Blanket use of "chemicals" as a stand-in for various toxic substances (most of which are never named) is a pet peeve of mine. Not all claims were well-supported (is the risk of black plastic kitchen implements high enough to justify throwing them all away?) which undermines the rest of the book.
Posts by Michael Birch
Cover of The Problem with Plastic by Adam Mahoney, Judith Enck and Beyond Plastics. The top quarter of the image shows the tip of an iceberg, but below the surface of the water if a plastic large bag floating ominously.
Review: The Problem with Plastic by Adam Mahoney, Judith Enck and Beyond Plastics
I agree with the core of the book: reduce plastic production + consumption, protect communities harmed by plastics processing, regulation preferred to individual action. But I have some gripes in the presentation
⭐⭐⭐
Lorehold (red+white) aggressive prerelease deck. Mostly 1, 2 and 3 mana cards with a few curve toppers to finish the game. A good mix of creatures, removal and pump spells.
I went 3-0 for the first time at a MTG prerelease event! Lorehold aggro seems like it will be a good archetype in Secrets of Strixhaven limited.
A graph of the histogram for frequencies of water sort puzzles with specific numbers of optimal moves to solve. The puzzle setup in this case is containers that are 5 segments high (N=5), with 5 distinct colours (C=5) and 2 empty containers (K=2) at the start/end. The most common number of moves is 19 and the bulk of the distribution is in the range [18, 20]. The distribution is bell-like, but skewed towards smaller values. It is fitted with a skew normal distribution curve that has parameters ξ=20.4, ω=2.38, and α=-1.76.
Finally, adding one extra colour (C=5) is the hardest of all with an average of nearly 19 moves to solve. This was the least surprising to me. Is it a coincidence that this average is 5 moves higher than the C=4 case, or is it a pattern? Is the average 25 if C=6? A question for future research...
A graph of the histogram for frequencies of water sort puzzles with specific numbers of optimal moves to solve. The puzzle setup in this case is containers that are 6 segments high (N=6), with 4 distinct colours (C=4) and 2 empty containers (K=2) at the start/end. The most common number of moves is 18 and the bulk of the distribution is in the range [17, 19]. The distribution is bell-like, but skewed towards smaller values. It is fitted with a skew normal distribution curve that has parameters ξ=19.3, ω=2.56, and α=-1.57.
With one extra segment on each container (N=6) the average increases to more than 17.5! This means adding 6 extra segments (only 4 of which are coloured) is significantly harder than taking 5 empty segments away (as in the previous case). This was also not what I expected.
A graph of the histogram for frequencies of water sort puzzles with specific numbers of optimal moves to solve. The puzzle setup in this case is containers that are 5 segments high (N=5), with 4 distinct colours (C=4) and 1 empty container (K=1) at the start/end. The most common number of moves is 15 and the bulk of the distribution is in the range [14, 16]. The distribution is bell-like, but skewed towards smaller values. It is fitted with a skew normal distribution curve that has parameters ξ=16.6, ω=2.50, and α=-1.49.
With one less container (K=1) the average only goes up by about half a move. I was surprised by this result! I would think reducing how much space you have to put colours would make the puzzle a lot harder, it only makes it a little harder. The distribution for this simulation is shown below.
The simulation is generic in the height of the containers (N), the number of colours (C) and the number of empty containers (K). My online version of the puzzle uses N=5, C=4 and K=2; but I also ran simulations for close variations on these values.
A graph of the histogram for frequencies of water sort puzzles with specific numbers of optimal moves to solve. The puzzle setup in this case is containers that are 5 segments high (N=5), with 4 distinct colours (C=4) and 2 empty containers (K=2) at the start/end. The most common number of moves is 15 and the bulk of the distribution is in the range [14, 16]. The distribution is bell-like, but skewed towards smaller values. It is fitted with a skew normal distribution curve that has parameters ξ=16.1, ω=2.38, and α=-1.77.
I also looked at the distribution of optimal moves by generating and solving many (200k) random puzzles. For the kind of puzzle used in the game (5 segment tall containers; 4 colours; 2 empty containers) the average is around 14.5 and the distribution is approximated by a skew normal distribution.
The algorithm for the optimal number of moves comes from here: kociemba.org/themen/water...
