Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Sign Stealer

There are a lot of signs around the neighborhood telling people to make sure they're registered to vote and how to get a mail-in ballot. They are put up by a number of local volunteers. At least one of them is associated with an organization called vote411 (https://www.vote411.org/).

Last Friday, on the way to work, I came upon a car stopped at a 4-way stop on the corner of Elliot and Audubon. Eventually, I realized there was no one in the car. Across the street there was an older gentleman, wearing American flag shorts, walking down the sidewalk. As I drove past and looked in the rear view mirror, I saw that he was taking up the signs and putting them in his car. That didn't seem like something he should be doing.

So I pulled in a driveway and turned around and went back to see what was going on. As I approached the man getting into his car, I took a picture.

I turned in past his car and took another picture so I could get his license plate number.

I drove a little further on and turned around to follow and see what he was up to. When I got back onto Elliot Rd., I could see that he had stopped at the next intersection and was preparing to harvest a couple more signs. I stopped behind him and got out my new iPhone 11Pro and started up the video. He decided that he would let all the cars piling up behind me go ahead before he grabbed more signs. He came around the front of his car and motioned the cars to go ahead. The two cars behind me went around both of us as I kept the camera rolling. At that point, he came toward me and I slowly drove off with the camera focused on him.



The movie doesn't give you a good look at the perpetrator, so I pulled a frame so that you can see him better. He looks like somebody's angry grandfather. 

When I got to work, I called the police station and reported what I had seen and that the man was driving a white Mitsubishi SUV with license plate # BMZ-6679. A bit later, an officer called to verify the information. After calling the police, I went on the Nextdoor website and posted this about the event:

Man seen removing "vote by mail" instruction signs. This morning on the way to work on Elliot Rd., I saw a elderly white gentleman, wearing American flag shorts, removing the little yard signs with instructions for voting by mail. I got pictures of him, his car and his license plate. He didn't seem very happy with me filming him so I didn't stop to chat. I did call the police and let them know.

The next day, my neighbor, who is a member of that vote411 group, walked up to talk to me about my Nextdoor post. She told me there were a few more sightings of the guy and that he had threatened to run over one member of her group. She told me she would keep me informed and put me on the email making the rounds in her group about this guy.

Well, later that day I received an email from one member of the group saying that the police had tracked him down and recovered about 16 signs. Here's what she said:

The Chapel Hill Police have recovered 16 signs from the back of the SUV that XXXX identified. Officer Wheeler brought them to my house just now. I suspect this was just today’s haul.

The culprit lives in Chapel Hill, was inebriated when the police talked with him, and apparently not that concerned that what he was doing is illegal. The officers talked with him about the illegality of stealing the signs, threatening someone with harm, and driving drunk.

We can press charges for theft and XXXXX could press charges for threat to harm with a deadly weapon (a car). Both would be misdemeanors. He would have to appear in court, probably in late September or October. He could do this some more in the meantime, because he will get only a summons to appear in court.

Here’s Officer Wheeler with the recovered signs explaining this to me. He said we could think about whether we want to press charges. I’m leaning toward pressing charges.

I wrote them back and told them I'd be happy to provide any more information if they needed it and was willing to testify in court if need be. And that's the last that I've heard of it.

Saturday, August 15, 2020

Sand Castles of 2020

So far in 2020 I've built a sand castle a couple of times. Kinda lame for a guy who likes to build sand castles and who has a house at the beach. Here's the most recent from August 22.

Here's the one built on August 8:


And here's the first one I built on June 21:

Generally I start building in the shade of the umbrella and move west with the edge of the shade. Usually there's a fat part where the most ambitious tower has collapsed and been piled into some amorphous blob. Hopefully, I'll get another one to add to these before the summer is over.

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

A Different Birthday Gift

On Sunday mornings, after the service ends, and the benediction is declared and the choir sings a final Amen, the organist plays a little improvisation on the music of the service. Usually the congregation is up and talking and making their way to the door and it's basically, "Walking Out Music". A few weeks ago I mentioned to the organist that it was my birthday. I sing in the choir and so I know the organist well. Pay attention after the service is over he said. And at the end of the service, this is what he played. About half of the choir caught on to what was happening and, I learned later, a few of the congregation also noticed. It was a different but appreciated birthday present.















Our organist has done this kind of thing before. Every Sunday morning, he does a nice improvisational transition from the music of the offertory to the Doxology. Last year, on the occasion of Leonard Bernstein's birthday, we heard this.

