Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Speed costs - How fast do you want to spend?

Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of WorkShop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work by Matthew B. Crawford

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


This book is fantastic. As a former carpenter, who at the risk of sounding self-congratulatory thought myself a craftsman, I found his writing to open up a deep sense of kinship. This is a man who cares deeply about his work and his society. As someone who now works extensively with technology and computers, I found his mild technophobia a little misplaced but highly likeable. I see no difference between working with physical objects and working with bits and bytes, but that's my personal feeling and no reflection on the book; Crawford's yearning for quality, self direction and improvement rings true. Readers may find deeper appreciation for their own jobs after reading this.



Some reviewers complained about the language being overly complicated or "hard", and that just makes me sad for books generally and the American education system specifically. His writing is as beautiful and well crafted as it gets, and those people should stop expecting pabulum, whip out a dictionary, and grow up.





View all my reviews

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Friday, September 16, 2011

Google Apps has made life difficult

It has taken me hours to undo the mess created by the Google Apps account migration tools.  Google plus remains hosed.  I love the free site hosting from Google apps but the cost had been high!

At least I can post from the Android Blogger app again.

More on this mess.


Saturday, May 28, 2011

Amazing movie: Transatlantic Tunnel (1935)

I just watched an old movie on Netflix streaming, and I was blown away by how good it was.  "Transatlantic Tunnel," filmed in 1935, was incredible, a quality science fiction movie with an impressive set of correct technological predictions.  The movie is set in the late 40's to mid 50's, and predicts:

  • Skype
  • Wireless Skype
  • Awkward social situations caused by Skype
  • Clean rooms / Central control rooms (almost a data center)
  • Widespread use of broadcast television
  • Widescreen television
  • Vertical take off and landing of heavier than air vehicles
  • Mobile Skype (VTOL aircraft to Home, Automobile to Home)
  • Helipads on top of buildings
  • Advanced tunnel boring technology
  • The Chunnel (the Engish Channel Tunnel)
  • An impending war with powers from "the east" (possibly Germany or Russia)
  • Issues with supplying war material from America to Great Britain during a European theater war
  • America and Great Britain coming together as allies during a European theater war
  • Love quadrangles with high-stakes stock price chicanery (ala Gordon Gecko)
  • The "military industrial complex".
The flick created detailed, plausible, science fiction movies sets and promptly ignored them in favor of a decent human plot, including fully realized female characters in pivotal roles, in the same vein as James Cameron in The Abyss, Alien, and of course Avatar.  Science fiction at it's best, this movie is a gem, check it out!

Friday, March 11, 2011

Energy itself is pixelated


Energy itself is pixelated, like zooming in so far on a digital image that you see it's made of colored squares, or compressing an MP3 until the sound quality degrades.
Check it out:

Planck constant - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: "This inherent granularity is counterintuitive in the everyday world, where it is possible to 'make things a little bit hotter' or 'move things a little bit faster', This is because the quanta of energy are very, very small in comparison to everyday human experience. Thus, on the macro scale quantum mechanics and classical physics converge. Nevertheless, it is impossible, as Planck found out, to explain some phenomena without accepting that energy is quantized; that is, it can only equal certain energy levels with space in between them."

I wonder what Schrödinger's cat thinks of that?

Friday, February 11, 2011

Mubarak's Swiss Assets Frozen - WSJ.com

See - this is what happens when you let Democracy do it's thing. It's simply awesome.

Mubarak's Swiss Assets Frozen - WSJ.com

Glen Beck makes me want to puke

I can't believe how Beck is coming down on what is happening in Egypt. I don't agree with much of what he says, but this approach is anti-democratic and deeply offensive. It appears Dark Ages Christianity is alive, well, and just as xenophobic as ever.

As a Democrat however, I think it's wonderful that he's ripping his own party to pieces with this drivel.

How Egypt crisis has divided U.S. politicians - CNN.com

In exact contradiction to Beck's loony perspective we should take a look at what is happening with the Iranian Green Party today:

Iran's Greens seek to fire up support

Tuesday, February 08, 2011

Mothers-to-Be Are Getting the Message - NYTimes.com

Look at this. With the extended family (the "normal" source of information for new parents) being non-existant in America, what's the next best option? Why, text messages of course. It's sad, and fascinating, and I hope it works.

Mothers-to-Be Are Getting the Message - NYTimes.com

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Tethered MyTouch 4G speed test

Just measured my speed while on a Chicago Metra train bound for Braeside.  Not exactly full 4G, but still, not bad.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

When liver donations go wrong - CNN.com

Our medical industry, which to me seems like just another labor union, is a bizzare collection of old school protectionist practices and it needs a serious overhaul.

Why is it that statistics on outcomes are unavailable, and mistakes are covered up or treated as if they are impossible?

From CNN.com...

When liver donations go wrong - CNN.com: "When a donor has a complication, the hospital is expected to do its own investigation and report to the United Network for Organ Sharing, or UNOS, which oversees transplants for the federal government.
'This isn't acceptable,' says Dr. Lloyd Ratner, director of renal and pancreatic transplant surgery at Columbia University.
'Never in a million years would we say to BP, 'Oh, you had an oil spill in the Gulf, why don't you do your own investigation and just tell us about it?' ' he said. 'That would be just crazy. It's not acceptable in other industries to do that, so why is it acceptable in ours?'"

Monday, November 22, 2010

The scanners are riskier than the terrorists

Check out the math in the article linked below, the quote coming from dosimetry expert Peter Rez.

Protests Mount Over Safety And Privacy Of Airport Scanners : Shots - Health News Blog : NPR:

"Rez agrees the individual risk is still negligible. 'It's a 1-in-20-million chance of dying from radiation for each scan,' he says. 'Your chances of being struck by lightning in the US in any year is 1 in 500,000. But the probability of being blown up in an airplane by a terrorist is around 1 in 30 million. So the risk from the scan is about the same as the thing you're trying to prevent.'"

Tuesday, November 09, 2010

Enable ping in Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008

Working on a network with Windows 7 or Windows Server 2008 is a pain when you just want to ping.  I'm sure there are swell reasons these operating systems have ping turned off, but I'm on a protected domain at work, and I'm not worried about a DOS attack or whatever MS is worried about.

Here is how you enable these operating systems to respond to a ping...

  1. Open a command prompt as an administrator.  Go to Start/Accessories/Command Prompt and right-click, selecting "run as administrator".
  2. At the command prompt, type (or paste) "netsh firewall set icmpsetting 8". 
  3. Hit enter.
  4. Read the bit scolding you about using a deprecatedcommand, then promptly ignore all that if the command returned "Ok."
  5. Enjoy pinging your machine.