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Update

Today I learned that Lauren like big, old things

I’ve not had a big update post in a while, but that’s because I’ve been busy having things to do.  Let me explain.

Mom came to visit.  Well, not really.  She came to see Tyler and Danny, and band, play.  She brought my PS3 and bought me PoP and LBP, so I’ve had new games to play in my free time.  PS3 is getting quite a bit of love.  LBP is a good game for my crowd here.  Lauren and I have beaten the main story.  The gang sorta paired off since I only have two controllers.  Anyway, we’re working on getting all the items still, which will take a while.  We explored some player made content today, which was pretty neat.

Ok, besides that, I also had a big 481 paper and presentation on Friday we were working on all week.  Well, really just Wednesday and Thursday.  We were busy working on the actual project for 481 on the other days.

Immediately after my presentation I went to Elisabeth’s with her and 7 other people.  Like, immediately.  I was still wearing that ridiculous get up they make us wear for presentations.  So, we did a lot of hanging out and whatnot at Elisabeth’s.  The guys, Hiro, Yusuke, myself, and Dan, played basketball.

On Valentine’s day each gender made food for the other.  We male’s got fish, since there’s a female veggie, and a couple other fish haters, and they chose stuffed peppers for us to make them.  In the end the division of labor was a little fuzzy, and there was quite a bit of sharing, but it was a very fancy occassion.  We had candles, and the sparkling cider, and fancy plates, and suits and ties and dresses and all that good stuff.  After that we went hot tubbing.  After that we males did pushups.  Then we watched Star Wars Episode IV.  Kinda, there were two people who watched it, and everyone else kinda watched or slept or goofed off.

There was also some incidental shopping and driving around during the Elisabeth visit.  And we all went and saw some children’s musical for some reason.  Elisabeth’s mom got us in for free.  Put on by homeschoolers, in like a church.  Yeah.  Whatever.

So, that’s pretty much the gist of what’s happened.  Had today off cause it’s a national holiday and all that.  School soon, though.  Rest of the time for me here at Central is going to be quite busy, I think, so if I dissapear from the blogosphere for a month or so, pity is the appropriate response.

Categories
Things I enjoy

Fashionable and practicle

Maybe it’s just the model but this seems ridiculously… uh… cool.

I don’t think it’s just the model.  I like corsets, and I like Star Trek… so it makes sense.  /shrug

From BoingBoing.

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Analytics

Thanks other people for the hits

  • dare officer gene
  • chloe butterworth, kennewick, wa
  • helen marie havnaer
  • plot device
  • tim minchin
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Uncategorized

Query the audience

I have to write a research paper about some societal issue that is impacted by computers.  I have to have two paper based sources as well, which kinda baffles me.  I can’t remember the last time I had a paper based source.  They know books and magazines are on the internet, too, right?  Got ideas?

Categories
Things I think

Case Analyses

I have two case studies due in my computer ethics class tomorrow.  I don’t really know what format he wanted, but I think I fulfilled the stated requirements.  I’m going to post what I have in full for you to enjoy if you want.  You have until tomorrow at around 3 to inform me of grammar and spelling mistakes.

Categories
Things I enjoy

GOOOOOOOOOOOOAAAAAAALLLLLLLLLLsss!!!!

I’ve never been one to make goals, and this is slightly problematic given the little experiment my aunt and I have, apparently, determined to set up.  (see comments)  I mean, I know the important goal, the thing I actually strive for, happiness.  I wish to be happy in life.  After that it’s a little fuzzy.

I think setting specific goals can often distract from what is really important, but since I’ve already determined what’s really important, I’ll list some things that I currently believe would help me with that goal.  They’re not things specific enough to objectively measure achievement, but they’re the general direction I’ll be trying to head.

  1. Have good friends and do things with them
  2. Have a job that is either
    1. simple and not very time consuming
    2. rewarding and vivifying
    3. both 1 and 2
  3. Improve the world, by my standards, which include
    1. increasing scientific knowledge
    2. increasing critical thinking skills
    3. providing entertainment
    4. producing a product that people use (for good)
    5. alleviating suffering (current and/or future)
    6. making enough money to donate significant quantities to people doing 1 – 5
  4. Maintain or improve my health
  5. Increase my skill set and knowledge

That seems like a pretty good list.  It is kinda late, though.  I’ll update it if I think of anything to add.  Am I missing anything big?

Categories
Things I think

Waxing economical

There’s been lots of talk about the economy lately, and, if anything, it’s underscored how I don’t understand as much of it as I thought I did and how my position on what is smart policy seems to shift in the face of an actual test, but never-the-less, I blog to you this day a bit of wisdom I feel sure of regarding our greatest institution.  Money.

I feel confident that many of you already know this, but it has come to my attention from some of the piss poor arguments of people on the radio and around the lab that some of you don’t.  And in my experience, when some people don’t know something of the nature and import of the wisdom I reference, there is often an even greater number of people who don’t know that they don’t know it, and they’re likely to believe whatever the first person tells them on the subject.  So in the case that you are in that last category, I hope you read this post before it is too late.

The information I will impart is somewhat tricky in that it is not something that seems immediately important.  It is of the variety of being so basic in depth that it doesn’t warrant discussion, and consequently is often not taught.  It is knowledge people tend to intuit, and not know that they do it, which is knowledge of a dangerous sort, because intuition is very often wrong.

You can recognize those who are confused on this subject, most often, by their stance against business.  Now, this is not mutually inclusive in either direction.  Meaning, people who hate business are not always mistaken about this wisdom I’ve yet to impart, and people who are mistaken do not always rant about the evils of corporations.  Still, arguments I’ve had with people who seem to have an irrational hatred of business lead to me recognizing this malformed piece of knowledge as being an issue, and it makes sense those mistaken would be against our corporate “overlords”.

