Monthly Archives: May 2001

Friday, May 18 2001

Community

Yesterday I read that Mollie has to face a very difficult decision. I still don’t know what to say. It takes a lot of strength to make a decision like that, and I’m confident she will make the right decision for her. I admire her for her strength and courage.

Good luck to you, Mollie.

Rick Saenz has great photos of their family trip to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and Yellowstone.

Harry Potter Movie

Boston Globe: The wizard of film scoring tackles ‘Harry Potter’. The article also mentions that the trailer for the movie is now available on the HarryPotter.com.

Link via Garret.

Kino

Das Dirk Jasper Filmlexikon hat endlich eine gut zu merkende Adresse im Web: http://www.djfl.de/. Wie neu die ist, weiß ich nicht, aber ich habe sie jedenfalls gerade entdeckt. Das DJFL ist die beste mir bekannte deutschsprachige Site über Kinofilme, mit ausführlichen Infos und treffenden Kritiken. Einziger kleiner Nachteil: Auf der Eingangsseite blinken einem ein Dutzend Werbebanner entgegen, die einen auch mit Cookies zuschmeißen, aber die kann man ja übersehen bzw. ablehnen.

Wednesday, May 16 2001

Interface Design

Forbes.com: The Humane Touch: Bad Design Can Be Costly. The author, Jef Raskin, is the “father of the original Macintosh project, he named it after his favorite apple”.

Link via Susan.

Physics

BBC News: The Secret of matter discovered. Charge Parity (CP) violation is responsible for the fact that there is more matter than antimatter.

Link via Hal.

Math

Cinderella is an interactive geometry software written in Java that is capable of constructions in Euklidian, elliptical and hyperbolic Geometry. You can include graphics in other documents as vector graphic or convert them to HTML. (Seems like it’s just what I was looking for when I wrote my thesis…) You can download a demo version from the website. The full version is DM 98.60 or $ 54.95. Cinderella is available in English and German (school, student and network versions).

Update: I downloaded the demo version for Mac (without Java Virtual Machine), but it didn’t work. Whenever I clicked on the ‘install’ icon, the thing tried to load a page in Internet Explorer – but didn’t succeed. I let it try for a whole hour, but nadasadface:

Amsterdam

André and I are going to Amsterdam on the weekend after this one. And yes, we’ll be at the Scripting News Dinner on Saturday night. We’re really looking forward to this little trip because we can do some more sightseein in Amsterdam (André didn’t get to see much of it last year) and of course because we’re going to meet some nice people there!

Link rot

The Globe and Mail article about the Lord of the Rings movie I linked to yesterday is now here.

Tuesday, May 15 2001

Sad news

Only 19 years old, Kaycee passed away yesterday. She will be missed. My thoughts are with her family and friends.

The Lord of the Rings

Note to self: Read this article about the movie tomorrw: ‘The most colossal movie production ever embarked on’.

Link via Garret.

2001

Tonight, André and I went to see 2001: A Space Odyssey by Stanley Kubrick, which was being shown in the original version. Since I had not seen the movie before, we had to grab the opportunity – not many films are shown in English here, and especially not good ones. I’m already worried that I have to watch ‘The Lord of the Rings‘ in German…

Anyway, I’m still a bit confused about Kubrick’s film. I don’t know if I can make sense of anything that happens after Dave Bowman shut down HAL 9000. I guess I’ll have to watch the film again – at least I’ve read that you have to watch it more than once to make any sense of it.

However, I was very impressed by the accuracy and credibility of the scenes in space. Rotating space ships to create a force like gravity, realistic-looking scenes on the moon and in the spaceships. The last film I watched that had scenes in space was Armageddon. Yes, it was on TV the day after easter, and I didn’t have anything else to do, so I watched it. I couldn’t believe they really went to MIR in order to refuel their space craft. And there were icycles hanging around everywhere on the outside of MIR. Two questions: Where did the water come from, and what force made them freeze like that, without gravity? I could go on and on.