Sunday, October 13, 2019

Stolen Bust

A few years ago, I wrote about the foolish stunt that someone in Washington pulled merely for a photo. They wanted a photo of Air Force One flying past the Statue of Liberty and so they fueled her up and flew Air Force One low over NYC while their cameras were a whirling. Turns out, duh, everybody freaked out with a big ass 747 flying low over NYC. So I wrote a blog entry about it. I showed how easy they could have just faked the picture with a little photo editing by showing Air Force One flying past me at the Wright Brothers monument. I really was at the monument for the photo. I just added the plane.

Well, today I read in the WRAL website that the bust of one of the Wright brothers, Orville I think, had been stolen. They're not sure why but apparently, it's not the first time. Anyhow, without checking to see if the guy in the picture was actually the one stolen, I updated my photo to reflect the new circumstances.

Before:
After:

There, fixed that for ya.

Thursday, October 10, 2019

Last Sand Castles of the Year

It was unseasonably warm early in October this year, so I was able to get to the beach and work in a couple more days of castle building. I'm not into things that look so much like medieval castles as I am into things that are tall and skinny and defy the notion of a pile of sand. My castles tend to fall a lot while being built. Here are the last offerings of the year, I fear. Unless it stays really warm.



Thursday, August 08, 2019

Sand Castle

Recently, I managed to get down to the beach one afternoon and build a sand castle. It was a little windy but all was going well until the beach Nazis drove up on their ATV and told me I had to take down my umbrella. "Sustained winds at or above 17 mph", they said. That kind of pissed me off since I hadn't slathered myself with SPF 90. Anyhow, I took a couple of pictures and asked a young man to stomp on the castles as I left to avoid sunburn. Here they be:


Maybe I'll get a few more in before the season runs out.

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Late Night Lightning

I have a camera at the beach to watch all those people come in and party while we're away. I have it set up to send me an email with a picture when there's movement. Last night I got an email around 12:30 pm with the picture below attached. Looks like it was rocking and rolling out in front of the house. I've seen this before (see below).


I've ordered a couple of new cameras from Wyze to help document my life (as if anyone cared). So maybe you'll be seeing more post on the old blog in the future.

Tuesday, July 09, 2019

MPG to GIF

A couple of years ago we published a paper on the discovery of a TAK1 inhibitor in which we included an x-ray crystal structure. Somebody wanted to use an animated picture of the crystal structure in a website and so I made a few movies and turned one of them into a .gif so I could drop it into a website without any problem. He it is.
This a a ribbon structure with the ligand shown as a space-filling molecule. It spins at about 15 rpm. Maybe too fast! The crystal is 5v5n and the movie was made with MacPyMol.

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Blue Shit, Bronze Shit

Over the last few years at work, I've been working with fluorescent dyes. Specifically I've been connecting them to an Hsp90 protein binding ligand to make a compound which, for whatever reason, selectively goes into cancer cells versus normal cells. Anyhow, to make these things, I sometimes have to make the dye which I couple to a ligand-linker construct via a Suzuki coupling. But that's not what this is about. This is about a weird property of these dyes. I've used one dye extensively because it absorbs and emits in a region compatible with widely available instrumentation. Recently, my supply has been running low and so I've been making more. The really cool thing about these dyes is that they start out deeply colored, in this case blue. But when they are purified and concentrated, they form a solid with a very metallic sheen. You can even see yourself in the reflection. Very weird. Of course I have some pictures. Here's the dye:


And here's how it looks when you make a bunch (7 g) of it.
Starts out Deep Blue.


Turns to Bronze.



This is pretty strange considering this molecule only contains carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur.

For the nerds reading this, here's the spectra of a compound after the conjugation. I don't have one of the dye itself, though it should be very close.


Friday, July 13, 2018

Commute

Five mornings a week, I drive to work. Five afternoons a week I drive home again. Here's what it's like.
Morning:

Afternoon:



Except that it's a bit slower.

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

Sand Castles

We bought a beach house a few years ago. For some reason, it seems that now it's actually harder to get out to the beach. But when I do, I build sand castles. I like to build them tall so they actually collapse numerous times over the course of construction. Here are three of my efforts so far this year,




A good day is when I get to see the ocean destroy them rather than an angry adolescent.





