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Showing posts with label The Ipcress File. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Ipcress File. Show all posts

Sunday, October 3, 2021

Books

Books on my Desk

I just finished reading The Ipcress File and now I've picked up The Terror again. I'm spent so much time with this book (a few pages at a time, whenever I have to wait for something, for months) that I feel compelled to finish it. 

We also have The C Programming Language here because I can never remember whether the source or the count is the second parameter to the library function movmem*. So these three books are on my desk, and I thought their physical condition is worth commenting on.

The Terror spent months being hauled around in my bag. It didn't seem to be of robust construction to start with, so it's no surprise that it's falling apart. This copy has a lived a full and useful life. When I have finished it, I will commit it to the great recycler in Toledo.

The Ipcress File is roughly the same thickness as The Terror even though it only holds one third the number of pages. I don't remember how I came by this copy, but it's a nice copy (Franklin Mystery Library) that's been sitting in the bookcase for eons. They (Franklin) inflate their pages to make their books look more impressive. At least they didn't inflate them with clay. I picked up a small atlas one time, 'one page for every country' or some such. It was a normal size book, not oversize like at atlas typically is, and I swear it weighed three pounds. Clay gives the paper a smoother finish which is what you want for detailed images. That's the story I remember anyway.

The C Programming Language is about half the thickness of The Ipcress File but has roughly the same number of pages - 280~. In spite of being a zillion years old and being well used (mostly the dozen or so pages in the back that describe the library functions) it is still mostly holding together. There are a few pages at the very back that will fall out occasionally and will have to be put back. So far, so good, i.e. I don't think I've lost any.

Cropped Screenshot of Google Lens Results

When I pulled up the image (top) on Google Photos, it asked if I wanted to extract the text, and I thought, sure, why not? Let's see what Google Lens can do. The words it found are the gray highlighted** text at the right side of this image. I don't know where it got 'trusted', but it got the SNOWWIS NE by reading the author's name backwards (the blue trapezoid enclosing most of the author's name).

* I asked Google about memove and the first page it returned is from a guy in Russia. That's pretty cool. He got the source and destination reversed, but what do you expect from a place where half their letters are backwards?


You're Driving Me Crazy


The Temperance Seven~~~You're Driving Me Crazy.
SixtiesOnly

I'm reading The Ipcress File by Len Deighton and somewhere along the way we hear "waah waah waah You're Driving Me Crazy" coming over the radio. Okay, that smells like a smash hit, so I do a little digging. Seems the tune has been around forever, it's been recorded by everybody from Billie Holiday to Frank Sinatra, but who made it a big hit back in the early 1960s? The Temperance Seven did, that's who. I'd never heard their version, or if I did it didn't make an impression. 

Update April 2026 replaced missing video.

Saturday, October 2, 2021

JULIE / JEZEBEL

What makes a passive buoy active?
Miss "Julie" Gibson, the namesake of explosive echo ranging technique.

I'm reading about the Grumman S-2 Tracker and the Wikipedia article mentions "Julie/Jezebel detection equipment", which leads to a page on WW2Aircraft.net, where I found this explanation:
THE LEGEND OF JULIE-JEZEBEL
May 27, 2005

In the 1950s the NADC (Naval Air Development Center, Johnsville, PA) was involved in the development of techniques to detect submarines.

One evening, between days of one of the program's technical reviews by visiting NAVAIR sponsors, some of the visitors took in the entertainment at The Wedge, a burlesque theater in nearby Philadelphia. A performer that evening was Julie Gibson, doing her "Dance of the Bashful Bride". The visitors were duly impressed, deciding that Julie "made passive boys (buoys) go active." OK, it may be kind of a lame play on words, but that is how they arrived at naming the program Project JULIE. JULIE was introduced into the Fleet in 1956.

JEZEBEL, the acoustic detection method using passive-listening sonobuoys, likely had its name inspired by Biblical reference. In Kings 1, Jezebel, a queen of ancient Israel, was nothing but bad. She was (among other things) "a Betrayer", and it was likely that idea of betraying the presence of an enemy submarine through passive acoustic detection that gave this technique its name.

Many Anti-Submarine Warfare aircraft were fitted with the AN/AQA-3 "Jezebel" acoustic search (passive sonar) and "Julie" echo-ranging (active sonar) gear.

More about Tracker to come, I hope.