QR Code: Learn about me
NetGalley Advocate
NetGalley Badge

Kelli’s Twitter Feed
Tweets by Ke_Br
Tech News from the Assoc. for Computing Machinery- Congress Passes Bill to Fund U.S. Science Agencies
- Flaw Lets Hackers Track, Eavesdrop via Bluetooth Audio Devices
- U.S., Taiwan Deal Boosts Chip Investment, Cuts Tariffs
- Can AI Generate New Ideas?
- Flipping One Bit Leaves AMD CPUs Open to VM Vulnerability
- Standard 3D Printers Enable Cheap Super-Resolution Microscopy with Custom Optics
- U.K. Backtracks on Digital ID
- CAISI Requests Information About Securing AI Agent Systems
- Risks of AI in Schools Outweigh Benefits, Report Says
- BodySnatcher: A Broken Authentication and Agentic Hijacking Vulnerability in ServiceNow
My Pinterest Food board (http://pinterest.com/kellibkelli/)- An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.
Search Research- SearchResearch Answer: Where / why / what is causing point source pollution of the Susquehanna?
- SearchResearch (1/7/26): Where / why / what is causing point source pollution of the Susquehanna?
- SearchResearch (1/2/26): (UPDATE) A Review of the year at the SearchResearch Rancho
- SearchResearch (12/31/25): Review of the year at the SearchResearch Rancho
- SearchResearch (12/24/25): Living in an AI world that kinda, sorta works for OCR
- SearchResearch (12/19/25): An experiment in cross-posting podcasts - SearchResearch X Unanticipated Consequences
- SearchResearch (12/17/25): Control-F for reality--when it works / when it doesn't work
- SearchResearch Method: Control-F for reality (finding books on your shelves)
- Answer: How good is AI at recognizing images? What should you know?
- SearchResearch (11/13/25): How good is AI at recognizing images? What should you know?
-
Recent Posts
- Recommended debut Sci-Fi novel: “Lightless” by C. A. Higgins
- That All May Read: What IS a print disability? An answer + resources
- Ian Caldwell’s “The Fifth Gospel” — an excellent and riveting thriller
- “Princess Academy: The Forgotten Sisters” — another excellent YA adventure from Shannon Hale
- Book suggestions from TechRepublic — 7 Leadership titles to read in 2015
Archives
- December 2015
- May 2015
- January 2015
- November 2014
- April 2014
- March 2014
- December 2013
- November 2013
- October 2013
- September 2013
- August 2013
- July 2013
- June 2013
- May 2013
- April 2013
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- December 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- June 2011
- December 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
Goodreads
Categories
Meta
#18 Google Earth (I use MSFT’s Virtual Earth3D)
I love and hate MSFT Virtual Earth.
It is wonderful to get to see where you’re going before you get there, and I had a blast going through my deceased grandparents’ old postcards from their trips they took as a young couple. Getting to see how things have changed (or not, in one case) from when they travelled through Nova Scotia 60 years ago was neat and made me feel connected to them, if only for a little while, which is good because I miss them terribly.
On the other hand, I looked up my childhood home, and the neighborhood is so different that I was heartbroken. Growing up, I lived in an old farmhouse that backed onto a cornfield and a row of trees where we picked black raspberries every summer. Where there was the cornfield that housed my summer forts (carpeted with grass clippngs – quite luxurious!) and trees and raspberry bushes, there are now houses upon houses. The farmhouse had been rotated 90 degrees (it was pretty ratty while I was growing up, so why they didn’t just raze it mystifies me), and the huge old weeping willow — whose bark yieled up handfuls of locust shells to me and my nextdoor playmate, Troy Minnich — was gone. The local pool looked different, and the high school had changed. I was very sad.
Posted in Uncategorized
Leave a comment
web-based applications
I do think it’s funny that people think the web-based applications are "Free"…who is writing them if no one is paying a programmer? And since you HAVE to have a google account to use google docs, don’t you think maybe they’re earning their money by selling rights to data-mine your "creations". And whom do you call specifically if there is an issue? The author of some program could be some fly-by-night guy who disappears, leaving some know-nothing to answer help questions.
