Author: James Vornov
I’ve gotten my big autofocus Leica SL2 out of the cabinet to photograph my little friend here. Just too hard to grab focus with my M11’s manual focus rangefinder. Classic Lab.
The Puppy: Week 1 in Review
This is some old style blogging.
Our Labrador Retriever puppy is now 9 weeks old. It’s been quite a project onboarding her into our home. I grew up with dogs at home (Pugs) and had a great companion for all too brief a time after moving to Baltimore in the mid 80’s for my Neurology training at Johns Hopkins. That was Cajal, named after the Spanish neuroanatomist. She was a gentle, but enthusiastic Frisbee dog. A Lab and Shepard mix from an accidental litter. So after many years, we’ve brought in this baby animal to be a companion. She comes from a fine line bred at Viklan Labradors in West Chester, PA.
Dog training and management has changed dramatically since I adopted Cajal. Back then, training was largely aversive using negative reinforcement to guide the dog into desired behaviors. Thiebaud is seeing play and reward and is responding quite remarkable. She shows powerful place preference for a red fleece mat that I’ve reinforced her on with food, just dropping kibble on it when she brings all 4 paws onto it. She’s happy in here crate since most of her food is thrown into her crate, door open or closed. She’s already retrieving toys, bringing them back to me just for more play and engagement, not on any command. She comes running on cue as she’s expecting some kibble in my hand.
This dog has enlarged and shrunk the world simultaneously. Enlarged it of course since I have this rapidly developing puppy becoming devoted to her humans. Everything good comes from us- food, water and play. Shrunk it, since it’s a big project taking many hours a day. Learing about training methods, play, management. Fortunately, she settles down quickly after a play session and snoozes, so there’s time for work, cycling training and blogging.
Kindle Scribe- Initial Impression
I put in an early preorder of the new Kindle Scribe and it arrived last week. I’ve only had a few days of use, but have only seen review site discussions and no real user comments.
I had thought about buying one of the other e-Paper tablets like the Remarkable 2, but just didn’t see the value for digital handwriting only. I’ve also given the iPad and Apple Pencil approach a try over the last few years, but it never stuck. It’s a combination of not liking the stylus on glass feel and the availability of distraction when reading documents.
Since I’ve been successful with book reading on the Kindle, I wanted to try the Scribe. And as it turns out, the Scribe is a big Kindle with stylus input added.
This means the device is quite modal in use.
Reading Kindle books or any document in the Amazon format provides the standard Kindle experience plus stylus. So you can highlight and add sticky notes. Just the notes can be typed or handwritten. The addition of handwriting is nice as it makes casual use away from a desk much easier. Solving one of my issues of note taking for reading away from the desk.
PDFs get to the Scribe via sharing with the Kindle app or via a website for sharing. But now there is only highlighting and writing on the PDF itself. And since many PDFs have minimal white space for writing, it’s really mostly highlighting and a few words in the margin as guides, not real notes. I’ve already seen that PDF templates are going to be a useful addition. There are already some being created for daily agendas and Bullet Journal layouts.
Finally, there are independent Notebooks which can use a handful of supplied templates. The templates are limited and really not very good. The lines and dots are both too big and too dark to be usable the way a paper notebook is or even nice iPad apps like GoodNotes. For now, it’s not much use for me. I’d rather use fountain pen and paper since I can quickly scan a page with my iPhone and GeniusScan if I want an archive online.
So far for me the value is a large format, distraction free PDF display with easy highlight and margin notes as if I had a paper printout. Exactly the way the Kindle has served as a paperback size book substitute. I’ve also done some reading in books with handwritten notes. We’ll see if the handheld nature of the device is worth giving up a notebook and pen.
In summary, many of the tech site reviews have captured the device quite well. It’s a reading device with supplemental pen input. At least at release. Amazon has tended to just focus and incrementally improve its Kindle software and my expectation here is similar. I’ve got just a few immediate needs for improvements- sticky notes or more room to take notes on PDFs. A more compact export of notes and highlights from PDFs. A quick way to switch from book or PDF to Notebook mode. But overall, a solid start with some refinement needed.
iPhone Photography and the Puppy
Expect lots of puppy photos here. I have not had such a willing model in many years.
So far, it’s been iPhone photography all the way. This is a portrait mode image to get that blurred background. Digitally created in the phone with the AI system combining two images, but no work and quite impressive looking.
I’m figuring out how to use the bigger cameras for these portraints, especially the Leica SL2 which has been pretty idle without roadtrips and landscape photography.
