Simanaitis Says

On cars, old, new and future; science & technology; vintage airplanes, computer flight simulation of them; Sherlockiana; our English language; travel; and other stuff

Monthly Archives: September, 2023

AUTOMOTIVE BRAKING 101

CABLES ACTUATED THE EARLIEST CAR BRAKES. Indeed Ford continued with them until 1939. As you might imagine, maintaining equal actuation at all four wheels was a non-trivial matter.  Replacing cables … Continue reading

September 30, 2023 · 1 Comment

ON CANINE AUDITORY PROCESSING

“WHO’S A CUTE PUPPY?” ASKS AAAS Science, September 15, 2023, in a Research item titled “Auditory Processing.” The item is based on a paper by Anna Gergely et al. published … Continue reading

September 29, 2023 · 2 Comments

OLDS CUTLASS SALON—EQUAL TO EURO LUXURY SPORT SEDANS AT A BARGAIN PRICE?

FIFTY YEARS AGO, IMPORTS WERE FIRMLY ESTABLISHED in the U.S. market. Not just sports cars and VW Beetles, but even at the luxury end of the market. In February 1973, … Continue reading

September 28, 2023 · 1 Comment

OVERDOING IT

IS THERE BETTER LIVING THROUGH OPTIMIZATION? Not necessarily, posits mathematical modeler Coco Krumme in her new book Optimal Illusions. In their review of the book in Science, September 14, 2023, … Continue reading

September 27, 2023 · 1 Comment

DETROIT RACES 1901

WHEN THE SECOND MOTOR CAR was built, its driver likely challenged the first. Thus came motor sports. According to Motoring in America: The Early Years, so it was in Detroit … Continue reading

September 26, 2023 · 5 Comments

TIN PAN ALLEY

NEW YORK CITY’S TWENTY-EIGHTH STREET between Fifth and Sixth Avenues is the legendary Tin Pan Alley, the center of American popular music at the turn of the century. (That old … Continue reading

September 25, 2023 · 1 Comment

OLDEN GAMES

CURIOUSLY, JAMES HALLIWELL’S DICTIONARY OF ARCHAIC WORDS proves to be an entertaining source for games of old. My source as well is archaic: Though published in 1989, it’s a facsimile edition … Continue reading

September 24, 2023 · 1 Comment

THE THEATRICAL PRINTS OF THE TORII MASTERS

“CREDIT FOR THE BEGINNING OF KABUKI,” Howard A. Link recounted, “goes to a female shrine dancer from Izumo named Okuni. Around 1600, the very year of Hideyori’s defeat by Ieyasu, … Continue reading

September 23, 2023 · Leave a comment

HOW’S YOUR LOREM IPSUM DOIN’?

YESTERDAY, WE MENTIONED jamais vu, the familiar becoming peculiar through extreme repetition. (Try saying “table” 30 times.)  Speaking of Which. I’m reminded of an opposite word game, the one starting … Continue reading

September 22, 2023 · 3 Comments

THE 2023 IG NOBEL PRIZES 

IT’S IG NOBEL PRIZE time again! Officially the “33rd First Annual Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony” rewards researchers in ten categories for presenting “things that make people laugh, then think.”  I … Continue reading

September 21, 2023 · Leave a comment