Paddington 2 (2017)

As I mentioned last time, I only watched the first film because I had heard about how good this sequel and here we are. This one still has a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes a year after its release which is quite an achievement. Like the first one, it is a children’s film but one that is so earnest and unwavering in aiming to be wholesome that it appeals to adults anyway.

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Loves of a Blonde (1965)

I usually like to let a bit of time pass before I watch two films by the same director but this one was added to the list quite some time ago and I didn’t quite realize that it had the same director as One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. This was made before Miloš Forman moved from his native Czechoslovakia to Hollywood and is in fact his first film. It is apparently considered an important film of the so-called Czech New Wave.

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Stellaris

Though I have a passing familiarity with the grand strategy games made by Paradox, I am not usually a big fan. They are way too big a time-sink and the complex systems they build don’t always hold together over the course of a long game. I find that trying to play to win these games in a conventional manner often ends up being a frustrating experience but treating them as a role-playing experience is often enjoyable. Plus their plethora of DLCs for every title is both annoying and confusing.

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Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri (2017)

When my wife asked me what this film is about, I described it as a Coen brothers film that isn’t actually by the Coen brothers. This isn’t quite true as director Martin McDonagh is British and his visual style is different but between having Frances McDormand as the lead, it being set in a small American town that is named in the film’s title and its dark comedic drama tone, you have to agree that there is at least a superficial resemblance.

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Bye Bye Birdie (1963)

I remember this film being used as the subject of a Mad Men episode and I think it makes for a good example of a film that was wildly successful in its day but falls short of true greatness. This is a musical comedy with several well-known stars including Dick Van Dyke and Janet Leigh. But is probably best known for launching the career of Ann-Magret who is featured in the iconic opening scene copied in Mad Men.

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Recent Interesting Science Articles (November 2018)

Many articles this month, ranging from genuinely exciting stuff to just cool news.

  • This most significant piece of news comes late, being a claim of the first human gene-edited babies being born. As this comes from China there are plenty of skeptics but it seems sound enough. The claim is that fertilized embryos were edited to disable a gene known as CCR5 which can act as a protein pathway for HIV infection. The idea is that this can help to improve resistance to the disease. The most important bit seems to me is that the edited embryos were implanted back into the mother and successfully carried to term. The science isn’t that new but the ethical implications are more important.
  • Next up is another piece of news that is also more interesting due to how it came about than the actual result. In this case, a deep learning algorithm was used to analyze images of the retina, and it found a correlation between the images and cardiovascular risk factors. In essence, it might be possible to predict such risks by looking at patients’ retinas, an association that most likely would not occur to doctors and could not have been found using means other than an AI trawling through a huge trove of data.
  • Next is a depressing finding about how mobs nominate members of a group to be victims. They discovered from a simulated mobbing game that even in exchange for very modest gains, members will not only single out individuals to be victimized but will coordinate with one another to ensure that only a single person is targeted at a time as per the rules. There is no sense of pity as the group will repeatedly target the same victim if that is what the group agrees on and fear of being the next victim does not seem to dissuade the group.
  • Moving on to lighter stuff, here’s a cool post speculating about how the unknown interstellar object that has entered our solar system could be a piece of a solar sail from an alien civilization. The object called Oumuamua is thought to be more than just a piece of space rock because its movement shows signs of acceleration that is not due to gravitational forces plus it has no signs of emitting a tail that would indicate a chemical reaction creating that acceleration. Since it doesn’t appear to be a comet, it may be that the acceleration is due to solar radiation, suggesting that it may be a piece of solar sail due to having the right physical properties. Of course, it’s all pure speculation but it’s fun to think about.
  • Finally here’s an article about how science-fiction author Greg Egan contributed a partial solution to a mathematics puzzle. It’s an entertaining read because apart from Egan’s minor celebrity status there’s the fact that the puzzle are originally posed in 2011 as a question of the ordering of episodes of a television show. Shortly after that an anonymous poster submitted a lower bound to the solution but it was until recently that Egan offered an upper bound. The puzzle and the solution itself, part of something that Egan calls superpermutations, is of interest only to mathematicians, but I love the whole story of how this came about.

The unexamined life is a life not worth living