Tuesday, April 07, 2026

NYC Transit Museum

Friday was my birthday, so on Saturday we took a field trip to Brooklyn and Manhattan.

In downtown Brooklyn, we went to see the transit museum, which--appropriately--is located underground. 

I didn't know this, but the first leg of the subway (beneath Manhattan) was built in 1904. Over 7,000 workers for a 1.5 mile length of track. 

Given working conditions back then, I don't know how anyone survived.

You can click on this (and any of these photographs) for a larger image:

















Here's a selection of employee badges from many different eras (as the subway has been expanded almost continuously for the last century):

















When I first saw this next exhibit, it seemed wild. Why would your employee badge have a designated hospital on it in case of compression sickness? Then I remembered--from an earlier exhibit--that Irish, Italians, and blacks were the primary frontline workers. Because of segregation and ethnic discrimination, I'm almost certain there would have been different hospitals for each group.

















Here's a beautiful poem:

















I don't remember who did this lithograph (I think it's a lithograph), but it's spectacular:












This is one of those underrated museums that seems to be around every corner here.

Monday, April 06, 2026

Memories of a Death

Mom 96.0 told me a poignant story on Sunday.

Her dad died when she was about four of a sudden heart attack. I'm not sure how old he was, but I'm guessing he was very young, probably still in his thirties.

Mom was so young that she doesn't remember much, but two details still stand out.

The first was chocolate cake. Everyone in the neighborhood brought food over, and one of the items was a chocolate cake. Mom had never had it before (she grew up in the Depression, when desert wasn't exactly a priority), and she said it was the most delicious thing she'd ever eaten. 

The second detail was that in those days, the body was embalmed and then returned to the house for a few days. I know this is still done, at times, but it seems so chilling to me. You're four years old, your father died suddenly, and now he's in the living room for a few days? It sounds emotionally devastating.

Thursday, April 02, 2026

Friday Links!

Leading off this week, an incredibly moving article: ‘I was in the pit of despair’: Non-speaking autistic novelist Woody Brown on his journey from write-off to writer

A mess that's been around for decades: Polygraphs have major flaws. Are there better options?

These are staggeringly beautiful, as always: Strandbeest evolution 2025.

A deep, fascinating dive: The Profession That Does Not Exist: Writing won’t make you a living.

From Joshua B., and I have some characteristics in common: Consider the Greenland Shark.

From Wally, and it's a very fun info-type graphic: The Deep Sea. A guide that is also quite interesting: Kosher Food at MLB Stadiums: The Complete 2026 Guide. Incredible luxury: The ‘Hunger Games,’ Hamptons-Style: Hiring a Private Chef for Summer. This is fascinating: The Life-Changing Power of a Book Review Before Algorithms: How The Washington Post’s now-defunct Book World transformed the careers of two giants of American literature. A terrific read: Typos Have Plagued Us for Centuries. Just Ask the Publishers Who Printed the Seventh Commandment as ‘Thou Shalt Commit Adultery’ in 1631. Montreal! The 10 Largest NHL Arenas in North America

This Doesn't Feel Like the Future

I worked with a developmental editor and she gave so much excellent feedback that the book will be much, much better after the next draft.

It's also going to be a ton of work.

The best part of working with her is that she understood the book. She knew exactly what it was trying to do, she was fully invested in the narrative, and she gave me enough praise to soften the critical blows. 

I still think I'm looking at completion by the end of the year, but I now have a rare opportunity to improve the manuscript  beyond what I thought was possible. Both her comments and my reflection on her comments have generated a ton of new ideas and connections. 

I still have one thing in particular left to solve. I finally had an idea today that should move me in the right direction. 

This shit is hard. 

Wednesday, April 01, 2026

Queens

When I was in Austin, I only heard English (mostly) and Spanish (occasionally). 

I'd walk down streets and hear person after person speaking English, and it felt strange. This is what happens when you live in the enormous melting pot that is Queens.

I missed hearing five languages a block. Not just a little, either.

I was walking back from somewhere on Saturday (after I'd gotten home) and saw a little strip center that is the epitome of this borough:










If you can't quite make it out, here are the stores (in order from left to right):
--laundromat (everywhere here)
--Irish tavern
--Chinese halal restaurant
--pharmacy
--Thai restaurant
--French cafe
--Moroccan restaurant

That's totally on-brand for what it's like here. If it was closer to where I live there would be at least one Greek restaurant, too.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Airports and Casinos

I bet I've written about this before.

I was struck by how there was no concept of time in the Austin airport. No concept, that is, except in relation to when one's plane leaves. It was before 9 a.m. and bars were packed. People were eating barbecue and burgers and fried chicken and pizza and it didn't matter that it wasn't breakfast time.

That's when it hit me: I was inside a casino, basically, where time doesn't exist. Want a hamburger at 6 a.m.? No problem. Want to drink before breakfast? Also no problem. Airports are on a near-24 hour schedule, just like casinos. 

The logical step here is to start putting casinos inside airports. Surely that can't be far away.

Monday, March 30, 2026

Travel

I went to Austin Mon-Thursday last week to see my sister and Mom 96.0

I heard wild stories about security wait times at both airports (JFK, Austin-Bergstrom) before I went.