Da schaue ich doch lieber ein paar Stunden Space Night.

Monday, May 14 2001

This is not an obituary

Richard Dawkins: Lament for Douglas Adams.

Birthday Dino:
Community

Happy Birthday und alles Gute zum Geburtstag, Martin!

Two-winged visitors

Scott posted in the DG that they prefer to watch bats in the back yard instead of having hornets visiting. But do you also have bats inside your house, Scott?

One day last summer, when I was visiting my parents, my mom said she saw something black flying around in the house. At first we didn’t believe her, but she insisted. After a little searching, we found a bat hanging on the curtains in my sister’s bedroom – upside down and asleep.
My dad put on gloves, grabbed the bat and released it from the window.

Later that evening, we were sitting in the livingroom and watching TV. My mom said she saw something again… And suddenly I saw it, too! It was another bat, flying round and round right below the ceiling. It tried to land on the curtains, maybe it was looking for a place to hide or sleep. But for some reason the curtain didn’t suit it’s purposes, so it landed on a wall above a picture, turned upside down and crawled behind the picture frame. We watched in disbelief and awe.

We took the picture down from the wall, and the bat, no longer able to hide, started flying around again. From one end of the living room to the other, around the lamp, around, around, around. Poor thing, it certainly was frightened. We would have been glad to get it back outside, but how do you catch a bat that’s flying around in your living room?

My dad got his gloves out again, my mom and I watched the bat and hoped it would land somewhere. I had the great idea to open the window – maybe it was going to find the way out by itself?

Bad idea. Within a couple of minutes, we had two bats flying around in the living room. Now imagine three people shooing two bats around the room, trying to get them to the window. I stood next to the window, which I had closed again, ready to open it when the bats approached. But no such luck.

Next try: We opened the window again and didn’t move, hoping that the bats tried to find the way out once they calmed down. And yes, one bat really found the window and flew out – only to fly back in again. Or was it a different one? I looked out into the garden and saw a whole bunch of bats flying around in the back yard. And whoops! Another one flew in. Now there were three bats flying around the lamp…

Grundschule Hetzwege: I imagined the conversation between the bats in the garden: “Hey, Tony, who’s next once Joe comes back outside? We have to keep those humans occupied!”

But finally, after more than an hour, we managed to get all three bats back outside without others coming in.

But I still wonder why they came inside. There have been bats around as long as I can think. They have quite a few quiet places in the neighbourhood where they can rest undisturbed during the day: a lot of high old oak trees, barns, and the little tower on top of the school, which is right across the street from my parents’ house and makes a perfect bat hangout. They have never tried to enter the house before and never since, as far as I know. But then, I don’t think my parents like to leave the windows open in the evenings any more…

Interesting sites about bats

  • Organization for Bat Conservation
  • bat conservation international, especially the Discovery section
  • Bat Conservation Trust, UK
  • This page has sound files of bats (.wav or .ram)
  • Und auf deutsch: Filineas Fledermäuse
  • May 13 2001

    Bzzzzzzzzzzzz!

    We had a few visitors with six legs and a pair of wings in the last couple of days. Some were wasps, but I’m pretty sure that at least one was a hornet. And a few years ago, a hornet queen took a wrong turn and ended up in my parents’ house. It was about as long as my little finger and quite impressive – and a bit scary.

    I did some research on the web and came up with Hornissenschutz.de (hornet protection), a very informative web site that is available in German, English and some other languages and offers some impressive photos as well. I learnt that hornets are not as dangerous as most people believe. In fact, in Germany they are listed as endangered species, and it is forbidden to kill hornets or destroy their nests.

    Okay, now let’s see if I can find something about bees, wasps, or bumblebees…

    day8:

    Trip to England

    Finally I got the PictureCD which included the last pictures from our trip to England. Here are the photos of the flight from Plymouth to Gatwick via Newquay.

    And now I’m going to spend a little time in the garden, lying in the sun – reading a book on nuclear and particle phyics, of course! No better way to enjoy a sunny Sunday…