I have referenced this site before because I have talked about this kind of puzzle in the past. Then it was a ball sort problem instead of a water sort (the difference being how many segments move at once)
Screenshot from my water sort puzzle game. There are 6 containers, each of which is 5 segments high. The 4 containers on the left have their segments filled with colours. There are 4 distinct colours and they are all shuffled up in the segments. The goal of the game is to use the empty containers to sort the colours back into individual containers. The solved state of the puzzle will still have 2 empty containers and 4 full ones, but each of the full containers will only have a single colour.
I built another small game! This is a remake of a puzzle game I have enjoyed playing in the past. I also included an algorithm for finding the optimal number of moves. Trying to find the optimal sequence as a human is an additional challenge to the game.
birchmd.github.io/water-sort/
Cover of Once Upon a Prime by Sarah Hart. Three planes intersect in the middle of the cover: one shows text (presumably from a famous work of literature), another shows mathematical imagery such as geometric diagrams and graphs of functions, and the last shows the tail of a whale. The text "The Wondrous Connections Between Mathematics and Literature" is also included.
Review: Once Upon a Prime by Sarah Hart
The new-to-me content was sparse; I was already familiar with all the mathematical ideas and many of the historical anecdotes. The literary examples where these things appear are interesting though. It's not the book's fault that I love math so much!
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Cover of Someone You Can Build a Nest In by John Wiswell. A shadowy figure with a scary smile, wild hair, tentacles and glowing eyes looms over a woman. Chains, books and spiders adorn the background.
Review: Someone You Can Build a Nest In by John Wiswell
I didn't enjoy the first 2/3s because it looked like a typical liar revealed trope. I never like that one and I was dreading how it would resolve. But, without giving anything away, the last third of this book included my favourite parts.
⭐⭐⭐
Thanks to @lynnesargent.bsky.social for the beta testing and encouraging me to pursue this project ❤️
The goal of the game is to use your understanding of rates of change to reproduce various curves. I think it is a fun, interactive way to engage with concepts from calculus and differential equations. What do you think? Feedback is welcome!
I made an incremental/idle game! It's in the style of classics like Kittens Game and Universal Paperclips. The central element is a plot that visualizes how quantities in the game are changing (with respect to time and each other). You can check it out here:
birchmd.github.io/de-idle/
Cover of The Atlas Six by Olivie Blake. It shows image reminiscent of a diagram of the solar system with the sun at the center being the iris of an eye and pierced by a sword. The phrase "Knowledge is Carnage" are written at the top.
Review: The Atlas Six by Olivie Blake
I liked the opening of this book; recruiting powerful magical individuals to compete for spots in a secret society is very fun. I feel like the book drags in the middle though relative to this opening. It is more character-focused than I would prefer.
⭐⭐⭐
Cover of The Alloy of Law by Brandon Sanderson. The image shows two men: one with a bowler hat and shotgun slung over his shoulder, the other in a suit with a long overcoat and goggles around his neck.
Review: The Alloy of Law by Brandon Sanderson
It's been a long time since I read the original Mistborn trilogy and I remember quite enjoying those books. I think I liked this even more though - in a guilty pleasure sort of way. I'm a sucker for high action, witty remarks and powerful magic.
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Cover for A Grim Reaper's Guide to Cheating Death by Maxie Dara. A grey parrot is perched on a grim reaper's scythe and someone in a hooded black cloak holds a magnifying glass which contains the text "A S.C.Y.T.H.E Mystery".
Review: A Grim Reaper's Guide to Cheating Death by Maxie Dara
I didn't like this one as much as the first book. The parrot was funny and the additional world-building was interesting. But overall I didn't find the mystery as engaging and it didn't have as many touching emotional scenes.
⭐⭐⭐
@3blue1brown.com always produces incredible math explainers, but this one is particularly excellent. I love the overlap between math and art in it.
Cover of Play Nice by Jason Schreier. The title is shown in a blue font in the same style as the Blizzard Entertainment logo. There is an axe stuck in the 'E' as if it had been thrown there; perhaps by a fantasy video game character.
Review: Play Nice by Jason Schreier
I'm not much of a gamer (I haven't played any of Blizzard's games), but I am a programmer that has worked at startups so I could sympathize with some of the grind culture. This is an engaging non-fiction book that I quite enjoyed!
