Studio711.com – Ben Martens

Weekend in Spokane

Sometimes we try to squeeze in a quick random weekend vacation, but there are so many great options, how do we decide what to do? To help with this, we kind of fell into the odd goal of trying to touch every county in Washington with our electric vehicle. The bar is very low. We just have to drive through it and while I try to limit the times we just drive in/out of a county to say we were there, it’s ok if that’s what happens. We invented the challenge so we can invent the rules and we can change them later if we want to!

We’ve been doing this for a while so the counties are getting harder to hit. For this trip, we targeted the northeast corner of the state. There are some really interesting spots in that area. For example, Crawford State Park has an amazing cave system that I would like to explore. But when you try to cram a bunch of stuff into a quick weekend trip and group a couple counties together, it gets tougher.

The itinerary for this trip was that we would drive to Spokane on Friday evening. Saturday we would do a counterclockwise loop north and west of Spokane and then Sunday we would drive back. And of course, we would stay at a Best Western Plus which Elijah thinks is the best hotel chain in the whole world. That status got a bit of a blemish when we pulled up and found out that their pool was closed for repairs!

I chose the Liberty Lake hotel because it was right across the street from a Tesla service center and Supercharger. That was very convenient and made staying there worth it even with the hotel being on the east side of Spokane.

  • Our tour started with driving north to Pend Oreille County Park. The park had a disc golf course but it wasn’t very well kept so we decided not to play and continued heading west.
  • Our next stop was breakfast-all-day at Hunters Holy Grub. We had a seat next to a window with a very active hummingbird feeder which Elijah and I enjoyed watching while Tyla pet the dog that was trying to sleep on the couch.
  • Our main stop for the day was Fort Spokane. I didn’t expect it to be super impressive (and it wasn’t) but to make things a little more interesting, I had AI create a ~15 minute podcast about the history of the fort. This ended up being incredibly interesting and provided great context as we walked through the museum and old buildings. I uploaded the podcast to YouTube with a static image if you are interested in hearing what it created for us.
  • On our way back through Spokane, we stopped at Riverfront Park where we tried the gondola over the falls (not worth it) and visited the trash goat (obviously worth it.)
  • Dinner was at the delicious No-Li Brewhouse

Our whirlwind tour of those counties was fun but our trip wasn’t over because on Sunday, we were invited to a graduation party on the Olympic Peninsula (west of our house.) We didn’t want to miss the opportunity to connect with old friends so we made the drive back home, past our house, and over to the party.

By the time we were done, we had traveled 989 miles. It was probably too much driving but we crammed a lot in and collected 5 new counties along the way. Below is a map of our route as well as an image showing the counties we have hit in total.

We have touched red counties with the Tesla. Blue counties are only with the truck.

Leavenworth Chocolate Tour

A couple weeks after Mother’s Day, Tyla finally got her Mother’s Day present. Elijah and I put together our own “chocolate tour” of Leavenworth. There are so many shops there but we used to go to the same one or two every time. But before hitting the sweets, we made a couple other stops.

The first was for the new-ish alpine coaster. Each car on the track holds one (or possibly two) people and you have a hand brake. The brake is not necessary and will annoy the people behind you, but it exists and a lot of people use it. The track is built onto a steep hillside right as you come into town from the west side. There are various YouTube videos if you want to see what the ride looks like, but in general, we all give it the thumbs up, at least to experience once. If you’re a fan of rollercoasters, the thrill level is pretty low, but if you’re a nervous rider, this is good because you can control your speed. It’s worth a visit.

Next we had lunch at Blewitt Brewing. We hadn’t been there before but we enjoyed our pizzas and I enjoyed some beers. They don’t necessarily do flights of beer, but they sell 5oz pours and you can get however many of those you like. I logged (via Untappd) my 1500th different kind of beer there!

Then finally it was time for the chocolate tour! Here are the places we went:

I won’t review them all individually, but it was a blast! It was so fun to explore business and buildings that we don’t normally go in and some of these will definitely get a second visit. This was especially good timing because Rocky Mountain Chocolates used to be our favorite stop by default, but the “Leavenworth Chocolate” business that replaced it is so bad I can’t imagine they will still be there next year. I’m glad we have great alternatives.

Happy Mother’s Day, Tyla!

AI Video Generation

Do you remember when Dall-E came out and people were amazed that you could generate a picture of a tomato driving a tractor? Those images were amazing at the time but already seem ancient in terms of quality and capability. That was only 4 years ago and now we’re well into examples of convincing AI generated video! Google Veo 3 is the latest video generation tool to make waves. Seeing is believing and while there are many examples floating around, I appreciated this video’s overview of what Veo 3 is an is not capable of.

