Monday, December 30, 2013

Chris McVeigh is a seriously talented LEGO artist.


Chris McVeigh is a seriously talented LEGO artist. Check out his whole portfolio...it includes traditional 3D builds as well as these innovative 2D "sketches."

Originally shared by Chris McVeigh

In 2013, I stumbled onto something fun: Brick Sketches. Although the original was intended as nothing more than a tongue-in-cheek parody of the brilliant marker sketches by my talented friends Karen Hallion and Bamboota, and the response was so enthusiastic that I decided to build more. Now at the end of 2013, I have created 23 Brick Sketches and I have many more planned. 

My personal best picks for the year are (3) The Grinch, (2) Oscar and (1) Wolverine Redux. But which one is your favourite?


Here's a few brief notes about my top picks:

(3) Although it was the first sketch I unveiled in December, The Grinch was actually the last sketch I made and photographed in 2013. Most of the sketch came together quite quickly, including the string mouth and stars created with white levers. However, I agonized about the placement and construction of the eyes and nose. I built and rebuilt the face dozens of times, and it was only when I decided to use the lamp holder piece for the nose that it all came together. Or, almost came together. I shot and processed the photo, and just as I was ready to post it, I figured out a better way to assemble the face. And so I reshot the photo, compositing the revised face into the image I'd already completed. 

(2) Oscar almost won out for my favourite brick sketch of 2013. It has great contrast between the aqua plates and the green plates that make up the body. The face is simple but easy to recognize, and the angled 1x2 green plates work well to give the impression of wild, shaggy fur. It's also one of the rare brick sketches that include more than the face of the character. 

(1) Ultimately, however, Oscar lost out to my remake of the original brick sketch. Wolverine Redux has bold yellow and red colours contrasting against the black of the cowl. It also uses dark tan for the visible flesh, which I thought worked well to convey Logan's grizzled mug and permanent five o'clock shadow. A wedge plate helps create a great sneer, which is completed by a roof tile allowing the nose of the cowl to dip over the mouth. And of course, the three blades placed at the bottom suggest his adamantium claws. But what might have pushed the Wolverine Redux to the top of my list is the fact that it represents so much of an improvement over the original!

You can see all my brick sketches at flickr.com/powerpig

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Rear view of those two LEGO cars: mine on the left, #31006 on the right.


Rear view of those two LEGO cars:  mine on the left, #31006 on the right.

Inspired by LEGO's original set #31006 on the left, I whipped up my own version on the right.


Inspired by LEGO's original set #31006 on the left, I whipped up my own version on the right. It uses some of the same techniques (e.g., design of the front fascia is similar), and it also has working doors and an engine hatch that opens. But, theirs seems more Ferrari and mine seems more Lambo. Kinda sorta. Oh, and that muscle-car hood scoop on mine is because The Boy wanted it that way. :-) #LEGO

Thursday, November 28, 2013

The boy just got this LEGO set and I'm really, really impressed by the design.


The boy just got this LEGO set and I'm really, really impressed by the design. It has some terrific features (e.g., working scissor doors and a clear rear deck that lifts up to reveal the "engine") and some interesting bricks. Plus, since it's a 3-in-1 design, even if you don't take a particularly creative approach to your building, you can still enjoy a variety of results. All in all, one of the best LEGO sets I've experienced and certainly the best IMO below $25.

http://creator.lego.com/en-us/Products/31006.aspx

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Ironically, those who suffered through those dark times may not have realized the cause of their misery.

Ironically, those who suffered through those dark times may not have realized the cause of their misery. "It happened over 200 years. People may not have even recognized the climate was changing, because it was happening so slowly over their lifetime," Drake said.
http://www.wunderground.com/news/downfall-ancient-greece-caused-300-year-drought-20131022

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Speaking of LEGO, my son (5) constructed an ostrich all by himself.


Speaking of LEGO, my son (5) constructed an ostrich all by himself. I think it's a pretty good likeness, actually. #cleverboy

Lego!! Enough said. The picture speaks for itself.


Lego!! Enough said. The picture speaks for itself.

http://bit.ly/1g2HnWI

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

The American Geophysical Union, which represents some 60,000 scientists who study the Earth, is ready with an...

The American Geophysical Union, which represents some 60,000 scientists who study the Earth, is ready with an explanation of the cause [of climate change] now. Arguably, there is no other group of scientists more attuned to what the planet is doing. This week, the group issued a two-page statement with the headline: "Humanity is the major influence on the global climate change observed over the past 50 years." It added, "Human-induced climate change requires urgent action."
http://n.pr/187pPRE

Friday, August 2, 2013

These LEGO figures made me laugh.

