30 March 2018

https://apple.news/Aywh6qgCvTw6IbzIFDhm-Zg

Rico says you reap what you sow...

https://apple.news/A2k2xplLGT9qTQrqFfHcPzg

Rico says that's bad for Tesla...

https://apple.news/Ac2ha77lTSCaIOklyBdYvHQ

Rico says the world is better off without them...

The song in Rico's head: Piano Man (1973)


Billy Joel: Piano Man (1973)
The first music video for this song was released in 1973. It features Joel portraying a bar act Bill Martin performing the song, and shows a typical A…
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt7114448/

Sent from the IMDb iPad app.
www.imdb.com | IMDb on Facebook | IMDb on Twitter

29 March 2018

Solitaire

Solitaire version 4.10.1.276
iOS version 9.3.5
Device: iPad (iPad3,3)
Scoring=Standard
Draw=1
Cards=Standard
GC=Off
Hints=Auto
Animations=Many
Last Deal=Winner 583992 (50%)
Tap=Auto
Congrats Screen=On
Orientation=Portrait
Sound=Full
Drag-And-Drop=ON
Swipe to Toggle Toolbar=OFF
Emphasized Auto Hint=OFF

VGCS=Unavailable


mseymour@proofmark.com
215.866.6184

mseymour@proofmark.com
215.866.6184

Sent from my new iPad
Of course it's 1:11...
Rico says he doesn't believe any of it...
https://apple.news/AJmmvrx9-RYu1_b5z36BbvA

Rico says he gets idiot for the day...

28 March 2018

Getting eaten in Africa

https://apple.news/A426nVcNpTX6fy8z_XRAB7Q

If you’re an impala or a zebra (photo) on the South African savannah, there is no shortage of predators to worry about. You’d make a tempting meal for leopards, cheetahs, African wild dogs, and lions, especially if you are less bulky than the animals around you. How do you stay one step ahead of all those hungry mouths?
To avoid being caught by surprise, you’d best keep your ears open. That means listening for any cries of warning from your fellows and eavesdropping on the other species around you. It turns out that impalas, wildebeests, and zebras can recognize each other’s calls. What’s more, they do not pay the same amount of attention to each alarm cry, scientists reported on 19 February 2018 in the journal Animal Behaviour. When the researchers broadcast zebra calls, all three species went on the alert. But when zebras heard impala or wildebeest calls, they were less perturbed. This could be because impalas are smaller and targeted by more predators, making their calls less concerning for the other, larger, herbivores.
“They know what the calls mean, that there’s a predator around,” says coauthor Meredith Palmer, an ecologist at the University of Minnesota’s St. Paul campus. “But they also know to temper the degree to which they respond to these calls based on how much of a threat this call is actually signaling to them.” There are plenty of animals that listen in on other species’ chatter, including birds, primates, and rodents. Scrub wrens and fairy wrens flee when they hear each other’s alarm calls, while nuthatches eavesdrop on chickadees, and vervet monkeys heed superb starling warnings. Eavesdropping lets an animal stay in the know without much effort. “You’re not out there gathering that information firsthand, you’re just intercepting it from your environment,” Palmer says. It’s common for wildebeests, zebras, and impalas to group together while grazing, and all three have distinctive alarm calls. Startled impalas let out a series of short barks, while wildebeests make sneeze-like snorts and zebras bray, whinny, and snort. Since they spend so much time together, Palmer suspected these herbivores might recognize their neighbor’s warning noises. She and her colleague, Abby Gross, also of the University of Minnesota, gathered recordings of each of these cries with a little help from a life-sized photograph of a stalking lion mounted on plywood. They wheeled the ersatz lion through the bush in hopes of surprising zebra, wildebeest, and impala, then filmed their reactions. Later, the researchers played the alarm calls at grazing herds of each animal. They then watched to see how long the animals spent scanning their surroundings for predators, as well as how swiftly they began to sound the alarm or flee. For every species, zebra calls provoked strong reactions. Generally, though, zebras ignored impala or wildebeest calls or only stayed vigilant for a brief time after hearing them. This is likely because zebras, which weigh in at more than four hundred pounds, don't have to worry about as many threats as other animals. Impalas, on the other hand, max out at under two hundred pounds. While hefty herbivores like zebras and wildebeests are mostly hunted by lions, impalas are often on the menu for smaller carnivores such as cheetahs as well. That means an impala distress cry is less likely to signal imminent danger to a zebra. Impalas themselves were alarmed by every animal’s distress call. They also were more likely to flee if they heard zebra or wildebeest calls than those of their own kind. This may be because impalas are skittish and prone to sounding false alarms. “If you’re an impala and you know that other impala are probably responding to a predator but there’s also a 25 percent chance that they are alarm calling at some waving grass, maybe you would give more weight to an alarm call from something like a zebra which perhaps is a little more discriminatory,” Palmer says. Strangely, wildebeests fled more quickly after hearing impala calls than wildebeest ones. This might be because it’s actually easier for wildebeest to leave an area and return once they realize there is no threat than trying to focus on eating and looking around for a stalking lion at the same time. In future, Palmer plans to investigate how zebras, impalas, and wildebeests learn to link other animals’ distress calls with danger.
Rico says it's tough being prey...
https://apple.news/AuvHvDrqVQnezNwOeVU6ttg

