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Revision as of 00:56, 28 September 2009
Macronencer
Real name
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Mike
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Based in
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Bursledon, Southampton, UK
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Education
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Southampton Uni Maths grad, 1986.
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Job
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Software developer
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True vocation
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Media Composer (I'm working on it)
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xkcd history
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Fan since the first mention on BoingBoing in 2005
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Home turf
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approximately here
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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.
This is Chuck, my 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
- Do a Buccaneer Geohash on Talk Like a Pirate Day 2009 (2009-09-19)
- There are three main options for this one. Standard meetup (if it's a good location), otherwise retro hash based on 1995-09-19: either Southampton Water (if I can borrow a boat) or Brighton grat (hill walking) (1:20 drive). The weather forecast for Saturday is better to the West at the moment, so I'm also considering that.
- Other possibilities:
- 1930-12-01 50 -1 (First publication of Swallows and Amazons) - Holbury sports ground, near Fawley (0:34 drive)
- 1935-12-28 51 -1 (Release date of Captain Blood) - In a field near Little Langford (1:00 drive)
- 2008-05-21 51 -1 Standby retrohash for next year's Mouse Over Day - hash for original geohash day in the Swindon grat.
- Visit the hash point from the original comic: 2005-05-26 37 -122 - it's in the Golden Gate recreational park in San Francisco.
Attempted Hashes
Map of my expeditions on Google Maps
Standard Hashes
All distances in km
Successes (proved)
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13
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Saturday Meetups
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4
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Total by car
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1352
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Successes (unproved)
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0
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Total by ferry
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45
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Total on fastfoot
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156
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Failures
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1
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Total by rail
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276
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Total on foot
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29
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Seq#
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ID
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Location
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Information
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First encounters
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017
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2009-09-27 50 -1
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Eastleigh
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33
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2
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davidc, Dee, JonRead
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016
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2009-09-18 50 -0
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South Harting
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100
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4
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015
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2009-09-13 50 -1
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Hilsea recreation ground
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43
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3
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Maoi-taoi
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014
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2009-09-10 51 -1
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Litchfield
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136
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6
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013
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2009-09-06 50 -1
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Harbridge, New Forest
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63
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46
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2
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012
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2009-09-02 50 -2
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Iwerne Minster
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195
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011
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2009-08-30 51 -1
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Barton Farm, Winchester
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59
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Mapaholic
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010
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2009-08-15 50 -1
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Bierley, Isle of Wight
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40
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12
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68
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DavidMiller
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009
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2009-08-10 50 -1
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New Forest, near Hythe
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5
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19
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15
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008
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2009-08-08 50 -2
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Chesil beach, Portland, Weymouth
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|
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233
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16
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1
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007
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2009-08-07 50 -1
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Field near Rockbourne
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|
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9
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|
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006
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2009-08-01 50 -2
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Charlton Marshall, Dorset
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|
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148
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1
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04housemat, Mahahahaneapneap
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005
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2009-07-27 50 -1
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Romsey, Hampshire
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192
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1
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004
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2009-07-27 51 -0
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Flitwick, near Luton
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|
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248
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003
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2009-07-22 50 -0
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The Road To Bognor
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93
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2
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002
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2009-07-18 50 -1
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Hambledon Cricket pilgrimage!
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49
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9
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001
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2009-06-28 50 -1
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Hedge End recreation ground
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5
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Sermoa
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Retro Hashes and Special Expeditions
Statistics
Score Card
Note: only reached co-ordinates on standard hashes are counted here
Achievements
Ongoing
Completed
Template:Virgin graticule
Consolation Prizes
Gratuitous Ribbons
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 (attempted on 2009-09-27 50 -1 without success)
- 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!
- Earn the Origin geohash achievement by visiting 1965-05-06 51 0 in a field near Chelmsford
- Leave an xkcd sign in Braille
- Leave an xkcd sign that can only be seen from the right angle (like the Channel 4 logos on TV)
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
2009-09-15 Globalhash mirrors
The Globalhash concept is like having the same lottery numbers every week, in one sense: it is so unlikely that your neighbourhood will come up, that you feel you have to check it every single day, for fear of kicking yourself later that you missed one you could have done. This got me thinking today. Every graticule must have a special region in it, which I will call the "Globalhash mirror". If a standard daily hash point falls within this region, then it also means that the Globalhash for that day has fallen in that graticule. This is true East of W30, but West of W30 one would have to remember that the Globalhash will be a day behind the standard hash because Globalhashes always use W30 co-ordinates.
Anyway, the Globalhash mirror region can be calculated easily from your latitude and longitude. It is a "trigonometric rectangle" (i.e. bounded by latitudes and meridians) with two opposite corners defined thus:
GMLAT1 = ( 181 * HOMELAT + 90 ) / 180
GMLON1 = ( 361 * HOMELON + 180 ) / 360
GMLAT2 = ( 181 * HOMELAT + 91 ) / 180
GMLON2 = ( 361 * HOMELON + 181 ) / 360
...where HOMELAT and HOMELON are the absolute values of your graticule's integer co-ordinates. After calculating, you have to re-apply the correct sign. This makes the floor/round issue go away :)
For my graticule (50 -1) these work out to:
GM1 = ( 50.77777778, -1.50277778 )
GM2 = ( 50.78333333, -1.50555556 )
By plotting these on Google Maps (GM1 and GM2), I can find out the "rectangle" of land to watch. If a hash point lands in there, I know that the Global hash for that day will also be in my graticule :) If you look at those two points on Google Maps and compare them, you'll see that it's an extremely small strip of land. This just goes to show how unlikely it is that the Globalhash will fall in your graticule: in fact, in a given year, the odds would be around 1 in 178, so if you're waiting for it, better be prepared to die first! To Globalhash, one has to travel :)