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WIDLM: Lag

This is just a generic one. Everyone hates lag, so it’s not very insightful, and I don’t really have anything to add to the subject, but I just really hate lag. In a few minutes I’m going to try and play Modern Warfare 3 with my friends, but it will only be like half as fun as it should be because of lag. And tomorrow, hopefully, I’ll get into Star Wars: The Old Republic and I’ll probably die a few times when I shouldn’t have because of lag.

The world would be better without lag. I wish it would stop existing.

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WIDLM: my chair

We’re going small time this week. I’ve been sitting here trying to figure out what I don’t like and it’s been right under my… nose.

I got this chair about 8 years ago. It is a Costco computer chair. Probably like $90. And I have sat in it quite a bit. I have sat in it so much at this point that pretty much all the padding has been smooshed the sides where I don’t sit. It makes the chair difficult to use for the marathons I would put it to. It is not so uncomfortable that I move around very much more than I would otherwise, though, I don’t think. Once it gets to that point it will probably actually sorta be a good thing, and I’ll probably switch chairs.

In the mean time, if any of you have any techniques or fixes for this particular problem, let me know.

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I missed WIDLM

so clearly the world is perfect.

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WIDLM: Aging

It’s my birthday tomorrow. I’ll be 27. Not exactly old, but I can still remember times in the past when I could remember easier or run longer. That running thing could probably be overcome with exercise. Regardless, it puts into mind the notion that aging is pretty lame.

I’m sure it serves some useful purposes. Like, uh… I dunno. No, can’t really think of any. We should do away with it.

Aging isn’t necessary. I know because some animals don’t really do it, like tortoises. Aging is a problem not recognized by biology, (at least in our case) and therefore one that hasn’t been solved. Any issues you see with it are only issues because we’ve built our notions of reality and society around the idea that people age and die. Aging should be classified as a disease, a cure funded by government money, walks should be walked and a ribbon color should be worn.

A world without aging would be a different place, but it would be way better. Pretty much all other disease is really just being old, so if we cured old, we’d wipe out a lot of other diseases with it. I could wax hypothetical about other possible ways curing aging would be nice, but I’m getting too old for this. I’m gonna go lie down for a while.

Side note: I watched Star Trek: Insurrection yesterday. That’s the one *minor spoiler alert* with the planet bathed in magical radiation that magically rebuilds DNA making you young forever and magically has no negative side effects or magic. In like 2 days on the planet Worf unaged from mid 40’s to puberty. If such a place existed, I see no reason to destroy the planet or move the local population. Just get everyone to take a weekend holiday there once every 20 years or so and you’re golden. Maybe the effect goes away once one leaves the radiation or something, although, from the magical mechanism they give for eternal youth, I don’t see why it would.

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WIDLM: Snail Mail

Mostly I’m just writing this one because I don’t have Modern Warfare 3 yet. I preordered it, and they shipped it to me starting the day after it came out from New Jersey, even though there are like 1,000 copies within 10 miles of me. What kind of a stupid system is this? I’m pretty sure I’ll get it later today, but man, the inefficiency is bothersome, almost as bothersome as missing out on the beginning of the games life cycle. QQ

Just in general I don’t much see the need for snail mail anymore. Obviously it is still necessary to some extent, since some old people don’t have internet and of course physical objects need to mailed. But games are digital, no reason I couldn’t have just downloaded MW3. And post cards are tweets from 100 years ago. Time to update people.

I don’t really have a point this week. I just don’t like sending, receiving, or in any way interacting with the mail service. I’m glad it exists when I need it, but that’s pretty rare. So when they talk on TV about how the USPS is gonna go under, I sorta think it’s time. We can’t bail out everything forever.

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WIDLM: Grades

I don’t like grades. I haven’t liked them for a while, and not for the usual kid reasons of having bad ones. I’ve had a lot of grades in my life, more than most, and a lot of A’s too. More than most. And I still don’t like grades. I will ramble about why… now.

By grades I mean the big A or C or whatever you get at the end of class that sums up the whole year or semester. I am not against the concept of assessing ones learning, like, on a paper or test, but the report card grades put an unnecessary barrier between education and the goal of education, which is learning things. Since people only look at the grades, it becomes more important to get good grades than to actually know anything. I guess the purpose of grades must be as a way to communicate to the world how well you learned a subject, so let me go over all the ways grades are really bad at this. I’m sure you know them, but still.

