Saturday, May 4, 2019

Opening Night

I didn't bring too many articles of clothing with me to Spain. Now, 10+ months into it, the clothes I have are getting kind of worn. In addition, I've intentionally lost a bit of weight. The combination prompted me to go the Primark today with Laura to get a couple of pairs of shorts and some pants. It was pretty crowded over there, but I managed to find some pieces that will at least get me through the rest of my time here. I'm going to retire a couple of articles of clothing by leaving them in the dumpster area down by the bridge (where we bring our regular refuse). People regularly scour that area for usable items like clothing and shoes. I left an old pair of shoes there a few months ago and someone claimed them before I was 20 meters away.

***

Feria starts tonight at midnight. The grounds are all prepared now. Laura and I wandered down there this evening to have a look at the grounds before the crowds showed up. Walking south through Triana from our house, you get to


Here's a closer view:


Tonight at midnight, this entrance will be lighted, and the week-long feria begins. The sandy grounds which are empty the majority of the year are now covered with tents called "casetas" along temporary avenues. The casetas are typically green/white or red/white striped canvas. They erected in the weeks leading up to feria and are "owned" by families that have had these spots for generations, or other organizations:


People dress up in their finest. Some of the casetas are quite large:


The avenues are decked out:



Already the street cleaning is underway. Tonight there will be thousands of people in this makeshift city:




Inside the casetas, the tables are set and waiting for friends and family to arrive:


 ***

On a completely unrelated note, this license plate hanging in a restaurant window caught my eye as we walked home:


Friday, May 3, 2019

Clustering

I started reading about clustering today in my data science review. I have some ideas on how to apply clustering to my Whitman STEM data set. The thing that's interesting about clustering is these algorithms help you find patterns in your data that you may not be aware of. It's a form of unsupervised learning.

***

This afternoon, I walked Laura to class and then headed over to the gym. The jacarandas around Sevilla are in full bloom and they're really beautiful:



The various trellises are filling up too:


***

Juli is getting onto Spain time. She spent a lot of time walking around this afternoon seeing all the places she hasn't seen in about 20 years. She seems to be enjoying herself.

Thursday, May 2, 2019

Juli's here

Another warm day in Sevilla. My first day post paper submission and I spent it working on some STEM data from Whitman and reading an intro machine learning textbook. The STEM data is really just an excuse to polish my pandas skills. Even though I've been away from it for a while, I still remember most of it. Even better, some of the more abstract stuff like groupby() and merge() are a bit clearer to me.

***

I walked Laura to school, then back over to the gym. Here's the view from Puente de San Telmo:



Rode the stationary bike for about an hour. I really like their bikes.

***

Laura went to Costco after her class. I hung out here to meet Juli. She got here about as expected. She's pretty tired from a long trip starting in Walla Walla. I just showed her to her room, gave her a brief bathroom tutorial and withdrew. Hopefully she can get a good night's sleep--although the bar/cafe across the street will be going full on until about 12:30am. I recommended earplugs, but that was not necessary, she came prepared.

Laura's bus from Costco broke down, so she had to get off and wait for the next one. Needless to say, she's running a bit late.

Wednesday, May 1, 2019

May Day

Marge was up and out relatively early today. She caught the bus to the airport at about 9am this morning. She made it to the airport on time. We haven't heard anything since, but assume she's well on her way to Madrid where tomorrow she catches a flight back to Walla Walla. Really nice person. Fun getting to know her.

***

May 1st is a national holiday in Spain (and in much of Europe). It's the equivalent of Labor Day in the US. With the lovely weather and thd day off, folks were out in droves today. All the cafes were packed.

I went to the gym today and had the place to myself. (Like I said, the cafes were packed, haha.)

***

Taking the trash out this evening, when I happened upon a bit of commotion in our courtyard. A couple of neighbor kids trying to catch a dragonfly perched on the wall:


Ultimately, they succeeded. Dragonfly safely ensconced in ziploc bag:


***

After dropping the trash in the bin, we stopped for brownie helado at Villar:


This was a bit of a reward for finally submitting my paper today. Tomorrow I have to task switch. I'm going to dig back down into some data science for a while.

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Real Alcazar redux

The paper submission process is slowly converging. Got most of the auxiliary material ready for submission. Laura's willing to have another pass at the draft. Once that's done, I'll pull the trigger. I'm confident it'll be in by the end of the week.

***

I picked up All of Statistics again. There are computational exercises at the ends of the chapters. Today I spent some time doing those exercises in jupyter. I'm pretty comfortable with that platform now. I'm really interested in trying to get it into the classroom.

***

We went to the Real Alcazar today with Marge. I think this is the 4th time for me, but it was Marge and Laura's first time. The weather was clear and warm. I took a lot of the usual pictures, but used the GoPro this time. I learned that you can't just leave the camera on, because it burns through the battery disappointingly quickly. At around 38%, I started turning it off and on between shots. That helped a lot. It's annoying that the camera can't do this on its own between shots.

The GoPro's stills are pretty good, but not enough better than my phone to make it worth dealing with. Its real niche is in timelapse and slo-mo. Here's what made the cut for the blog:



Here I tried the wide angle lens:



In general, I think in these circumstances, the linear view is better. At least the palm trees are straight, haha:




These climbing flowers were pretty distinctive, though I think they were just some variant on a Morning Glory:


This trellised gazebo in the large garden is probably the most peaceful place to just sit and relax in the garden there:


Obligatory jamón man:


Here's a slo-mo of the spout. This is 1080p at 240fps slowed to 24fps:


***

My long-lived and trusty bluetooth speaker finally gave out on me yesterday. If I were home, I'd probably have taken it apart and tried to repair it since the only problem it had was a faulty power switch. I don't have a soldering iron here though. So I tossed old faithful and bought this one today at Fnac:


I like it. The sound is much superior to the previous--especially in the low-frequencies.