Philip Brewer

Writer: science fiction and fantasy, personal finance, and Esperanto

header image

Main menu

Skip to content
  • Fiction
  • Nonfiction
  • About me
  • Contact

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

2024-02-07 10:34

Posted on 2024-02-07
by Philip Brewer

I have invented a (I think) new cocktail: the bluevardier! It’s a boulevardier, except that the sweet vermouth is replaced with blue curacao.

I’ll make one for cocktail hour and post a picture!

Posted on 2024-02-07
by Philip Brewer
in News | Tagged bourbon, cocktail, cocktail hour, cocktails | 1 Comment

2024-02-06 14:41

Posted on 2024-02-06
by Philip Brewer

There’s a cybersecurity company that advertises on some podcast that I listen to. Their tagline is “We stop breaches!” My brain immediately adds, “But not culottes!”

Posted on 2024-02-06
by Philip Brewer
in News | Tagged allegedly funny, security

2024-02-03 14:40

Posted on 2024-02-03
by Philip Brewer

The dog seemed happy to laze about for an extra half hour this morning, so I wasn’t out in time to see the dawn, but I got this nice view just after sunrise.

The sun rising between buildings, as seen from Dohme Park
Posted in Local, News | Tagged Photography, sun

2024-02-02 08:13

Posted on 2024-02-02
by Philip Brewer

Reminder: Your local spring is forecast by your local groundhogs. Ignore celebrity groundhogs!

I’m looking forward to an early spring, despite my dread of the other effects of global warming.

A tree on the edge of the street, with an apartment building and parking lot beyond, and a cloudy sky
Posted in Local, News, Photography | Tagged groundhog's day, Photography, spring

2024-02-01 06:30

Posted on 2024-02-01
by Philip Brewer

After week after cloudy week, where dawn was just the sky going from black to dark leaden grey to light leaden grey, today we get an actual dawn.

Looking down the path through the prairie toward the dawn sky
Posted in Local, News, Photography | Tagged dawn, Photography

An actually useful use-case for large language models

Posted on 2024-01-24
by Philip Brewer

I just thought of a possibly actually useful use-case for large language models (what’s being called AI these days): Generating metadata for your photo library.

This is useful, because almost nobody is willing to generate their own metadata for photos. Most people have vast libraries with literally nothing but the date, time, and location captured by their phone or camera, the image itself, and details of the capture (exposure time, ISO, etc.).

Using the date, time, and location info, together with the image itself, AI could:

  • Write a brief description of the image.
  • Tell you where it was taken from (not just the latitude and longitude, but the name of the place where you were standing).
  • Look up if an event were underway at that place and time and say what it was (county fair, protest march).
  • Tell you any number of arbitrary things, like if there was something going on with the weather at that time (blizzard, wind chill advisory)—but only if it was interesting.

I know Google Photos can already do some of this. I don’t think it writes metadata for you, but it will find all of your photos that were taken in St. Croix, for example. (I’d heard that it could locate all your photos of a particular sculpture, but it didn’t work for the sculpture I just tried to find.) In any case, an LLM running on your own computer, saving the data to your photo library, would have all kinds of advantages. There are the obvious privacy advantages, but also sharing advantages—the metadata (or a subset that you selected) would be available to be included when you shared the image with a friend.

Posted in News | Tagged AI, large language models, llm, metadata, Photography

2024-01-23 18:55

Posted on 2024-01-23
by Philip Brewer

Street lights on the ice glaze left by freezing rain.

Street lights shine on snow and ice, with a swing set in the foreground.
Posted in Local, News, Photography | Tagged freezing rain, ice, Photography, snow, street lights, winfield village, winter

2024-01-22 14:35

Posted on 2024-01-22
by Philip Brewer

The package I was waiting for came! My new Sigi Maestro, by Sigi Forge! Look at that glorious etching!

It is light, nimble, and agile. I can’t wait to try it out! #HEMA #longsword #sigi #sigiforge

The hilt and schilt of a longsword, held by one hand in a heavy glove, showing the fancy etching on the schilt
Posted in Fitness, News | Tagged Fitness, hema, longsword, sigi, sigiforge

2024-01-22 14:02

Posted on 2024-01-22
by Philip Brewer

An ice storm has made it way too slippery to walk further than absolutely necessary. Plus, I have a package coming that I need to sign for. So, for the dog’s third walk today I kept her within my front and side yards.

Happily, there was this nice patch of lichen right there. #lichensubscribe

A patch of blue-green lichen on the trunk of a white pine
Posted in Local, News | Tagged lichen, lichens, LichenSubscribe

2024-01-18 10:08

Posted on 2024-01-18
by Philip Brewer

The very first breakfast Jackie ever cooked for me was some Tassajara Bread book pancakes. (They’re special because you beat the egg whites and fold them in, which makes the pancakes super light and fluffy.)

Jackie is away to attend a tapestry weaving workshop, so today I decided to make my own pancakes.

Pancake batter, and the bowls and measuring spoons used to make it.
Half-cooked pancakes on the griddle
A stack of pancakes covered with maple syrup
Posted in News, Photography | Tagged cooking, food, maple syrup, pancakes, Photography

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Philip Brewer

  • githubGitHub
  • facebookFacebook
  • microblogMicro.blog
  • instagramInstagram
  • flickrFlickr
  • blueskyBluesky
  • mastodonMastodon

I write science fiction and fantasy stories.

I speak Esperanto, and use it to communicate internationally. Esperantistoj, legu mian esperantan hejmpaĝon.

For a while I taught Taiji. My current hobby is HEMA (Historical European Martial Arts, aka sword fighting).

For eleven years I was a senior writer at Wise Bread, writing about personal finance and frugality.

Before that I spent a quarter-century as a software engineer.

NaNo 2.0 Progress

10,154 / 50,000

Progress toward 50,000 words

My email newsletter has gone live! Subscribe here:

Info

  • About me
  • Article pitch Policy: Don’t
  • Clarion at home
  • Clarion writers workshop
  • Contact
  • Guest-post Policy: No guest posts
  • Incognito Writers Group
  • My OTR Fingerprint
  • My PGP key
  • Privacy Policy
  • Story Structure in Short Stories
  • ToS

Blogroll

  • Ashley Price
  • Beth Adele Long
  • Jackie Brewer
  • Kelly Searsmith
  • Marissa Lingen
  • Martha J. Allard
  • Mary Turzillo
  • Nnedi Okorafor
  • Richard Brewer
  • Steven Barnes
  • Steven Brewer
  • Theodora Goss
  • Tobias Buckell

Esperanto

  • Ekoci

Websites

  • Ashley Price
  • Geoffrey Landis
  • James Patrick Kelly
  • Karina Sumner-Smith
  • Kelly Link
  • Mary Turzillo
  • Nnedi Okorafor
  • Pat Murphy
  • SFWA
  • Theodora Goss

My microblog

Tags

allegedly funny art Ashley beer books daily routine dog dog pictures dogsofmastodon Economics endurance exercise Esperanto exercise fiction Fitness food freedom gratitude health hema hiking human movement jackie lifting metrics money my work Oura ring ouraring Photography policy politics public policy running SAD security sun sunrise tai chi taiji walking website winfield village Wise Bread writing

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org
  • githubGitHub
  • facebookFacebook
  • microblogMicro.blog
  • instagramInstagram
  • flickrFlickr
  • blueskyBluesky
  • mastodonMastodon
This site is powered by WordPress and styled with SemPress