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Previous Two Issues

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous Two Issues

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous Two Issues

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous Two Issues

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous Two Issues

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Previous Two Issues

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

"History is just people doing things"

 

THE ABQ CORRESPONDENT

                 ISSN 1087-2302   Online Edition Number 359......November 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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AN INSIGHTFUL TITLE  

Bear with this step by step, if you will:

We can represent sound signals as images e.g. of amplitude modulation.

We can scan images, converting them into sound signals.

We can convert those signals into sound, and listen to them. 

A chap who is skilled with electronic equipment and signal processing sketched an image of a bird. It’s just an outline, but looking at it, you think, “Oh, that’s a representation of a bird.”

He scanned that image and converted it to a sound signal.

Because he is fascinated by the sounds birds make, he took his equipment with him when he visited a friend who had saved and raised a baby starling that had fallen from its nest. (Starlings are noted for their high precision mimicry.) He shot pictures and recorded the sounds the bird made, interested by the fact that it had not grown up in the wild, hearing and imitating sounds produced there. He wondered what would interest this bird. Among other experiments, he played some sounds to see what would attract its attention, including the recording he had made of that image of a bird he'd drawn. Examining the data later, showing graphically the sounds the bird had made, he was startled to see that image …unmistakably the one he’d drawn, converted to an electronic signal, then into sound that he’d played to the young starling, then back into an image. The discovery was surprising partly because he’d heard the sound himself; it had no meaning to him, just seemed like noise...but the reconstructed image did have meaning to him. The sound presumably had no special meaning to the bird, either. It had mimicked precisely what it heard.

The experimenter reported this in a video (that covers all sorts of other things as well…discussions of equipment, for example), laying it all out, showing the signals, the images, the bird, etc…and here’s the insightful part: his title for the report gives it a satisfying technical twist:

I saved a PNG image to a bird.

Well worth a look.

 

SERIOUSLY…

Bill Turner commented on last month’s Item From The Past discussing Big G gravity,

“This also has been a mystery of mine .  I tend to think gravity is an invisible isotropic substance that I call "aperranto" that permeates all of space the way water fills an ocean and that the presence of any mass within it distorts the aperranto, creating gradients along which the objects slide downgradient. Gravity is not created by the objects.  It is there without regard for the objects. The objects or ejecta from supernovas cause larger distortions of aperranto that we misnamed gravity. Gravity as coined by Newton is so ingrained into the mind of people that it distorts their thinking. It is actually only the sliding of matter down the aperranto gradients. That causes smaller ejecta to agglomerate and grow in size.  They cause ejects containing elements of all elemental species created from the supernova to accumulate within the aperranto.  I heard Harold Urey pontificate on this topic in a lecture at UNM about 1965 at which I ran his slide projector. Could a mechanism be built that actively sucks in aperranto and ejects it to create a propulsion system? Just saying.

This recalls a long-ago puzzlement over the way light could be transmitted through space. We refer to “wavelength,” so one would assume that there are waves in something. That something was for a time identified as the aether, a stuff that permeated space, and was agitated by the passage of waves we called light. By the mid-thirties or so the concept of aether had been pretty well discarded, leaving us with particulate light or waves in nothing. When I grilled Iben Browning on the subject, he uncomfortably said that best he could figure, space contains something, nothing, and not-nothing. I take solace in equating Iben’s “not-nothing” with Bill’s “aperranto.”

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NELS MUSES 

Item:

The Correspo has shown so many of the odd flying vehicles of our time that it’s not easy to find any that are notably new, but here’s one: the Helix, by a company called Pivotal, already commercially available. The electric Helix takes off vertically, flies, and lands at a strikingly peculiar angle. (good video here). You won’t be flying it from Chicago to Rome; it has one-person-and-maybe-a-briefcase capacity, limits on altitude, speed, range, and all that, but maybe it’s practical for commuting (not by me). The picture of the whole plane and pilot descending on a parachute is heartwarming. This one’s fun to contemplate.

 

Item:

It’s hard to imagine that these “intelligent wheels” that can propel a vehicle (the wheel is the engine) can rotate more than a dozen times without suffering a mechanical breakdown, they have so many moving parts…but maybe, maybe. The concept is certainly interesting.