Wednesday, April 04, 2018

Tides

I have a camera at my beach house, or should I say marsh house, that takes a picture every 8 minutes. Every once in a while I download a couple of weeks worth of pictures and cram them together into a movie so that I can watch the tide go in and out. Let's try and insert one here.


Somewhere in here I raked the yard and so you see the leaves disappear and slowly come back again. So, after posting this video, I can see that Blogger compresses it a bit and makes the video a little lower quality than it already is. Here's a link to a better version: Tides

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Lightning

This morning, at about 5:50 AM, the motion detector function in my camera at the beach sent me a picture because it had detected motion. Motion, to a motion detector function in a camera, is a change in what the camera is seeing. When I looked at the picture and then looked at the time it was sent, I figured it should have been dark. Hmm! So I looked on the weather map and saw that an intense storm has just passed through. The light is from lightning. It's an eerie glow. Kind of ghostly.



Tuesday, March 06, 2018

Friends

Everywhere that I work, I have friends that accompany me. Here are my friends from home.


And here are my friends at work.


Monday, February 05, 2018

Stock Market Deja Vu

A few years ago, as I was sitting at my computer, the stock market crashed. I watched it in real time and then I wrote about it on my blog. Here's what it looked like:


Well, today as I was sitting at my computer, I got a message from Preston telling me that all my money was going down the tubes. I managed to catch it going down and watched as the Dow dropped 1,500 plus points. It bounced back a bit but not as well as in 2010. Here's what it looked like:


Eerily similar.

I wonder if the Trumpster, who takes a lot of unwarranted credit for the stock market boom, will be willing to take the blame for this little setback. Nah, I didn't think so.

Saturday, October 29, 2016

Coins

This post will not be exciting. It's here mainly for accounting purposes. Some time ago I documented emptying my coin jar. Wow, that was 10 years ago! I didn't mentioned that soon after, we put them all in little rolls and took them to the bank. Anyhow, I just did it again, almost.

Some years ago, my lovely wife decided that it would be fun and educational for her and the kids to collect quarters from each state. Do you remember how they were gonna go from having one quarter to having 50 quarters with each state honored on one side? And how they would roll out each state one at a time? They would put them each in a little book and learn about the states as each new one was issued. Well the kids never got interested and most of us forgot about the whole quarter-state thing.

About 20 years later, my wife pulls down a box from on top of a cabinet and it contains a boat load of quarters and a bunch of paper tubes to hold them in.  She hands it to me and says "Deal with this". So I finish rolling them all up and, while in the mood, go get my big plastic coke bottle and go through the whole process with it again. To make a long story short, I deposited about $800 total and now I get to start all over again.


Monday, September 26, 2016

Sand Castles

This year's offering.  The tide was going out so I didn't see how it ended.


Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Scintillating scotoma

A few years ago, I was working in the lab when I noticed that my vision was going wacky. I wrote all about it on my blog which you can read here. Well, today I was reading In the Pipeline and one commenter mentioned fortifications hallucination. So I looked that up and found the wikipedia article, scintillating scotoma, which pretty exactly describes what I was seeing.  The Wiki article even has some pretty good graphics.

Now I have a little better idea of what was going on. I never did get a migraine and this never happened again.

Saturday, August 01, 2015

Castles Made of Sand

I recently spent a week at the beach. After a week of distractions, I finally got a day to build a sand castle. Notice the windows in some of the towers. I build hollow castles. Here it is:


After a couple of hours, the tide returned, just like I planned.


And eventually did its work.


And I managed to get sunburned.

Tuesday, July 07, 2015

Deer Here

On the way home from the grocery store, as I stopped at the light in front of Whole Foods store, I noticed a different looking animal crossing the street. We have zillions of these bastards around the house constantly eating the shrubberies but something was different about this one.  So when the light turned green I crossed the road and turned into the church parking lot where it looked like it went. At first I didn't see it and then I turned to the left and there it was.  I took a picture with the window up first, in case it ran away and then I rolled down the window and took a couple more.  Here it is.


Sunday, August 31, 2014

Flowers Blooming

I've always been intrigued by those movies that speed up action by taking a lot of pictures over a long time and cram them together. They're usually something like plants growing. So I made one.

