Thursday, June 23, 2022
32.1° Celsius
The temperature at Twenthe Airport has gone up to 32.1° Celsius, which breaks the previous record of 31.3° on this date in 2016.Finding MUPI route
The past two evening, I spend finding a new optimal route. The first short route did look a bit strange, crossing itself. When I added more connections, the TSP solver kept on finding only longer routes. This evening, I made some changes to the solver, which came down to grouping all variants of the same length together and only keeping one. That did result in an interesting route.Wednesday, June 22, 2022
Link
Tuesday, June 21, 2022
AKI MUPI route 2022
I found AKI MUPI ROUTE 2022 and spend some time in Google Earth connecting the locations in order to be able to calculate a shortest route to visit all the MUPI's. Then I decided to write a program, ParseMUPIkml.cpp, to parse the KML file and generate input for the TSP solver, I wrote last year.Links
- Does one simple rule underlie learning in the brain?
- A calcium-based plasticity model for predicting long-term potentiation and depression in the neocortex
Monday, June 20, 2022
Link
Saturday, June 18, 2022
Truck Run 2022
Today, Andy and I joined the yearly Truck Run organized by De Tukker Truckers, just like we did four years ago. The GPS-track of how we drove in KML file for Google Earth.Thursday, June 16, 2022
Drents Museum
Conny and I went to the Drenthe province. We first went to Drents Museum in Assen, the capital of Drenthe. There we saw several exhibitions. The first exhibition we saw was Under the Spell of Mount Ararat. Next, we saw the exhibition Sam Drukker, which consist mainly of self-portrait of the painter Sam Drukker. I found the following paintings noteworthy:- Self-Portrait with Lobster, 2002
- Portrait, 2009
- In the Bath with Marat, 2005
- Without Title (Naked Self-Portrait), 2019
- Portrait with Green Collar, 2015
- Self-Portrait with Bare Shoulder, 2004
- Self-Portrait in front of Easel, 2010
- It is a Boy, 1996
- The Connoisseur, 2002
- Remembrance of Matthijs / After Matthijs Röling, 2003
- The Nose Picker, circa 2006
- Lying man, 2009
- Self-Portrait with Red Shirt, 2022
- The Potato-Eater, 1993
- Portrait 464, 2003
- The Teacher, 1993
- Self-Portrait with Paper Hat, 2006
- Dandelion and bumblebee, 2022
- River bullhead, 2022
- Stag-beetle, 2022
- Self-Portrait in Red Bathrobe, 2007, Barend Blankert
- Self-Portrait, 2003, Rsemin Hendriks
- Self-Portrait, 1832, Louis Albert Roessingh
- Self-Portrait, 2014, Alfred Hafkenscheid
- Self-Portrait with Paintbrush, 1990, Theo l'Herminez
- Self-Portrait, 2008, Thy Jansen
- Self-Portrait, date unknown, Jan Mankes
- Self-Portrait, date unknown, Sinta Salter-Heddema
- Soulmate, 2007, Tamara Müller
- Self-Shortened, 2008, Arout van Albada
- Self-Portrait, date unknown, Jan Roëde
- Self-Portrait, date unknown, Georg Ruefer
- Self-Portrait, circa 1933, Chris Lebean
- Self-Portrait, 2013, Hans Hoekstra
- Self-Portrait Naked Full-Length, 1995, Karel Bushes
- Self-Portrait, 1978, Herman Tulp
- Self-Portrait with Snorkel, 2004, Pieter Pander
- The Mole Catcher, 1984, Rinus van der Meer
- Videocalling with Background, 2021, Peter Hartwig
- Toilet, 2009, Tamara Müller
- Jealousies, 1996, Ilse Meijer
- Self-Portrait, 1996, Theo l'Herminez
- Monochrome Self-Portrait with Cap, Philips Akkerman
- Self-Portrait, 2007, Philips Akkerman
- Inferior with Painter and his Model, 1970, Matthijs Röling
- Self-Portrait with wife, 1918, Bart Peizel
- In-Between Self, 2021, Deborah Poynton
Afterwards, we went walking in Dwingelderveld National Park where we saw Dwingeloo Radio Observatory near the offices of ASTRON.