As an indicator of whether someone knows anything the grade is only as good as the tests it is built on, and those mostly suck. Grades are temporally locked, so I can get an A one day, and forget it the next, but the A will never be changed. Grades are limited in scope. There’s no way to distinguish between the prodigy A and the just scraping by with cheating A, and there’s no way to distinguish between the got a C despite raising two kids C and the got a C because I was drunk during the final C. This limitation pigeon holes people, causing a self fulfilling prophecy. People are not motivated to do more than is necessary to get an A, so most don’t, and a similar situation exists for people on the cusp of the other letters. Teachers have complete control over grades and are pressured to have high scoring students, so that further skews grading, reducing its value. Grades are often given for group activities, but are only ever viewed on an individual basis, causing an unaccounted for delusion of credit. There are no universal standards between schools, disciplines, or teachers, so an A from one place is not the same as an A from somewhere else. I’m sure there are other’s but I grow bored with this.

Grades are bad at what they’re designed for, but they’re bad for a bunch of other reasons as well. Grading on a curve encourages competition instead of collaboration. They encourage teaching to, and learning to, the test. They stifle the great, since there’s nothing better than an A, and they discourage the struggling, since they get labeled permanently. They’re forced onto fields that they really don’t make sense for, any course where objective measures are not possible or desired. Grades are also stifling teaching creativity, since if they can’t grade it then they aren’t allowed to teach it.

Grades are not serving their intended purpose, or any other I can think of, and they’re making life a lot harder for pretty much everyone involved. I’m not sure I really have a solution to this problem, though. If I was asked to come up with something to try I’d say that we start with a system somewhat similar to what we have now. Several small tasks during a course, punctuated by a few bigger ones, each with grading similar to what is used now, although it could be tweaked to the teachers preference since it will no longer need to add up to a big letter at the end. Each course will end with a final project, and possibly a presentation of some sort. This final project must demonstrate the students understanding of all of the core principles of the course, the learning objectives. That project itself will be the grade. So, when you apply to college or whatever they can ask you for your Calculus project and your Junior and Senior English projects, or whatever they want. Physical projects will be a bit of a challenge, but photographs/videos should serve for most purposes. Some projects will likely require the presentation be included as well, as the students explanation of the project will be as important as the project itself.

In thinking about this project idea a little more, I come to like it better in that it’s not temporally locked. There’s nothing to say you couldn’t improve on your project. In fact, it seems it would be quite common in some fields to use a previous project as a starting point for your new project. After the course is over one could continue to work on the project and/or presentation to better reflect one’s current understanding. If a college or interviewer wanted a current snapshot of your abilities they’d simply demand a live presentation on the subject of whatever project they were most interested in.

The projects would be open ended, so they would be more interesting to the students and more informative to an interviewer. They’d function somewhat like a portfolio, but of your entire life. The artists have always had less use for grades, it makes sense that they would have figured out a good alternative.

Plus, added bonus, some of these projects would probably actually be useful. Like… leading to inventions and new companies. Unlike our current system which has us cranking out 1 million nearly identical papers on Romeo and Juliet every year.

As for cheating, I think it could be easily rooted out by just having a question and answer section in the presentations. Any student who had their project done by someone else would have to be intimately familiar with it anyway to answer any potential question, so the effect would be nearly identical, regardless. In fact, it would be nice if there would be some way to encourage mixing of projects when appropriate. For example, in computer programming classes, each student could code pieces of one greater program. Or students could work together to design and conduct a more complicated or extensive experiment than they could do alone, but would each still have to be responsible for a presentation and a QA session.

*shrug* seems pretty good to me.

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WIDLM: Fad Diets

This WIDLM was sparked by this post on BoingBoing. If you didn’t click the link, it is basically an ad for a book some guy wrote that can be summed up as, “Wheat is killing you!” It caught my attention partly because I’m the son of a wheat farmer, so wheat is always more interesting to me than most people, and because it’s not exactly the typical affair on BoingBoing. I went to the post soon after it showed up in my RSS feed and found 20 comments, 19 of which were negative toward the book, or the advertising nature of the post, so they really beat me to everything I had to say. So I’ll say it here.

I’ll broaden the focus here to include all the fad diets. Paleo diet, Atkin’s Diet, Low Carb diet, No Carb diet, No Fat diet, probably a bajillion I’ve never heard. They all fall into this category of not entirely crap, but mostly crap, that makes me uncomfortable. I can’t just say, “Crap!” and leave it at that. I have to qualify everything. So here it goes.

So, everyone knows these diets I’ve listed. Why? Because they were popular? Why? Well, it’s not because they work, or we wouldn’t have needed the 5th one. I think it’s because they each work well enough to create enough compelling anecdotes. You can’t have a diet book without a lot of anecdotes. That’s a must. So, for every popular fad diet out Ā there are probably dozens of others out there that didn’t even work well enough to break the threshold of minimum anecdotes.

