Update about blogCa

Wednesday, October 4, 2023

Progress in skills, and blogs; and The Nobel Prize in Chemistry

 Anniversary of my pottey blog's first post...

October 4, 2010 first Post!! (I actually started other blogs in 2008) LOVE this program even with its quirks when they decide to upgrade.

I think some of it is still on line.

But it reminds me how much I have done, and how my clay forms improved since I first was blogging about them until I quit in 2020.

Here's the first entry (remaining). I admit to having removed some of the posts from that first year! And I went through many changes in the community pottery studio!


A simple pitcher, which I laughingly said was formed while thinking of the KoolAid pitchers. But I like it so much I won't sell it.


A Facebook post asked, if you life were a book, what would this chapter be called?

My first response was, "Waiting for The End." 
But then I rethought and said to meself, "Living Till The End."

What would you say?

Today's quote:

It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into. -Jonathan Swift, satirist ( 1667-1745)

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ALSO today:

The 2023 Nobel Prize in Chemistry has been awarded to Moungi G. Bawendi of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Louis E. Brus of Columbia University, and Alexei I. Ekimov of Nanocrystals Technology Inc. in New York for the discovery and development of quantum dots.

The three scientists each contributed to a "fundamental discovery in nanotechnology," according to officials from the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which awards several of the prizes each year. The work they've done has already led to new technology in television screens and in bioimaging.

Quantum dots are particles that are so incredibly small that their size actually starts to affect their properties. For example, blue quantum dots and red quantum dots can be made from the exact same material, with the only difference being the size of the particle itself. (The blue quantum dots are smaller than red ones.)

In fact, changing the size can alter many different properties beyond just color – which means that quantum dots could be useful for a variety of applications, including building better solar panels and perhaps even creating fuel by using sunlight (something that plants do to generate sugars).

While it may sound like a subject closer to physics, officials said that it was chemists who did much of the fundamental research in this field.

The three scientists will share the prize money of 11 million Swedish kronor (close to $995,000) in equal parts.



Thanks to Inge Look for card painting

10 comments:

  1. A good and interesting blog post. Why do people want to control others so much...is it because they can't control their own lives?
    No, don't sell the pitcher, it is special

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  2. I do like the shape and colouring of that jug. Wonderful. No wonder you won't part with it.

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  3. Your kool-aid jug is all grown up. This Chapter of my life would be called "The Ever Changing times."

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