Nietzsche
This morning, I finished reading the book Nietzsche written by Paul van Tongeren, who recently has been granted the honorary title 'Thinker of the Fatherland'. I started reading the book on May 29. I bought the book on November 27. The book is about Friedrich Nietzsche, his life as a philisopher and less about his personal life. (The name of Lou Salomé is only mentioned twice in the book.) After finishing the book, I felt that the life of Nietzsche has some resemblance with that of Vincent van Gogh. I liked the book and I got the impression that it is a good introduction to Nietzsche as a philosopher.Saturday, June 11, 2022
Doublets
After I saw the exhibition Ergens in het midden... again, I went to Concorodia, where I saw the exhibition Doublet with murals by Petra van Noort (who is from Rotterdam) and an installation by Marleen Kappe (who is from Amsterdam).Thursday, June 9, 2022
Books and cable
Around 11 o'clock, I got two books and a USB-cable in the mail. The books are:- The Diary of Anaïs Nin: 1931-1934 written by Anaïs Nin, edited by Gunther Stuhlmann, and published by Swallow Press in 1966, ISBN:9780156260251, which I had bought on Tuesday at 14:06:51 from Antiquariaat Bij tij en ontij for € 7.00.
- Henry and June written by Anaïs Nin and published by Penguin Books in 1990, ISBN:9780140145915, which I had bought on Tuesday at 10:17:36 from antiquariaat t' Wasdom for € 3.00.
The USB cable is to connect my Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ8 and download the date. Just like in 2018 the SD card has become stuck in the camera after a period where it did not want to stay inside and I had to push it in during taking a photograph. This was also after the cover for the SD card and the battery broke off. Since some time the camera also has some wear on the LCD screen. But for the rest, it is still working. This time, I thought it was beter not to try to repair the SD card holder like I did before, but use the USB cable. It took me some time to figure out which USB cable I needed.
Wednesday, June 8, 2022
Link
Tuesday, June 7, 2022
Link
Monday, June 6, 2022
KunstenLandschap
This afternoon, I biked around the rout of KunstenLandschap 2022. I found the following works worth mentioning:- Various works by Herman de Vries at Bert Kuipers Kunsthandel (#4 at 12:33)
- Soundscape by Peter Geerts. (#7 at 13:11)
- Look Who's Posing Now by Willemijn Calis and Mette Hoekstra. (#8 from 13:17 to 13:29)
- Cees Willemsen (#9 at 13:30)
- Velo-electro by Tristan Kruithof. (#8 at 13:32)
- Ode aan William Turner by Marco Overkamp (#14 at 14:01)
- four video poems by Pat van Boeckel.
- Een oude stem van wind en zout by Monique Bastiaans on the top of Roolvink Esch usually not open to the public. (#21 at 14:57 and 15:10)
- Alive by Tamara Klein. (#23 at 15:07)

Een oude stem van wind en zout
I also paid a visit to Rijksmuseum Twenthe, which also made part of the event, where I saw the following works part of the exhibition Collectie Wilploo:
- Wetmatige Beweging (Zwart-Wit) (1965) by Peter Struycken.
- Buiten de oever (2002) by Elsbeth Cochius.
- Beukenbos (2006) by Elsbeth Cochius.
- The Embium Building in the Sky (2011) by Rik Smits.
- Recreatiegebied #9 (2003) by Renie Spoelstra.
- ZT (B03#12) (2019) by Ruri Matsumoto.
- Zonder titel (2011) by Abdalbagi Ainyal.
