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The New American Digest

For Followers of Gerard Van der Leun's Fine Work

  • About American Digest
  • About New American Digest
  • “The Name In The Stone”
  • Remembering Gerard Van der Leun
    • from the website: Through the Looking Glass
    • from the website: Barnhardt
    • from the website: Neo’s Blog
  • Articles
    • The Overland Stage
      • The Holladay Overland Stage: 1 – The Central Route
      • The Overland Stage – 2 Company Operations
      • The Overland Stage – 3 Exploring The Route – An Overview
      • The Overland Stage: 4 – South Platte/Julesburg/Ft Sedgwick
        • Jack Slade
      • The Overland Stage: 5 – Julesburg to Junction Station (aka Ft Morgan)
      • The Overland Stage: 6 – Junction Station to Latham
      • The Overland Stage: 7 – Latham Crossing to Fort Collins
      • The Overland Stage: 8 – LaPorte to Virginia Dale
      • The Overland Stage: 9 – Virginia Dale to Cooper Creek
      • The Overland Stage: 10 – Cooper Creek to Pass Creek
        • Fletcher Family
      • The Overland Stage: 11 – Pass Creek to Bridger Station
      • The Overland Stage: 12 – Bridger Pass to Duck Lake
      • The Overland Stage: 13 – Duck Lake to LaClede
      • The Overland Stage: 14 – LaClede to Almond
      • The Overland Stage: 15 – Almond to Rock Springs
      • The Overland Stage: 16 – Rock Springs to Fort Bridger
      • The Overland Stage: 17 – Fort Bridger to Weber Station

I find I don’t wish to explore new lands, but to explore again those I have already passed through, trying to see what I’d missed in the first hectic rush … Gerard Van der Leun

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Slipsticks

The New American Digest Posted on June 18, 2026 by DTJune 18, 2026

For those in technical fields some large number of decades ago, slide rules were THE means of calculation.
No calculators, no PCs, no smart phones, no AI.

Recall (maybe) that slide rules work on the basic principle that adding logarithms is the equivalent of multiplication:
log(A x B) = log A + log B
log (A/B) = log A – log B
log Ac = c log A

Calculators got rid of that principle; Boolean (binary) logic was more conducive to electronic implementation (aka “digital” stuff).
And it’s been that way since … since roughly 1970.

But here now in 2026, AI and quantum computing are the current rage. And Nvidia is the king of the heap in providing the chips that drive that effort. If you have any investments in a ETF or mutual fund, you likely own shares of Nvidia – among if not the largest company in the world with a capitalization of over $5Trillion (1000 times 1 billion) – larger than all but 3 or 4 countries. (Elon Musk himself is now worth about $1T)

This just came over my transom:
A new company is challenging Nvidia … by implementing the electronic slide-rule methodology of using logarithms; binary logic systems have gotten too unwieldy. This is big if they can pull it off.

Tensordyne claims its 72-chip system can run large LLMs four times as fast using 20% of the power of Tensordyne’s new chip, Napier,s fast using one-fifth the power compared to a 72-Nvidia GB300 system.
The “secret” behind the outsized efficiency of the new device is how it does matrix multiplication, the main math of AI. It takes advantage of the fact that the logarithm of A times B equals the logarithm of A plus the logarithm of B.
“We’ve turned multipliers into adders,” explains Gilles Backhus, a Tensordyne founder and vice president of AI. Adders are smaller and more energy-efficient logic circuits than those that do multiplication, he says. So Napier can pack more compute into a smaller area and still save on power.

Can’t help it – this is the kind of stuff that captures my interest.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a reply

Somewhere Over The Rainbow

The New American Digest Posted on June 18, 2026 by DTJune 16, 2026

Off CO92 outside Crawford, Colorado – which incidentally, is where Joe Cocker spent his last years. No, I never met him.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Reply

Oregon to California and New York:

The New American Digest Posted on June 17, 2026 by DTJune 17, 2026

Here – hold my beer.

I see an article on ZeroHedge by Tyler Durden:
“New Oregon Initiative Would Criminalize Hunting, Fishing And Farming“

This has been in the local news recently seeing as the state line is right over there … and it’s heavy ranch and farming country (and desert as well to be fair). Going to be fun, fishing by boat from the Snake River.
One side you fix yourself a meal; the other, the county fixes it for you.

