Wordless Wednesday: LACMA


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After about 24 hours of pre-NAMM adventures, I will finally begin to observe and review the actual show. We’re all set with our iPhone/iPad NAMM app:

More to be posted on this pages as time permits. In the meantime, follow @catsynth on Twitter for live updates.

As usual, the description is in the comments. But while you’re here, please checkout yesterday’s South Carolina post.
NOTE: CatSynth will go black 8AM to 8PM US Pacific Time in protest of SOPA/PIPA. More information at http://www.fightforthefuture.org/pipa and http://sopastrike.com/.


For Weekend Cat Blogging and the Photo Hunt, we preset this photo of Luna with stripes of light.

This was once again taken with the Hipstamatic on the iPhone, using relatively simple lens and film effects that bring out the light.
Weekend Cat Blogging #340 is hosted by Pam at Sidewalk Shoes, with help from Coco.
The Saturday PhotoHunt has a new home. This week’s theme is Lights. Thank you to tnchick for hosting over the past years.
The Carnival of the Cats will be hosted this weekend by Samantha, Clementine and Maverick at Life from a Cat’s Perspective.
And the Friday Ark is at the modulator.


Please join me in wishing Luna a Happy 7th Birthday today! (Wednesday, November 30, 2011)
For our combined Weekend Cat Blogging and Photo Hunt theme of two, we present a pair of Hipstamatic photos of Luna. A single pose, but two sets of lens and film effects:


It’s a sleepy morning for us, after I recover from two music performances over the past two days, and Luna basks in some sunshine after a wet and rainy Friday.
This weekend also marks the 400th Edition of the Carnival of Cats. That is quite a milestone, and we are happy to help celebrate! It is hosted by Mog, we has been the “Carnival Caretaker” over the past couple of years There is a history of the Carnival posted by last week’s hosts Nikita and Elvira of Meowsings of an Opinionated Pussycat.
Photo Hunt #291 is hosted by tnchick. The theme this week is two.
And the Friday Ark is at the modulator.

At 11:11 on this day 11/11/11, I snapped screenshots of both the iPad and iPhone featuring Luna.

Of course, the symmetry and homogeneity of the date and time is quite attractive, and unique (at least within a given century). The number 111111 is also interesting when you decompose it into primes:
111111 = 11 * 13 * 3 * 37 * 7
I find the prime factorization quite poetic.
We can also factor the date and time together (11:11:11 on 11/11/11):
111111111111 = 11 * 13 * 3 * 37 * 7 * 101 * 9901
Note quite as poetic as the previous example, but still interesting. In particular, 9901 is interesting as the greatest prime factor for any repeating series of 12 numbers. Other related properties can be seen at the site Prime Curios.