On the way home, I went to bookshop Broekhuis, were at 17:02:39, I bought the book Henry & June written by Anaïs Nin, translated from the English edition into Dutch by Margaretha Dorothea Ferguson, published by Volkskrant Verboden Boeken in 2012, ISBN:8710371001989, for € 6.95. At home I discovered that I already at an edition of this book.
Saturday, June 4, 2022
Staggering Genius
I finished reading the book A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers, which I started reading on May 6 after I bought it on Friday, April 29 second-hand. On the front of the book there is a round sticker from Illini Union Bookstore with the text '30% off' suggesting that the book was bought there. On May 8, I already wrote something about the book. At some point, I was afraid that the author was just being funny for the sagke of being funny, but the book also has some serious content. I found the book a bit long-winded here and there, especially regarding the parts with internal dialogue. I searched about some information about the Might magazin but did not find much.JSON processing from HTTP get
With respect to implementing an app store for the the MCH2022 badge, have been studying the ESP HTTP Client and the example program . It works with a callback function that is called whenever results are received. If the data is JSON and you immediately want to process it, you need a JSON parser that can process chunks of data. If you immediately want to process the parsed JSON, you could use some technique like protothreads for C. I started to write some example code.Wednesday, June 1, 2022
Parsing JSON
I have expressed some interest in developing the interface with the Hatchery for the MCH2022 badge. The plan is that a REST API will be developed for the Hatchery. For this it will be needed to parse some JSON. For this, I am looking into some existing JSON parsing libraries. These are the libraries that I looked into:- cJSON: Ultralightweight JSON parser in ANSI C. I would not call it ultralightweight, because it builds a tree structure when parsing the JSON. But for processing JSON it is not neccessary to first build a generic data structure and next process this structure. I think that in an embedded system memory allocations should be avoided as much as possible. The fact that it does not use a union in the definition of the nodes, does not make it particular lightweight with respect to memory usage.
- JSMN jsmn (pronounced like 'jasmine') is a minimalistic JSON parser in C. It looks a little more leightweight because it does not build up a structure, but instead fills an array with tokens that point to the JSON input. It does thus not allocate any memory when called, but you have to specify the number of tokens before calling the function. That is nice when you for parsing JSON messages with a known structures and a limited length. This too is a library that parses the whole JSON in one go and requires you to process the result.
- Frozen: JSON parser and emitter for C/C++. It has a different approach. It has a SAX parser where you need to provide a call-back function. Personally, I dislike SAX like parsers. But beside this it also has some other methods to extract data from a JSON string similar to the scanf function. It also has some functions to parse JSON arrays.
- Parson is a lightweight json library written in C. Also uses some internal structure to represent the JSON.
- tiny-json also parses a JSON string into a tree. Also provides some methods to navigate that structure.
- JSON-C: A JSON implementation in C. It looks very complete, but not very lightweight.
- Jansson. Also looks very complete, but again not very lightweight. In the load.c, I did find the lex_scan function, that implements a lexical scanner for JSON.
I am thinking about developing my own JSON parser as an iterator, much like the lex_scan function from Jansson, for processing data received from the Hatchery. I think, I first want to study the code from performing an HTTP request in the badge and/or storing the data in a local file system (for caching).
Saturday, May 28, 2022
Into the city
This afternoon, I went into the city. I first went to have a look at the exhibition Ergens in het midden... with portrait and nude photographs by Ragnar Gischas. I was impressed by the pictures and found them artistic. There was also a book with some pictures from the exhibition, but for some reason the prints in the book looked less artistic and more nude. Reason for me to not buy the book.I walked through the city and went to bookshop Broekhuis where I found a large collection of autobiographic books from Privé-domein ("private domain") series. At 15:50:49, I bought the following two books:
- Eindexamencatalogus 2004 Academie voor de beeldende kunsten en vormgeving Arnhem written in Dutch and published by Academie voor de beeldende kunsten en vormgeving in 2004 for € 7.95.
