accumulation

There were very light flurries yesterday morning but no accumulation.

However, I got an email with the link to pay the balance on my K-Accumulator pre-order, and that should be shipping next Friday. Super excited…!

Also my Walk 4 (“Quad Brownian Accumulator”) arrived yesterday and I spent some time playing with it. I was inspired to record something, using offsets into the Value inputs to generate chords, giving it some rhythmic texture by sending rapid triggers to Reset, and mixing/reverbing/rotating the outputs through Silhouette.


I’ve mostly been feeling good and happy over the past few days. I’ve got a nosebleed this morning — the air in the office yesterday was super dry and I felt dehydrated — and kind of a headache to go with it, and that’s not great, but I’m still fairly happy.


We made a Thai curry with kobocha squash last night. The lemongrass and basil smelled amazing during the process, the sauce was super flavorful and right on the edge of too spicy but not quite over it. I wasn’t a fan of the skin on the squash, and it was a lot of work, but we can adjust how we do things when we decide to do this agin.


I finished Fully Present. Mainly it comes down to (A) why mindfulness is good (and where more research is needed) and (B) advice on mindfulness meditiation. The latter ends up being a little bit scattered through the chapters, due to the organization of the book. The first exercise has you doing things a specific way, but then later you’re shown other ways and told why you might want to choose one kind of meditation over another. Still, it was a useful book to have read.

One of my favorite quotes from the book: meditation is simple but not easy. (Some of the mind’s major functions include making connections, analyzing the past, preparing for the future, finding connections, telling stories. This is all great… except when you’re trying to just observe your own breath, sensations, emotions or thoughts in the present moment in a non-attached way.)

I’m currently in the middle of The Heartbeat of Trees. Written by the author of The Hidden Life of Trees (not to be confused with The Secret Life of Trees…!), a German forester, it’s mainly about humanity’s relationship with forests and trees. Through several short chapters we learn lots of cool stuff about trees and ourselves, and both known and speculated connections between us. At times it does get a little woo-ish, even while the author talks of his love for science and disinclination toward religion — and I say that as a person who definitely gets woo-ish themself, in a different way. But it’s neat stuff overall.

it works now

It took a few days to hear back from Zenowell support. They asked me to test the electrodes with my fingers, cranking the level up “above 20” (it goes to 30)… and lo and behold, I felt it.

I tried it in my ear again, and it took a couple of tries and some wiggling but worked fine once more. Go figure.

And having just done a session, I think the Relax program does work.


I bought a used Oura Ring 4 sizing kit, and have been wearing a test ring on my left index finger for a day now as recommended. I just bought a deeply discounted but new/unopened box one in brushed silver off eBay. I was debating with myself between the brushed silver and “stealth” (matte black) — I think either would work for me and the other rings I wear. The stealth one apparently shows scratches more and also tends to scratch other things more.

The ceramic ones look really nice but cost significantly more… and though they tend not to scratch, with the wrong kind of impact they can chip and then quickly degrade after that. Doesn’t seem worth it.


I have a couple of tracks recorded now for the next album. Project idea confirmed, working, and… a bit different. But the train is underway now.

It took a few days but I got a shipping notice on the Walk 4. Also one of the K-Accumulator batch 1 folks has been sharing some sounds from the basic “getting started” exploration and there were some surprising timbres there — almost physical modeling, overblown flutes etc. Delicious stuff.


utinni…?

Saw the trailer for The Mandalorian & Grogu. The title feels awkward, like it should be “Grogu and the Mandalorian.” Also it’s apparently The Mandalorian season 4 reworked into a movie, which… I’m not sure how much rework happened and whether that is bad news. It’s not as if major decisions were poorly made about Star Wars movies in the past or anything ::cough cough::

I like Pedro Pascal. I enjoyed season 1 of the TV show, and its theme music. But I’m finding it hard to summon more than a “meh” for Star Wars or Marvel comics at this point.


My Zenowell Luna stopped working after 11 days. The screen lights up, the buttons work, but the electrodes don’t do anything. I sent an email to their support on Sunday and haven’t heard back yet. Hopefully soon; I chose them because of a reputation for good customer service.

