
What's New - December, 2015
December 4, 2015: Between travel and that Holiday
at the end of the month, December will be a sparse programming month for me.
I did receive an interesting email recently from a scout troop leader which is
just the kind that makes my week. The troop built a catapult based on the
a page actually provided by another viewer several years and available from my
Catapult Simulator page.
Here's the email:
 
Building a catapult is one of
the requirements for the engineering badge or the Arrow of Light, the
only cub scouts achievement that can be worn on the boy scout uniform -
so the Webelos 2 (older boys) in our cub scout pack in middle Tennessee
had high enthusiasm for this project.
We downloaded the parts list
and the pictures from
DFF's "A
Catapult Story" and the boys built it pretty much according to
the instructions and pictures in an assembly line - one boy measured
and marked the PVC, another cut the marked pieces, another
labeled the pieces, and another did a dry assembly (see picture).
After we made sure it all looked good assembled, it was
disassembled, PVC adhesive applied to the ends of the pieces, and
reassembled (we used the sawed-off bottom of a movie theater cup for
the cup). Using PVC adhesive was faster than screwing in all the
pieces, as was done in the instructions - the entire catapult was
cut and assembled in about an hour (easily done in one den meeting).
The only other difference is that we used threaded rod for the stop
- it worked, but you can see in the animation that it bends when the
arm hits it.
The boys attached streamers to
the back of the projectile, so they could more easily see it in the
air - you can see the tails in the launch, below. It easily gets 20
feet of height and 60 feet of range. Worked beautifully, and the
kids loved it - thank you very much!
- James W, den leader
December 24, 2015:Merry
Christmas!
We are just back from 10 wonderful days in Central Europe (the
Prague, Vienna, Budapest triangle) with family. None of these will replace
Lauterbrunnen, Switzerland as our favorite, however it was worthwhile and
educational none the less. We had been to Vienna many years ago but
the others were first-time visits. Both Prague and Budapest have
similar geography; straddling a river with a castle on the high ground on one
side and the peons living on the other side. Both were occupied before and
after WW2; first by German Nazis, then by Russian Communists. Lots of
differences in the details though. All three cities have large
Christmas Markets where the girls spent many hours buying gifts and souvenirs
while the guys sampled and compared beers, wines and brandies (e.g. Palinka in
Budapest - ouch!). Just spending time with our wide-spread family
was the real highlight for me. The children and older grandchildren are
experienced travelers by now, so Grandma and I could mostly just relax and
enjoy.
In Vienna we had a long lunch with
Cristian Kranich
after attending a performance of the Spanish Riding School Lipizzaners.
Christian graciously tested the "stay as long as you want" tradition of the
Vienna coffee house by occupying an 8 person table alone at the classic Café
Central for several hours before we arrived, bypassing the long line
of those awaiting a table. He is an interesting fellow who is using some
of my code in his hobby of analyzing Eastern and Indian flute scales.
He programs and designs/builds hardware for a niche market and is the closest to
a true polymath that I have ever encountered. Thanks for the
hospitality Christian!

As the final posting this year, here is an unpolished version of
my Rectangle in Polygon program started in
October. The idea is to to find the largest area rectangle that can
be inscribed in an arbitrary convex or concave simple polygon.
("simple"==>sides do not cross.) A fun and challenging project that
still needs some fine tuning for efficiency.
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