woodchuck

There's a question how much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood. Obviously, a woodchuck would chuck wood as much wood as a woodchuck could.

shrugs

droplets

shiny water droplets on leaves

The Story of the Chinese Farmer

“You’ll never know what would be the consequences of misfortune. Or, you’ll never know what would be the consequences of good fortune.” — Alan Watts

Persistent bat is persistent

For the last couple weeks or so, there's a bat that somehow managed to sneak in and hid somewhere in the house and then flew frantically in the living room every evening around this time of the day, causing the cats to run and jump around trying to catch it. We caught this bat every time and delivered it outside, hoping it would never return again. But it kept coming back. Now I am sort of giving up trying to catch it. Even the cats are no longer paying attention to the bat and just give this "meh" face when they spotted it.

old window #garage

old windoe

“Thief of Time”

For something to exist, it has to be observed.

For something to exist, it has to have a position in time and space.

And this explains why nine-tenths of the mass of the universe is unaccounted for. Nine-tenths of the universe is the knowledge of the position and direction of everything in the other tenth. Every atom has its biography, every star its file, every chemical exchange its equivalent of the inspector with a clipboard. It is unaccounted for because it is doing the accounting for the rest of it, and you cannot see the back of your own head.*

Nine-tenths of the universe, in fact, is the paperwork.

*Except in very small universes.

— Terry Pratchett, Thief of Time

(that paperwork statement feels so true in so many things…)

Yo!

\m/

Public Domain Day (January 1, 2016): what could have entered it in 2016 and what did get released

Every year, January 1st also marks works from around the world that would be entering the public domain thanks to the copyright laws in their respective countries. Sadly, none of them are made available in the US yet, even works from Lorraine Hansberry, T.S. Eliot, Winston Churchill, and Malcom X. Curses (and lucky you, Canadians!)

Public Domain Reviews put a list of creators whose work that are entering the public domain for Europe and Canada. (http://publicdomainreview.org/collections/class-of-2016/). Nice list (also, Bella Bartok!) Although, Canada might be required to add 20 years the copyright term next year thanks to the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement. \silent curses\

Center of Study for the Public Domain put a list of some quite well-known works that are still under the extended copyright restriction: http://web.law.duke.edu/cspd/publicdomainday/2016/pre-1976

John Mark Ockerbloom from the University of Pennsylvania pointed out that the 1959 articles from Nature, Science, and the Journal of American Medical Association (JAMA) can now be digitized and open for public consumption. https://everybodyslibraries.com/2016/01/01/public-domain-day-2016-freezes-and-thaws/

Three more years to go (e.g. in 2019) until we can see something that would enter public domain in the US.

The awesome things @ Michigan State University

Sometime ago I read about going out and learning about your own surroundings. Sorry, I’m completely blank on the actual resource and whether I read from one of those motivational emails or tweets or websites or image meme. The point is, we should not stay inside our own bubble.

How much do we actually know the kind of awesome services or initiatives available in our own library or within other units on campus? I only know a little, to be honest. Many times I found out a cool set of collection in the library because somebody mentioned it, a local newspaper wrote about it, or from the newsletter sent to the library supporters. Kinda embarrassing, but, hey, better late than never. Same thing with many initiatives happening around campus. With so many units established on campus, I am sure I miss many of them. But I would like to highlight several of them:

First, MSU Libraries is gathering text and data aimed for digital humanities (DH) projects either through our own digital collection or collaborate with vendors. It’s all started with a request from a research faculty wanting to work on a topic that would require Congressional data. This collaboration with the faculty prompted our Digital Humanities librarians to pursue other text or data collections that we could offer to our users (and, in some cases, to the public).

MSU Libraries Digital Humanities text and data collections

Another one that I’d like to highlight is Enviro-weather, a weather-based tools for Michigan Agriculture’s pest, natural resources, and production management decisions. This is a collaborative project between the Michigan Climatological Resources Program and the MSU Integrated Pest Management Program. Each yellow dot on the map represents an Agriculture Station. If you highlight the dot with your cursor, you’ll see the latest weather data pulled from the weather station positioned around the state. Click on the dot and you’ll see a more complete information on the area. You could, of course, go further and get the raw data itself by going to their Enviro-Weather Automated Weather Station Network site.

Michigan State University Enviro-Weather tool

The Geographic Information System (GIS) unit on campus created cool and useful GIS-based applications that they developed to showcase the MSU campus. My favorite applications are these two below:

The Historical Imagery provides aerial photography of the MSU campus from 1938 to 2010 (I hope they’d add more for the later years.) While interacting with application, I, of course, couldn’t resist checking the area where the current MSU Libraries is located. By moving the slider slowly, I could see the changes happened from an empty slot to its current structure. Not all images are available; sometimes you get an empty section due to image unavailability. Still, it’s really cool to see the changes happened during the last 60 years or so.

Michigan State University GIS Historical Imagery

The Environmental Stewardship (requires Adobe Flash Player 11 or higher, unfortunately) allows one to check the energy consumption and/or waste reduction effort around campus. You can pick a building and generate the report based on the data for current or past fiscal year. One can see that they made the information available for the public to see and download due to MSU’s status as a public and land grant university; the application allows the public to inspect and interact with the information themselves.

Michigan State University Environmental Stewardship map

There are more great projects and initiatives around campus like the ones that I highlighted above. It would be nice if I could do a “cool stuff on campus” search on the university website instead of relying on the serendipity. But, hey, I probably should go around and ask instead. :-)

Favourite excerpt for the time being

[Mark]”…Codfish Islands was infested with feral cats. In other words, cats that have returned to the wild.”

[Doug]”I always think that’s an artificial distinction. I think all cats are wild cats. They just act tame if they think they’ll get a saucer of milk out of it…”

— Douglas Adams and Mark Carwardine, Last Chance to See