Difference between revisions of "User:Macronencer"

From Geohashing
imported>Macronencer
(Journal: Missed opportunity :()
imported>Macronencer
(Journal: A whimsical idea for map analysis)
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'''2009-08-23''' Missed it!<br/>
 
'''2009-08-23''' Missed it!<br/>
 
Bah!  I was ferrying my son back his mum's place today, and in doing so I had about 4 graticules potentially accessible from the journey - two of which were unexplored by me.  You would have thought that, with two days' notice, I'd have managed one hash!  But no.  They were all either too far from the route or clearly in inaccessible land (e.g. slap bang in a field with a farm building very close by).  Curses!  This will surely delight my evil twin brother, Thaddeus...
 
Bah!  I was ferrying my son back his mum's place today, and in doing so I had about 4 graticules potentially accessible from the journey - two of which were unexplored by me.  You would have thought that, with two days' notice, I'd have managed one hash!  But no.  They were all either too far from the route or clearly in inaccessible land (e.g. slap bang in a field with a farm building very close by).  Curses!  This will surely delight my evil twin brother, Thaddeus...
 +
 +
'''2009-08-27''' Folding Huge Tracts o' Land<br/>
 +
A thought experiment: Iterate through all the graticules that cover your country.  Take the average hue, saturation and luminance values of the the various graticules for each pixel, according to a map of your choice (e.g. Google satellite).  What you've done is kind of fold the country on top of itself by treating all graticules as geographically equivalent, and the result might be interesting.  For a given day's co-ordinates, for example, if it lands in a grey area it's probably going to indicate that there is a variety of terrain represented around the country.  If it is blue, there's a good chance that many of them are on water - etc.  I thought of this today when I was clicking around on peeron's hash tool.  I noticed that two of the points were quite close to golf courses... now, we just need a map showing just the regions that are in golf courses (black) or within a certain distance of one (fading to white).  Or the same for pubs, parks, etc.  This would enable an instant analysis on a given day - showing, for a given set of graticules, what kind of probability sum results from adding the individual distance functions.  If the point is in a very dark region, something wonderful has happened (for example, every hash in your country is near a pub) - if it's white, there's nothing of interest near any of the graticule points.<br/>
 +
Wow, that was quite a stream of consciousness.  Sorry, I'm feeling creative.

Revision as of 21:28, 27 August 2009


2009-07-18 50 -1 094.jpg
Lol-asg.png 59 / m / 50,-1

Macronencer

Real name Mike
Based in Bursledon, Southampton, UK
Education Southampton Uni Maths grad, 1986.
Job Software developer
True vocation Media Composer (I'm working on it)
xkcd history Fan since the first mention on BoingBoing in 2005
Home turf approximately here

Other information

Mike can close his nose without touching it, which makes him fart-proof. He eats at least forty times his own body weight every century, is a part-time volunteer in the Lynne Truss militia, and loves skunks, his son and longevity research - but not in that order. Give him an inch and he takes a mile. Give him a pinch and he makes a pile. He is a full-time sceptic, part-time father, one-time rock star and all-time champion awful punster.

Macronencer Chuck.jpg

This is Chuck, my new hashscot. Being one of the greatest adventuring scientists who ever lived, rather exhausted after his voyage on the Beagle, family tragedy and the years and years of work on his well-known book, this 200-year-old explorer decided to take it easy, and now travels to random locations with me.

He enjoys looking at the countryside on our travels, and gets rather animated when by chance we spy a finch or lowly earthworm. I often have to remind him to calm down before he punctuates his equilibrium. I am looking forward to the day when my bicycle chain breaks so I can ask him, in jocular fashion, to go and find the missing link.

Local graticules

Southampton, United Kingdom (home)
Swindon, United Kingdom (convenient alternative)
Brighton, United Kingdom (possible alternative as I work near Fareham)
Weymouth, United Kingdom (occasionally convenient)

Planned hashes

Standard hashes

Retro hashes and special expeditions

Attempted Hashes

Standard hashes

(icon work in progress!) (M), OSM = Official Saturday Meetups, PT = Public Transport. All distances in km