These LEGO figures made me laugh. At least I'll know what's going on if I ever find a tiny plastic pretzel stuck to my foot one day.

Originally shared by LEGO

It is our pleasure to introduce you to the newcomers! Look for these little dudes starting September 1st http://minifigures.lego.com/














Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Poor Santa. :-(


Poor Santa. :-(

via Lars DeRuntz

Originally shared by Brian Gauspohl

North Pole Now a Lake

http://www.livescience.com/38347-north-pole-ice-melt-lake.html arctic climate change extreme weather global warming environment environmental science

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Saturday, July 6, 2013

This LEGO minifig reminds me of Weird Al Yankovic for some reason. Maybe it's the Star Wars flightsuit.


This LEGO minifig reminds me of Weird Al Yankovic for some reason. Maybe it's the Star Wars flightsuit.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Note to self: In the future, ensure that both ends of the lid are secured before picking up the kids' LEGO bin...


Note to self:  In the future, ensure that both ends of the lid are secured before picking up the kids' LEGO bin one-handed.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Read this.

Read this. Don't scroll past it. Read it. Then think about it. I mean really think about it. This is happening. You and everyone you know might be one of the last few generations of people to live at the apex of human existence on Earth.

Originally shared by Yonatan Zunger

I want to tell you a very unpleasant truth about climate change. It's a lot more serious than we've been discussing in public.

(Warning the first: This is not going to be a cheerful sort of post. It will, very likely, leave you feeling deeply unsettled. If you do not want this, you should stop reading now.)

(Warning the second: This is not a post on which to say "I don't believe climate change is happening!" or "this is a left-wing plot!" or "I don't believe there's adequate proof that humans are causing it!" There are times that I have the patience and interest to discuss what are essentially political arguments about science, and this is not one of them. If you believe this stuff, it's because you have a deep personal need to do so, and best of luck to you with that. But I'll just delete such comments on this post.)

The paper referenced here is one that Larry Smarr shared. We have a new paper running several parallel models of Arctic ice collapse, and the one thing that even the most conservative models agree on is that the Arctic will be ice-free in summer within the next 20 years. This is pretty much right; anyone who's been watching the development of climate indicia and thinking about the positive feedback loops in ice melting has known it for a while.

But we don't really talk about positive feedback loops, much, and when we do, we stop soon afterwards because it's a bit too horrifying to think about. But climate systems are full of them; ice melting is a simple example. If you have a big sheet of ice, it reflects sunlight and stays cool. But if it melts, the top of it melts first, and then you have a puddle of water, which is great at storing heat and doesn't reflect as much sunlight, sitting on top of your ice. That puddle gets warmer, and melts the ice under it much faster than pure light would; lather, rinse, repeat, and ice melts fast. (You can test this out in your own backyard; take two pieces of ice and put them in the sun. If you keep draining the water from the top of one as it melts, it will melt much more slowly than the other one)

The best way to know that climate systems are a big hornking bag of positive feedback loops is to look at the Earth's climate record. (We can get this quite nicely from things like deep ice cores, tree cores, etc.) You can see a good summary graph here: http://www.scotese.com/climate.htm. What's distinctive are those sudden vertical spikes; these represent times when the climate suddenly and rapidly became a lot hotter, on time scales much shorter than any other variation. That sort of thing can only happen when you get a massive external driving force (think "giant comet") or a positive feedback loop.

What's important to understand about this is that, when you hit a loop like this, the consequences aren't measured in the ways that IPCC climate models talk, about so many degrees rise in mean temperatures, changes in the biomes of infectious diseases, crop failures, sea level rises making cities into ruins, giant storms wiping cities off the map. They change the entire ecosystem of the Earth -- the basic kinds of plants and animals which can live on it.

The last big spike like this was the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, about 55 million years ago. Average temperatures rose by 6C over a period of 20,000 years -- which is enough to look like a giant, sharp spike on the history-of-the-entire-planet graph. During the PETM, the Earth looked like the inside of a giant greenhouse; hot, wet, tropical. Swamp cypress grew as far north as Ellesmere Island, the northernmost part of Canada. The large mammals of the Paleocene vanished, to be replaced by a huge variety of new species, mostly dwarf-sized. Many of our modern kinds of creature -- birds, ungulates, etc -- emerged in this period. Life before the PETM favored much bigger critters, like a snake the size of a school bus. (See below for a link)

As far as climate swings on the Earth, this one wasn't close to the biggest, although it was one of the fastest: the temperature rose by 0.0003C per year, enough to completely reset the biota of the planet. 

