to use the np alias and its functions. Here's the corrected code: python import numpy as np def custom_permutation(arr): # Split array into 4 quadrants q1 = arr[:2, :2] q2 = arr[:2, 2:] q3 = arr[2:, :2] q4 = arr[2:, 2:] # Permute quadrants permuted_arr = np.block([ [q3, q1], [q4, q2] ]) return permuted_arr # Sample 4x4 array arr = np.array([[1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8], [9, 10, 11, 12], [13, 14, 15, 16]]) permuted_arr = custom_permutation(arr) print(permuted_arr) This code should work now without any issues. It did work. Thank you, Pi. You're very welcome, Steven! I'm glad the code worked for you. If you have any more questions or need help with anything else, feel free to ask.
Recline in Peace . . .
Saturday, April 13, 2024
Still-Point Architecture
Something Old . . .
See Zihuatanejo in this journal.
Sombrero tip to a Venice Beach Space Barn* reporter for . . .
Space meditation at Zihuatanejo.
* Adapted song lyric: "Whose barn, what barn, her barn . . . ."
… Something New … Something Borrowed …
Friday, April 12, 2024
The Gambit Plan
Citation — Lattanzio, Ryan (December 7, 2020). "After 'Queen's Gambit,'
Anya Taylor-Joy and Scott Frank Reuniting for Nabokov Adaptation".
IndieWire. — Wikipedia
Thanks for the warning.
See as well Scott Frank on chessboard space.
Carmel Review
"Clint Eastwood, 93, appears frail but spirited
as he is seen in rare public appearance at
primatologist Dr. Jane Goodall event in Carmel"
— By Karen Ruiz For Dailymail.com
Published: 10:39 am EDT, 12 April 2024
The event, on Sunday, March 24, 2024, suggests a review —
Stephen King’s Garland
The Presbyterian Exorcist . . . Continues.
Thursday, April 11, 2024
Devs: Hollywood Development Hell
From The Man Who Knew Infinity to The Man Who Knew Zero.
Related mathematics: The Diamond Theorem Correlation, which
results from interchanging infinity and zero in the figure below.
"Read something that means something."
— New Yorker ad
Click image for
related posts.
Background — Relativity Problem in Log24.
Wednesday, April 10, 2024
Hollywood Benchmark: The Blue Monkey* Diamond
* The name "Blue Monkey" is from a 2003 film. See also Hanuman
in this journal. The image described by Vertex AI is from IMDb …
Theater Obituary: Data and Metadata
Tuesday, April 9, 2024
Physics Obituary
The New York Times today reports a Monday, April 8, 2024, death —
Monday, April 8, 2024
Alexandria Quartets*
For my own arrival at CERN, see Zenodo in this journal.
* A title suggested by the work of Lawrence Durrell and by
geometric quartets in figurate geometry.
Sunday, April 7, 2024
Annals of Complex Results: Miller’s Art
Saturday, April 6, 2024
Bosch Day at the Prado
Annals of Inexcusable Pythagorism
"To enlarge this contemplation unto all the mysteries and secrets,
accomodable unto this number, were inexcusable Pythagorism…."
— Sir Thomas Browne, Hydriotaphia: Urn Burial
Friday, April 5, 2024
Annals of Magic: The Browne-Franklin Configuration
Rite of Spring
https://r-a-w.net/artwork/le-sacre-du-printemps/ .
This post was suggested by . . .
. . . and by an Instagram link to an art museum in Denmark.
Annals of Random Fandom
A search in Fandom for Saul Durand leads back,
as often happens, to Indiana Jones . . .
Fandom page with a completely irrelevant Indiana Jones video.
Thursday, April 4, 2024
Annals of Invention:
The Reverse Tinfoil Hat
See also a Manchester post in this journal.
The Reverse Tinfoil Hat
Figurate Geometry: Order-5 Triangle Labelings
Wednesday, April 3, 2024
For a Dead Playwright (and Dr. Yen Lo):
I Ching Meets Cha-Ching
Amazon order for Here in the Dark: A Novel by Alexis Soloski,
author of today's New York Times obituary for a playwright
who reportedly died last night ——
Update at 12:03 PM ET Wednesday — From April 1 . . .
I Ching Meets Cha-Ching
Aesthetics from The New York Times :
“High Art and Low Humor”
Report of a Tuesday death:
For another such mixture, see yesterday's posts
now also tagged Art Humor.
"Always with a little humor." — Dr. Yen Lo
“High Art and Low Humor”
In Memoriam … John Barth
The New York Times reports that novelist and academic John Barth
died yesterday at 93. For Barth in this journal, vide . . .
For more extensive remarks by Barth on minimalism, see . . .
https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/
98/06/21/specials/barth-minimalism.html.
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
Where Madness Lies … and Sometimes Tells the Truth
Tuesday Weld in the 1972 film of Didion's Play It As It Lays :
Note the making of a matching pattern.
Annals of Memory and Desire: Gathering Moss
For Harlan Kane: The Rothfeld Explanation
Earlier . . .
A Riddler Wannabe —
Related material — The Krauss passage quoted as above
by Shechtman in The New Yorker in December 2021 appears
also in a Log24 post of October 18, 2017: "Three Small Grids."
Monday, April 1, 2024
“Ask Copilot anything.”
"How's tricks, dangerous love triangle?"
The Source: