Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Paradise postcards...

Paradise postcards...  Just a couple of scenes from our yard this morning.  The first was taken looking west just before sunrise; the Wellsville Mountains were lit up, but the valley floor was not (and that's our shed on the left).  The second was taken from the same spot, looking east.  That's my friend Tim's alfalfa field, with his two horses very contentedly munching away on the 4 to 6 inches that's grown since the last mowing of the season.  They sometimes hang over our fence (on the right) and look longingly into our kitchen :)


Electronics and wildlife!

Electronics and wildlife!  Down under transplant, reader, friend, and former colleague Simon M. noted that the latest xkcd cartoon combines two of my favorite things: wildlife and electronics!  When I saw the cartoon yesterday, I just smiled – it didn't occur to me that a lot of people wouldn't get it.

Red and yellow are two of the ten standard colors used for coding the value of components (especially resistors).  It's a very old system, predating me considerably, and it's used worldwide.  I've been familiar with it since the early 1960s, so it's second nature to me.  Red is the code for 2, and yellow for 4, hence the reference to “24” in the cartoon.  The omega (Ω) is the symbol for ohms, the unit of electrical resistance.

The “red touches yellow” is part of a rhyme for telling a coral snake apart from a king snake.  This is important where both snakes coexist (like in Florida), as the coral snake is venomous, and the king snake is not.  The complete rhyme:
Red Touch Yellow - Kills a Fellow
Red Touch Black - Venom Lack
Yellow Touches Red - Soon You'll Be Dead
Red Touches Black - Friend of Jack