From CNBC:
Weekly petroleum report, link here:
- US crude oil inventories: decreased by 1.1 million bbls; now at 427.6 million bbls
- operable refining capacity: 92.4% (flat, but technically down a bit)
- otherwise, ho-hum
- I no longer track "time to re-balance"; that metric has become irrelevant
- the "old" US crude oil inventory baseline number was 350 million bbls
- the "new" US crude oil inventory baseline number is 400, maybe 420 million bbls
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For The Granddaughters
Well before the 15th century, the Chinese were using the equatorial system for open water navigation. From Gavin Menzies,
1434, page 33:
For
the stars, the Chinese had the same system of measurement they used to
determine latitude and longitude. This system was called
the equatorial system
-- vastly simpler than the equinoctial system [Wiki does not have a
page for the equinoctial system], used in medieval times which relied on
the ecliptic or the horizon. After 1434, Europeans adopted the Chinese
system, which remains with us today.
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For The Granddaughters
If there is one part of the world's geography that gives me the most trouble, it is Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei.
I was reminded of that while talking to a woman of Asian descent recently (the Tucson wedding).
My wife is Hispanic-Japanese -- her mother was Japanese, born in Japan and emigrated to the United States during the Korean War.
I
have always enjoyed trying to recognize the ethnicity of people I meet
-- based on any number of criteria. I remarked to this woman that I was
was having trouble with her ethnicity, running through about six
different Asian possibilities. I failed to mention Filipino. When she
said she was Filipino, I was quite taken aback. She did not appear
Filipino to me and after after a bit of conversation it turned out that
only her mother was Filipino. Her father was not Asian. That explained
everything.
She looked more Japanese than Filipino and
interestingly, had a connection to Malaysia -- and that's where the blog
helped me out immensely.
I know almost nothing about
that part of the world (geographically) but because I had been following
the route of the Shaden on the blog, I was somewhat familiar with the
straits, Malacca, and Singapore. Absolutely fascinating.
Just one more reason why I love to blog and how much it has permeated all aspects of my life.
[I
completely missed the next one, but I was working with almost no
information. I suggested to the woman next to Ms Filipino above that she
looked to be Welsh or Irish -- completely wrong: she was of
Lithuanian/Polish background. When we were stationed in Europe, we were
struck by how beautiful Polish pottery was -- and, of course, that
became the topic of conversation.]