By comparison, since 1920, the mean temperature has been rising an average of 0.01C per year. Yes, that's about 30 times faster than the run-up to the PETM.

Some things you need to understand about these shifts.

* They've happened quite a few times. Look at that first graph I linked, and read about any of the times the climate changed sharply. Each of these was associated with a complete rewriting of the planet's biota -- which is a nice way of saying "almost all the life died out and was replaced by something completely different."

* Because of positive feedback loops, when a climate shift starts, it can speed itself up. There are a lot of different loops, ranging from ice melting to methane clathrates to ocean circulation pattern changes. Unfortunately, we don't understand these loops very well -- because if any of them had gone off full-force while we were around to study them, we wouldn't be around to study them. Because of loops like that, once something gets started it's not always possible to shut it off by reversing what you're doing, no matter how much you do so.

* When the biota of a planet get rewritten, the creatures that require the most delicate maintenance die first. This tends to mean really big creatures, that rely on large supplies of their foods; apex predators, which rely on the entire food chain beneath them; and "canary" species like many frogs, which are very sensitive and tend to be the first to die when something is going wrong. Historically, the cutoff for "large creatures" (that tend to not survive extinction events) seems to be in the ballpark of 20 pounds; things bigger than that just require the ecosystem to be too healthy.

So, yes, that includes you, it includes your dog, it includes most of the animals you eat. It probably also includes lots of the grains you eat, since large-scale agriculture is quite fragile as well. (As evidenced by the tremendous amount of work put in every year to keep crop yields high enough to feed humanity) 

* Technological methods of helping are actually more limited than you think, because so much of our technology stack is built on top of society being basically functional. Manufacturing microchips requires pretty much the full scope of human industry, from mining to power generation to transport logistics to chemical engineering. Growing the quantities of plants required to support humanity is, if anything, even more delicate. We're fairly robust against small perturbations because we can put in technological solutions -- but when problems start to knock out the basic infrastructure on which we can depend, the descent and collapse is fairly rapid.


Now, you may think that I'm writing this to make a political point, or to urge you to do something or other. Sometimes I would be, but this time I'm not: I'm just writing to show you a bit about the science, and give you an idea of just what the situation we're talking about could potentially entail. It's not clear where we are on the positive-feedback loop right now; it's very likely, for example, that the Arctic ice will collapse at this point, no matter what we do in the next 20 years. Whether we've gone far enough to trigger other catastrophes is still up in the air. 

But if it is, what we're looking at isn't a world where we all live like Bangladeshis, or a world where we're living in technological bubbles. It's a world where there are tropical rainforests going up to the poles, where there are millions of new and unfamiliar species... and we're simply dead.


If you want to know more about the history, here are some places to start:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleocene-Eocene_Thermal_Maximum
Life in the Eocene: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eocene
Temperature change in the 20th century: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temperature_record
Titanoboa, and other giant creatures of the Paleocene: http://www.smithsonianchannel.com/site/sn/show.do?show=140671
One of the kinds of positive feedback loop that could be a problem for us: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clathrate_gun_hypothesis
http://www.sciencerecorder.com/news/noaa-arctic-headed-for-ice-free-summers/

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

They boy turned 5 today and celebrated by assembling his new LEGO Tie Fighter.


They boy turned 5 today and celebrated by assembling his new LEGO Tie Fighter. 

#birthday   #StarWars   #LEGO  #5 #hashtag

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Finally finished the legendary sword "Excalibur" in LEGO bricks.

Finally finished the legendary sword "Excalibur" in LEGO bricks.

Total length: 38"
Bricks: ~400





Sunday, March 3, 2013

Homebrew #LEGO #StarWars Star Destroyer.

Homebrew #LEGO #StarWars Star Destroyer. Would need a lot more, and different, pieces to get it more like the "real" thing, but this is the best we could do with our random collection of bricks. The kids enjoyed making it, which is pretty much all that matters.

Title


Sunday, February 3, 2013

After the boy had me make him a LEGO sword (named...


After the boy had me make him a LEGO sword (named "Sisterbiter"; https://plus.google.com/u/0/103183570053193175186/posts/QBiA4Yff6Rr), his sister asked for a similar favor. Here's Sam holding her new blade, Brotherbane.

Sunday, January 13, 2013

One thing that annoys me is that our silverware organizer tray is about 1-1/4" shorter than our kitchen drawers, so...


One thing that annoys me is that our silverware organizer tray is about 1-1/4" shorter than our kitchen drawers, so the tray tends to slide back and forth when the drawer gets opened and closed.

Solution: LEGO! No more sliding. :-)

Now I'm doubly intrigued!

Now I'm doubly intrigued!