MA

@13ma1@discuss.systems
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Builds / operates carrier, cloud, & enterprise networks; curious about novel approaches at scale. I enjoy learning about technology: new, current, and legacy.
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The 12th root of 2 times the 7th root of 5 is

1.333333192495....

And since the numbers 5, 7, and 12 show up in scales, this weird fact has implications for music! It leads to a remarkable meta-meta-glitch in tuning systems. Let's check it out.

Two important glitches that afflict tuning systems are the Pythagorean comma and the syntonic comma. If you go up 12 fifths, multiplying the frequency by 3/2 each time, you go up a bit less than 7 octaves. The ratio is the "Pythagorean comma":

p = 531441/524288 ≈ 1.01364326477

And if you go up four fifths, you go up a bit more than 2 octaves and a major third (which ideally has a frequency ratio of 5/4). The ratio is the "syntonic comma":

σ = 81/80 = 1.0125

In music it would be very convenient if these two glitches were the same - and sometimes musicians pretend they are. But they're not! So their ratio is a tiny meta-glitch. It's called the "schisma":

χ = p/σ = 32805/32768 ≈ 1.0011298906

and it was discovered by an advisor to the Gothic king Theodoric the Great.

In the most widely used tuning system today, a fifth is not 3/2 but slightly less: it's

2^(7/12) ≈ 1.4983070769

The ratio of 3/2 and this slightly smaller fifth is called the "grad":

γ = p^(1/12) ≈ 1.0011291504

Look! The grad is amazingly close to the schisma! They agree to 7 decimal places! Their ratio is a meta-meta-glitch called the "Kirnberger kernel":

χ/γ ≈ 1.0000007394

If you unravel the mathematical coincidence that makes this happens, you'll see it boils down to

2^(1/12) 5^(1/7) ≈ 1.333333192495

being very close to 4/3. And this coincidence let Bach's students Johann Kirnberger invent an amazing tuning system.

(1/2)

@dev thank you for your service.
@dev Ellis Island is physically connected to NJ by a small bridge.

Here's a fascinating little "home movie" that #YouTube just surfaced for me. Shot as a personal walk through by the gentleman who ran Camera 4 on "The Price Is Right", it's a backstage tour the morning of the last episode of the show ever hosted by Bob Barker, in 2007.

I've told the story before of my experience with "The Price Is Right" crowd at CBS Television City in Hollywood, many years ago. I had come over to the studio to tape a network news interview.

To get from the parking area to the famous "Artists' Entrance" I had to literally push my way through a crazy crowd of people waiting outside to enter Stage 33 for the show. It was an utter madhouse. Quite an experience!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q-Ypsde-L74

Bob Barker's Last Show

YouTube

I hope this beagle finds you well.

#DogsOfMastodon

Milky Way over a Turquoise Wonderland

Image Credit & Copyright: Petr Horálek / Institute of Physics in Opava, Sovena Jani

https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap230529.html #APOD

APOD: 2023 May 29 – Milky Way over a Turquoise Wonderland

A different astronomy and space science related image is featured each day, along with a brief explanation.

'sup lil prairie dog
Fun fact: "up" is "dn" rotated 180 degrees.
@tschak Is VDC 80 column VT100 support for the C128 on the road map?