One segment:
“Leftist activists have adopted the age-old mantra that the “squeaky wheel gets the oil”; but imagine a wheel that never gets enough oil?  Imagine a movement specifically designed to keep society constantly on egg shells, trying to figure out different ways to satisfy that squeaky wheel so it will finally shut up?
One eventually has to ask the obvious question:  Why don’t we simply throw that insufferable wheel in the garbage?
“

“If passed, the law would effectively criminalize the entire meat production base for the state under “animal cruelty” statutes.“

[Final sentence]
“This is why the majority of Americans distrust and despise vegans: It not because they’ve chosen a different lifestyle, it’s because they are obsessed with forcing that lifestyle on everyone else.“

Two things I noted:
1) Tyler Durden is a pseudonym: This “feels” like it was written by AI … or equally “flat”, a committee.
2) Not just vegans

Posted in Uncategorized | 7 Replies

Rocks

The New American Digest Posted on June 17, 2026 by DTJune 16, 2026

… with a few cows

Posted in Uncategorized | 3 Replies

Blogger

The New American Digest Posted on June 16, 2026 by DTJune 16, 2026

Seems to be on the warpath the past few days.

This message is getting to be common:
Sorry, the blog at variouswebsites.blogspot.com has been removed. This address is not available for new blogs.

It’s one reason this site is on WordPress.

Posted in Uncategorized | 7 Replies

Tunesday: King Crimson – Epitaph

The New American Digest Posted on June 16, 2026 by DTJune 10, 2026

A sample of some obscure – and maybe not obscure – tunes from my strange and off-the-wall collection.

Today’s medley selection: King Crimson – “Epitaph” 1969

From the 1969 album “In The Court Of The Crimson King“, the cut was released as a single in 1976.

King Crimson was a 5-man band formed in London in 1968. “In The Court Of The Crimson King” was their first and most successful album. The original band broke up and personnel fluctuated during the recording of the band’s 2nd and 3rd LPs: “In The Wake Of Poseidon” and “Lizard“. One of those changes in personnel was with Greg Lake (bass, vocals), who because of the band’s uncertain future, teamed up with Keith Emerson of Nice and Carl Palmer of Atomic Rooster to form Emerson, Lake, and Palmer after recording Poseidon.

Posted in tunes, Uncategorized | 1 Reply

In Case You Were All Wondering

The New American Digest Posted on June 15, 2026 by DTJune 15, 2026

Larry Lambert over at Virtual Mirage posted a picture of me preparing posts for New American Digest.

Enjoy … 🙂

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Replies

Little America

The New American Digest Posted on June 15, 2026 by DTJune 12, 2026

Proving it’s possible to be in the middle of nowhere even on a modern interstate, roughly halfway between Green River and Fort Bridger in Wyoming off I-80, sits a motel with gas. Or what used to be just a motel with gas. Perhaps the only motel with gas in the country with its own zip code (82929) and listed as a census-designated place (pop. 68).

Stephen Covey was herding sheep as a boy in the 1890s and got lost in a blizzard. Forced to make camp in 50mph winds and -40° temperatures, he recalled dearly wishing for shelter of some kind. In 1929, Covey saw photos of Admiral Byrd’s Little America camp in Antarctica. Recalling his time as a boy, he returned to the place he camped in 1934 and built a 12-cabin motel with two gas pumps. He added a cocktail lounge with small cafe for travellers along the Lincoln Highway which would eventually become US30, then I-80. It was named “Little America” because Covey felt the comparison with Byrd’s Antarctica station was valid: a place of shelter in the midst of a (at times) frozen, desolate wasteland.

That’s the highway in the foreground. Burned down in 1949

It was Robert Holding that turned Covey’s Little America into the empire it is today. The stop was struggling financially, the facility was isolated and staff was hard to hire and keep. Covey offered Holding and his wife the opportunity to manage the place. They accepted and moved into a small apartment on the grounds. Winter weather caused frequent closures of I-80 (still does), stranding travellers literally on their doorstep. The Holdings chose to concentrate on quality and volume rather than taking advantage of those caught in the frequent road closures.