I had to think about whether I wanted a refund or exchange. I’m not sure the device is that effective, and maybe it’s redundant with the Lexapro anyway. But it’s also too early to dismiss, and it can be a pleasant sort of ritual. So I asked for the exchange.

I’m also looking seriously into an Oura Ring. I feel like (A) it might have some useful insights and information, and (B) it’s just kind of neat. 🙂


Had another therapy session yesterday afternoon. We actually wound it down a bit early, beacuse things are going well and nothing much came up. She does keep asking if there’s anything else I want to bring up, and I’ve been saying no. Maybe I should go ahead and go into the emotional difficulties I had as a kid, even though they got so much better? Maybe talk about gender identity… although I think the additional stress that puts on my mental health is 100% from the transphobic poolitical climate and I’ve made piece with being a weirdo. Actually I think I might privately journal about those things to work out if they’re something I want to bring up.

We changed the scheduling so it’s theoretically every 2 weeks, rather than every week.

I picked up a bunch of books on mindfulness from Alibris. Ironically, several of them were recommendations for “if you read just one book on mindfulness…” Here is a size comparison of two of them:

oversized bananas for scale — sorry I don’t have a normal sized banana to show the scale of the oversized ones.

But the one I’m reading now, Fully Present, is more moderately sized. Its authors are an anthropologist/psychiatry professor, and a former Buddhist nun and mindfulness educator. Between them they cover both “science” and “art” perspectives of mindfulness, and the book leans toward practical, uh, practice. I’ve already picked up some specific advice for meditation with a bit more discipline (but still gentle and accepting). I have to say I’m grateful to be able to sit for 15-20 minutes and just focus on breathing or body sensations or gazing, without it being boring. That doesn’t mean consistent focus without the mind telling stories isn’t a challenge.

My previous read was The Seafarer’s Kiss. Take the basics of “The Little Mermaid” but put it in freezing Scandanavian waters, change the queer subtext to text, make the king a sexist tyrant who needs to be overthrown, replace the sea witch with Loki and add a very heavy dose of “be careful what you wish for.” I liked it.

Ask A Historian was a little bit of a mixed bag. The stories were enjoyable and I learned some stuff, but some of what it covered needed a little more debunking or clarification.

  • the “Hayfeverite” craze. There was a period when hay fever was fashionable among white, upper-class men (this part is true, there were clubs and everything). This was because a doctor claimed it was a disease of the priveleged, which women and “lesser races” (sigh) didn’t get. The book said it was because exposure to pollen reduces hay fever susceptibility — but the accepted explanation seems to be that the doctor was mostly just treating the privileged in the first place and/or just wanted to distract patients from feeling miserable with a little casual white supremacy and sexism.
  • the alleged craze for fistula surgery among the sycophantic aristocracy after King Louis XIV’s life was saved. Kaz Rowe did some research on this and presented it in a recent video, and gave a pretty solid argument for what they were thinking and the way it’s been exaggerated. 17th century medicine was pretty grim…
  • there was a mention of the Moses myth where the author was speculating which phaoroah it might have been. He really should have said that it wasn’t any of them — Egypt had at various points conquered some of its neighbors but it never mass-enslaved any population. The pyramids etc. were built by farmers in the off-season, and they were paid for the work. In fact the first known labor strike was among pyramid builders because their beer shipments were late!

We’re 13% of the way through the year (thanks timeanddate.com) and NAMM is behind us, and I’m not finding myself tempted by any other Eurorack modules or plugins so far. I looked at Minimal Audio’s Poly Flanger this morning, added it to my cart and then said “…I don’t need this, I should instead play more with regular flangers” and dropped it. I see that GRM Atelier has a Windows release now, but… it’s still a “you have to trust that we’ll add more stuff in the future” thing and I’m just not feeling the hype.

Still waiting on a shipping notice from Control for that Walk 4. Their website still says “week of February 10th.” I just sent a message to ask if they have an update.