As with all things AI, you have to remember that however you judge the quality today, it will be unimaginably better in 6-12 months.

Elbow Room

Technically I live in a suburb, but it sure feels like “the city” to me. I grew up in a much more rural area, but how much different is it really? Check out https://www.tomforth.co.uk/circlepopulations/ which shows you how many people live within a spot on the map.

Using a 3 km (1.8 mile) radius, the place I grew up has 1200 people in it. I’m sure that’s dramatically higher than it was back then, but let’s just use that number. My current house has 44,000 people in that same space.

This site is a fun tool to keep in the bag, especially on those evenings when it’s super noisy in my neighborhood and I start clicking around wondering what it would be like to live somewhere else.

P.S. Context for the graphic chosen for this post: Poem: Daniel Boone by Arthur Guiterman

Agentic AI Research

AI is transforming every aspect of life, but one very important area that I think we’re just starting to explore is how AI can speed up physical research. Specifically, you’ll hear the term “agentic AI” which basically means that the AI does more than just answer questions. It can, for example, execute some code to run an experiment or click buttons for you in various apps. All of that can sound vague, but a recent presentation about the new “Microsoft Discovery” platform is a solid example of this.

Before we get into that, have you heard of “PFAS” or maybe “forever chemicals”? Derek from Veritasium did a comprehensive overview of the problem recently.

My area of the company was exploring some extremely promising fluids that would revolutionize the way we cool datacenter computers, and while they were different enough to be safe from PFAS concerns, we stopped using them anyway.

But the problem still exists. How can we meet the ever-increasing demands for data center cooling? Enter the Microsoft Discovery platform. Using this AI tool, researchers were able to identify a new environmentally friendly coolant in just 200 hours instead of the years that it would normally have taken. Watch this 5 minute demo to see how it all worked:

It’s difficult to wrap our minds around the scale of progress here, but try to imagine this level of capability increase across ALL AREAS OF SCIENCE. These initially discoveries are just the first hints of the flood that is coming.

Leaving the Nest

A few years ago, Elijah and I built a birdhouse. We looked up all the recommendations for the dimensions of a birdhouse that would work for birds in our area and then waited anxiously. Year after year no birds were using it. Initially we found that the inside was getting wet so we improved the design. Then we wondered if the location was not inviting so we attached it to the house under and overhang where no squirrel could ever reach. We even installed an extra security camera aimed at the box to see if maybe they were using it and we just couldn’t tell. Nothing.

Then finally this year we started seeing a couple chickadees making a lot of trips to/from the birdhouse! Later we heard lots of chirping from the babies. The parents made so many trips back and forth bringing them food. Then finally one day it was quiet.

I scanned the camera footage and I think I found video of all five(?) babies leaving the nest. The internet says 6-8 babies are more common so it’s possible that I missed a couple. I edited it down to about 5 minutes so if you want to check out the riveting footage, it’s there for you to enjoy:

It sounds like there is a small chance that a mating pair would attempt a second brood in one year so we’ll wait until later in the summer to clean out the birdhouse and see what we find.

DGPT Shelton Review

Last year our family went to our first professional disc golf tournament in Portland. We had such a great time that when we heard about the tour stopping closer to home in Shelton, WA, we quickly bought tickets.

The day was extremely wet at home but thankfully, the tournament happened to be in the rain shadow for the Olympic Mountains. The winds were very strong, but it was warm enough to make for a pleasant day outside. We arrived about an hour before the leaders teed off and stayed through the event.

One highlight for us was seeing Simon Lizotte who wasn’t at the previous tournament. Elijah was also very excited to see Niklas Anttila. Niklas was defending a tournament win at this course from last year but unfortunately wasn’t able to string together enough good holes to contend for the win this year.

When we arrived, we took a lap around the spectator areas getting a feel for the course and watching a few of Niklas’s holes. Then we made our back to the start of the course and watched the lead groups come through. This course looked fun to play but since it was mostly in the woods, it was much more difficult to watch as a spectator. There were way less people at this one which helped, but I think part of the lower attendance might be because there just weren’t many spots to get a really good view of the action.

Towards the end of the day, we parked ourselves at the end of the course and Elijah collected as many autographs as he could. He got a signature from Niklas on one of Niklas’s custom-stamped discs and then loaded up a second disc with signatures from most of the players in the last ~5 groups.

It was another good experience and the whole event was very family friendly, but next year I think I’ll eyeball the course a little more to see what the spectator experience is like. If it’s another wooded course, it might be worth paying for the VIP ticket which lets you follow behind the players on the course.

Drama Free Zone

Welcome to another Tesla Tuesday!