⭐⭐⭐⭐
In set-theoretic foundations, the statement “every fully faithful and essentially surjective functor is an equivalence of categories” is equivalent to the axiom of choice. But with the univalence axiom, it is just _true_
-The HoTT Book
Cover of Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer. The subtitle text reads "Indigenous wisdom, scientific knowledge and the teaching of plants." Braids of sweetgrass appear above and below the title.
Review: Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer
The book as a whole is a little repetitive, but in fairness the message of gratitude towards the life-sustaining earth and humanity being a productive part of ecosystems rather than apart from (or worse destroyers of) them deserves repeating.
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Cover of Saint Death's Daughter by C. S. E. Cooney. The title is woven into a woman's hair along with several items, including flowers, bones and small animals.
Review: Saint Death's Daughter by C. S. E. Cooney
I enjoyed the world building in this most of all. I love stories that include footnotes! Some of my favourite aspects include necromancers being allergic to violence, the pantheon of gods and how they manifest in different kinds of magic.
⭐⭐⭐⭐
My Lean code just got real horny for some reason
```lean
do
let d ← d
let t ← t
let f ← f
pure ⟨d, t, f⟩
```
I promise this is a real snippet that makes perfect sense in context.
Master of none no longer, I have now completed all the color mastery achievements!
Cover of The Ends of the World by Peter Brannen. The history of life on earth is visually represented from modern times all the way back to the deep past with layers of fossils of different kinds.
Review: The Ends of the World by Peter Brannen
This non-fiction book about the 5 mass extinctions in earth's history is well written with many colourful descriptions of the extreme conditions involved. The parallels to human caused climate change are relevant even 9 years after being published.
⭐⭐⭐⭐
I'm starting to learn Lean because (a) math is fun, (b) programming is fun and (c) knowing your program is correct because math is amazing. I am very impressed with the quality of the Lean docs and tutorials. I have finished the natural numbers game and it was great!
adam.math.hhu.de#/g/leanprove...
Deck 1 Abigale, Eloquent First-Year (ECL) 204 3 Moon-Vigil Adherents (ECL) 184 1 Vinebred Brawler (ECL) 201 1 Overgrown Tomb (ECL) 266 2 Prideful Feastling (ECL) 238 1 Gangly Stompling (ECL) 226 1 Wildvine Pummeler (ECL) 203 1 Champions of the Perfect (ECL) 171 1 Dawnhand Dissident (ECL) 98 1 Blossoming Defense (ECL) 167 1 Evolving Wilds (ECL) 264 1 Requiting Hex (ECL) 116 1 Pummeler for Hire (ECL) 190 1 Selfless Safewright (ECL) 193 1 Lys Alana Dignitary (ECL) 180 1 Morcant's Loyalist (ECL) 236 1 Bogslither's Embrace (ECL) 94 2 Lys Alana Informant (ECL) 181 1 Eclipsed Elf (ECL) 218 1 Iron-Shield Elf (ECL) 108 1 Assert Perfection (ECL) 164 7 Swamp (SLD) 1470 8 Forest (UNF) 244 Sideboard 1 Wildvine Pummeler (ECL) 203 1 Wanderbrine Preacher (ECL) 41 1 Eclipsed Boggart (ECL) 217 1 Bile-Vial Boggart (ECL) 87 2 Moonglove Extractor (ECL) 109 1 Mischievous Sneakling (ECL) 235 1 Safewright Cavalry (ECL) 191 1 Stoic Grove-Guide (ECL) 243 2 Reckless Ransacking (ECL) 152 2 Barbed Bloodletter (ECL) 86 1 Surly Farrier (ECL) 196
7-2 record in Premier Draft Lorwyn Eclipsed at rank Gold 1.
7 wins on #MTGArena in a #MTGLorwyn Premier Draft with a sweet elves deck! Having good rares helped of course, but Moon-Vigil Adherents was still the main win condition.
Mastery Level: 60 Constructed Rank: Platinum 4 Limited Rank: Platinum 4 Games Played: 429 (more than over 80% of players) Quests Gold: 35000 (more than over 90% of players) Daily Wins Gold: 26250 (more than over 90% of players) Boosters opened: 101 Favorite Color: Red Favorite Format: Standard Ranked Favorite Format Wins: 86
#MTGArenaStats during Avatar: The Last Airbender