Saturday, June 20, 2026

Bakken -- Staggering -- A Reminder -- June 20, 2026

Locator: 51022B.  

A reminder. This link to see staggering wells from over the years. 

When you get there, this post will show up at the top, so scroll down through all the "staggering" wells.

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The Book Page

Arrived today: The Conversations: Walter Murch and the Art of Editing Film, Michael Ondaatje, c. 2002. Dustcover price: $35. Thriftbooks, $6.75. 

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The Book Page

Re-reading. Trying to sort this book out.

Suddenly Something Clicked: The Languages of Film Editing and Sound Design, Walter Murch, c. March, 2025. 

Link here for the notes. 

This is the first of three volumes. The author says he has already completed volumes 2 and 3, but they won't be released "until the right time." 

Walter Murch is 82 years old. Volume 1 was published when he was 81 years old. Wiki

Never quit reading. This is truly amazing. On the very first page of this book: "uncanny valley." See wiki. So incredibly relevant at this moment in time.

Murch started compiling notes for this book in 2013 or thereabouts. And now AI.

As related to robotics engineering, robotics professor Masahiro Mori first introduced the concept in 1970 from his book titled Bukimi No Tanilit.'uncanny valley phenomenon').

Bukimi no tani was translated literally as uncanny valley in the 1978 book Robots: Fact, Fiction, and Prediction written by Jasia Reichardt.

Over time, this translation created an unintended association of the concept to Ernst Jentsch's psychoanalytic concept of the uncanny established in his 1906 essay "On the Psychology of the Uncanny" which was then critiqued and extended in Sigmund Freud's 1919 essay "The Uncanny." 

Mori's original hypothesis states that as the appearance of a robot is made more human, some observers' emotional response to the robot becomes increasingly positive and empathetic, until it becomes almost human, at which point the response quickly becomes strong revulsion. 

However, as the robot's appearance continues to become less distinguishable from that of a human being, the emotional response becomes positive once again and approaches human-to-human empathy levels.

When plotted on a graph (see above), the reactions are indicated by a steep decrease followed by a steep increase (hence the "valley" part of the name) in the areas where anthropomorphism is closest to reality.

Presidential Libraries, Museums, Shrines, Centers -- June 20, 2026

Locator: 51021OBAMA.  

The President Barack Obama Center (is that the correct name?) came up in passing this morning in a one- or two-line conversation with my wife when she mentioned a friend of a friend of a friend attended the opening of said library, Chicago, IL.

I mentioned that as far I knew, I have only visited one presidential library, the George W. Bush library here in Texas, and I think I only went there because of its proximity to where we live. I thought it was a great museum / library.

Then my wife reminded me that we had been to John F Kennedy library in Boston. Now, I remember. Without question that was my favorite. Very small, mostly a library in the true sense of the word, except not a "lending" library. The site, the location, the view, second to none. What I liked most about it: small, intimate, quite, restful.

The Bush libary here in Texas is beautiful, but it was a museum, not a library. It's "way over the top." Wonderful to visit, but I liked the JFK library so much more.  

So, now I'm starting to get it. Library. Museum. Shrine. Center. Campus.  

Factoid:

  • the Obama Center in Chicago, the one we're talking about, is 8 stories high;
  • the proposed Trump Center, to be built in Florida, is expected to be 50 stories high.

The centerpiece and major visual "wow factor" inside the museum at the Obama Presidential Center is a soaring, three-story atrium containing a monumental artwork called "City of the Big Shoulders" by artist Mark Bradford, alongside an expansive 88-foot digital wall celebrating the "Power of Words." See photograph of the painting here.

President George W. Bush library: a replica of his Oval Office.

President Donald J. Trump center: a decommissioned Air Force One on the bottom floor.  

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Going Forward


 

What Makes An Investor, An Investor -- A Repost From Three Years Ago -- June 20, 2026

Locator: 51020INVESTING.  

Re-posting, from November 23, 2023. Link here.

Locator: 46146INV.

I don't know how this contributor ended up on my twitter feed, but I consider myself lucky he did. I've learned a bit about investing from him.

From today:

Two things Giuliano taught me today, as an investor, not a trader:

  • investors don't understand P/Es; and,
  • investors wait too long to pivot.

