I haven't mentioned my portfolio site here before, but I did manage to fix page view tracking on it today, so that's kind of nice. It was the final project for a digital portfolio class I took at City College San Francisco and highly recommend. History Research Recap I'm offloading a significant amount of research work for my history of physics book, The Gladych Files , onto an orchestrated platform of LLM agents in Gas Town . The bulk of the work is to research passengers on trips the main characters of the book took from the 1930s to the 1950s. One of the main subjects of the book is Tom Slick . While returning from a trip to attempt to spot the Lochness Monster while he was a student at Yale—seriously, I love this book—he was aboard a ship, the Normandie, with Hedy Lamarr. The ship also had over 1,000 other passengers including the grandchildren of Henri Matisse . My agentic AI research team comes to task because it's not a small project to research each of a t...
Moving the camera to see the sky in CesiumJS maps has always been a little bit difficult for me. So,m when CesiumJS announced their baseline MCP for controlling the camera on CesiumJS maps, I leaped at the chance to try out an MCP and to grab hold of better control of my map camera. This week, the sujbect of eclipses came up in my Gladych Files research. ( Ferry Barrows Colton , famed National Geographic Science writer of the 1940s was part of the 1947 Brazil eclipse expedtiion, and was also on board the Normandie with Tom Slick in 1937.) That reminded me of the following picture I took of the 2017 eclipse from Wyoming. I've wanted to identify the stars on that picture for years, so I was curious if CesiumJS had accurate constellation maps for a given date and time. Turns out, they do. But, how to look at the stars? I revived my version of the MCP camera control server for CesiumJS in a few minutes by starting Codex in the repo directory on my local machine, a...