Jan 24, 2020

Panda Facts

All Pandas in all the zoos around the world are owned by China and loaned to the zoos. Male pandas do a handstand when urinating, because when they pee on a tree, higher means more dominance.

US Supreme Court Facts

Recently a presidential contender said he would appoint Barack Obama to the Supreme Court. Obama is not a lawyer and has never been a judge, so I looked up qualifications required.
There are no explicit requirements in the U.S. Constitution for a person to be nominated to become a Supreme Court justice. No age, education, law degree, job experience, or citizenship rules exist.

To date, six justices have been foreign born; the most recent. The youngest associate justice ever appointed was Joseph Story, who was 32 years old when he joined the bench in 1811. Associate Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., who served from 1902 to 1932, retired at age 90, making him the oldest person ever to sit on the court. One thing every justice who has served shares in common is that all were lawyers (although not required) prior to joining the court. During the 18th and 19th centuries, before attending law school was standard practice, many future justices got their legal training by studying under a mentor.


James Byrnes, who served on the court from 1941 to 1942, was the last justice who did not attend law school or graduate from high school. He worked as a law clerk and later passed the bar exam. Justices are appointed for life but can be impeached.

Incidentally, during recent years, the court has received some 10,000 annual requests to review cases, but hears only about 80.

Largest Armies

With more than 2 million personnel, China’s army is the largest. The second largest is from India with about 1.4 million, the U.S. army comes in third with about 1.3 million. Russia is fourth with about 900,000.

Signing 2020

Have seen this in a number of places and thought I would pass along, in case you missed it. According to law enforcement, this habit could put you at major risk of fraud.
When signing and dating legal documents, do not use 20 as the year 2020.
The problem stems from the ease at which the year 20 can be changed to any date from the last two decades. For example 02/01/20 could easily be changed to 02/01/2019, 02/01/2016, etc., giving scammers a chance to defraud you. Of course that was also true of using 19 as it could have been changed to 1991, etc, but that would make the dates changed to much older.


Incidentally, using 02/29/20 would be a bit less of a problem due to the lower number of leap years. Just had to add that tidbit as 2020 is a leap year. Ha.

Auld Lang Syne

Most people do not know any of the lyrics beyond the first stanza and chorus of this traditional New Year's Eve song 'Auld Lang Syne'. During 1788 Scottish poet Robert Burns wrote down the traditional lyrics and added some of his own.
Auld lang syne literally means "old long since," or "long, long ago." The phrase "for auld lang syne" translates to "for old time's sake."
The first line of the song is a question: Should we forget our old friends?
The answer is in the chorus:
For auld lang syne, my jo (For old time's sake, my dear)
For auld lang syne (For old time's sake)
We'll tak' a cup o' kindness yet (We'll take a cup of kindness yet)
For auld lang syne (For old time's sake)

The remainder of the lyrics sound as though they are spoken to an old friend. That unusual verse actually means, "We two have paddled in the stream / From morning sun 'til dinner time." The singer is reminiscing about all the fun he and the friend have had together.
The last verse concludes: And we'll tak' a right gude-willie waught (And we'll take a good-will drink, alright) For auld lang syne (For old time's sake).
The tradition of singing Auld Lang Syne on New Year's Eve came from Scottish immigrants who brought the custom with them when they moved abroad. It is traditional to sing the song just before midnight as a reminder that, even though the New Year is coming and we are about to face new delights and challenges, we should not forget where we came from.


Auld Lang Syne is also sung at social gatherings like weddings or funerals.

Old 2020 Predictions

In 1990, The Washington Post reported in a front page story: "Carbon dioxide is the gas most responsible for predictions that Earth will warm on average by about 3 degrees Fahrenheit by the year 2020." It further warned: "The United States, because it occupies a large continent in higher latitudes, could warm by as much as 6 degrees Fahrenheit." Thirty years later, 2020 has finally arrived. The Earth has warmed about 1 degree Fahrenheit according to NASA. The United States also warmed roughly 1 degree.
- CNN ran a headline in 2003 titled 'World oil and gas 'running out'. The New York Times reported in 1989 that "untapped pools of domestic oil are finite and dwindling," and that "William Stevens, the president of Exxon U.S.A., said ... by the year 2020 there would not be enough domestic oil left 'to keep me interested.'" Both U.S. oil output and U.S. proven oil reserves are dramatically higher now than they were in 1989.
- "It's now estimated that by the year 2020, there will be no glaciers of Mt. Kilimanjaro," the U.N. Environment Program, told CNN in 2003. In 2001, glaciologist Lonnie Thompson predicted the snows of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania would disappear within the next 20 years.”  Today, Kilimanjaro's glaciers are still there, according to a 2019 paper in the Journal Ecology and Evolution that includes photos and another new timetable: "most of glaciers on Kilimanjaro ... will most likely disappear within 25 years."

- Reuters headline in 1997: "Millions will die unless climate policies change." The report said 8 million people would die by 2020, citing a prediction in the Lancet medical journal. “None of these predictions came true, and aren't even close to coming true,” said Roy Spencer, a climatologist at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. “It's amazing that the public can continue to believe apocalyptic predictions despite a 95 percent decline in weather-related deaths in the last 100 years.”