- Aan nederlagen geen gebrek: Brieven en documenten 1988-1994 written by Arnon Grunberg in Dutch and published by Singel Uitgeverijen in 2016, ISBN:9789029505802 for € 14.95.
Friday, May 27, 2022
Links
- Lexical Distance Among Languages of Europe 2015
- Justice and rejection sensitivity in children and adolescents with ADHD symptoms
Thursday, May 26, 2022
Forward button presses to FPGA
Today, I have done some work for the firmware for the MCH2022 badge. I worked on the issue for sending button presses to the FPGA. I managed to get a working solution. I needed to install the pyserial in order to run the Python script for uploading bitstream to the badge. I extended the script a bit for debugging purposes. I was using the following command:python3 fpga.py /dev/ttyACM0 buttons.bin
Links
Wednesday, May 25, 2022
Link
Tuesday, May 24, 2022
Link
Saturday, May 21, 2022
Link
Thursday, May 19, 2022
Arnhem
Conny and I went to Arnhem. We first went to Museum Arnhem. From the exhibition consume by, I found the following works interesting:- Science Fiction Postcards by Stéphanie Roland, 2013. (This had a heating panel besides it, which I found a little strange in an exhibition about the climate, while it was also possible to use body heat instead.)
- Maaier by Jan Toorop, 1915.
- De Storm by Helma Pantus, 1991.
- In Pursuit if Bling by Otobong Nkanga, 2014.
- De zich spiegelende beek by Johannes Warnardus Bilders, circa 1870.
- Heidelandschap by Frederik Hendrik Hendriks, circa 1840.
- Drie Schildpadden by Carel Willink, 1952
- De maraboes by Carel Willink, 1962.
- Bush Compulsion: a Primitive Breakthrough in the Modern Mind by Melanie Bonajo & Emmeline de Mooij, 2008.
- IJsselgezicht bij Hattem by Jan Voerman Sr, circa 1925-1930.
- Woudsterweg bij Oranjewoud by Jan Mankes, 1912.
- Weidelandschap by Ali Goubitz, 1934.
- Primordeal Earth (foto serie) by Léonard Pongo, 2017-Now
- Zonder titel by Britta Marakatt-Labbu, 2011.
- Growth by Wiebke Pandikow, 2016.
- Andere wereld by Maurits Cornelis Escher, 1947.
- Kust bij Amalfi by Maurits Cornelis Escher, 1931.
- Mijn moeder by Wim Schuhmacher, 1925.
- Babel by Nicolaas Wijnberg, 1970.
- Zittend naakt voor de spiegel by Herman Meurs, 1929.
- Vrouwen in de straat by Pyke Koch, 1964.
- Bladeren met fruit by Edgar Fernhout, 1935.
- Witte kelkjes by Edgar Fernhout, 1935.
- Zonder titel by Gaby Bovelander, 1977.
- Zelfportret (naakt) by Henk Mual, 1959.
- Hate crime surivor I by Zanele Muholi, 2004.
- Zelfportret (gender) by Dorian Hiethaar, 1984.
- The guilt of the privileged by Marlene Dumas, 1988.
- Protester #1-24 by Iris Kensmil, 2020.
- De leesplank by Klaas Gubbels, 1964.
- Stilleven met de hand by Dick Ket, 1933.
- Stillevem met druiventros by Dick Ket, 1934.
- Zelfportret by Dick Ket, 1939.
- Stilleven met bokkingen by Raoul Hyncker, 1941.
- Damesportret by Henri van de Velde, circa 1930 - 1940.
- Nocture by Pyke Koch, 1930.
- Mercedes de Barcelona by Pyke Koch, 1930.
- Voorstudie voor de grote contorsioniste by Pyke Koch, 1956.
- Zelfportret by Carel Willink, 1941.
- Wilma met kat by Carel Willink, 1940.
- Het gele huis by Carel Willink, 1934.
- Château en Espange by Carel Willink, 1939.
- Job by Carel Willink, 1938.