Rico says being black can be dangerous...

https://apple.news/AxAns593rTmK3Q6wYl6cdYQ

Rico says the little guy always gets screwed...

https://apple.news/AeJnFmLJyQa-DbGLAYsFEJw

Rico says the Universe continues to amaze...

https://apple.news/A5E-vgNIcQueufwLNrKknog

Rico says somebody fucked up...

https://apple.news/AbjMGKp9PS_-MqQ0polgekQ

Rico says new idiot for the day...


The girls in their summer dresses.
Quote for the day, from Marie Osmond:
I never had a sister growing up. Donny was the closest thing
To all you spam callers out there: what part of "Fuck You" didn't you understand?

25 March 2018

Watching "Pearl Harbor" makes Rico less sorry for Hiroshima and Nagasaki...

23 March 2018

Rico says he wins idiot for the day...
https://apple.news/AZX12e77eT12d_LizYJ-nIw

Rico says that sounds like jail time for these guys.

https://apple.news/AreExOq_QR3qF0t18vnA7bQ

Rico says more Russian trouble, right here in River City.

https://apple.news/Ag-Hhtx_1SQW9Sx6mY33SfA

Rico says it's a good idea, but won't catch on...

https://apple.news/Aca08zabLSn2BaZpuXkEh-w

Rico says that, fortunately, he did them anyway.

https://apple.news/AuE4sKqfQSwSZZ5aNYlQ8OQ

Rico says, if you can afford it, drink it.

https://apple.news/A8plKdwaSSgaFr_gtUtAriA

Rico says he hated his foldable phone years ago, and doesn't want one now...

22 March 2018

https://apple.news/A66hnu2tDQyKh3kKJ83LpMw

Rico says Mother Nature is always smarter...

https://apple.news/AkOc8vV8OTw-hdXk0QAWnTw

Rico says enough whining... Apple just does it better.

https://apple.news/ATA8wOnH6Taq88kVVjlxmWg

Rico says things are heating up in merchandising...

https://apple.news/A6IC9jUnXQZWsOGnIA6Dy5w

Rico says he's glad that's over.

From "Contagion": Blogging is not writing. It's graffiti with punctuation.
https://apple.news/AJnbdflLpSiS1TsDePEoOGA

Rico says we know he's an idiot...

19 March 2018

14 March 2018

Another great one gone: Stephen Hawking.
Not unexpected, but sad.
Of course it's 11:11
Rico says another idiot politician...

https://apple.news/AcJAD-heUSwK_mc9-GuB0Yw

Rico says how to make enemies out of friends...

https://apple.news/AVJQuP0k0RJWun1uTSYYwEw

Loretta Swit http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0842794/

In an episode of Gunsmoke, of all things...