Thursday, October 17, 2024

Voici, les Tomates

I have had an interesting week.

Got handed two rather complicated and convoluted document revision jobs at work.

Spent a lot more time than I wanted grading papers after the day job and am still behind in my teaching work.

I'll spend this evening helping to paint an enormous pile of pumpkins for a city pumpkin display that has to be ready on Saturday and has a good chance of being snowed on.

But I do have some itty-bitty tomatoes growing in my window well, so that kind of takes the curse off it.




Wednesday, October 16, 2024

"The Stranger," and Bugs Bunny

I've had this book on my shelf for a long time, and finally pulled it off the shelf to read this week.

The plot: (warning, spoilers)

(Bugs Bunny quote)

[Blam] . . . [blam blam blam blam]

There is no God.

I mean, there's a little more to it, I guess, but that's what I got out of it.

A senseless murder committed, the back cover says, by a man "victimized by life."

Not really. He saw a dog that was poorly treated. He saw his best friend beat up a woman. He didn't know how old his mother was when she died. But he seems a lot more autistic than victimized by anything even approaching life. I say autistic because he's a character who approaches life logicially, and seems to have a difficult time expressing emotion.

I can say I've read the book. I'm not going to say I enjoyed it.

Also, the Cat in the Hat-inspired characters on the cover never showed up.

Sunday, October 13, 2024

We Don't Look Half Bad


Thanks to Maaike and Jason, we had a fun cousins party last weekend.

I'm posting two photos because it looks like some of us managed to hide behind the others.


Yes, that one's much better.
 

Saturday, October 12, 2024

Paver Project, Almost Done



I'm close to having these pavers done. Well, they're all in place and cut, but I've got to do some cementing along the edges and then get some dirt hauled in because as I discovered, there's a bit of a pit in this part of the yard. Good for keeping water away, but not necessarily good for keeping pavers in place.

Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Yup. Local Traffic Only.

An update to my post from last May, re: a shortcut many people in Ammon are used to taking through a neighborhood to the south of us to get from 17th Street to Sunnyside without having to traverse the mess that is Hitt Road.

The city's traffic comittee, in conjunction with residents in the area along Curlew and Eagle Drives between 17th Street and the canal at Salmon Street, have decided to really make the roads local traffic only by kneecapping access.

The plan is to make the canal bridge at Salmon a one-way only going south, and the intersection of Curlew and 17th street a one-way-only going north out of Curlew.

Like this:

The yellow line shows the route people were taking to avoid traffic on Hitt, and the red arrows show how that trip will be rendered impossible by the new restrictions.

Changes at the canal bridge will be immediate, but the city is going to have to do a little study and homework to make the change at Curlew and 17th Street take effect.

Traffic counts are showing the route is seeing more than 4,500 cars a day. I'm going to say I have my doubts about this. I admit I take that shortcut route on occasion, and I've never felt the roads had more traffic than the minor arterials in our neighborhood. Yes, Eagle is a narrow road, but for the most part, I've seen people well behaved there. That being said, I don't live on the road and haven't seen what the residents have seen, though I suspect when the traffic counting was taking place there were more than a few residents of that neighborhood who did a few extra loops every time they left home to goose that count up.

As I mentioned in my previous post, linked above, the city has a much better minor arterial at Midway that could do the job this route is doing except it doesn't have traffic lights at either end. A city councilman told me today that to move the traffic lights would cost in the neighborhood of $1-2 million apiece, and since Midway doesn't have the traffic count to merit grant assistance, the city's not in a position to do the work.

That seems a bit disingenuous as I believe the current shortcut is taken partly because the traffic lights at either end, and if the lights weren't there but elsewhere, the traffic count elsewhere would increase. But that's clearly cart before the horse thinking.

Anyway, I guess the local input is what mattered here. I hope they're willing to sleep in the bed they've made, because I'm fairly confident residents of those streets also liked being able to get in and out without having to go to Hitt Road -- which they really can't do anyway, as the city's streets in that area are kind of a cluster anyway (see the linked post above).

I should point out that as of today, the traffic situation in our neighborhood has changed. John Adams is now a through street from almost Ammon Road to Hitt, and before too long Curlew will be a through street from 17th Street to First Street. First Street is temporarily closed as the canal company puts in a new bridge over the canal by Hitt in preparation for First being widened to five lanes next year.

Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Kinda Showing Your Cards there, Maverick.


When this is the prompt shown going into your artificial intelligence essay writer in one of the ads you're using to shill it on social media, you know what the service you're offering is being used for, and who's going to use it.

I was going to name the company, but it doesn't matter. They're all pretty shameless in their purpose and marketing, so picking one out of the crowd as the most shameless seems moot.

And yet students still appear stunned when instructors call them out on their use of AI.

The irony is many of the students are going through machination after machination to try to conceal their use of AI -- in other words, putting effort into making a silk purse out of a sow's ear when that effort could go into making the silk purse to begin with.

Monday, October 7, 2024

Hold Fast

I have been highly entertained -- and educated a few times -- by Rainman Ray, a Florida auto mechanic and YouTuber. I've watched him go from working at a dealership to starting up and succeeding with his own auto repair shop.

I've also watched he and his family -- mostly him, because he respects his wife's wishes to keep his kids out of the limelight -- survive through two hurricanes.

Right now I'm watching as he boards up house and shop in preparation for Hurricane Milton. I wish him and his family well.




TOUGHER SENTENCES FOR JOGRAFFY TEACHERS!

One of the biggest buzzes I get from spoken English is hearing a proper English pronunciation of "geography."

They just get to it: JOGraffy.

I have noticed in some Americans a tendency to hesitate slightly on the ending of the first syllable, making it sound like this: JeOGraffy.

Does anyone else notice this?

(Also, I envision some of you spending the next few minutes saying "JOGraffy and JeOGraffy" to yourselves to hear the difference, then getting to the point the word and associated sounds lose all meaning.]

Below, a Brit saying "geography."

And in American English:


But clearly there's still some dispute as how to say it. You'd think Pitt the Younger would get it right, but no:


I had to listen to this twice to make sure I got it right. I fully expected to be wrong, particularly on the second mention of the word, which should have come off as a pejorative. But no.

Then Richard Hammond, accused of being a de facto American nails it as a Brit:





Saturday, October 5, 2024

NaNoWriMo Be on Fire, Yo.


Back in the day, I participated in NaNoWriMo, just for the fun of it. I wrote two novels that haven't gone much beyond what I did with the program, and haven't much thought about the site since.

Then I found this video with its understandable righteous indignation about NaNoWriMo embracing the use of artificial intelligence/deep language models in writing.

Obviously, this has caused some consernation in the writing community.

It seems since this video was written the folks at NaNoWriMo have done some backtracking, and I mean a lot of backtracking, as I can't find the post in question on their website.

They don't necessarily condemn the use of AI, however.

That second link says this: "If using AI will assist your creative process, you are welcome to use it. Using ChatGPT to write your entire novel would defeat the purpose of the challenge, though."

So not a ringing endorsement of AI. But they seem to give it a big wink, as long as it "assists" your creative process. How much of an "assist" is allowed? Not the entire novel, it seems. But . . .

Here I am as an English instructor trying to convince students that using artificial intelligence to write their papers is cheating, nothing less. We do not need mixed messages on artificial intelligence use in any writing endeavor.

Good on Ellipsus -- a company I'd not heard of until today -- for backing out of NaNoWriMo sponsorship due to this mess.

I'm also posting this video, which includes a brief but helpful discussion on generative vs. non-generative AI. The generative AI is the problem child.


And while I support the idea of opposing generative AI on the basis of its developers stealing from writers to train it, there's something more fundamental here: When I read a student essay, or a novel, or whatever, I anticipate that a human wrote it. If a robot is writing it -- and right now we can tell, but I suspect it'll get to the point we won't be able to -- I don't want to read it.

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Welcome to Fort Dix

We just watched the MASH episode where the characters get their families together for a reunion at the Pierre Hotel in New York City.

It's a great episode that is home to two lines by Major Winchester we quote a lot in our family:

1. Hunnicutt, you're to blame for this.

2. I shan't be there. I'm turning myself in to the Chinese.

Not to forget Charles complaining about "my Uncle Ed and *me*" and the goat Randy trying to kiss a turkey.

Tonight, though, it was Klinger's desire to continue the charade that he's really at Fort Dix rather than Korea, so his mother wouldn't worry.

His mother, of course, knew where he was all along, despite the scores of Fort Dix photos he sent home.

Mothers always know.

Miss you, Mom.