The puppy’s name is Thiebaud, named after the California painter, Wayne Thiebaud. Pronounced in both cases “TEEBOW”. We’re learing about each other and I’m learning how classical and operant conditioning work in the real world, training an animal that now lives here. The power of positive reinforcement using food is quite remarkable, which I ought to know after decades of reading about behavior studies in the lab.
Speaking of lab, she’s a black Labrador Retriever from Viklan Labradors in West Chester, PA. A confident, playful and very motivated companion.
In the Garden
A very simple image with minimal manipulation. I’m using some constraints like sticking with the Q2 Monochrom and images in the autumn garden. I’m not spending dedicated time to capture images and processing is casual, so this seems to be a way to be a bit more consistent.
Finally I CAN take notes while reading
I’ve lamented how much I’ve struggled taking notes while reading. This summer, in part due to injury downtime, I’ve been reading more. A couple of the books really prompted note taking. I now separate reading from note taking and it’s all good.
Ironically, I began rereading Ryan Carroll’s Bullet Journal Method and was moved to buy a notebook with pre-numbered pages. I’ve adopted many of Ryan’s principles in the past, but indexing never reaaly worked since my notebooks have generally been dated, not page numbered. I decided to take some summary notes of the Bullet Journal Method in my new Bullet Journal.
It was a fortunate turn of events because it brought together two factors that unlocked a new approach. First, I had read the book before. Second, I had a notebook and a text. So instead of reading and interrupting to note, it was a pretty quick process to work at a desk and take bullet journal style notes in the style that Ryan calls “rapid loggingâ€. It was a review, not a re-read and served to see the book at a higher level than the first read through and reaction.
So now I’ve done the same with two more books. The first read is a no notes read. I can sit in a chair, stand on line at the store, lay on the couch- no matter, it’s just reading. Now of course I’ll capture an important thought now and then in my usual capture method, but it’s a process completely independent from the notes I’ll take later.
Note taking is then a fast, focused activity once I’ve made a first pass through the book. Then I have a better idea of what I’m after in taking notes. That is if I’ve decided I want to record anything from the reading experience at all. Some books provide a page of brief notes, others many pages with notations.
At this point, I’m making a digital copy of the notes to store in my DEVONthink database. If it’s going to be the subject of analysis or writing, I’ve then been typing up some notes that are searchable on the computer. I’ve been using Genius Scan for many years and agree with this nice summary Paper to Paperless: A Guide to Digitalizing Your Journals with a Scanner App | Mark Koester:
Genius Scan does a great job of automatically detecting document edges while you take photos using the camera or while directly editing static images. The app then resizes and positions the images accordingly to create a flat, document view. You can apply appropriate filters so docs are high contrast and black and white (or alternatively leave them as colored photos). You can also manually edit scans to correct misapplied edge detection, use an alternative color filter, or make other corrections.
The nice thing is that whether the scan is in Apple’s Notes.app or in DEVONthink, the OCR of those apps generally provides good searching capabilities and so the notes are archived and available for future use.
So, now I’ve can take notes on books. My breakthrough was to separate the reading from the note taking summary. More efficient, focused and more useful.
Steering the Horse from the Chariot
The metaphor of horse and rider is an ancient way of understanding the relationship of mind to body. Our control is at best partial, influencing the animal we inhabit. The metaphor is dualist of course, seeing the mind and the body as separable entities.
We now understand of course that awareness itself arises from the brain itself, intimately tied into signals coming both from the environment and from within our own bodies. Those physical appetites and values we assign to the world pull brain function in their determined direction as brain control systems do their best to steer toward goals valued in more abstracted models of how the world works. Food, shelter, stability are basic desires, but we know based on social models that a fat bank account can be used to obtain them if some immediate gratification is delayed for a future gain.
I’m working my way through the classic Jewish book “Nefesh HaChaim†(“Living Soul”) by Reb Chaim of Volozhin published after his death in 1824. In a bit of a twist on the classic horse and rider metaphor, Reb Chaim likens the body and mind to a horse and chariot. It struck me that while it evokes a deeper separation of body and mind, it captures well how the body is physically under indirect control, being steered by the man in the chariot and not under the kind of direct control we imagine. The charioteer says go and we hope gets pulled in the right direction by the horse. There’s some steering and ability to stop, but not much more than that. The brain executes behaviors in the way the horse pulls the chariot. Awareness can influence but rarely control.
The limitations of awareness and agency are truly profound. We’re operating under assumptions of control that are not very accurate when tested. As choice is so limited, the emphasis has to be on training the horse rather than somehow trying to gain more control over it, an effort that seems destined to fail.
Deep Fall
Leica Q2 Monochrom