Summer is officially over, and we spent a lot of it at the beach. Lots of days there was a wall of fog right off the shore, which reminded me of that Star Trek episode with Dr. Crusher trapped in a pocket reality where the universe is a spheroid region 705 meters in diameter.
Google Messaging Apps History
A decade and a half of instability: The history of Google messaging apps … Google seems content only to spin up an innumerable number of under-funded, unstable side projects led by job-hopping project managers.
I’ve watched XMPP-based Google Talk, Google Hangouts, Google Plus and now Google Chat and Meet march by in my Gmail sidebar. Never even bothered with Allo and Duo.
(But hey, ICQ is still around.)
Doogie Matrix
There’s a new Matrix movie and since it features Neil Patrick Harris of “Doogie Howser, MD” fame, I had to do this mashup:
Tangentially of interest, a new Disney series based on Doogie Howser, also about a young doctor: Doogie Kamealoha, MD.
MREs
Only just recently learned about Steve1989MREInfo (aka “Let’s Get This Out On a Tray, Nice” dude), who records soothingly comprehensive video reviews of military rations from around the world and through history.
I was especially interested in the Humanitarian Daily Rations, airdropped by the US to feed a wide range of civilian populations in crisis — how are they adapted to fit a variety of dietary restrictions? (The answer: lots of beans and lentils and rice. Interestingly they still include peanut butter packets; I guess peanut allergies aren’t much of a concern.)
- Year 2000 Yellow Pack review
- Year 2003 Pink Pack review (colour was changed because the yellow looked too much like undetonated cluster bombs)
Also thinking of getting some civilian MREs for emergency or camping use. And in case you were wondering, yes, there are Filipino MREs as well.
HaliPano
Quick iPhone panorama of Halifax from the Ferry Terminal Park in Dartmouth across the harbour:
Nearby, the fire rescue boat “Kjipuktuk”: true Mi’kmaw name of Halifax Harbour and the surrounding area.
Suborbital Tourism
July 2021 saw two major suborbital space flights, significant for being private commercial space tourism trips carrying the founders of their companies with paid or sponsored passengers:
Virgin Galactic Unity 22 [WP/YT] aboard SpaceShipTwo VSS Unity, air-launched from carrier aircraft VMS Eve, reached an apogee of about 86km (under the 100km Kármán Line but above the USAF threshold for space), with Virgin’s Richard Branson aboard.
Blue Origin NS-16 [WP/YT] aboard a New Shepard launcher and capsule, reached an apogee of 107 km (above the Kármán Line, so within the international definition of space), with Amazon’s Jeff Bezos aboard — and Wally Funk of the Mercury 13.
14 years after SpaceShipOne flew its historic X-Prize flights, it says something about how I’ve changed that I went from thinking “hey maybe I’ll have $250K for a suborbital hop” back then to “they should pay fair wages and stop evading taxes” today.
I guess it was too much to hope commercial space tourism would grow into more than a couple of billionaire junkets. But hey, I’m happy Wally Funk got to space.
Truro, NS
I had to drive up to Truro for my second vaccine dose so I wandered around town to see some sights and get some lunch.
I’d heard about the local brown sauce pizza and wanted to give that a try, but all the pizza places I found downtown were closed, so I settled for some Murphy’s fish and chips, eaten alone in my car later. Best fish and chips I’d ever had.
And since I work for them now I also dropped by some Trailer Park Boys season 8-12 filming locations, like Forrester Hall at the NSCC Truro campus, or “Sunnyvale Hospital”:
In the nearby village of Bible Hill is Bible Hill Estates, or Sunnyvale Trailer Park (this field was where Ricky, Julian, and Bubbles lived, but the trailers and sheds have since been removed or destroyed):
And down the highway, the site of the old Palliser Restaurant, Motel, and Gift Shop, namesake of Trinity and Jacob’s son Mo. (The motel and house have been demolished, and the field is now a parking lot):
Across the road is the Fundy Discovery Site, where one can watch the tidal bore flow through. (I had already missed that morning’s tidal bore, though.) Funny thing here, the parking area was all people eating fish and chips, so I parked there and did likewise. When in Truro…
I’d definitely like to come back here some day to see the tidal bore, and there’s a nice playground by the viewing area that my kid would enjoy. More photos from the day in my Truro NS photoset.
COVID-19: 3rd Wave, Vaccinated
Got my first Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine dose in May and second dose in July. Only major side effects were muscle aches and fatigue the day after the second dose, gone the next morning. As of this week, wife and I are officially fully immunized — but not our son, so until a vaccine is approved for children under 12, we continue to mask up and avoid most social contact to avoid the slim chance of bringing home an asymptomatic breakthrough infection.
Meanwhile Nova Scotia is on the tail end of a third wave of COVID-19 that maxed out at over 1700 active cases, but was brought back down to single digits by hard restrictions. Low numbers with no (?) community spread persist now even after a gradual multiphase reopening, so the vaunted Atlantic Canadian pandemic response seems to have worked once more.
I’m troubled by governments and individuals running victory laps, unmasking, and relaxing on safety before we’ve approached herd immunity levels of vaccination coverage, especially with no immunization options yet available for children under 12. The pandemic is not over and things can change quickly, especially with more infectious variants constantly developing; nor is vaccination a magic bullet, especially where uptake or supply is low.
Got a bad feeling that with relaxation of restrictions and the messaging switching to “we have to learn to live with COVID,” things are about to get bad again, for vaxed and unvaxed alike, just in time for when school starts in September — and the Delta variant is more dangerous for children.

Hope we’re wrong on this but for us it’s gonna be Swiss cheese for a while longer.
Five
At the age of five, Ezra can now write his own name, count to a hundred, has lost his first baby tooth (yeah, a bit earlier than most kids), and finished his first year of school.
He is really into Super Mario now, is able to finish World 1-1 of Super Mario Bros by himself, and enjoys watching us play through Super Mario 64, Sunshine, and Galaxy on the Nintendo Switch. Through the course of lockdown he’s been using combinations of toys to build his own Super Mario levels, in 2D and 3D, so we got him a LEGO Super Mario set.
We’re still in the same pandemic we were in last year but at least we’ve settled into the new house.
Storm Clouds
While picking up some pizza I saw these lovely shelf clouds advancing ahead of a rain storm over Halifax.
(Managed to get these photos, get back in the car, and head home before big splattery rain drops started falling, and only got a little wet running the pizzas from car to house when I got home.)




