I’ve drawn out the wisdom far too long.  I seem to be doing that lately.  Used to just get straight to the point like a good scientist.  Maybe I’m becoming too influenced by showmen.  Now I’m rambling on tangential me.  Here it is.  In the economy, everyone can benefit.

People seem to forget this very fundamental principal on which commerce is based.  I have donkeys, you want donkeys, you have limited edition Star Wars collectible action figures with light saber action, I want limited edition Star Wars collectible action figures with light saber action, we trade, we both are better off.  It’s totally obvious with bartering, but when you put the intermediary in, money, people somehow think that if someone is making money, they must be losing money.  So remember, even though Microsoft and Exxon have tons of money, it doesn’t mean if they didn’t exist their money would be in the hands of the little people.

Let me make sure you are following the important core logic by giving an example that’s more illustrative, and less humorous.  I have water, which has an intrinsic value to people because we need it to survive.  You have food, which is essentially the same.  Now, I value my water, because if I didn’t have it, I would die of dehydration, but you value it more, because you haven’t had anything to drink in a week.  You value your food, because if you didn’t have it, you would starve, but I value it more, because I haven’t eaten in seven days.  We meet, exchange goods, and both get to live.  Seems very good.  It works even with money.  We meet, each thinking our good is worth $1 per days worth, but that the other’s good is worth $2 per days worth.  After exchanging a days worth of goods we each, by our own evaluations, have gained $1, and the global economy increased by $2.

Somehow people fall into the trap of thinking the Earth is a closed system.  (This is a core mistake for some creationists, as well)  Money is a representation of value, and as time passes, people work to create value.  We also consume valuables, but not necessarily at a pace equal to our production.  There is not a finite amount of value, and therefore money, on Earth.  This is why everyone in the first world lives much better than royalty a few hundred years ago did, and why it’s ok if the Chinese, Indians, and Africans improve their standard of living.  They’re not going to take all our money away, we’re making more of it.

It is true that our system is not perfect.  There are all kinds of ways people can make money without producing value, and those people make life a little worse for everyone.  And it is true that proportions of money can shift between groups of people.  Maybe the rise of the developing nations is happening faster than would be permitted by the slow movement of the global economy, and that those nations are taking some of the 1st world’s wealth.  But issues such as these will not be solved if people do not correctly understand the fundamental system we are working to optimize.

I don’t want to devolve into talking about petty details, but I feel a need to point out two of the obvious conclusions from this understanding of the economy.  I’m gonna state them in the positive, but their negative corollaries are also true and useful to think about.  One, business, in general, is good.  It’s never as simple as two people exchanging goods in the real economy, but usually, when money trades hands, it is good for the economy.  Two, money is lost in inefficiency of getting stuff to the people who value it most.  This means systems of finding what stuff is available, and how much people want stuff, are good.

Just think about it some, even if you think you’ve got it.  And that comment button down there works if you need it.  Aunt Sandra has tested it.

Categories
Things I enjoy

Ladies and gentlemen… Tim Minchin

I recently have been introduced to Tim Minchin, through the SGU.  His stuff is pretty excellent.  He’s got lots of things on youtube you can lookout.  I particularly recommend the following.

Categories
Update

I r on duty

I haven’t updated in a while for a couple reasons.  Probably the most important is that I’ve been busy.  We had a giant paper due for that capstone class I have, and I also had some programming assignments due in my other classes.  I was very productive during the beginning of this week so I’m a bit ahead now, although I still have much on the horizon.  The other reason is that my internet is so atrociously slow back in the dorm that I can’t seem to load all the WordPress stuff I need to make a new post.  Sad, ain’t it.

So what’s been happening?  I wrote a genetic algorithm.  It’s really simple, just supposed to optimize a two variable algebraic inequality, but it’s still cool, imho.  I had a bug that flummoxed me for several hours until I got Keston to look at it.  He fixed it in like 5 minutes.  So, kudos to him.  I tried to make it general, and some of that kinda went by the wayside when I hit the bugs and the deadline, but I’m hoping it’s close and can be easily adapted for alternative projects.

Lauren, keeper of the Netflix queue, has realized that I’m leaving soon, never to complain about their movie selections again, so she’s bumped up all the movies I’ve been suggesting over the year.  So we watched Equilibrium, The Professional, and soon Airplane.  Elisabeth and Sidney opted out of The Professional, which was stupid of them.  I’m very disappointed.  I was a little nervous I wouldn’t like it as much as I remembered, but I still stand by my 10 star rating on IMDB.

Funny coincidence, The Totally Rad Show that was released two days after we watched it had The Professional as their recommended Netflix rental, and Dan said he thought it was a flawless movie.  I don’t really agree with Dan’s movie taste in a lot of ways, but we’re together on that one.  Anyway, the point is, Sidney and Elisabeth are dumb for missing it, and I don’t forgive them.  And anyone who doesn’t like that movie… well, I’ve never heard of such a thing, so please explain yourself.

Pat didn’t come visit me, cause he a sucka foo, or something.  I didn’t get him anything for his bday, though, so we’ll call it even.

Helen Marie Havnaer is my friend on facebook now.  You guys remember her?  From camp that one year when I was like 12?  /shurg  Well, I do.

Tomorrow Tyler‘s band is going to play on campus.  Mom’s coming to see him, and I’ll go.  Hopefully I can get others to go.

There’s more, but I guess they’re the subject of different posts.

Categories
Things I've learned

now you know

25% of false convictions were for cases where an innocent confessed.