Handy Microsoft Word tip plus bonus Imperial Units Rant

I just found this out in Microsoft Word, and it is pretty freaking awesome. If I write something (or more likely copy something) with weird units like miles, or inches, or chains, or whatever; I can get Word to fix this error in outdated units for me. Check it out:

word convert

Just highlight the offending units (including the numbers), right-click, and select the Additional Actions menu. Simple. Click on whatever units you want, and Word will replace the text and you are done. I don’t know why it gives two options which do the exact same thing, but I am willing to ignore the double up due to the sheer usefulness of this feature.

I think this will be most useful when I deal with documents that have temperatures, because Fahrenheit is just plain crazy. With miles at least I can have some sort of idea as it is just a proportion. I know a mile is just over one and a half times a kilometre, so I can get a rough idea.

This however cannot be done with temperature, not only are the units different sizes (i.e. a change of 1°F is different to that of 1°C), but the starting points are all off. When 32° F is mentioned I think, “man; that’s a hot day” (and not just because I am from Ballarat, and anything over 20° for me is too hot), and then I see pictures of people frolicking around in blizzards and make a Jackie Chan meme face.

Jackie Chan Meme

0° Celsius makes much more sense. It is zero degrees; you don’t have any degrees to warm yourself up.

Fahrenheit frustrations aside however, I was amused the other day when Harrison and I were watching a nature documentary set in an Arctic region and the Mighty Attenborough said something along the lines of:

Temperatures here can fall as low as negative 40 degrees.

“Is that proper degrees or Fahrenheit” my son asked.

(You can see that I have indoctrinated him well to my anti-Fahrenheit prejudice when he calls them proper degrees, and not Celsius)

We did our standard Siri-investigation and were surprised to discover that actually it doesn’t matter; -40 Celsius = -40 Fahrenheit. So at least that is one example of a unit in a documentary that is truly accessible to all, regardless of if you use proper units, or imperial monstrosities.

MM

P.s. as an atrocious speller, I have to point out that Fahrenheit , like manoeuvre, is a word that I struggle so hard to spell that even my best attempts leave spell check unable to understand what it is I am trying to say.

Book 7 for 2016: Railsea

Book 7 for 2016: Railsea

Last week I chose In The Heart of the Sea as my fiction pick to give myself a break from the non-fiction I had been reading, only to discover a few pages into reading that it was itself a non-fiction account of the sinking of the Essex by a sperm whale. I had assumed that as it was turned into a movie, the book itself would have been more of a historical fiction, I was wrong.

So this week I resolved to ensure I wound up with a fiction tale by picking my first ever read from the science fiction author China Mieville. It is hard, after all, for a science fiction story to end up being a non-fictional account (though some hard sci-fi can sometimes come close, I am looking at you The Martian). In an amusing turn of events I was looking over the blurb before I started to read and began noticing a few clear parallels with Railsea and Moby Dick (the book inspired by the events of last week’s book!). A ‘sea’ filled with prey, hunted by harpoonists, and lead by an obsessed captain seeking revenge on a great white animal! Seriously I didn’t plan this.

Anyhow, this year one of my goals has been to finally expose myself to a bunch of prominent speculative fiction authors whose work i have heard many good things about, but due to the breadth of their works I had always shied away from. First there had been Neal Stephenson’s Seveneves, then John Scalzi’s Old Man’s War, and now I am delving into what may be a long haul with China Mieville’s acclaimed body of works.
Well that’s enough writing for now; time to get reading!
MM

#2016inbooks #serendipity #ChinaMieville from Instagram: http://ift.tt/1TzEsYe

Book 6 for 2016: In the Heart of the Sea.

Book 6 for 2016: In the Heart of the Sea.

The book (recently turned into a movie) based on the real life events that inspired yet another (albeit more famous) book; Moby Dick. A lot of connecting threads going on here to entice me to read the book, but the main reason I had this book on my to read list is due to an article I read about the Essex and its crew (see link below). Then when I heard it was to become a movie, directed by the generally awesome Ron Howard, and starring Thor, I was getting pumped. My wife, being the awesome spouse that she is, managed to overhear my excitement about the upcoming (at the time) movie, and got me a copy of the book for Xmas.