I think the hubbub is funny, of course, I"m amazed at the web 2.0 mania out there. It’s just another tool. Some of the web-based programs are okay, but every things you do web-based has the opporutinty to let a hacker onto your machine. So, while it’s okay, and it’s great for someone else to store pics of my cat Fluffy and free up space on my computer, or have a group writing a paper on the rise and fall of American Idol auidences, I hardly have starry eyes over it. I’ll stick with software-based programs saved on my private machine that is less touchable by the wann-be Internet Unabombers and spyware/adware. If I must collaberate on the web, I will, but to think it’s the next wave, and that companies like Microsoft are passe, is silly. You need experts. Not hobbyists.
Posted in Uncategorized
Leave a comment
First crochet hook
I bought my first crochet hook (3.00 mm) and skein of yarn today (dalegarn "Baby Ull" machine washable wool, 50 g color 3718) from "Pinch Knitter" in Stanwood. Travel there if you can- it’s a small shop (2 rooms, one with a table a chairs for chatting while knitting) within a large shop, but the yarn is amazing, and not outrageously priced, like one might expect in a small-town store.
Posted in Crocheting
Leave a comment
Ground Cherries
If anyone is going to grow ground cherries, be forewarned that they may take 2 weeks to germinate. Cilantro can take up to 3 weeks. I was so sad, thinking I got a bum packet of seeds, and, yesterday…..woohoo, I noticed tiny little green threads in my peat pellets. I’m very excited, and will post a picture soon.
Now if only my lettuce would start growing in the greenhouse, instead of being the same size each time I go in…
Posted in Uncategorized
Leave a comment
Amazon.com: Get Your Crochet On! Fly Tops and Funky Flavas: Afya Ibomu: Books
How adorable is this top on the cover? And the book has several gorgeous tops (and a cute turtleneck shrug). So now all I have to do is teach myself to crochet! I’ve ordered several books from the library, in the hopes that at least one will understand how I learn and present the lessons in a format I “get”. Then I shall be “Fly and Funky".
Amazon.com: Get Your Crochet On! Fly Tops and Funky Flavas: Afya Ibomu: Books
Posted in Uncategorized
1 Comment
Inside Urban Green: Simple Sub-irrigation Grow Box
This idea is sooooo cool! We bought some 18-gallon storage tubs at Target for $5 each, then 2 18-gallon trugs –hadnles make movein them mcuh easier — at Home Depot for $6 each (just to see which turns out better). Costco also has a great buy on double-walled, 24” resin planters for $19.99 each that are guaranteed to last 10 years – many planting of tomatoes, beans, and kale for those! What a huge growing surface on top! I’m very excited to try this.
To make the interior system of these boxes, we found 2 sheets of 3/4" expanded polystyrene insulation for $5 & 20’ of 3" drain line (already has holes cut into it) for $2.50 at Home Depot.
Tomato season has begun!
Click on the link below for the directions…seems like a great way to save water, which, as you know, as liable to shortages by August depending on how the State had handled the dams, even though they know we have no rain every summer (why DO they let water out some years?.
Posted in Hobbies
Leave a comment
Transplant Day
So today I transplanted all seeds that germinated. Tomatoes, the lemon cucumber, 2 types of lettuces, and kale. Watered with fish fertilizer. They should be pretty nice-sized by May 15th (which is when my friend Mira told me was the earliest to plant things outside here – she would know, since she’s lived here many years).
I’m getting pretty excited 
Posted in Hobbies
Leave a comment
New Batch of Seeds Started
I was hoping to start some cantaloupe seeds, but discovered that they should only be started in areas with short growing season 1 week before last frost (mid-April for Camano), then transplant oustside 2 weks after the frost date.
Some of the tomatoes from the March 2 planting have succumbed from too much moisture in the grow dome, so something to remember from now on.
What I planted tonight:
- 4 types of tomatoes: weeping charley, pantano romanseco, marmande, and principe borghese (they all died last planting)
- cucumber: Mexican sour gherkin
- tomatillo
- strawberry husk tomato (a.k.a ground cherry)
- cilantro
- New Zealand spinach
- leeks: Bleu de Solaise
- pumpkin: sugar pie
Posted in Hobbies
Leave a comment