I live and breathe mom-and-pop retail investing, in which I mean I know nothing about bonds, nothing about inverted curves, nothing about short-selling, nothing about options, nothing about puts and calls. At the end of the day, all I know from the financial pages is the basic stuff -- market caps, P/Es, highs and lows. But I live and breathe mom-and-pop retail investing. I think about it 24/7. 

I think about -- and live and breathe -- only a handful of things, and pretty much in this order:

  • the love of my life;
  • music;
  • reading;
  • retail investing;
  • my extended family.

A basic question I ask when investing: if I were 20 years old would I want to work at this company for the rest of my life, for this CEO, and, if the answer is "yes," would I be willing to invest 100% of my retirement funds into this company's 401(k) or equivalent? If the answer to both questions is "yes," then I will invest in that company. If the answer to either question is "no," I won't invest. That seems pretty simple. [Obviously that question -- actually two questions -- needs to be re-asked periodically, not less than annually.]

In all my years of investing, I've only been really, really disappointed in three or four decisions and in all cases, I failed to pay attention to the answer to that question (or actually two questions).

Friday, June 19, 2026

California Archives -- Minor Notes -- June 19, 2026

Locator: 51019CALI.  

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Burrows

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The Birth Of Movies
The Book Page

Suddenly Something Clicked: The Languages of Film Editing and Sound Design, Walter Murch, c. March, 2025. Notes here. 

Dates: 

  • Tech -- The projector, film, motion picture, etc: Thomas Edison, Eastman Kodak (George Eastman / Henry A, Strong), and others. Over several years, but for one specific date, perhaps, 1899. 
  • Art -- Cinema: 1901.

Birth: 1889 -- 1901: twelve-year infancy and childhood of motion pictures.... motion pictures and cinema were not born simultaneously.  -- Walter Murch, 

Query

What happened with motion pictures in 1889 that Walter Murch said the movie pictures infance was 1889 to 1901? 

Reply

Query:

Difference between motion pictures and cinema. Walter Murch said that motion pictures and cinema were not born simultaneously.

Reply:

Bakken Factoids: A DAPL Update And North Dakota Taxes -- June 19, 2026

Locator: 51018B. 

The Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) generates a massive share of North Dakota's oil tax revenue, which funds the state's Legacy Fund. Since the pipeline became operational, the Legacy Fund has grown by more than $10 billion and recently surpassed $14 billion in total valuation. 

Fund Overview and Impact

  • Inflows: By constitutional mandate, 30% of the state's oil and gas gross production and extraction taxes are deposited directly into the fund. A massive driver of this revenue has been the steady, high-volume throughput of DAPL.
  • Distributions: The North Dakota Legislature frequently transfers portions of the fund's earnings to the state's General Fund to pay down state bonds, fund highway infrastructure, and support tax reductions.
  • State Investment: North Dakota has set aside approximately $1.3 billion for in-state infrastructure and investment programs, making it the second-largest state-level in-state investment program in the nation.

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Taxes

How North Dakota Could Overtake Texas And Florida As The Most Tax-Friendly State 
By Amanda Macias 
Fox News 
Published June 18, 2026 7:00am EDT
 

Severance taxes on oil and gas production account for 41% of total tax revenue, keeping income tax burdens low.

When Americans think of low-tax policies, states like Florida and Texas usually come to mind. But another Republican-led state has quietly joined the club: North Dakota. 

Tax cuts, strong finances and billions in oil revenue have combined to create one of the nation's most competitive tax environments in the Great Plains state while other states across the country grapple with budget shortfalls and debates over tax hikes. The issue is likely to remain front and center for governors and state lawmakers as they look to attract residents, businesses and investment in the years ahead. 

While most states do not sit atop one of the nation's largest oil formations, tax experts say the broader lesson is applicable almost anywhere. Strong revenues can be used to lower tax burdens and strengthen state finances rather than fuel spending increases. 

While North Dakota ranks second in tax collections per capita, it remains one of the country's more tax-friendly states — a welcome contradiction for the state's government and residents. 

Unlike New York and California, blue states that heavily rely on income taxes to fund government operations, North Dakota generates billions of dollars from oil and gas production. That energy wealth has given lawmakers greater flexibility to cut taxes for its residents while maintaining healthy state revenues.

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A Music Documentary

Must watch. Kathy Marshall. Huntington Beach. Dick Dale. And the Del Tones. Eddie and the Showmen. The South Bay. Palos Verdes. 

Link here