Archive for the ‘Personal’ Category
Books
Goodreads sent a note congratulating me for reading three books in 2014, which didn’t seem quite right even though it has been a very busy year! It turns out that I’d not marked a “date read” for many of the books, bringing the tally to 15, including some read-alouds with the kids.
My top three books for 2014 are:
- Poetry: Beowulf
- Fiction: Peace Like a River, by Leif Enger
- Non-fiction: The Supper of the Lamb, by Robert Capon
The Lord of the Rings earns an honorable mention; while it was not a new book for 2014, we really enjoyed listening to the Rob Inglis narration together as a family. Right now we are partway through reading The Yearling aloud, and plan to read N. D. Wilson’s Boys of Blur next.
For fun, I looked up some of my Goodreads stats. The date read vs. date published chart is fascinating. Augustine and Beowulf are my outliers. Some huge gaps to fill in there!

Five years
Five years ago we celebrated Asher’s third birthday at the Outer Banks. Here’s a picture from our visit to Jockey’s Ridge:

Last week we went back to the Outer Banks with some friends from church and recreated the picture:

Ranger of the Year
Congratulations to Asher for being the 2014 Ranger Kids Ranger of the Year at our outpost!
Derby
Asher and I raced our derby cars this morning. Here’s a picture of our cars before the race, with Asher’s in the foreground. He did a great job on his car!

Asher named his car “Fear, Fire, Foe!” Mine was “Supplanter.”
Asher won fifth place for design among Ranger Kids, and I won third place for speed in the open competition. There were some pretty creative and pretty fast cars there!
Treebeard
We’ve been listening to The Lord of the Rings audiobook as a family. Yesterday we happened upon this great quote:
Merry and Pippin heard, clear in the cold air, the neighing of war-horses, and the sudden singing of many men. The Sun’s limb was lifted, an arc of fire, above the margin of the world. Then with a great cry the Riders charged from the East; the red light gleamed on mail and spear.
Song and warfare go hand in hand. Worship is warfare.
It interests me that Tolkien has the hobbits refer to the sun as feminine:
‘Hullo!’ said Merry. ‘The Sun must have run into a cloud while we’ve been under these trees, and now she has run out again; or else she has climbed high enough to look down through some opening. It isn’t far—let’s go and investigate!’
This rainy Sunday afternoon we drew our impressions of Treebeard. Here’s what we came up with:
Asher

Charlotte

Ivy

Scott

Work
I was amused to find this in my fortune cookie last night.
For most of the last thirteen years, I have worked on IBM’s z/OS Communications Server mainframe networking product. Over the last two years I have still reported to Comm Server management but have been on loan to other IBM product areas as part of helping to lend our networking, security and high-availability expertise. I’ve only had three managers in the last thirteen years, which I think is fairly unusual.
But now I’m making the move to the IBM PureApplication System organization, where I have been working for the past year. You can think of it as “cloud in a box” (although this is both a little inapt and also oversimplified).
I’ll miss working with all of the wonderful folks in Comm Server. But I’m looking forward to wrestling with a new challenge.
Cube
While growing up there were a few issues of technical magazines that really captured my imagination. In the basement of the music store where I took flute lessons, there were some old Byte magazines. I remember being captivated by an article about OS/2 and Taligent, asking permission to take the issue home with me. Byte also sparked my interest in NeXT. For better or worse, this had the ultimate result that I was inspired to huddle over my PC for months to write a graphical file manager for the QNX platform. I’m not sure that anyone ever used it, but it’s still available for download.

