for the better part of a (fairly long) week, I helped Ms. May, and Ms. Ellen to set-up this (functional) pottery-show: http://www.earthtotable.land Which will be showing through 19 April, 2016, here in Stuart, Florida
for a few days in March it RAINED!: (and rained, and rained (some more?!))
AND - in Publix, (grocery-store) one day we found a LOT of support from the Star Wars people!: click for support image
for a VERY FEW days in March, I got 'fired-up' about a Porsche (918) I might like to have (but then I looked at the price!): http://www.caranddriver.com/porsche/918
AND - we are a bit 'behind the times' and managed to buy a "Go Pro" Session 'adventure' camera - some THINGS from this magnificent gadget are available, here : http://www.vikingasia.org/Misc/GoPro_Session/Misc; they are BIG, and may take 'a while' to download to your computer - and they will then 'play' ? - these are all 'raw' (not a heck of a lot of) iMovie editing!... so take them with a 'grain of salt'... (and - oh, use these: gpuser / gppass)
Revelation / (RE)discovery of a "Law of Physics" / example of 'Murphy's Law':
This is something
that I am CERTAIN we are not the first couple to discover, but PERHAPS
if we share our 'fortune' with others it will help them? Ever lost your key(s) to 'X'? - Hmm? - now let's be honest here, who hasn't? Well
- we'll come-clean-here, and let you know that YES - we lose our keys,
also... BUT in the past 4-6 weeks we've FOUND keys and so this MUST BE A
TREND! I lost my keys to the 'shop' - two big garage doors, that
sometimes we lock when travelling out of town (but sometimes we don't
lock)... - Well - I found the keys in the pocket of a 'fuzzy' vest (that
was originally my Mom's) - and I guess I hadn't worn that vest in quite
some time (It being 'cold-weather-gear') and this being Florida. Just
this morning my Ms. Huggly put on a jacket that she hadn't worn in
'quite some time' - and, well - what does she discover but a long-lost
car-key... SO - Bottom-Line / Lesson to 'take away' - when you LOSE
SOMETHING (like a key) - look in the pockets of EVERYTHING AROUND and
you might just find them?! Some other news / views / things:
This one-cup coffee maker came out of Ms. May's kiln, last fall, and we borrowed it from it's Maker, Mr. Will.
Mr. Bill, looking at out at the 'cross-roads' (where two
boating-channels cross, from our kite-park; so-named because this is
where we fly our kites, a lot! The 'Rhino3D'
thing - modeling Pottery-Kilns, (and other Rhino3D things) - and where
I'm going / where I've been and how I'm getting there... ============================================================================================================
AND MUCH of what I have learned about Python (which I'm using for this, that, and the other) has come from using the great courses and knowledge available from: http://www.lynda.com
Rhino3D
has a companion software tool that is called (loosely) a
"graphical algorithm editor" (_Grasshopper_
is it's name) - it allows me (the 'pilot' for lack
of a
better word) to do several things that are not
inherently
possible in Rhino3D... (AND NOW
the Grasshopper thingie is available for the Macintosh version of
Rhino3D) - AND as you know - mostly - I LIKE to use the Rhino3D for
Macintosh version, and so having Grasshopper on the Mac is a WONDEROUS
development for me! BUT as in life - there's a trade-off, and here
it means that the Macintosh version of Rhino3D is a 'bit' behind the
WindowsPC version. At home I have both, admittedly, both on
'older' machines (3-5 years older)... I LIKE Macintosh's user interface,
but there is / are a NUMBER of features that just work better on the
Windows PC version. At this point I've learned if it doesn't
work after the 'expected' investment of time and effort on the
Macintosh version, TRY IT on the Windows PC version and it typically
works there -
a
screen-capture of a Rhino3D model upon which a kiln was built last
October (2015). To fire this kiln wood goes in the left side (for
something between 72 and 108 hours, non-stop) and on the extreme right
side there is NO Chimney shown, though in the kiln that was built there
is an obvious chimney...
At the top (of this image) you'll
see (especially on the left-end) a number of black curves, those are the
'tops' of the 'ellipses' (that are 'cut-off at the 'floor' level (the
green-surface)). Ellipses are an acceptable approach to the
catenary type of curve that the real kiln has. Ellipses are
(mathematically) a closed-curve, which in the mathematical-modelling
world are much easier to deal with than open curves. However
catenary curves are coming in the next issue of Rhino (probably then
end of 2016 or the beginning of 2017).
Though the PC-version of
Rhino3D is still the goldstandard, the people at McNeel are making
significant progress on the Macintosh version of Rhino3D, and
Grasshopper, so - in time things will be MUCH BETTER.
Most everyone has
heard of '_AutoCAD_' (which is actually a 'suite' of products)
and even in the (VERY EXPENSIVE) _AutoCAD_ world there is
nothing to compare to Rhino3D and Grasshopper applications
working together. Here's a tiny-representation of Mr. Bear(s) sailing our 14 foot skiff... if you want a BIGGER VERSION, click here!
Archived
BeachWeb monthly (and other) site(s):
Click here for a list of the archived months updated: 09:52 a.m.
(USA-EDT) Sunday, 20 March, 2016; by:
Mr._Bill on the Apple Macintosh 'Mac Mini' (10.11.3 - revID: 1b