going through my old Twitter favorites, so here, have a picture of Mark Melancon from 2016. The look on his face is amazing.
hello vonnie
Not today Justin

oozey mess
Peter Solarz
Mike Driver

titsay
Misplaced Lens Cap
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Keni
NASA
ojovivo
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

No title available
official daine visual archive
Noah Kahan
Game of Thrones Daily
trying on a metaphor
YOU ARE THE REASON
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

ellievsbear

seen from Malaysia
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@nupharlutea
going through my old Twitter favorites, so here, have a picture of Mark Melancon from 2016. The look on his face is amazing.
There's Kevin Gorg out there interviewing ...wait, that's not Eddie Rosario or Miguel Sano or Byron Buxton or Kyle Gibson. This must be hockey season.
"Illuminated Manuscript II", from the September/October 1991 issue of Cross Stitch and Country Crafts. Probably finished in 1995, but I still haven't got around to framing it.
More old circulating library books
Tumblr, why are you useless
Why do you show me posts relevant to my interests (and tracked searches) a week after they were posted? Even if they're by people I follow? This does me no good at all for using Tumblr for fandom.
New paint colors invented by neural network
So if you’ve ever picked out paint, you know that every infinitesimally different shade of blue, beige, and gray has its own descriptive, attractive name. Tuscan sunrise, blushing pear, Tradewind, etc… There are in fact people who invent these names for a living. But given that the human eye can see millions of distinct colors, sooner or later we’re going to run out of good names. Can AI help?
For this experiment, I gave the neural network a list of about 7,700 Sherwin-Williams paint colors along with their RGB values. (RGB = red, green, and blue color values) Could the neural network learn to invent new paint colors and give them attractive names?
One way I have of checking on the neural network’s progress during training is to ask it to produce some output using the lowest-creativity setting. Then the neural network plays it safe, and we can get an idea of what it has learned for sure.
By the first checkpoint, the neural network has learned to produce valid RGB values - these are colors, all right, and you could technically paint your walls with them. It’s a little farther behind the curve on the names, although it does seem to be attempting a combination of the colors brown, blue, and gray.
By the second checkpoint, the neural network can properly spell green and gray. It doesn’t seem to actually know what color they are, however.
Let’s check in with what the more-creative setting is producing.
…oh, okay.
Later in the training process, the neural network is about as well-trained as it’s going to be (perhaps with different parameters, it could have done a bit better - a lot of neural network training involves choosing the right training parameters). By this point, it’s able to figure out some of the basic colors, like white, red, and grey:
Although not reliably.
In fact, looking at the neural network’s output as a whole, it is evident that:
The neural network really likes brown, beige, and grey.
The neural network has really really bad ideas for paint names.
The closest I come to attending Wild games: the library, on a non-game day, 3 hours after morning skate is over
Lessons learned from Opening Days, 2017
So it's really not a good idea to watch hockey and baseball simultaneously because it leads to thoughts like this. Mark Melancon went and blew a save in spectacular fashion at about the same time Mikko Koivu was doing silly things like be in the penalty box twice, and passing the puck to a non-existent teammate when the opponent's net was empty. Did they, like, switch places? (Hi, new followers. My own mother described me, a few weeks ago while we were doing the same dual-watch thing in a bar, as "a Brewers fan with a Mikko Koivu problem" and it's pretty accurate as 2017 goes, eh)
Lessons learned in an offseason
Baseball is not an inferior good. It has no adequate substitute. Other sports are their own things, and can only supplement baseball, not replace it. Also, when you realize you would enjoy your favorite player from another sport even more if he played baseball instead, you just may have a baseball problem.
What would happen if you crossed the cherry tree from X with the kite-eating tree from Peanuts?
I have incontrovertible evidence that there are an infinite number of awful, horrible, useless, comically stupid,and embarrassingly bad ideas. If you pay attention to the world around you, it’s pretty clear that people are coming up with new ones all the time.
Scott Berkun, “Making Things Happen: Mastering Project Management”
Baseball vs hockey fandom: March 2017 edition
Baseball: a good night is when your beloved pitcher doesn't allow a home run Hockey: a good night is when your beloved center doesn't​ leave the game because he's bleeding profusely from the face
The Wide World of Sports Despair
I am not going to the post-Nashville market sale at the LNS because my stash is big enough, for one thing, and the more important thing is that I want to watch the Wild game. It's silly! But the whole thing with sports fandom is that whole sense of the transitory, the cherry blossoms gone too soon (as I think I've even posted here before) and every time I put off watching one of My Pitchers(TM) something bad happens to them. Even when I do see them, like my successful endeavor to see A.J. Griffin in person in 2013, something bad happens. I know that Mikko Koivu isn't a pitcher but he does have an extensive injury history and after 12+ pro seasons that cherry blossom is about ready to go. Have to watch before there isn't any more.
Recovered cross stitch supply stash my mom had in the basement. I have set a goal to not buy any supplies beyond fibers until I clear the stash.
WIP of Pink Field Flowers. 2nd in a series of 3. Love working with DMC Color Variations so far.
Pokemon vs the cable industry
So I've been thinking about this ever since I was informed of this Pokemon called Dedenne, which feeds off the electricity in house outlets and communicates with other Dedenne using radio frequency. So if you have played Pokemon you know that most houses in the game have TVs. Cable TV runs off of radio frequency over the coaxial cable. I gather that Dedenne are rather a household pest in some places due to the easy availability of electrical food. So...Is there cable TV in the Pokemon universe? If so, are Dedenne the major cause of RF interference? What does the cable guy do when he gets out on customer premises on a trouble call and finds a nest of Dedenne? I bet they have to carry Pokeballs with them.
So mom calls during first intermission
Me, while stitching: I'm glad I picked up that needle minder at the Stitchville sale last week.
Mom: What did Niederreiter do?
Me: Needle minder. It holds needles. I don't think Nino is magnetic.