My wait at JFK: five minutes.

My wait at Austin: twelve minutes.

I believe I understand why I missed the massive lines, and maybe it will help you if you're unfortunate enough to need to travel before the funding standoff is resolved.

1. Do not, under any circumstances, take an early morning flight
Those flights before 7 a.m. may seem super sexy because you'll have most of the day at your destination, but those are also the flights where security lines are, by far, the longest. 3+ hours at some airports. No matter how tempting they sound, just don't. 

2. Late morning flights appear to be your best bet
Both of my flights left between 11-12 a.m. The lines were so short they barely existed. A TSA agent told me it was the best time, by far, to travel.

3. Get TSA Pre or Global Entry
At both airports, TSA Pre was still functioning. It can make an enormous difference, and it's much less stressful on a regular day. It's not expensive, and it's valid for five years.  

4. Finding out wait times in advance is tricky now
Most airports have real-time updates on current security wait times (the one for JFK is fantastic), but those aren't being updated until the standoff ends. So it's not something you can check on from home.

If you do need to travel, good luck. I was lucky, but it's crazy out there.


Thursday, March 26, 2026

Friday Links!

This Friday links was pre-recorded on March 21, so it's all long read this week. Enjoy!

A wonderful read: Unbounded: In the early 20th century, Emmy Noether’s mathematics transcended the physical world. She longed to do the same herself

Terrific: Into the Darkness: Germany’s Black Forest faces a future of transformation. So do the people who have lived there for centuries.

Electric guitar in Africa has a long, proud history: The Docteur Is In: David Beal The Congolese rumba pioneer Docteur Nico helped define the sound of African decolonization—and became one of the great visionaries of the electric guitar.

Beyond infuriating: Mom of 7-year-old hospitalized with brain swelling from measles: ‘I still wouldn’t have given my son the vaccine’

This is an amazing read: There are no psychopaths: Virtually everything you think you know about psychopathy has been thoroughly debunked. Why does this zombie idea live on?

This is beautiful and heartbreaking: The Girl on the Bridge: The Aurora Bridge was the Northwest’s most notorious suicide site for 80 years. After one man’s plan to finally erect a fence to deter fatalities was stalled, a race unfolded to save one last person.

This seems to happen regularly: This Military Tragedy Became a Blockbuster Movie. Here’s What It Didn’t Tell You.

An excellent and painful read: Inside the Shattered Sisterhood of Camp Mystic.

This seems like a potential environmental disaster: Mining the deep ocean.

A fantastic investigation, but Banksy is up to the task: IN SEARCH OF BANKSY.

Returning

I'm coming back today from Austin (I went to visit Mom 96.0 and my sister). It was in the 90s every day, which felt like heaven.

I'm assuming the world burned down while I was gone. I'll find out soon enough.

Back to normal next week. Friday Links is queued up to post soon and have a great weekend.

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Crimson Desert: Bonkers

I've been following Crimson Desert closely.

The control scheme is almost universally regarded as terrible. There are loads of bugs. Parts of the enormous world are almost empty. Reviews were very mid.

You can pet cats. You can fish. You can use the sun's reflection off your sword to grill food.  You can climb mountains. You can ride dragons and use them in combat. There is seemingly an endless number of NPC's to interact with. Players have reported spending 10-20 hours in just the first town and still not doing everything.

Random quotes from a ResetEra thread on the game:
I sold my mining knuckledrill.
Found a forest area where children tranquilize you if they spot you?
Jinro the dog is right at the north entrance into Hernand.
Use a grindstone and anvil before boss fights.
You can buy a Hernandian Banquet Cloak from the tailor merchant in the first town.
Picked up a beehive club from somewhere, when you hit something with it bees come out and attack you.
Its totally bizarre, the arm wrestling for example
You can carry animals on the horse? I've been running them on foot.

It also looks spectacular or awful, depending on your platform and settings.

It's Breath of the Wild and Wither 3 and Dragon's Dogma. On meth.

I still want to play it.

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

[POLITICS] A Bold New Tactic in War

Has there ever been a war where the attacking country told the defending country to "show restraint?" What's the thought process behind that, exactly?

It sounds like something from a Marx Brothers movie, which makes sense, since the theme of this Administration from day one has been, "Who do you believe? Me or your own eyes?"

[also, I wrote this late last week, so I had no knowledge of what happened the last four days when I made this post.]

Monday, March 23, 2026

Pucks

Eli 24.7 told me that someone in the student hockey organization (a friend of his) was able to get the puck from the Varsity Match.

I didn't even think that was a possibility, since Cambridge won. I assumed they'd take the puck. He has it now, though. 

He told me the pucks he's gotten since he started playing for Oxford:
--Finals puck from a tournament his team won in Prague where he was MVP
--Puck from the game where he had his 1,000th Oxford save
--Puck from the game where he became the all-time Oxford saves leader
--Puck from last year's Varsity Match (a 3-2 win where he had 65 saves)
--Puck from last weekend's 101-save game

I told him they'll look great in a trophy case someday, and even though it normally wouldn't be his style, he said he was thinking the same thing.

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