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"History is just people doing things"

 

THE ABQ CORRESPONDENT

                 ISSN 1087-2302   Online Edition Number 354......June 2025

Published since 1985 for clients and contacts of ABQ Communications Corporation, the fuzzy focus of The ABQ Correspondent is "the impact of new technology on society." If you'd like to receive email notification when each monthly issue is posted, please let us know.   correspo at swcp dot com 

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YOU ARE MY SUNSHINE

Mistrust it or embrace it, solar power has been much in the news during the last several years, and it seems to have become a significant source of energy in some areas. The big digital chip majors aren’t talking much about going solar for the massive new plants they’re building; they lean toward nuclear power… nerve-wracking fission, not yet fusion. Still, solar is interesting in a number of areas, including agriculture., and the U.S. Department of energy maintains a website encouraging farmers along these lines. This and other sites talk about ideas that don’t occur to most of us city folks, for example, the solar panels can be placed over the farmer’s least productive land (not just on the barn roof), and livestock can flourish underneath them, enjoying cooling shade in the hot summer and…um…fertilizing the poor soil there to make it more productive over time. One farmer in Colorado (he got a head start by being an engineer before taking over the farm) has four acres of solar panels on his place, producing energy enough for 300 homes while raising chickens, ducks, sheep and a variety of vegetables under them. He observes that the panels must be raised appreciably more above the ground than they are typically to accommodate activity below them, Really, four acres doesn’t seem like a whole lot of area; on the farm where we lived in Massachusetts many decades ago, we could easily have dedicated four acres out of our sixty to this. We didn’t farm it, apart from growing some veggies while chasing off the deer that were intent on eating them. (Our former-farmer relatives from the Midwest commented that the best harvest from the New England fields seemed to be the rocks from which the endless stone walls are made.) To see the other side of the solar-power-in-agricuture argument, take a look at this rather testy website posted by The Institute for Energy Research.  An appealingly different approach to solar power that looks great (and rather expensive) is offered by a Belgian company, Smartflower. The panels sit on a base on the ground like a radar or radio-telescope antenna. The circular blossom of panels opens and closes (automatically, at night, when the panels can be washed…dust being a major enemy of solar power). These things are adaptable to various situations; fun to contemplate. 

 

HISTORY IS PERSONAL

Allan Branch, previously identified in the Correspo as The Tasmanian Roboticist, whom I have known for nigh unto forty years has published an intriguing autobiography, The Vandemonian: Wall Street and Silicon Valley Collide. The handful of people who enjoy the mixture of comments on technology and anecdotes in the Correspo will probably like The Vandemonian.

The story is entertaining, informative, and unsettling.  

Allan and I have crossed/almost crossed paths occasionally, but our backgrounds and general experience are so different that it’s surprising to find that we come to the same basic views on what’s good and important. The narrative is stuffed with stories about famous companies and people…some I have known, and some I didn’t know I knew, revealing a whole lot about how new technology actually comes into use. It isn’t an orderly process, and this isn’t an orderly book. It’s full of pain and emotion. It begins conventionally enough by recounting his stressful youth in a village in Tasmania, during which he learns that he’s smart, technically adept, and tough enough to protect himself and his siblings. His story moves on through oddly varied education and increasingly high level professional activity to his becoming a consultant, company-fixer, and constant round-the-world traveler…but that story isn’t chronologically straightforward. He keeps recalling, sometimes repetitiously, the many people who have been important to him, but the repetition is helpful, because who remembers all the names and relationships he’s talked about earlier? The book’s 280 pages are a picture to be viewed as a whole …kinda like a life. Good stuff.

I can’t remember the occasion of meeting Allan, but when he was traveling with a party of four in the States long ago, they stayed with us one night. I pressed him to demonstrate Mr. Walker, his uncommonly clever (maybe 18” high) walking robot, to our son Brock, which he did…I can see it now,walking on the counter between the kitchen and the dining room.  That demo may have had some influence; Brock went on to become a figure in special effects in Hollywood. (You may remember the scene in Terminator II when Arnold slit his arm open to show the robot mechanism operating inside it; Brock had built that arm and was operating it in the scene.)

I once asked Allan if Australians have as much trouble understanding Americans as Americans have understanding Australians.

He said, “What?”  