- Ariadne van Bolivie by Carel Willink, 1926.
- Zelfportret by Berthe Edersheim, 1932.
- Jonge vrouw met portretjes by Harmen Meurs, 1929.
- Eenzaam by Herman Meurs, 1936.
- Twee vrouwen (Berthe en Lenu Edersheim by Charley Toorop, 1933.
- Liggend naakt by Charley Toorop, 1932.
- Portrait de ma by Gé Röling, 1932.
- Portret van mevrouw D. by Wim Schuhmacher, 1936.
- The tourist by Margriet van Breevoort, 2016.
- Vanitas (2) by Hans Op de Beeck, 2012.
- Borstentros by Maria Roosen, 2010.
- 12,5% Proog by Marc Quinn, 1993.
- Ondergrondse fontein by Thom Puckey, 1989.
- Venustrechter by Rebecca Horn, 1986.
- On invisible waves by Scheila Najand, 2001.
- I Almost Forgot by Peter Santino, 2001.
- Pelikaan by François Pompon, 1954.
- Vrouwelijke figuur by Dirk Wolbers, 1935.
- Voice of Nature - Fagus Sylvatica.Antropunicea 1900 by Thijs Bierstekker in cooperation with scientist prof. Stefano Mancuso.
- Autoritratto by Alighiero Boetti, 1993-1994.
After the visit to the museum we walked along the Roemondsplein (square) were the environmental artwork De Blause Golven (The Blue Waves) by Peter Struycken can still be seen in its original state. At the border of the square there is a large sign about the reorganization of the square. This will also involve changing the art work by changing the ratio between the width of the blue and white stripes.
We spend some time in the bookshop De Colofon. At 14:54, I bought the book Theo van Doesburg: oeuvre catalogus written by Theo van Doesburg, Els Hoek, Marleen Blokhuis, Centraal Museum, and Rijksmuseum Kröller-Müller, edited by Els Hoek, illustrations by Theo van Doesburg, written in Dutch and published by Centraal Museum in 2000, ISBN:9789068682557, for € 28.50.
Shortly after three, we arrived at St Eusebius' Church. We walked around the mostly empty church before we were allowed to go up into the tower. The tower was closed due to some bad weather conditions. (Later we discovered that damage caused by thunderstorms in some eastern parts of the country including Enschede were we live.) We dared to walk onto the two glass observation balconies at a height of 59 and 62 meters and took some pictures from them. There was also an audio tour about the Operation Market Garden and the destruction of the church.
After our visit to the church, we walked around a bit, and around five arrived at the Indonesian restaurant Rasasari. We both had a big rames dish where you can make a selection of ingredients to be used. Conny selected rendang beef, tumis beans, gado gado with yellow rice. I selected ayam semoor chicken, atjar, orah areh with fried rice. The dishes also came with a boiled egg, tempeh, fried coconut and crispy potato. We both liked these typical Indonesian dishes.
Wednesday, May 18, 2022
Fort Pannerden
Conny and I visited Fort Pannerden, a disused military fort. We learned something about the history of the area and the fort. The audio tour was quite interesting. It took us about two hours to walk through the fort and listen to all the stories. In the middle of the tour we saw an exhibition of woouden sculptures by Will Schropp. We also bought two metal mugs. Next we walked to the end of the dam where the Bijlands Kanaal splits into Pannerdens Kanaal and the river Waal.Link
- Ithkuil: A very complex constructed language
Tuesday, May 17, 2022
Nijmegen
This afternoon, Conny and I went to city of Nijmegen. We first visited the Valkhof Museum where we spend most of out time at the Moving Stories, the riches of the Limes exhibition. It is a mixture of archaeological artifacts and modern art. I liked the following items from the exhibition:- 7: Steel to Rust - Meltdown by Otobong Nkanga, 2016.
- 26: The Constellations #4, #5, and #6 by Bouchra Khalili, 2011.