Building on the Antarctica inspiration, penguins were chosen as the facility mascot. Billboards were placed 100s of miles away, reminding travellers that an oasis in nowhere awaited them. Large ice cream cones were a staple in the advertisements; originally a dime until inflation caused a rise in price to 50¢ (I believe the price has now increased to 75¢ but still a value for the money).

1952 – now US30

Gasoline sales were so successful, the Holdings bought their own refinery in Casper and in 1976, they bought out Sinclair. In 1979, a massive blizzard stranded 500 people. The hotel rooms were full, every spare mattress and blanket was pulled from storage and lined the hallways. The kitchen stayed open, serving coffee and soup to all regardless of payment.

TheAt one time, the stop had the largest number of gas pumps in the world with 55 pumps.

Robert Holding died in 2013 holding a personal worth of over $3billion

The billboard penguins have been removed, the facility evolved into Grand America Hotels & Resorts consisting of a chain of 8 facilities. The original site now has over 140 hotel rooms but still only has 55 gas pumps.

The company is still owned by the holding family but like many successful ventures, quality and service got in the way of profits.

A different time
Posted in Uncategorized | 7 Replies

Pay Up

The New American Digest Posted on June 14, 2026 by DTJune 14, 2026

Stole this from MidwestChick‘s place:

At least they’re telling the truth instead of some nonsense like “Safety” or “For the Children”.

You have to pay a fee for permission to drive effectively – a license so to speak, billed upon usage. But you’re only allowed a certain number of fees paid before you get a time out until your fee count resets.

I assume this is Aurora, Colorado so I have to believe those that posted this sign didn’t realize the message.

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Replies

Questions …

The New American Digest Posted on June 14, 2026 by JeanJune 14, 2026

Posted by Jean April 25, 2026

Do you pray?
Why? and to what?
Do you get answers?
Did someone teach you
Bless me, Father, for I have sinned…?
it’s been a long time
since my last confession.
Do you feel better after Amen?

I thought about joining a convent
until I read “The Nun’s Story”.
That’s when I started asking questions.
I was 10. 

Posted in Uncategorized | 8 Replies

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Contact: dt@newamericandigest.org

Gerard Van der Leun
12/26/45 - 1/27/23


Gerard's Last Post
(posthumous): Feb 4, 2023
"So Long. See You All a Little Further Down the Road"

When my body won’t hold me anymore
And it finally lets me free
Where will I go?
Will the trade winds take me south through Georgia grain?
Or tropical rain?
Or snow from the heavens?
Will I join with the ocean blue?
Or run into a savior true?
And shake hands laughing
And walk through the night, straight to the light
Holding the love I’ve known in my life
And no hard feelings

Avett Brothers - No Hard Feelings

The following was posted along with the announcement of Gerard's passing.
Leonard Cohen - Going Home

For a 2005 interview with Gerard


June 2026
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Most Recent Comments

  1. DT on Oregon to California and New York:June 18, 2026

    It's not the technology you have or don't have, it's the technology they do have

  2. ghostsniper on Somewhere Over The RainbowJune 18, 2026

    I saw Cocker and his entourage in Feb 77 on a flight from Nashville to Atlanta. Never been impressed with…

  3. GrayDog on Oregon to California and New York:June 17, 2026

    I never call my subordinates "Sir". Maybe that's just how I was raised. Otherwise, do everything you think you need…

  4. jean on BloggerJune 17, 2026

    ok I guess.

  5. ghostsniper on Oregon to California and New York:June 17, 2026

    Because I'm in a public forum I can't go into detail but I have accomplished about 90% of your "off…


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The New Neo
Jean's Blog - Pondering
The Feral Irishman

Hey, Mr. Tambourine Man,
play a song for me
I'm not sleepy
and there ain't no place I'm goin' to

Hey, Mr. Tambourine Man,
play a song for me
In the jingle jangle morning,
I'll come followin' you

Take me for a trip upon
your magic swirling ship
All my senses have been stripped
And my hands can't feel to grip
And my toes too numb to step
Wait only for my boot heels to be wanderin'

I'm ready to go anywhere,
I'm ready for to fade
Unto my own parade
Cast your dancing spell my way
I promise to go under it


Men who saw night coming down about them could somehow act as if they stood at the edge of dawn.


From Gerard's site. The picture always caught my eye.

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