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NELS MUSES 

Item:

The Correspo has spoken of nematodes (roundworms) a couple of times, not always favorably. If you grow soybeans, you want to keep nematodes away from them them…but they do kill some insects, and are used in certain cases instead of pesticides to protect plants from damaging invaders. That’s all very biological, but on the physics side, it’s been observed that the critter is able to “jump” many times its body length, and by slightly labored extrapolation, their leaping technique is being promoted for “soft robots” that can move about on the moon. See this entertaining explanation and demonstration.  

 

Item:

We don’t often dwell on the topic of viscosity around here (there was a sticky period some decades ago when a science fair project…one of many, many, not all recalled happily…involved measuring the viscosity of honey) but a report on an experiment on the viscosity of pitch, material you normally break up with a hammer, caught our attention. This demo has been going on for nearly a hundred years, and is now inspiring imitation. Not exactly thrilling action, but intriguing.

 

Item:

An associate who recently visited the million-plus square foot offices of Amazon’s Southeastern U.S. hub for retail operations has more than once mentioned her primary takeaway from the visit…the intense focus of Amazon employees on their delivery operations. They send out the familiar trucks, of course, and when you see a driver transferring packages to the back of somebody’s car, you’re not necessarily witnessing brazen theft; in busy times the company pays private individuals to make the final runs up to people’s front doors. In some areas, the deliveries are actually made by people on bikes…or even horses or mules. My goodness!

 

Item:

Some folks at the UPNA University of Pamplona are demonstrating a method that allows us to interact with three dimensional displays…to change the orientation of a viewed object, for example, by reaching into the image and making the adjustment…at least that’s what it looks like. Here’s a demo.

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ITEM FROM THE PAST

 

This item, probably from 1986 comes to mind because of

recent discussion of hybrid digital/biological computers,

de-extincting long-gone critters, etc…

SQUIRMING MOLECULES

Biology is basically very sloppy. How do enzymes and other protein mar­vels do such neat work? The very idea that strings of amino acids, what­ever they are, actually pass energy around, and form useful new sub­stances in a series of clear-cut processes, is just too much for some of us to grasp.  Well, a splendid Scient­ific American article recently pointed out that sloppiness makes the neatness possible. For years we've admired X-ray diffraction pictures of protein molecules, those lovely geometric patterns that clearly identify the stuff through which the x-rays flowed.  These regular geometric forms suggest that the molecules them­selves ­­­­­­­­are rigid geometric structures. Turns out they aren't. The mole­cules twitch, fold, flop, and twist constantly and rapidly, slither­ing around in the meat of which they are part. Any­thing that fits any­thing else has a zillion chances to make a connec­tion...enough so that whatever can hap­pen will probably happen. Aloof, rigid structures couldn't do that. "Ha," says Merl Miller, "I knew it all along.  What's a molecule?"

Experimenters/developers are exploring a wide range

of products using living organisms, or, anyway, cells,

to produce or comprise products. An example is the

introduction of “T-Rex leather” handbags, which has

stirred up vituperative quarrels over the question

of whether the stuff is “really” T-Rex leather or not.

After all, we haven’t found any T-Rex DNA…only

some collagen. Does that count? And even if it does,

did the T-Rex leather people get it right or are they

just a bunch of degenerate commercial hustlers who

don’t deserve their daily ration of gruel? Same goes

for work on the supposedly de-extincted dire wolf.

debates among usually-not-very-well-paid academicians

lean to savagery. You may recall the abuse Thor

Heyerdahl received over the voyage of Kon Tiki.

Some of us are amazed that the biologists can do anything

at all practical along these lines, “real T-Rex” or not.

Apparently, some researchers have now figured out how

to persuade spiders to produce red silk instead of the

usual …er…whatever color spider silk is. What a waste

of time and money! Those resources could be spent

productively on something worthwhile like football. One

assumes that there’s a lot more interesting stuff to come,

along with intense scolding of those who do anything

…anything.

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This book was written, richly illustrated, and published by excellent grandkid Malia. At 7 (gosh, eleven years ago) she was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes… suddenly, of course; “Get her to the hospital NOW!” and things have been nip and tuck since then with many scary crises. She’s taken control of her life…played and sang at Whiskey A Go Go on the Sunset Strip at 15, put out an album at 16, published this book at 17, and is off to college hundreds of miles from home. She has been videoed reading the book at a kids’ hospital, and every incoming T1D patient there from now on will see that video. Both pennies of her book royalty go to her college costs. Some of us are rather proud of her.

ISBN‎ 979-8320821917                               

See on Amazon

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