- Wikipedia, per usual, has a marvelout collection of information: Siege of Boston. This post has a good overview with secondary material.
- An example is the post on Knox's effort: Noble train of artillery.
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| Timeline of Settlement |
11/09/2025 --
Sponsored by the Thomas Gardner Society, Inc.
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| Timeline of Settlement |
11/09/2025 --
TL;DR -- King Slayer? That's a huge no-no rule, broken in both England and France. But, on the battlefield, is it allowed? This post looks at research of several decades that has been facilitated recently, in new ways, by computing done right (for the most part - until buckets'o'bits ran amok).
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We will have a regular series on the King Slayer's Court blog as work continues on that research. The following has links to recent material and other material provided for background and discussion.
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| (BBC London) A 16th Century Welsh chronicle charting the history of England and Wales between 1066 and 1552 is now online |
Adage, moral proposed for the TGS, Inc: there AIn't no critter involved with the buckets'o'bits that people are chasing seemingly mindlessly. That is, phenomena are involved that we can know more; lots of it involves mathematics that got too big for its britches.
Remarks: Modified: 10/29/2025
10/29/2025 --
TL;DR -- Machine learning, as AI, grates with the increasing hype of three years duration, so far. How much longer? This post points to work that has plenty of potential to help right the ship that founders.
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This is a brief technical overview about necessary work.
Real but unseen. Mostly ignored, for reasons that we can discuss. Basically, the psychology of the modern era that has gone off course.
The LLM (and their GenAIs associates) can be useful. I wish to introduce them to a big brother they ought to have known.
https://lnkd.in/gECn-HrX KBE used ICAD and demonstrated truth engineering
"For example, at Airbus UK, the design of Wing spars was reduced from 480 man weeks to 12 - a 97.5% lead-time reduction. Similarly, Jaguar Cars saw a 94% lead-time reduction in XK8 body panel development, and their collaborative headlamp program was reduced from 8 weeks to only 2 days."
And, this was precision work. Not mindless pretend by misusing mathemtical computing.
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| CAD to KBE (ICAD) to ... (dated but meant to show a point and an example for saving machine learning |
How does machine learning fit in? That was shown decades ago which lessons apply now. To discuss? KBE would have kept AI on track; several themes along this line deserve discussion and experimental attention.
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Wait, was my initial reaction. Kant is key. We can't Kant enough which will be on the table for discussion here (and demonstration). At the time, I started to remind people that there was no "critter" involved. This was applied mathematices which is centuries old.
Okay, I will now back that up. We'll focus on Cambridge for a bit, but in general consider that Lagrange was a cohort of Kant. The former ran down perturbations of diff eqs; the latter ran down perturbing our brains with his "classical" summary of the western way.
Right now, here are links that will kick things off.
1 - Littlewood on the 1st Wrangler guantlet - quoting him: Preparation; Incubation; Illumination; Verification. https://lnkd.in/grC5tnNz Littlewood's take on the Tripos challenge
... https://lnkd.in/gk5BShm7 What is Enlightenment?
2 - Kant's answer to what is enlightenment - https://lnkd.in/gJzUNjVS
11/09/2025 - A few typos fixed.
Remarks: Modified: 10/23/2025
10/23/2025 -
TL;DR -- We pause to refresh the technology focus for the future. Simulation will be a recurring theme for many reasons.
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Given that we are now into the age where everyone has heard of "AI" and have three years of data on both sides of the argument, the future will be more interesting from several angles. Technology is great, when it works. It can be expensive.
Saw this image today and had to show the particulars. It's a robot that went through millions of simulated miles with no problems. But, then stumbled on something unexpected when let out into the real world. On LinkedIn, see the article: The Simulation Myth.
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| Spot, of Boston Dynamics |
Remarks: Modified: 10/11/2025
10/11/2025 -
TL;DR -- Today we saw an old photo of a sketch which shows part of Bunker Hill West in the 1870s. That's early enough to be before lots of the changes introduced over the long span of US history. The English culture took over in 1847 from that of New Spain. And so, the area has lots of offer with respect to our interest in the long reach of New England.
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Here we go with a post on LA, again. Yesterday, as we looked at New France and New Spain, we mentioned Bunker Hill West. In the early days, the hill overlooked bustling LA. Then, people built upon the hill. They tunneled under it to start to build on the other side. It was partly lowered starting in the 1960s. Now long after, the skyscrapers started to appear with the first one right by the Library which is about as old as the LA City Hall.
This pointer is to a search on Los Angeles within our blog. There may be Bunker Hill posts that did not come up on the list. In any case, the below photo which is courtesy of the Water and Power Organization of Los Angeles, CA is from a sketch near what is now 9th Street looking north. To orient the view, the well-known City Hall is between Spring and Main Streets (shown converging here) eight blocks north above 1st Street.
To the middle below the foothills is where one would find The Cathedral of the Angeles, not built yet. The train station is north of that.
Of interest today are the hills on the left. If one follows the Fort Street line (left of Spring Street) up toward the hills to north, there is a building standing above the city. That was Fort Moore. Going to the left, one can see parts of Bunker Hill West.
Prior posts had some information about the history of development of the hill. Today, we wanted to show a view indicating that there was a hill of size. According to Wikipedia, the elevation was up to 200 feet above Los Angeles. Naturally, there are higher hills including the massive 14k-foot mountain within a morning's drive seen on the upper right.
The Bunker Hill represents history, pre-US and post the events of 250 years ago. In this area, the culture changed several times in a manner that is representative of the changes in the US. The current stature of Bunker Hill is obvious in the photos of LA. The majority of the skyscrapers have their footing on the scraped down and leveled heights of the hill.
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Caption of the photo: (ca. 1873)* – Panoramic sketch looking north toward downtown Los Angeles showing mostly undeveloped land. At lower-right can be seen the junction of Main and Spring streets at a point where 9th Street will one day intersect. Hill Street and Fort Street (later Broadway) are on the left. The Verdugo Hills and snow-capped San Gabriel Mountains can be seen in the distance. Photo of a lithograph, courtesy of the California Historical Society.
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| DTLA, 1873 |
Remarks: Modified: 10/11/2025
10/11/2025 - Water and Power has a whole page of photos from Bunker Hill West from the 1930s onward, including many areas compared with photos from then and now.
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| The United Watershed States of America |
Remarks: Modified: 10/02/2025
10/02/2025 -