- 46: Mijn naam is Taal by Nicoline van Harskamp, 2021 (For a different recording, see: Mijn naam is Taal | My Name is Language.)
- 54: Things, Traces and Memories by Ni Haifeng, 2021.
- 87: Café Disorient by Susanne Khalil Yusef, 2021. In particular the painting Palestijnse vluchteling - Een laatste blik by william Halewijn.
- Gezicht op de Nijmeegse binnenstad vanaf de spoorbrug by Hendrik Elias Roodenburg, 1926.
- Gezicht op de benedenstad met op de achtergrond de Sint-Stevenstoren by Dorus Arts
- Gezicht op het Valkhof vanaf de Vleeshouwerstraat by Ben Viegers.
- Gezicht op Nijmegen vanaf de Lentse Waaloever Evert Moll, 1920-1930.
- Rotation fourfold 1-4 by Kenneth Martin, 1975.
- De innerlijke strijd van de handelsreiziger by Berend Hendriks, 1980.
- Thema III T 11; eerste tekening voor schilderij 04 van thema III; de vierde cirkel by Berend Hendriks, 1970.
- Thema IV T 17; tekening nr. 17 voor thema IV; reeksmatige ontwikkeling regel B; enkelvormige kerngroei in 3 lagen, aanzet. by Berend Hendriks, 1976,
- Thema IV T 13; reeksmatige ontwikkeling regel B, ontwerp by Berend Hendriks, 1973.
After the visit to the museum, we visited Antiquariaat Van Hoorn (at Houtstraat 35), a bookshop with second hand books. We also paid a short visit to an underground bike shop where the remains of an old defense tower are revealed. It is called the lost tower, because there was no record of a tower at that location. The tower was part of a second ring of stone walls and towers around the city that was believed to have been build but for which never any evidence was found.
We had a dinner at Thibea, were we ordered the following dishes:
- Red lentil walnut craquettes. Red lentil walnut croquettes, kimchi mayonannaise, lemon. (As a starter.)
- Caulifower 'steak'. Roasted harissa cauliflower, carrot chickpea cream, escalivada, green asparagus, spinach, almond, wild garlic dressing. (One for each of us.)
- Roasted sweet potato. Cashew sour cream, pimentón, spring onion, green herbs. (As a side dish.)
Afterwards, we walked through the city to look at the remains of old medieval and Roman walls on the river side of the town. I walked the labyrith at the river side from the inside to the center. While standing at the center, I heard my own voice bouching of the round walls of the labyrith. I cheated on the way out.
Monday, May 16, 2022
Lunar eclipse
Conny and I woke up around a quarter to four and went outside to see the lunar eclipse. The weather prediction stated that it would be cloudy, but the sky looked clear. However, when the eclipse increased and the moon went down, it became clear there were clouds at the horizon. Due to the sun getting up at our location, the sky became too light to see the part part of the moon and see the redening that is typical for a blood moon. Below a crop of one of the last good pictures Conny took from the moon. After this, we turned around our chairs to watch the sun rise. Below one of the pictures Conny took from the red sky before the sunrise. We also watched the first trips of the ferry going from the otherside to our side and back. We were surprised by the number of cars on those trips guessing that there must be a number or regulars taking these first two trips.