Seq# ID Location Information proved success success failure OSM car (km) cycle (km) walk (km) PT First encounters
010 2009-08-15 50 -1 Bierley, Isle of Wight proved success exact location reached group of geohashers present (OSM) car cycle (ferry) cloudy sunny 10 10 0 4 12 68 40
009 2009-08-10 50 -1 New Forest, near Hythe proved success exact location reached solo hash car (ferry) cycle cloudy rain 9 9 0 3 19 15 5
008 2009-08-08 50 -2 Chesil beach, Portland, Weymouth proved success exact location reached group of geohashers present (OSM) (train) cycle sunny 8 8 0 3 16 1 233
007 2009-08-07 50 -1 Field (in Wiltshire) near Rockbourne, Hampshire proved success exact location reached solo hash car cycle sunny 7 7 0 2 9
006 2009-08-01 50 -2 Charlton Marshall, Dorset proved success exact location reached group of geohashers present (OSM) car cloudy 6 6 0 2 148 1 04housemat, Mahahahaneapneap
005 2009-07-27 50 -1 Romsey, Hampshire proved success exact location reached group of geohashers present car walk cloudy 5 5 0 1 192 1
004 2009-07-27 51 -0 Flitwick, near Luton proved success exact location reached solo hash car walk cloudy 4 4 0 1 248
003 2009-07-22 50 -0 The Road To Bognor proved success approx location reached solo hash car cycle cloudy 3 3 0 1 93 2
002 2009-07-18 50 -1 Hambledon Cricket pilgrimage! proved success approx location reached solo hash (OSM) car walk cloudy 2 2 0 1 49 9
001 2009-06-28 50 -1 Hedge End recreation ground proved success exact location reached group of geohashers present car sunny 1 1 0 0 5 Sermoa

Retro hashes and special expeditions

Date ID Location Information
2009-07-27 1965-05-06 51 0 Origin Geohash achievement
In a field next to Hylands Park, Chelmsford
proved success exact location reached solo hash car sunny

Statistics

Score card(s)

-2 -1 -0
52 x x x
51 x x 1
50 2 6 1

Achievements

Ongoing

Minesweeper geohash empty.png Minesweeper geohash empty.png Minesweeper geohash flag.png
Minesweeper geohash flag.png Minesweeper geohash 3.png Minesweeper geohash flag.png
Minesweeper geohash empty.png Minesweeper geohash empty.png Minesweeper geohash empty.png
Macronencer achieved level 3 of the Minesweeper Geohash achievement
by visiting coordinates in Southampton, United Kingdom and 3 of the surrounding graticules.
Centurion0.png
Macronencer earned the xkcd Nullaturion achievement
by attending 4 Saturday meetups.

Completed

Consecutivegeohash.jpg
Macronencer earned the Consecutive geohash achievement
by reaching 2 consecutive hash points starting on 2009-08-07.
Bus.PNG
Macronencer earned the Public transport geohash achievement
by reaching the (50, -2) geohash on 2009-08-08 via South West Trains.
2009-08-08 50 -2 Macronencer 15.jpg
Gift.PNG
Macronencer earned the Ambassador achievement
by obtaining permission from Mr. McLeod, son of the land-owner to access the (50, -1) geohash on 2009-08-07.
2009-08-07 50 -1 Macronencer 24.jpg
Pubgeohash.jpg
Macronencer earned the Pub Geohash Achievement
by visiting a pub visible from the (50, -2) geohash on 2009-08-01.
2009-08-01 50 -2 Macronencer 32.jpg
Geotrashribbon.png
Macronencer earned the GeoTrash Geohash Achievement
by cleaning up the (50, -2) geohash on 2009-08-01.
2009-08-01 50 -2 Macronencer 22.jpg
Geotrashribbon.png
Macronencer earned the GeoTrash Geohash Achievement
by cleaning up the (50, -1) geohash on 2009-08-07.
2009-08-07 50 -1 Macronencer 19.jpg

Template:Virgin graticule

Multihash.png
Macronencer earned the Multihash Achievement
by reaching the 2009-07-27 51 -0 and 2009-07-27 50 -1 geohashes on 2009-07-27.
Origin2.png
Macronencer earned the Origin geohash achievement
by reaching the (51, 0) geohash for 1965-05-06 on 2009-07-27.
Landgeohash.png
Macronencer earned the Land geohash achievement
by reaching the (50, -1) geohash on 2009-06-28.
Meetup.PNG
Macronencer earned the Meet-up achievement
by meeting Sermoa at the (50, -1) geohash on 2009-06-28.
2009-06-28 50 -1 sermoa and macronencer.jpg
Meetup.PNG
Macronencer earned the Meet-up achievement
by meeting DavidMiller at the (50, -1) geohash on 2009-08-15.
2009-08-15 50 -1 Macronencer 43.jpg

Gratuitous Ribbons

Guitar.PNG
Macronencer earned the Musician Achievement
by playing flute at the (50, -1) geohash on 2009-06-28.
2009-06-28 50 -1 macronencer playing flute.jpg
Rubiks-cube-icon.png
Macronencer earned the Rubik's Achievement
by solving a Rubik's cube at the (50, -1) geohash on 2009-06-28.
2009-06-28 50 -1 macronencer solved rubiks cube.jpg
Playing card.jpg
Macronencer, Sermoa and DavidMiller earned the Card Game achievement
by playing cards at the (50, -1) geohash on 2009-08-15.
2009-08-15 50 -1 3256.JPG

