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Archive for the 'Linkydinks' Category

God’s Email

Tuesday, May 23rd, 2006

I’m testing out Google’s new “Gmail for your domain” service with my domain heaven.com. Here’s a screen snapshot. It’s pretty cool – all the goodness I’ve come to expect from GMail, with a much cooler domain name. god@heaven.com currently gets about 30 to 50 prayers a day, and a very large amount of spam. He […]

I’ve been dugg!

Monday, May 15th, 2006

Welcome, visitors from digg. Here are some recent music-related posts from KrazyDad: About the Whitney Music Box A φ fractal Organum Mathematicum Text to Song More fun stuff in the links on the upper right… Enjoy! UPDATE: Welcome also, visitors from flabber.nl. My favorite comment on your site was this one, which needs no translation: […]

QFold Puzzles

Thursday, May 11th, 2006

The QFold puzzle website contains puzzles that are meant to be printed and solved with a pencil. The puzzles are beautiful symmetrical designs that contain 20 hidden asymmetrical elements. To solve the puzzle, you identify these 20 elements of the puzzle and count the number of instances of each class of asymmetry (this is explained […]

Why Flickr is cool

Wednesday, May 10th, 2006

Today I emailed this photo to Flickr. I had taken it with my cellphone last month while traveling on business. Within minutes, Jogales added a comment which revealed the make of the plane, the airline, and pointed me to a far more interesting picture of this very same plane colliding with another plane, on the […]

We can remember it for you wholesale

Monday, May 8th, 2006

Here’s a new coverpop featuring the works of my favorite sf author of his generation, Philip K. Dick. The covers were provided by the Philip K. Dick cover gallery, courtesy of Jason Koornick.

5000 Puzzles from 1914

Wednesday, May 3rd, 2006

Ed Pegg Jr, of the excellent MathPuzzle.com, has put up a complete set of scans of a profusely illustrated classic from 1914 containing 5000 unique puzzles. Sam Loyd’s Cyclopedia of Puzzles. If the name Sam Loyd isn’t familiar to you, perhaps it should be. Loyd was the inventor of the sliding 15-tile puzzle. Here’s my […]

A φ Fractal

Tuesday, May 2nd, 2006

I’ve been examining the visual patterns produced by the Whitney Music Box (see previous post). If you watch the animation for any length of time, you’ll notice that the dots form spoked or starfish-like patterns periodically. These patterns often cause chords to be played by the music box. I was curious to understand the sequence […]

Ten Reasons to Visit the Brand Library

Thursday, April 13th, 2006

I live near one of the coolest public libraries in Los Angeles, Glendale’s Brand Library and Art Center. Here are a 10 good reasons why you should go. 1. The library sits at the the top of Western Ave in a beautiful park overlooking the valley. Excellent for picnic lunches. 2. The library specializes in […]

Text to Song

Monday, April 10th, 2006

I’m still working on making artificial yet authentic 17th century vocal music, so I thought I’d provide some MP3 samples to listen to, and give capsule reviews of a few of the different software packages I am using, in particular, Flinger, and Tracktion. If you haven’t read my previous post about this project, check it […]

Organum Mathematicum

Sunday, April 2nd, 2006

Here is a screenshot I took while I was working recently, to document a fascinating project. The project involves resurrecting a bit of technology from the 1600s. In the screen snapshot, I am entering numbers into a text file. I am copying the numbers, as you can see, from a digital facsimile of an old […]