Month: March 2026
Art vs. Function: The Irony of Bathroom Signs | March 29 2026, 20:17
Duplicated for those who do not understand art


| March 28 2026, 11:20
Evening Stroll with Yuki: A Cherry Blossom Encounter | March 28 2026, 00:06
Walking with Yuki

| March 27 2026, 17:34
| March 22 2026, 10:30
Celebrating a Milestone: Rauf Aliyev’s Programming Qualification from 1994 | March 21 2026, 13:54
Mom sent it. This was given to me when I graduated from school. The education was quite good back then, at least. Part of the science classes were conducted at the institute.

| March 21 2026, 13:03
When the Night Lit Up: Unraveling the Mystery of a Superbolt Storm | March 21 2026, 12:55
We had a thunderstorm last night. The whole county is buzzing because everyone thinks that something exploded just before midnight. Several posts in a row on social media. In short, it was thunder. But a bit more rare than usual. Caused by a 401 kA lightning, dubbed the Wild House Shaker. A typical lightning strike is 30 kA. If the numbers are to be believed, 401 kA is really damn a lot. They will likely say we haven’t had such lightning here for decades.
Attaching an interesting map.
The points on the map show superbolts — lightning strikes with an energy of no less than 1M J. Red points — particularly powerful superbolts with an energy of more than 2M J. That is, superbolts mostly occur in the northeastern part of the Atlantic and in the Mediterranean Sea, and less frequently — in the Andes, off the coast of Japan, and near South Africa.
this is what the page from which I took the map says (translation):
“New work shows that superbolts most often occur over the Mediterranean Sea, the northeastern Atlantic, and over the Andes, as well as in smaller amounts to the east of Japan, in tropical oceans, and near the southern tip of Africa. Unlike regular lightning, superbolts often strike over water.
“Ninety percent of lightning occurs over land,” said Holzworth (that’s the main guy on lightning at the University of Washington).
“But superbolts mostly arise over water, right up to the coastline. For example, in the northeastern Atlantic, the distribution maps of superbolts clearly show the outlines of the coasts of Spain and England.”
“The average energy of a discharge over water is higher than over land—that we knew,” he said. “But we did not expect such a stark difference.”
The season for superbolts also does not match the usual patterns of lightning. Regular lightning most often occurs in the summer—the three main so-called “lightning chimneys” coincide with summer thunderstorms over America, Africa south of the Sahara, and Southeast Asia. However, superbolts, which are more common in the Northern Hemisphere, occur in both hemispheres from November to February.
The reason for such a distribution remains a mystery. In some years, there are significantly more superbolts than in others: the end of 2013 was record-breaking, and the end of 2014 was the second largest, while in other years such events were much less frequent.
“We speculate that this may be related to sunspots or cosmic rays, but we will leave that for future research,” said Holzworth.
“For now, we are just demonstrating that there is a previously unknown pattern.”






Smartfolio.me: Revolutionizing Knowledge Organization with Advanced Features | March 19 2026, 04:01
My creation – the knowledge organization tool Smartfolio.me – has gained new features. I’m attaching a five-minute video overview.
It’s like Google Docs, but you can embed documents within each other, creating a network of connected knowledge, and these documents can be PDFs and regular texts.
Upload a PDF, the program converts it into images, and you can highlight any sections right on the pages to leave a comment or ask a question.
If something in the text is unclear, you highlight the area and press “elaborate” — the LLM will detail everything thoroughly, taking into account the context of the entire document, and the explanation will stay linked to the highlighted fragment.
You can simply cut out a piece from a PDF, and the LLM extracts clean text or a ready-made formula from it.
In the PDF window, there is now a small panel — all comments and explanations are immediately visible there, so you can quickly jump to the necessary parts.
You can cut out a diagram or graph from a PDF, copy it as a picture, and paste it into your text. It will automatically crop “on the fly” and save in the database, not as a copy but as a link to the page with crop parameters.
If you delete the page link in the text, it won’t disappear completely but will go into a special list, from where you can reattach it somewhere else or delete it finally. The same document can be inserted in several places. If you add a comment to it, it updates everywhere where this document is linked.
Mathematics is fully supported — LaTeX formulas can be not only viewed but also clicked to adjust them in the editor.
You can generate formulas by description. Just write in words what formula you need (for example, “binomial distribution”), and the system itself outputs the ready formula code.
Now there is a system of plugins – essentially isolated experimental functions separate from the main program. For instance, there is a plugin that recursively collects all subpages into one long document — convenient if you need to read or print everything at once.
Or consider the “YouTube Transcript Cleaning” plugin. If there is a dirty lecture text from YouTube, the plugin will punctuate, paragraph, and create neat headers.
If you insert a link to a website, it opens in a column next to it — you can read the source and simultaneously take your notes. However, some websites do not allow embedding on foreign pages. The system recognizes such sites, and they open in a new tab.
The left panel with the list of pages can be hidden or resized with the mouse, so it doesn’t take up space on the screen.
You can simply copy and paste an image or screenshot, and it will not just insert, but also upload to the database.
It supports working from a mobile phone. On the phone, the interface switches to a single-column mode for convenient reading and commenting on the go.
Multiple databases are supported – you can switch between them. You can connect different databases and different LLMs and switch between them.