Emmerich, Schenkenschanz, and Kleve
This afternoon, Conny and I made a trip through Germany. We first visted Emmerich am Rhein where we walked along the Rhein front and visited two Roman Catholic churces. Next we travel to the Spyk hamlet on the south front of the Rhine were at 13:35 we found the border poles 660 (D). One of them was a little closer to the river in an area that we could not visit. We saw some dark clouds and heard some thunder. We continued to the remote village Schenkenschanz and waited some time in the car for the rain to stop before we walked through the village. At the location of the village there used to be a fortress at the location where the Rhein would split into the Waal and the Nederrijn. Through several efforts to canal the river, that location has now changed close to Pannerden. The last place we visited was Kleve were we only visited the Klever Schlosspark. Just across the road there is a long pond going into the direction of the church at Hochelten. This only becomes visible from the lookout point higher up the hill. Around the pond there is a pathway named after the German artist Joseph Beuys.Sunday, May 15, 2022
Tolkamer and Hochelten
In the morning, Conny and I, went to the village Tolkamer. The name is Dutch for toll room. It is on the riverbank of The Rhine with Germany on the other bank. For about 7.8Km the border the Netherlands and Germany is in the middle of the Rhein. Actually, the west half is the Bijlandskanaal. In the afternoon, we visited the village Hochelten, which is part of Elten. It is just across the border in Germany. Through the ages it has either belonged to the Netherlands and Geramny. The last period it belonged to the Netherlands was between April 23, 1949 and August 1, 1963. Even now it is surrounded by the Netherlands from three sides. There is a mixed population of Dutch and Germans living in the village. We met with at least one German person there who spoke perfect Dutch. Hochelten is on a hill that is about 82m above sea level. On the top of the hill, there is the church St, Vitus. The first church was build in 967 on this spot. We visited the church. Before we came to the church, we saw Der Stein Tor (German for The Stone Door) sculpture by Christoph Wilmsen-Wiegemann. Near the church there was also a stone chair from which you could see some dent in far away hills that could be seen between the 'door'. We wondered if on that far away hills there would be a similar sculture. In the evening, we discovered that dent is near the Klever Schlosspark. The church belonged to a Damenstift, which was also on top of the hill. We also visited the Brususbron, a 57 deep well on the top of the hill, which was probable dug to provide water for the damenstift. The name refers to Nero Claudius Drusus, who although he did campaigns in the area, is not believed to have visited the hill nor commanded to dug the well.We also visited a number of border poles in the morning and afternoon. These are:
- At 11:08, pole 659 (N)
- At 11:39, pole 600 (N)
- At 15:01, pole 663-D
- At 15:03, pole 663-E
- At 15:15, pole 663
Saturday, May 14, 2022
Pannerden
Today, Conny and I arrived in the village Pannerden where we are actually staying outside the village near the ferry crossing the Pannerdens Kanaal to Doornenburg. The ferry is one of eleven motor supported reaction ferries in the Netherlands. There are three small boats up stream through which the ferry is connected with a cable to the anker point in the middle of the canal. After we arrived, we sat outside and watched the sunset. We will stay here for about a week and make trips to surrounding areas and cities.Monday, May 9, 2022
Link
Sunday, May 8, 2022
Spruce Street, Berkeley
I have started reading the book A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius. I was reading Chapter 2, where it mentioned Grotto Rock. After some map searching, it seems that they lived at 876 Spruce Street, Berkeley. The book also mentions the author walking down Marin Street, but that must be Marin Ave. Although Cragmont Elementary School is just across the street, in the book it says that they send Toph to Black Pine Circle. On page 59, there is a mentioning of a nude beach. This could either be Gray Whale Cove State Beach or a smaller one closer to Montara that is now closed.Addition: On Monday, I discovered that Cragmont Elementary School was closed between 1990 and 1999.