Personal Online Privacy

Beginning New Year’s Day, you may have noticed a small change to some of the websites you visit: a button or link, probably at the bottom of the page, for privacy policy and/or reading “Do Not Sell My Personal Information.” The California Consumer Privacy Act defines personal information broadly, including, but not limited to identifiers (name, address, online identifier, IP address, etc), purchasing history, geolocation, audio/video, biometric data, inferences made about your personality or psychological trends. The act also allows Californians to see the sources of that data, the types of third parties data is shared with, and how it has been categorized.

It empowers consumers to access the personal data that companies have collected on them, to demand that it be deleted, and to prevent it from being sold to third parties. Since it is a lot more work to create a separate infrastructure just for California residents to opt out of the data collection industry, these requirements will likely transform the internet for most users. Unless you love ads, take advantage and opt out.

New Olympic Events 2020

The summer Olympics and Paralympics Tokyo 2020 will feature four new sports: karate, skateboarding, sport climbing, and surfing. Baseball and softball, which had previously been played in earlier games, will both return. Incidentally, just like the London Olympics, it will be broadcast in many places as 8K or 4K. Japan currently has a 4K and a 24hour 8K station broadcasting daily since December 2018. 8K also includes 22.2 channel sound.

Interesting January Events

Start your year with some amazing facts to impress your family, friends, and neighbors.
January 2, 1975 - The U.S. Patent Office was renamed "U.S. Patent and Trademark Office" to incorporate its new function as a trademarking center.
January 3, 1967 - Harry Thomason received a patent for an apparatus for cooling and heating a house using solar energy.
January 5, 1965 - "Home of the Whopper" was trademarked by Burger King.

January 7, 1913 - Patent was granted to William Burton for the manufacture of gasoline.

January 9, 1906 - Campbell's soup was trademark registered.

January 13, 1930 - The first Mickey Mouse cartoon appeared in U.S.

January 17, 1882 - Leroy Firman received a patent for the telephone switchboard.

January 20, 1929 - "In Old Arizona," the first outdoor feature-length talking motion picture, was made.

January 21, 1954 - The first atomic submarine, the USS Nautilus, was launched.

January 24, 1935 - The first canned beer, "Krueger Cream Ale," was sold by the Kruger Brewing Company of Richmond, VA.

January 26, 1875 - The first electric dental drill was patented by George Green.

January 27, 1880 - Patent was granted to Thomas A. Edison for "an electric lamp for giving light by incandescence."


January 28, 1807 - London's Pall Mall became the first street lit by gaslight.

National Trivia Day

January 4 each year is National Trivia Day. Over time, the word “trivia” has come to refer to obscure and arcane bits of dry knowledge as well as nostalgic remembrances of pop culture. You can celebrate by getting together with friends and play Trivial Pursuit. You can call friends and family and enlighten them with some trivia. More fun is to stop random people and start a conversation with “did you know...?” You may even make some new friends. You can also pick up one or more of my books and spend the day filling your brain with more exciting, interesting, and random trivia.

Keeping Cooked Chicken

According to food expert Janilyn Hutchings, StateFoodSafety food scientist and Certified Professional in Food Safety, cooked chicken will last in the refrigerator for three to four days.

According to the USDA, chicken should be refrigerated within two hours of it being cooked and one hour if the temperature of the environment is 90 degrees or over. The USDA also advises to reheat leftovers to 165 degrees.

If you know you will not get around to eating it before it is time to toss, another option is to put it in the freezer and it will stay good for up to six months. The USDA suggests that if you are freezing chicken, make sure it is wrapped tightly with a freezer-safe covering.

Canary Island Facts

The Canary Islands were named after canary birds, but the location was actually named after dogs. Although it is off the coast of northwestern Africa, the archipelago is part of Spain. In Spanish, the area's name is Islas Canarias, which comes from the Latin phrase Canariae Insulae for "island of dogs."

2020 Quirk

Because of a quirk in our calendar, which began on January 1 at year 1 (1AD) we have some question about when a specific named decade begins and ends. Since there was no year 0, between year 1 BC and year 1 AD, it can be confusing.

A decade, by definition is ten years, regardless when you begin counting, but decade names begin in the “1” year, not the “0” year. The 2020s will begin in 2020, but the next named decade will begin in 2021. When the year is 2021, 2020 years would have passed since the beginning of our calendar at year one.

2020 is also a leap year, so we get to enjoy an additional day of fun next year.

Incidentally, Chronométrophilia, the Swiss Association for the History of Timekeeping, pointed out a practical shortcut applies to the century system. "The 20th [Century] started with 1901, ended with 2000, so the two first digits of the last year of any century give it its name."

Year ending in 1 is named decade and year ending in 0 is century.

Explode vs. Implode

Take a plastic bottle. Fill it with water until it is full. Continue filling it with water - plastic will expand, stretch, and eventually burst. This is an explosion, an outward expansion.

Now take same bottle, and suck air out of it. Keep sucking air out, creating vacuum, and pulling sides of the bottle inside. The bottle is experiencing an implosion, an inward expansion.

To add to this - if you EXplode a building, debris ends up everywhere - spread out for many yards/meters. If you IMplode a building, 99% of the debris falls into the footprint of the building.