 

Item:  (Nov)

Pivotal, the company producing the Helix aircraft, is headquartered in Palo Alto, California. Seeing that triggered a recollection unrecalled for many years. Sometime about 1952, when we lived in San Mateo, a bit farther up the Peninsula, I was involved in a play that called for a snake in a terrarium. One Saturday I just happened to be driving through a residential neighborhood in Palo Alto when I spotted a kid holding a snake. I asked if I might borrow his snake, promising to return it in a week. He agreed. We used the snake in the show, and the following Saturday I returned to Palo Alto, found the kid on the same street, and gave back the snake. One doesn’t get to do such things very often. It must have been fairly interesting for the snake, too. He surely didn’t think of himself as that kid’s property. He’d probably just been slithering along on a sunny morning, minding his own business when somebody picked him up. Somebody else coming by in a car had then taken him on a ride, displayed him to a big room full of people, and returned him eventually to the kid. That snake’s life seems to be no more sensible than mine, full of arbitrary events. Good cess to him...and to the kid, who is by now an old man.

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ITEM FROM THE PAST 

This item from 1998 is recalled by a photo (maybe

not a deepfake) of Bill Gates sitting at a banquet

table with the President and an assortment of

Captains of High Tech Industry.

CHAIRMAN BILL IN THE MYTHIC BIGTIME

The current difference of opinion between the U.S. Department of Justice and Microsoft Corporation over the propriety of Microsoft’s grip on the computer industry suggests that reason has little to do with the matter. While the company’s hubris insulates it from understanding the complaints of the people it frightens and overwhelms, the DOJ’s insistence on certain measures (dis-integrating internet functions from the operating system, for example) flies in the face of reality. It’s like legislating a value of 3.0 for Pi, to make all that bothersome arithmetic unnecessary. If you’re waiting for the public to express itself helpfully, don’t hold your breath. Consider that a well educated, technically competent geologist with decades of practical experience, inquired recently what all the fuss was about the Year 2000 Problem. After listening to the explanation (including the observation that it’s more complicated than anybody is likely to think, owing to thousands of arbitrary decisions made over the years), he asked: “Does Bill Gates know about this?” He was assured that Bill has heard about Y2K. “Well,” he said, “why doesn’t he just fix the problem?” This was a serious question from an otherwise relatively sane man. Somehow, the Bill we knew slightly as a disheveled, driven young computer geek has not only become startlingly rich, but has acquired an aura of absolute invincibility with respect to computers. The mind boggles. I recall as a child being told that Horowitz was the world’s greatest pianist... and I assumed that was an objective fact; the title was real, established by some authority. A chap who was raised in Russia in the Stalin era observed that he believed without question that the Generalissimo was the best hand at everything, and if he wasn’t performing miracles of brain surgery every day, it was only because he was too busy with pressing matters of state. The chap was astonished to learn otherwise in his later years. Gates is achieving the same superhuman status in the eyes of the general populace...not because he is striving for that, one supposes, but because he is a symbol of his time. Then again, maybe he really could haul off and solve the Y2K problem if he weren’t too busy with brain surgery and pressing visionary matters. Perhaps we should ask.

Indeed, we got through the Y2K turnover without

major problems, aided probably by a massive review

of installed software that not only reduced the chances

of turning into a pumpkin as the calendar passed the

magic date, but doubtless cleaned up a lot of other

problems, and increased the efficiency of our systems

significantly. Apparently, Bill didn’t achieve that single-

handed. Meanwhile the hassle between the DOJ and

Microsoft has quieted somewhat while that between

Microsoft and the EU regulators has escalated. Mr.

Gates’ image has morphed from that of an untidy

geek to that of a major philanthropist with a geeky

history. Not all bad, probably.

 

Holy smoke! The Bill Gates who wasn’t old enough to

order a beer when we first met at lunch some years

since is seventy this year. Ouch. He’s clearly still in

the bigtime, with perhaps a bit less mythic aura.

Others of the several at the table with him have taken

on that sheen. He’s probably relieved by the change.

 

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This book was written, richly illustrated, and published by excellent grandkid Malia. At 7 (gosh, twelve 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. Some of us are rather proud of her.

ISBN‎ 979-8320821917                               

See on Amazon

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