Long-term intentions

  • Earn various Displaced origin geohash achievements (some of these are rather ambitious, I'll admit!)
    • 1965-05-06 51 -3 - actually on a green on the Aberdare golf course near Cardiff in Wales :)
    • 1965-05-06 52 0 - marginally within somebody's front garden, but arguably public as within GPS accuracy of public land :)
    • 1965-05-06 53 -1 - next to a canal and the M62 near Sheffield. Sounds inaccessible, but satellite imagery makes it look relatively easy.
    • 1965-05-06 39 3 - very accessible as it is right next to a road... but it's on Mallorca.
    • 1965-05-06 20 -156 - Maui - therefore expensive to get to. But just a short walk into the hills...
  • Leave a variety of unusual xkcd signs
    • One made out of ants (Oh yeah!)
    • One that can only be seen from the right angle (like the Channel 4 logos on TV)
    • One in ASCII binary (probably already been done)
    • One in Morse code (ditto)
  • Collar someone with a boat and do a big Water geohash, probably in the Solent, or the river Itchen or Hamble.
  • Buy a small boat (kayak?) and do a small Water geohash, probably in a lake or small river.
  • Gain the Minesweeper Geohash ribbon because it's shiny! Probably centred on the Swindon graticule.

Completed!

VERY long-term intentions

  • Complete a hash expedition in all 64,800 graticules. Hey, I'm a life-extensionist and I think big, what can I say? The real question is: centuries from now, will geohashing exist? Come to that, will the Dow Jones exist? I think Gene Roddenberry would probably say "Let's hope not". So there ya go.

Journal

Old journal entries archived here


2009-08-04 Bigness
64,800 graticules... think about that. I just did. Even if you did one every single day, in the biggest Consecutive geohash ever, it would take 177 years. Even if you didn't bother with the ones that are in the sea, you're looking at decades of travel.
And when you remember that it would take most of an entire day to walk non-stop from the North end of a grat to the South end, you begin to understand the size of the Earth.
The Earth, of course, is just a small planet orbiting a star. The best estimate we have for the number of stars in the known universe is a very large number. So large that if you counted 3,000,000,000 stars every second (roughly the current clock speed of a home computer), you would take a whole CENTURY to count them all.

Feel small yet?

I see a distant future, in which latitude and longitude have been replaced by galactic co-ordinates, GPS units by some sub-ether positioning system with tweaks for relativistic issues such as the simultaneity conflict, the DJIA by some other source of stochastic nutrition (who knows what?)... how long would we have to live to hash every planet on every star in every galaxy?

I told you: I think big. I see no reason to think small.

2009-08-05 New GPS
My Garmin eTrex Vista HCx arrived today from eBay. Seems very nice! Robust, and waterproof (IPX7, which I think means up to 1m of water) - however, I'm sure it doesn't float so if I get my boat, I'll also be getting a plastic sealable pouch with attached buoyancy device to prevent anguish. The software is adequate, but could be more exciting. As for the price of the maps...! Bloody hell. The UK TOPO map costs more than the device, aat a nice $299.99 or €230. Won't be buying that in a hurry. I think it would be nice if you could buy small sections of the maps, like with the old OS maps of Britain - they were not cheap, but at least you could go somewhere where you needed to buy maybe three of them, and it wouldn't break the bank. Anyway, it's good enough for hashing, without detailed maps, so I'm still happy. Also just downloaded the Goecaching app for my iPhone. I will try it out this weekend, perhaps.

2009-08-23 Missed it!
Bah! I was ferrying my son back his mum's place today, and in doing so I had about 4 graticules potentially accessible from the journey - two of which were unexplored by me. You would have thought that, with two days' notice, I'd have managed one hash! But no. They were all either too far from the route or clearly in inaccessible land (e.g. slap bang in a field with a farm building very close by). Curses! This will surely delight my evil twin brother, Thaddeus...

2009-08-27 Folding Huge Tracts o' Land
A thought experiment: Iterate through all the graticules that cover your country. Take the average hue, saturation and luminance values of the the various graticules for each pixel, according to a map of your choice (e.g. Google satellite). What you've done is kind of fold the country on top of itself by treating all graticules as geographically equivalent, and the result might be interesting. For a given day's co-ordinates, for example, if it lands in a grey area it's probably going to indicate that there is a variety of terrain represented around the country. If it is blue, there's a good chance that many of them are on water - etc. I thought of this today when I was clicking around on peeron's hash tool. I noticed that two of the points were quite close to golf courses... now, we just need a map showing just the regions that are in golf courses (black) or within a certain distance of one (fading to white). Or the same for pubs, parks, etc. This would enable an instant analysis on a given day - showing, for a given set of graticules, what kind of probability sum results from adding the individual distance functions. If the point is in a very dark region, something wonderful has happened (for example, every hash in your country is near a pub) - if it's white, there's nothing of interest near any of the graticule points.
Wow, that was quite a stream of consciousness. Sorry, I'm feeling creative.