The first batch of K-Accumulator has shipped, and apparently us folks who put down a deposit for batch 2 will get an update next week. Meanwhile there’s a “quick start guide” which is pretty mind-blowing, revealing a bit more about the morph system, the delta-sigma pattern generator and the interactions between sections. I’m super excited about it. Hopefully anticipation for Walk 4 and K-Acc isn’t the only thing keeping my gear curiosity in check. There’s gonna be a lot of fresh exploration to do.

a thousand of bread

That pillow is a no; I’m returning it. Yes, it was an expensive enough pillow to justify the hassle. The return process was a little annoying — it kept trying to sneakily change my refund into an exchange, and it managed to reset itself and make me start over. The first time I clicked on the “Return Portal” (which sounds like something much more science fictiony) a couple of days earlier, it was “down for maintenance.” Seems like a dark pattern to me…


But things are generally good with me. No panic, very little anxiety. Calm and peace and general happiness. The morning meditations are going well now, after I looked up a little bit on mindfulness to get an idea of different methods. Instead of a morning routine of reading email and Discord and forums in the bathroom downstairs, I don’t look at my phone. I go to the second bedroom upstairs (a combination shrine room, guest bedroom, and crafting space), sit on the futon and give myself 20 minutes of focusing on the present moment (which happens to be the session length for the Zenowell device). Breathing meditation isn’t super awesome for me, but focusing on sensations or gazing at something specific works.

This morning I had a particularly nice session. In that room we have a shiny gold garland with little stars on it, strung along and between the curttain tods. A cluster of starts was catching the light and waving gently in the airflow from the vent, twinkling and flaring, which caught my eye in a mesmerising way — so I focused on that. I felt a kind of paradoilea, like this was a special moment arranged for me. In Kemetic Orthodoxy, stars are a manifestation of our blessed ancestors, watching and protecting us (which is why I chose that garland in the first place). I also had a lovely experience as a young teen, when I was just sort of vaguely pagan, where a star-like light shone through a pinhole in a curtain and I felt protected and loved for some reason. Hey, I’ll take anything that makes me feel happy.

This sort of meditation brings esoteric questions. When you’re observing your sensations, what is doing the observing? Is that observer the self, or is the self an emergent property of the observation, barely more than an illusion if that? A sort of inevitable coincidence? It seems like the self and God(s) have that in common… no “real” physical thing but an experience nonetheless. Or as physicist Carlo Rovelli wrote, “nothing is; things happen.”

I would much rather face these questions and feelings on waking, than doomscrolling on the toilet. 🙂

The Zenowell gizmo doesn’t immediately make me feel supremely chill, super emotionally relieved, nor give the “brain orgasms” that Pulsetto’s awful marketing claims. What it feels like depends greatly on how well the electrodes are making contact as well as the intensity setting; it takes some practice/experience to find the right combination. But generally it’s a pleasant if odd fluttering; a poor fit is more like rapid-fire mosquito bites. For me, spraying the electrodes with water rather than brushing on the gel, and rotating the earpiece back rather than forward, seems to give better contact and calls for higher intensity settings.

I’ve been using the Relax program twice a day, as they recommend, and the Sleep program right after I put my book down for the night. If it’s doing anything for me I should start to see results within a couple of weeks. There’s a Meditation mode, but that morning session is really the best time for me to use Relax so I’m sticking with that at least for now. There’s also a Headache mode, but I haven’t been troubled by migraines in a while so I’m leaving that off.


The bread machine’s been great. I made the cinnamon bread from that book my sister-in-law likes, and it was so good I made another loaf to give my parents. I also made the simple French bread, and it was quite good, though the paddle got stuck (possibly due to the strong crust) and tore a bigger hole than before. Today I’m making rosemary bread to go with the potato leek soup my spouse is making, and I have plans for chocolate peanut butter banana bread because the grocery delivery service my mom uses brought 3x as many bananas as she wanted.

It’s sort of become a mini-hobby, with things to learn and supplies and equipment to gather and so on. That probably will settle down a bit when it’s just a regular routine thing. But I’m enjoying it. 🙂


Recent reads: A New Map of Wonders is like a modern version of the books about foreign lands and curiosities first popularized in the 14th century. Meant to encourage fascination and wonder, now relying on science rather than making up details, it begins with the theme of light, moves on to life and its origins, the human heart, the brain, the world, and technology. It’s not as lyrical as some of the science books I’ve read (I mentioned Rovelli already) but it does what it sets out to do. I don’t feel smarter or deeper having read it, but it was a pleasant read.