Thursday, May 5, 2022
De vijfde lijn
I finished reading the book De vijfde lijn (Dutch for The fifth line) which is based on a number of talks between Steven Aalders (a Dutch abstract artist) and Robert van Altena (a Dutch art critic). I started reading the book on February 23. I bought it on January 26. Just like with Peter Struycken, colour plays a central role in his works. He makes use of simple shapes, mostly rectangles. Compared to Struycken, it seems to me that his approach towards colours is more intuitive (based on emotions) whereas that of Struycken seems to be more rational. On page 36 of the book Struycken is mentioned along with Jerry Zeniuk (a German artist) and Daniel Buren. On page 237 Aalders makes a remark how Rembrandt in his painting Self-Portrait with Two Circles made use of the four colours from the Greek antiques: Whites, blacks, ochres and reds. Struycken has studied the use of these four colours from the Greek antiques through history. On page 192 the book references Sentences on Conceptual Art by Sol LeWitt.Wednesday, May 4, 2022
Uploading bitstream to FPGA
Yesterday evening at TkkrLab, I talked about helping out with developing the firmware for the MCH2022 Badge. I am going to look into uploading bitstreams to the FPGA through the USB connector. The first idea is to add a menu option to the main menu which listens to the USB connector for a bitstream to be uploaded to the badge and which when the bitstream is received, uploads it to the FPGA. There is already code available to upload a bitstream from an SD-card. I will also have to develop a program for sending a bitstream from a file to the USB. I had a look at the code of iceprog, the program to upload bitstreams to, for example, the UPDuino. This program talks to a flash-chip. So, it is not really applicable. This evening, I spend cloned the firmware repo and build it, running the Install Prerequisites for ESP-IDF and next using the following commands:git clone https://github.com/badgeteam/mch2022-firmware-esp32.git cd mch2022-firmware-esp32/ git submodule init git submodule update esp-idf/install.sh . esp-idf/export.sh ./build.sh
I only found the BADGE.TEAM > ESP32: firmware development > Getting started page after I did this. I do not know whether this is still up-to-date. I spend some time studying the code in the 'main' folder and from there also some files in some other folders.
Tuesday, May 3, 2022
Links
- HN discussion of A Minimal C Compiler in x86 assembly (kind of)
Monday, May 2, 2022
Link
Sunday, May 1, 2022
Irregular grids
In the past weeks, I wrestled a lot with finding a correct algorithm for the generation of irregular grids of squares and equilateral triangles. For a long time, I worked on an algorith that would generate all possible strings of 'pieces' (the triangles and squares at the various orientations) from a give string of pieces. But it was only after I decided to look at the five possible slopes of the lines on the top and bottom of the strings of pieces and generate all possible strings of slopes from a given string of slopes, that I succeeded in implementing the working program irst.cpp this evening. It also groups all strings of slopes into groups that can reach each other the program finds a total of 455 groups. Many of these groups have just one or a few elements. There are also groups that have strings of slopes that have not been investigated (marked with the text 'FAIL'). This is because the strings of slopes are generated by searching all strings of pieces up to and include a length of twelve that return to the first element of the string.Link
Saturday, April 30, 2022
The Nemesis Machine
Yesterday evening, I wanted to see the opening of the The Nemesis Machine by Dr Stanza at the Museum of the Future. The announcement of the opening on Facebook said that it would start at 19:30, but when I arrived there, I heard that the real opening started at 20:00. Because I wanted to be home before 20:30, I decided to go home. Today, I bought a free ticket, which stated 14:00. I arrived shortly before 14:00, but a little after 14:00, I discovered a sign saying the museum only opens at 15:00. I walked around the city and visted the exhibition Ateliers '93 op bezoek at Concordia. It has works by seven artist from the artist collective Ateliers'93 from Hengelo. Quite interesting. I liked the What are you looking for works by Jose Maria Verstappen and also the collage by Gertie van Neunen with the last three lines of the poem On A Distant Prospect of Eton College by Thomas Gray:Thought would destroy their paradise.
No more;—where ignorance is bliss,
'Tis folly to be wise.
Around 15:08, I arrived at the Museum of the Future again only to be told that the room with The Nemesis Machine was not open yet and that it might still take an hour for it to open. I decided to pay a short visit to TkkrLab. At 17:33, I returned and saw The Nemesis Machine. I was not very impressed. It was basically old PCBs decorated with some LEDs that blink in a seemingly random pattern, based on signals from IoT sensors in Portugal according to the description on the wall. Random patterns, even if based on an external source (which might be interesting in itself), are not interesting as they contain no information just like a boring constant signal. Signals only become interesting when they have a pattern.