I never ended up seeing the film, but seeing as it is time for a fiction read, I figured it was time to launch myself back into the 19th century whaling world (Oh I hope there are some good shanties!). For those who don’t know, the story of the Essex involves a whaling ship that is attacked by the very animal it prowled the oceans looking for. After a bull sperm whale sinks the ship the survivors were able to cling to life aboard a whaling boat (distinct from a whaling ship) and ended up resorting to cannibalism to stay alive! Sounds like a gripping read, so I’d better get to it.

MM

#2016inbooks #BooksAreAlwaysbetterThanTheFilm #PossibelExceptionFightClub #AnimalsRevenge #InTheHeartOfTheSea

http://ift.tt/1odKE3u from Instagram: http://ift.tt/1STpoFe

February 16, 2016 at 03:23PM

Here is something interesting to think about; today Australia’s population officially passed 24 million people. That’s 24, with 000,000 after it. That’s a big number, a lot of people.

But is it really?

To put it into perspective, the population of Shanghai proper is around 24.5 million people. So imagine that; imagine all of Australia decided to meet up the Shire of Glenelg, (which has an area comparable to Shanghai), and then an extra Tasmania showed up. That’s Shanghai. All over the world there are metro areas that themselves have larger populations than Australia, and usually an inversely proportional land area.

Mind boggling.

24 million people; such a small nation compared to the rest of the world.

And that number increases by one person every 91 seconds, so just under a thousand new Australians arrive every day (whether they are born here, or choose to become Australian). When I was born there were only 15.5 million Aussies, and look at all the cool stuff we have managed to do in the preceding three decades: Hosting Olympics, giving the world polymer banknotes and Wi-Fi technology, letting loose Hugh Jackman on the world…. Amazing feats.

And to think people still languish in fear of a few thousand asylum seekers arriving by boat each year.

Anyhow, that was just something that came to my attention today. Will knowing that our population has increased past some arbitrary number affect me in any significant way? I can’t say it really will, but now when I hear that the odds of me winning a lottery are 1 in X million, I will have a new metric to measure it against.

MM
#Australia #australiapopulation #randomthoughts
P.s. while I was writing this post, another ten Australians got their wings; welcome! from Instagram: http://ift.tt/1KSTxBo

Book 5 for 2016: An Astronauts Guide to Life on Earth.

Book 5 for 2016: An Astronauts Guide to Life on Earth.

My Instagram feed tells me I actually bought this book 50 weeks ago, and even started reading it back then, but for some reason it didn’t really take off. No offense to the books itself, somehow it just fell by the wayside.

So I figured it was time to take this beauty off the mantle, and finish it off. I have had a lot of space related stuff piquing my interest the past year or so, whether it be the engrossing Seveneves, Kim Stanley Robinson’s fascinating Aurora, or the real life awesomeness of last year’s Pluto revelations, and SpaceX’s successful rocket landings; either way space related things really seem to be gaining a lot of momentum with me lately.

What better way than to continue my education of all things space related than by reading a book written by someone who has actually been there. What’s more Chris Hadfield’s book is supposedly a great read for those hoping to get a better understanding on how to live your life, whether it be on earth, or hurtling around it in a tin can. And I am always open for a bit of introspection and education.

#2016inbooks #ChrisHadfield #spacerocks #Iwanttoretireonmars from Instagram: http://ift.tt/1SDgqfc

February 03, 2016 at 11:16AM

Book 4 for 2016: Old Man’s War.

I usually try to alternate between fiction and non-fiction to give my mind a bit of a break from trying to
digest facts, and after my previous book’s foray back into the paleontological lessons of the past, I figured it was time for a nice relaxing piece of make-believe. So for the next week I shall indulge in my love of sci-fi with John Scalzi’s Old Man’s War.

After reading Redshirts last year (and absolutely loving it), and hearing about Scalzi’s multi-million dollar deal with Tor Books, I figured it was time to give his more famous book a go, and see what all the fuss is about.

Sidenote: I love when a book has a great opening line, and this year two of my reads have had stellar ones (one of them nearly literally so): Seveneves – “The moon blew up with no warning and with no apparent reason.” Old Man’s War – “I did two things on my seventy-fifth birthday. I visited my wife’s grave. Then I joined the army”

I love it; they both get you hooked straight away, just like good speculative fiction should.

#2016inbooks #oldmanswar #lovemeabitofscifi from Instagram: http://ift.tt/1X1CD5w