Phoenix Extravagant is a fantasy tale set in an analog of Korea, having been subdued by an analog of Japan and both finding themselves threatened by “Westerners.” The main character is nonbinary and there are several queer relationships, but gender is not directly a factor in anything — instead the struggles are political, and of social stuffiness versus creative expression, tradition and heritage and family versus expediency… and with nothing in black and white. I enjoyed it pretty thoroughly.

The Foghorn’s Lament: The Disappearing Music of the Coast is indeed about foghorns — their sound and the way they make people feel, and a bit of their history and that of lighthouse and lightship keepers who lived with them. A great nuisance, a comforting and familiar sound of home, an eerie and melancholy moan, a nostalgic soundmark of times past, a strange fascination for people who don’t live near one, an element in musical composition — and generally not all that effective as a navigation aid, especially in modern times.

I’ve started reading Ask A Historian, which is a thing that the author was going to do in live performances off the cuff, until the pandemic happened. Answering random questions about history — both good questions and dumb ones — with accurate and witty answers. I like it when a historian is a storyteller, and makes past events relatable.


As of yesterday Joranalogue Walk 4 was officially released, and I’m eagerly expecting a shipping notice from Control any moment now. DivKid did a video on it, demonstrating many different uses — and it is indeed quite versatile. One of the things I was eager to find out was how it behaves processing audio, and I didn’t expect the sort of hyper wavefolder that the Auto-Reset feature provides. There are still some other experiments that he didn’t cover, and I’m sure all kinds of creative ways to use it in patches.

give us this day…

The bread machine arrived Monday. I started launching right into preparing the basic white bread recipe in the manual, despite having bought bread flour and it calling for all-purpose unbleached flour… the wet ingredients, sald and sugar were already in the machine when I realized it called for nonfat dry milk and I didn’t have any. This was after my spouse said “are you sure you’ve read the whole recipe first?”

DOUGH!

But after a quick store run, then spilling 1/4 of the nonfat dry milk on the floor (sigh), everything went off without a hitch and the bread was quite good. Success!

My sister-in-law sent photos of her favorite bread machine recipes, and we located a PDF of the book they were from. Looks like we’re going to live deliciously.


The new pillow arrived too. I’m less sure about it so far. The company I bought it from has a 60-day return or exchange window, and recommends trying it for at least three weeks and possibly making adjustments to the height. I feel like it works well enough when lying on my back, and if I put my buckwheat pillow atop it it’s fine for reading as well. On the side is a little more awkward. Sometimes I find a really comfy position, sometimes not so much.

One thing about it is it’s designed with the idea that you roll from your back to your side, changing where you are on the bed. But I am in the habit of trying to rotate in place, so whether I’m facing left, right or up I’m still centered in my half of the bed — not perching on its edge or encroaching on my spouse’s space. That would put my head always in the pillow’s trench, so I have to move the pillow if I do that.


I just had my second therapy session. I talked a bit about the things that triggered anxiety last week, and also in the past. We’ve basically identified it as:

  • Health-related anxiety. Specifically when I’m feeling something like an elevated heart rate and don’t know why; possibly also some fear of sunburn.
  • Getting overstimulated / overwhelmed. Mostly sensory — loud noises, a lot of chaos and things going on, but not necessarily loud music; also heat. Also being presented with a lot of instructions / a lot to do all at once. I need things broken down and listed and prioritized to feel in control over it.
  • Politics / current events, and feeling powerless to fix any of it. I got a lot of obvious sympathy for that one; apparently it’s common and probably affecting my therapist as well.

But she also made it pretty clear that I have some pretty good coping strategies in place for a lot of stressors already, and decent sleep hygiene. After all, I’ve been dealing with anxiety on my own for many years now. She did recommend I get into a morning meditation/stretch/wellness habit of some sort; she mentioned reframing, reminding myself “I’m in control of this moment” and that I’m working on things and am making progress.

The sessions seem really short, especially given they’re only once every week or so. But it’s probably good to take small steps, absorb and reflect.

equanimity

Our driveway is still half-buried in snow and the weather’s remained below freezing for this week (even dipping below 0F a few times). We dug out my spouse’s car but not mine, which meant a lot less work. If we’d been smarter we might have parked at least one of the cars at the back of the driveway so we’d have a lot less to shovel. We’ll see some above-freezing weather this week, hopefully enough to melt a significant amount of snow… but there’s also some chance of thaw/freeze cycles that turn the snow to treacherous ice.

On Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday we went out to watch the Lord of the Rings trilogy (extended editions with rambling pre-show commentary by Peter Jackson) on the 25th anniversary of Fellowship. The theater Monday was almost empty except for us (no doubt due to the weather) and it was chilly in there. Tuesday, in the exact same theater, there were more people, it felt like 80 degrees and the volume was extremely loud — it was overstimulating and uncomfortable. (I noted that as an anxiety experience; I felt a tightness in the throat and chest.) Wednesday was at a different location, and it was perfectly comfortable and the theater was about half full.

This is the first time we’ve seen the extended, or say rather full-length, versions of the movies in theaters. We’ve seen them many times at home on the small screen, but we picked up more details. It’s an absolutely gorgeous set of films, super detailed… and an enormous effort by hundreds of artists and craftspeople. It makes me like AI even less!

Despite that one not so great moment, the unusually nasty weather, all kinds of gross news about the Chump administration and ICE and the Epstein files and so forth, and facing having to interview some potential new hires at work in the near future, the anxiety has calmed way down. I’ve found some internal peace. I’ve even risked regular coffee a couple of times with no ill effects. I feel like I’m already doing better than I’ve been since before the big panic in late October, or the fear through September that built up to it. But I plan to continue therapy at least for a few sessions to see where it goes.


I mentioned the tVNS device. I didn’t mention I ordered a barely-used bread machine, inspired by the bread my sister-in-law served us on our New Year visit. I used to have a cheap simple bread machine back in the day and kind of enjoyed it, though I had a few spectacular failures with it. (Like… completely forgetting the yeast when I wanted to make jalapeño cheese bread for a Christmas party at work.) Machines have improved since then, and there’s advice online for getting perfect loaves, as well as more interesting recipes.

I also have an unusual pillow on the way. I’m a combination sleeper, picky about pillows, prone to doing things to my neck, back, and arms if I don’t find the right position. My buckwheat hull pillow is okay but there’s probably something better, and it tends to hold heat. PillowCube, which makes side-sleeper pillows with a rectangular profile, recently introduced one with a channel in the middle for combination sleepers, and it’s cooling too, and you can open it up and adjust the thickness. So I’m eager to try that.

All these things have had their shipping delayed by the weather. I’m crossing my fingers they’ll show up soon.

a win

I know I’ve said “I feel like the Lexapro is starting to help” before, but at this point I’m willing to upgrade it to “it is helping a lot.”

It’s also giving me extra-vivid dreams as well as hypnopompic hallucianations (while transitioning from sleep to wakefulness). Nothing disturbing, mostly just weird and amusing. This morning it was a red and green flickering LED clock that very clearly read 2:47… in the opposite corner of the room than our actual clock, which is blue and which I can barely read even with my glasses on, when it was more like 5:20.

But I’ll take the weirdness, given that I’m not panicking or even dwelling on worries so much now.

The most common anxiety experience I’ve had for the past few weeks has been noticing that my heart rate was pounding/racing without me exerting myself. I’d assume that was either panic already in progress with an unknown trigger, or that I have some kind of heart issue to worry about. So I’d dwell on it, which would sustain the worry and/or elevate it. I had some guesses about a possible trigger but they didn’t really pan out. I finally realized, it happens within a few minutes to a couple of hours after eating, especially if I stand up or move around a bit. And it’s a fairly normal, harmless physiological thing which can be increased if you take insulin (and various other things, including stress levels). Heh.

Saturday when I noticed it happening, I still dwelled on it a little, but less. Today? No problemo, cool as a cucumber.


I’ve also been considering various devices that might be able to give me insights (like health tracking rings/watches) or help in relaxation or meditation. I read a lot of reviews and arguments, marketing stuff, etc. and weighed various pros and cons.

Oura Ring: seems to be the best of the health trackers for the job. But it requires a subscription for full analysis of your data. I thought maybe comparing objective measurements to my feelings might give me more perspective, but some folks with anxiety are actually triggered by the additional data and AI-powered analysis, so that’s a gamble. I think this will depend on how things progress with therapy, and how I feel about it at a later time.