Let's go back a bit. I recently agreed to do an interview for a company and provided feedback on their new website design. For a fee, of course. They paid me $200 for my lunch hour in the form of an Amazon credit. This money was burning my pockets (as my dad used to say), so I spent some of it on a wireless camera that you link via WiFi and can control and view over the web.  I bought this one. I'll put in a picture cause the link will quit working some day. It costs $110.  Of course, as soon as I bought it, it went down to $99.
I can't figure out what to do with it exactly. We originally mounted it in the garage and pointed it at my wife's tomatoes to see if we could figure out what was eating them. Turned out it was birds.

It doesn't have the highest quality picture but there are a lot of nifty things you can do with it after spending days reading the instructions which you actually have to go looking for on the web. One thing you can do is have it take a picture at regular intervals and send them by ftp to some server if you have an account. I happen to have a GoDaddy account that I use for all kinds of crap like this. Then I take all the pictures and cram them into a movie.

Recently my wife got these neat flowers from the guy who does our next-door neighbors yard. They're big white flowers that bloom when it gets dark and collapse the next day around 10 in the morning. After making sure that I had an adequate WiFi signal in the yard, I set up the camera near sundown and pointed it at the flowers. I set it to take a picture every minute and then left it alone. This is my first shot at it. You have to look fast.


The flowers are definitely cooler than my movie making.

Tuesday, April 08, 2014

A Peep in the MicroWave

So, just what happens when you put an Easter Peep in the microwave?  I decided to find out.  And I decided to record it.  It was necessary to do this pretty soon as the Peeps the I bought at Roses were disappearing one at a time.  So here's what happens.


Cool, Huh?

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Samuel L. Jackson or Laurence Fishburne

Recently a reporter was interviewing Samuel L. Jackson and asked him about his role in a Super Bowl ad. Unfortunately for the reporter, the ad had Laurence Fishburne in it and not Jackson. So Jackson proceeds to mercilessly pound the reporter for quite some time over his mistake. I felt bad for the reporter because I am always getting those two confused. I understand. And I don't get either of them confused with Morgan Freeman.


Which is which?

Tuesday, February 04, 2014

Miracles Do Happen

This morning a minor miracle happened. About two thirds of the way into work, I realized that I had not been stopped by a single red light. And the trend continued all the way to the parking deck. I copied a picture of my route and pasted little stoplights on the route where the lights actually are to give you an idea of what a miracle this was.


It wasn't a perfect miracle. I did take a right on red without having to wait onto Erwin and I slipped through the light on Garrett on yellow fading to red as I passed under it. Maybe I should buy a lottery ticket on the way home.

Friday, January 24, 2014

The Apple Macintosh is 30 Today

As most people who know me know, I've been an Apple "fanboy" for much of my life.  When people have asked me what computer to buy, I always say "Get a Mac".  Anyhow, on the 30th Anniversary of the Mac's introduction, I thought I would put up a list of the Macs I've had over the Years.

The first one was the original Macintosh.  In September, 1984, wife got some friends to get it for me with their college discount, which made it it about half the cost of retail.  I think it was an anniversary gift.  In 1989 I made my best Apple purchase ever.  I bought 100 shares of AAPL at $35 each.


We got our next Mac, a Mac IIsi, seven years later in 1991.  This was purchased with the Princeton college discount.  We also got the 13 inch color display.


After another seven years, in 1998, we got a new G3 desktop with a new 21 inch display.  No college discount but the college discount had pretty much gone away by then.


Seven years later, in 2005, I decided that the computer and the monitor should be separate, so rather than buy an iMac, I purchased a Mac mini and got a Dell monitor to go with it.  After 2 years, I attempted to upgrade the RAM and damaged it such that the fans ran wide open all the time.  Luckily, after a couple of months of loud fan noise, a lightning strike put it out of it's misery.


And so, in 2007, we bought a new Aluminum 20 inch iMac.  This machine was a disaster because it kept shutting down unannounced. After a lot of complaining and phone calls, I got Apple to replace the motherboard and power supply and all was good in the world.  In 2012, I replaced an increasingly flaky internal hard drive with a new 1T drive.


Rather than wait the full seven years, and still feeling a bit guilty about the indulgence since the old one was working fine, I treated myself to a new 27 inch iMac for Christmas 2013.  I reasoned that the stock was doing good enough and I was getting old and it was time and the new one would be a lot faster and, blah, blah, blah.  So I'm just getting it up to speed.  It's a nice toy for an old boy.


So this picture sort of summarizes my Apple Macintosh journey.



Fortunately, the little Apple stock I bought back in 1989 has appreciated nicely enough to cover these purchases along with all the other Apple do-dads we've bought along the way.