It has been quite a while since my last Tesla post. Part of it is because we’re just chugging happily along with our car, saving money every mile and ahead of schedule with my cost saving estimates. We have about 64,000 miles on the car now and at this rate we’ll hit 100,000 miles in early 2027.

But probably the bigger reason I haven’t written anything is because I don’t even want to acknowledge the drama Elon. Everyone has their thing and if your thing is cheering against Elon, go for it. I’m not accusing or defending him, but I also don’t pretend that every company I give money to has perfect human beings working for it or leading it.

So the news here is that there isn’t much news. I still enjoy driving the car and if it got totaled tomorrow, I’d probably buy another one.

Quotes

We’re inundated with quotes and when the volume is high, they flight right by. But everyone once in a while one will stick and I’ll remember it throughout the week. I had been making a list of some quotes that popped up recently but then the one that stuck is the first one listed below. I don’t know which quotes are original to the linked source material, but the links are provided in case you want to dive in for more.

  • Making It Podcast episode 482
    • “Respond, don’t react.”
  • Merlin Mann’s Wisdom Project, via Recommendo #460
    • Write down the travel items you forgot to pack while you’re still traveling.
    • Sometimes in life, even though it’s not your fault, it’s still your problem.
    • You are not obligated to have a strong opinion about everything.
    • Never organize anything you should discard.
    • If an item is especially precious or valuable to you, never set it down anyplace that you wouldn’t want it to be overnight.
  • More quotes via Recommendo #461
    • Thousands of people don’t like what I do. Fortunately, millions do. — James Patterson
    • Everything that needs to be said has already been said. But since no one was listening, everything must be said again. — André Gid
    • The illiterate of the 21st century will be those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn. —Alvin Toffler

Invisalign Review: The First 8 Weeks

Without turning this into a disgusting post about my dental history, I’ll just say that I got enough nudges to get some orthodontic work done that I finally investigated it. Once the orthodontist gave me a detailed overview of my mouth, I was grossed out enough that I couldn’t wait to get started. But this was still more preventative maintenance than anything else.

All I knew about Invisalign was that it was expensive and that it was hard to tell if people were wearing it. Both proved true. The details were interesting though. The process starts with a full 3D scan of my mouth. Based on that scan, the orthodontist designs a correction plan and ships it off to Invisalign. The company takes all the data and predicts how much my teeth should move each week. For each week they print a separate set of clear U-shaped “trays” that fit over the top and bottom teeth. I then had an appointment where the orthodontist’s office put anchors onto my teeth in specific places. They would get them into mostly the correct position and then a custom template (also printed by Invisalign) was held on my teeth while they used a UV light to cure what I assume was resin.

I’ll go back for another visit at the 11 week mark for a physical check up but otherwise, everything is handled through an app. Each week I use an adapter they provided for my phone to take pictures of my mouth with and without the trays in. Through some combination of automated scanning and human verification, they make sure that the trays are working as planned and then clear me to move on to the next set of trays.

I wondered why Invisalign was targeted more at older kids and adults than at younger kids. For example, Elijah has regular braces right now and Invisalign wasn’t even part of the conversation. I think it’s because the trays can be a lot more work. You have to take them out every single time you eat and anytime you drink anything except water. After you finish eating or drinking, you have to brush your teeth and then reinsert the trays. That’s not terrible, but the trick is that you’re supposed to have the trays in 20-22 hours per day. More is better. I’ve heard that some people really push the limits of how long they can leave them out, but I figure if I’m paying this much money, I want it to work so I almost always hit the 22-hour mark, if not 23.

The side effect here is that it’s an amazing weight loss program for three reasons:

  1. It’s annoying to go through the hassle of cleaning my teeth just for a snack.
  2. My teeth hurt some days and it’s painful to chew.
  3. My teeth are moving around and some days they just don’t line up very well making it hard to chew.

Add all those things together and I’m dropping about two pounds per week. I’m currently hovering right around my “record” low point as an adult. I’m curious to see how far this will go. I feel like I generally still eat what I want but there is literally zero snacking at any point in the day. I’ve been good about cutting out extra food at various points in my life before, but I’m curious to see how much of this will stick around given that I’m forced to do it for so long.

The total process varies by patient but mine was estimated to last around 16 months. About halfway through, they’ll do another scan, assess the progress, and print another set of trays. I expect I’ll know more about the total estimated duration at that point. On the Invisalign website, I can track my progress and see a video of what will change over the first half of treatment and it’s incredible how much my teeth will move.

Once this is all done, I’ll get a retainer to wear (hopefully only at night) for the rest of my life. That is, of course, optional, but given that I really don’t want to go through this cost/effort again, I expect I’ll make good use of that.