Reflect Orb: a squishy ball that you hold while meditating or relaxing, which measures heart rate variability and rates your stress/calm with a simple 4-color light ring. Then you can sync to an app and get a timeline and overall trends. Reviewers tend to be positive on it, but it doesn’t do anything else. It’s unclear what you lose out if you don’t have a subscription (otherwise I’d have considered buying a used one). And the company is Israeli, founded by a former intelligence agent, and there were some kind of squicky interviews talking about the need for stress relief after the Hamas attack.

Mendi: a headband that links to a smartphone, and a focus training game. Concentrate on the ball and it rises, lose focus and it starts to fall, keep up a streak as long as possible. Then it tracks your stats. This is supposed to help in general with focus, clarity, and maintaining calm. But for what it is, it’s expensive, and there are some doubts about the accuracy of the sensing method. I also feel like direct feedback on calm vs. stress would be more helpful to me than focus in particular.

Pulsetto: a tVNS (transdermal vagus nerve stimulator) device that you wear around your neck. There are some mostly good reviews of the product, a concerning number of negative reviews about the customer service, and some really questionable marketing.

Truvaga Plus: a handheld tVNS device that you hold up to your neck for 2-minute sessions. It generally has excellent reviews and is the consumer version of an FDA-approved, by-prescription-only device the same company makes. It’s quite pricey, apparently has trouble connecting to the app at times, and their somewhat cheaper (but still not cheap by any means) standalone versionhas a non-rechargeable battery and is only good for 350 2-minute sessions before it becomes landfill. I wonder whether the Plus version reports usage data since I can’t think of many other reasons why it’d use an app.

Zenowell Luna: a tVNS device that’s like a 2005-era MP3 player with a single earbud (except electrodes rather than audio). Also excellent reviews, aside from a few people with the wrong ear canal shape. (I’ve had no trouble with any kind of earbuds I’ve tried, so I don’t think I’ll have this issue.) There’s an older and a little cheaper version, but this one has twice the battery life and an additional program mode designed for headache relief, which since I get migraines sometimes might be useful. The other modes are Sleep, Relax and Meditate — there’s no app or Bluetooth connection required. I decided to go ahead and give this one a try.


The German company that owns Native Instruments, Izotope, Plugin Alliance and Brainworx has filed for insolvency. The blame can no doubt be placed on venture capitalism. This represents a signficant chunk of the industry and a lot of customers who might not be able to use a lot of plugins critical to their workflow in the future. Hopefully there will be some kind of solution that prevents everyone from getting screwed over.

let it go…

I’m writing this more for posterity, but this weekend there’s a massive winter storm affecting a lot of the US. Right here, the current temperature is 2°F (-17°C) and -9°F wind chill (-23°C). Light snow began a couple of hours ago — we’re expecting 1-3 inches today, 5-8 more tonight and another 3-5 tomorrow morning. It’s going to be 10 days before the temperature goes above freezing, with a low of -4°F tomorrow night.

Sunday night is our usual grocery run, but we’ll be all right if that gets delayed a few days. Monday my spouse has a doctor appointment but they called yesterday to say it’s been switched to telehealth. Monday’s also my usual day to go to the office, but I can work from home with no problems. We were hoping to catch the 25th anniversay Fellowship of the Ring rerelease Monday night (and the second and third movies the following nights), but that still gives us a bit more time to dig out.


I had my first therapy session yesterday, on a Zoom call during my lunch break. As the “intake appointment” it was mostly general questions about my mental and physical health, living situation, history, social stuff etc. as well as asking what my goals for therapy are.

(At one point she asked if I’m indecisive, and… I had to think about it. 😉 I wound up saying “here I am being indecisive about how to answer, so I guess that’s a yes!”)

My “homework” is to make note of when I experience panic / anxiety and what was happening that might have triggered it. Since this is a very busy therapist, we weren’t quite able to schedule weekly, but the next three appointments are booked at least.

I feel like the increased dosage of Lexapro is helping. While I was feeling a bit nervous before the appointment I think it was probably a normal level of nervousness, and I haven’t had any reason to take notes yet. Fingers crossed! This is one piece of homework I hope to fail at 🙂 If I end up ending therapy because the meds are enough, that’s actually great.