Often we would go to the Hershey public library’s annual library sale. Several times I scooped up batches of Scientific American issues. The March 1981 issue occupied many hours of my time. In this issue, Douglas Hofstadter’s “Metamagical Themas” column addressed the Rubik’s cube, and I was hooked.
Hofstadter’s article was a brisk introduction to cubology. But instead of giving a quick how-to on solving the cube, he described the underlying concepts and patterns for manipulating the cube. No solutions: only a framework for building a solution piece by piece. But this only whetted my appetite to struggle on to understand what he had to say about group theory. Hofstadter did teach me how to disassemble and reassemble the cube, which was a great help as I stumbled along. (This is not only less destructive than peeling stickers, but is actually much easier.)
Hofstadter introduced a notation for operations on the cube. Each face had a letter: F, B, L, R, U and D for front, back, left, right, up and down. Any operation on the cube could be expressed in these terms, with exponents to indicate repeated turns of the same face (positive exponents for clockwise turns, prime symbol indicating a counter-clockwise turn). So, for example, to go from Start to a simple cross pattern on each face, you could execute F²B²L²R²U²D². Another pretty pattern, which Hofstadter calls “Dots,” can be reached from Start with BF’UD’LR’BF’.
My first excited discovery was a move that swapped two pairs of edge pieces: F²U²F²U²F²U², alternately (F²U²)³. From this one operation I was eventually able to derive all of the operations I needed to solve the cube.
These are not the shortest operators by a long shot, but these are the ones I came up with. I use Hofstadter’s notation for the cubes that are affected by each operator. These rather awkwardly tend to focus on solving the bottom face; I may take the time eventually to rewrite them in terms of the upper face. And thus we come to my motive in writing this post: I can never find my “cheat sheet” when I want it.
- Edge operators
- Double edge pair swappers
- (dr,dl)(df,db) — L’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’L
- (dr,dl)(df,db) — F²D²F²D²F²D’F²D²F²D²F²D
- (fr,fl)(dr,dl) — F²D²F²D²F²D²
- (fr,fl)(br,bl) — F²D²F²D²F²B²D²B²D²B²
- Double edge flippers
- (dl)+(dr)+ —
F’L’R’B’FD’F’LF’D²F²D²F²D²
F’L’FDF’BRLF’D²F²D²F²D²
- (dl)+(dr)+ —
- Three-cycles of edges
- (dl,df,dr) — L’DLF²D²F²D²F²D²L’D’LF²D²F²D²F²D²
- (df,dl,db) — F²B²DR’LF²RL’U²D’F²B²
- Double edge pair swappers
- Corner operators
- Double corner pair swappers
- (dlf,drb)(drf,dlb) — L’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²
- (dlf,drb)(drf,dlb) — F²D²F²D²F²D’F²D²F²D²F²D’
- (dlf,drb)(drf,dlb) — L²R²D²L²R²U²DL²R²D²L²R²U²D
- Meson makers (quarkscrews)
- (drf)+(dlb)– —
F’UFU²F’U²FL’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²
F’U²FU²F’U’FL’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²
- (drf)+(dlb)– —
- Three-cycles of corners
- (dlf,drb,drf)+- (introduces a quark) —
RUR’BLB’L’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²
BL’B’L’RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²RU’R’ - (dlf,drb,drf) —
R²DF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²R’D’R²DUL’UL
RDF²D²F²D²F²DR’LD²L²U’LU’D’R²DL’
- (dlf,drb,drf)+- (introduces a quark) —
- Double corner pair swappers
Hofstadter’s article inspired me to put in the effort to read his fascinating book Goedel, Escher and Bach. It is not an exaggeration, as I do here, to describe it as a romp through a variety of fields. Perhaps second only to my high-school programming mentor, I owe Hofstadter my interests in math and computer science.
If you’re interested in Hofstadter’s article on the cube, you can order a digital edition from Scientific American.
Letter to the editor
I submitted this letter to the editor of the News & Observer:
Dear Editor,
In every city, on any given week, the most important thing that happens is the meeting of King Jesus with his people in his house. The heavens stoop to earth for the king to hold court with his people, eat with them, and send them out as his servants for the life of the world.
This Sunday morning, a triathlon barricaded southern Wake County. Some travelers waited over 90 minutes before turning back. We left early, prepared to expect delays, but not this complete standstill.
Local leaders will answer to constituents for matters such as the interruption of family trips to the farmers’ market on a beautiful spring day. But many families were kept from church, and our leaders will answer to Jesus for the interruption of his worship. Jesus does not wish his people to be detained when he calls them together. I pray that our leaders would follow the example of Darius in Ezra rather than Sanballat and Tobiah in Nehemiah; that they would exert themselves to encourage and not obstruct the assembling of God’s people. Our cities will be blessed by God if they do so.
Respectfully yours,
Scott Moonen
304 Kite Dr.
Fuquay-Varina
Face
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A few weeks ago, we cut a swath out of the ivy on a large oak tree in our front yard and had an arborist come by to trim dead branches. Since then, the ivy has started to wither away and the tree’s leaves are beginning to spring forth. This evening we discovered this fellow emerging from the ivy. His left eye and mouth were missing, but we found them after grabbing a rake and scratching about for a few minutes. Here he is after clearing away more of the ivy.
Click on each picture for a larger view.
Derby
For this year’s Royal Ranger pine-car derby, Asher and I each made a car. We built them on Lego bases:

Asher built a sweep-wing spacecraft, “The Blaster”:

I built a space shuttle:

We were sick the weekend of the official race, so we had to run our own race:
Last year we made Francesco Bernoulli and Asher won the design trophy for his age group!