NAMM is here, and (thankfully) I just don’t find myself tempted by any of the new music gear announcements. Korg Phase-8 is now an actual product, but it seems so much less interesting (especially for the price) than the electro-magnetic-acoustic experiments Korg Berlin first started showing off about 3 years ago. I’m not interested in picking up a hardware polysynth, so I can ignore ASM’s big deal. Noise Engineering has a new trigger sequencer that’s definitely cool, but for my needs I have plenty of tools for the purpose. OBNE has a new pedal collaboration with Emily Hopkins, which can sound pretty good at times but I’m not excited for the random glitching or yet another reverb-into-bitcrusher (it does make me want to play more with tremolo though). Make Noise announced an announcement, but (unless there is more to it) Thomann has already leaked the surprise and it’s not something I need.


Pretty good article from Cory Doctorow on the AI industry here. I like the “centaurs” vs. “reverse centaurs” metaphor for whether machines serve humanity or vice versa. Of course the concept of bullshit jobs fits the latter as well. As a worker, nobody wants to be the person who babysits a machine that’s usually right but sometimes catastrophically wrong in a way that looks at first glance like it’s not. As a customer, nobody wants to get wrong answers and badly designed products from that process. As a wise or decent businessperson who actually cares about their people and their reputation, nobody wants to sell those wrong answers… but as an investor who wants maximum ROI, they definitely want to replace expensive labor with cheap machines and (if they must) a couple of low-wage interchangeable humans whose job is to be responsible for the errors.

released: Questions

Enjoy 🙂

I’m happy with how the various sequencing techniques/disruptions worked out. MD2, Marbles, Nibbler, 0-Ctrl and Clep Diaz all work together nicely and Bitwig Grid, Harmony Bloom and Entonal Studio contributed as well, to the point where even I can’t necessarily tell what I used without referring to my notes. Each tool is wielded a little differently and contributes something different, but it’s still just an extension of me.

I’m looking forward to finding out how Walk 4 contributes as well. Will I use it more at audio rates or for modulation or both; more as a source or a processor? Its release was delayed a bit, so work on the next album isn’t likely to be launched by exploring it. I think there’s a lot of potential there though. I kind of hope that it and the K-Accumulator don’t arrive too close together, although I am excited for both of them, just so I dedicate an initial learning period to each one.

so much to read

I did buy a couple of things from Amazon recently — the needle clippers, a replacement desk fan, a magnetic water conditioner that’s supposed to help prevent buildup of calcium gunk in pipes. But I’ve fully transferred my book wishlist to Bookshop.org and deleted everything else off my wishlists except one pair of linen pants, which might also go depending on how the ones I’m getting from Etsy are.

That desk fan replaces a dead Vornado Zippi, which didn’t start again after I turned it off for the New Year road trip. That was my second one and I’m just not all that convinced by Vornado anymore. The air circulator we have in the upstairs bedroom is that brand, but I don’t like it because unless you’re very specifically positioned you can’t feel it. I also had one of the standard Vornado fans die on me, though the other is still running on the upstairs landing (trying to equalize temps a bit both in winter and summer).

The replacement is an Arctic Summair 2Go. It’s a German-made DC computer case fan — very efficient, meant to be reliable for a long period, and stepless speed control — in a handheld/desktop repackage. It does have a battery and USB charging but I trust them a little more than a random Temu fan. And so far it’s been great. At low to moderate speeds it’s quiet; at high speeds it’s noisy but also impressively strong for its tiny size. If I wanted to run it on batteries it’s supposed to last anywhere from 4 to 77 hours on a charge, depending on speed. And it was fairly cheap too… I may get more of these in the future.


My brother and his wife almost always send their Christmas gifts late. Yesterday I got a gift certificate for Left Bank Books from them. Between that, Alibris, Bookshop.org, and Open Library I have the rest of Martha Wells’ Fall of Ile-Rien trilogy plus 4 more fiction and 6 non-fiction books. I’m making good on the goal of reading more stuff on science, ancient history and wonder in general.


I had my follow-up appointment with the PHMNP this morning. She’s increasing my Lexapro dose to 15mg. Unfortunately since they come in 10 and 20mg doses, that means splitting pills.