“Well,” you say, “these ones worked better than the others, so there must be something to them”. “Yes,” I respond with numerous qualifications. If you think about this a little bit, the diets I’ve listed are not very different from each other. They all have you remove a huge portion of foods from your diet, most recently this has usually be carbs, before it was fat. My contention is that the people that lose weight on these diets do so because when they cut out those huge pieces of their diet out, they don’t replace it with as much other stuff. I mean, say you can’t eat carbs. That means whenever you want to eat you have to eat a salad, or a steak, or something harder to get a hold of than a cookie or toast. You’re just not as likely to over eat if you have the discipline to not eat carbs.

“Great,” you say, “you just proved that fad diets work.” No, I didn’t. I “proved” that eating less calories and burning the same amount causes you to lose weight. These diets don’t work because carbs/wheat/processed food/food combinations are bad for you, they work because they make it more difficult for you to over indulge in food in general.

I’ve got a new diet. It turns out that low altitude is the problem. Storing food at the same altitude as you live is bad for acid balance and your chi. Humans evolved from monkeys, who have to climb trees to reach their food, that is the natural order. What you need to do in this modern age is store your refrigerator, and all your other food, in a shed at least half a mile vertically above your house. You can eat whatever you want! If you get a craving for some pie, that’s fine, just put on your boots and hike to the food shed. The only rule is that you cannot eat in the food shed, cause that’s bad karma. You have to bring the food back down to your dining room table to enjoy it slowly like nature intended. And you can only bring back one meals worth, since if you have leftovers then you’d be storing it at your own altitude, and that would ruin all your hard work. I guarantee if you follow my system you will watch the pounds fall away. And here’s some anecdotes to tickle your emotion centers…

If you’re following along with me you might be thinking, “Well, fine, so the diets don’t really work because of the way people think they work, but so what? You’re still basically saying they work.” No, I’m not. Unfortunately, it’s not that simple. Defeating the animalistic desire to pack on as much weight as possible is a harder problem than that, and we’re not going to be able to beat it without understanding what we’re doing. Not eating carbs, is not something most people can do, and it’s not something most people want to do. As a result, people don’t keep up with these diets. That’s why they invent a new one every 6 months, it’s to catch all the people that started gaining weight since they quit the last one. People are kicking themselves over every crumb of bread they eat because they are convinced that those carbs are going to make them fat forever. It’s not that crumb that makes you fat, it’s the 10,000th crumb right after dinner. Avoiding the 10,000th crumb is a lot easier than allĀ the crumbs.

What people really need to do is just eat less and/or exercise more over a long period of time. The fad diets are a way to trick yourself into eating less for a little while, but they rarely work over the long term, because they’re extreme. People like extreme in a book. It sounds new, it sounds convincing, it sounds like it’s worth a shot. But extreme is not what people want when it comes to diets. At least not the majority of people. If most people wanted it, it wouldn’t be extreme.

All these diets do is trick you into eating less and convince you that whatever machinations they made you use to eat less were the key. I say, even though it’s not easy, we should at least keep in mind that eating less is what we’re actually trying to achieve, and not pretend and obscure it.

I don’t normally do this, but I’m going to give some suggestions of what would actually be better than these fad diets. Here are some ideas if you are trying to eat healthier and lose weight.

First, factor a food’s healthfulness into your equation of whether to eat it. I know, sounds simple, but I think a lot of people just eat whatever’s handy when they’re hungry, so long as it tastes good. I’m not saying never eat dessert, I’m saying that you have to really like that dessert, or be really really hungry in order to eat it. If you like pie more than cake, then maybe don’t eat cake. Or if you kinda like Doritos, but you know they’re really bad for you, maybe it’s not worth it. The worse a food is for you, the more you have to like it in order to eat it.

Second, substitute for the healthiest option you can stand. White or wheat? Wheat. 2% or skim? Skim. butter or margarine. Margarine. Always try the thing with the fewest calories. Maybe it’ll be terrible and you won’t eat it, then go back, but just try less. Maybe you’ve been slathering butter on your toast for so many years you don’t even know why you do it any more. Could be that if you had less you wouldn’t even be able to tell the difference. Constantly choose the smallest end of what you think will be acceptable. And keep decreasing these amounts. You know you don’t really need more than you’re using now. Slowly you’ll get used to the new norms, and many small changes will add up over time. This follows the formula from my first tip. Maybe you like whipped cream. Do you need whipped cream on all the things you put whipped cream on? If you had less would it taste worse? Do those sprinkles actually make the cookies taste better?

Third, exercise in your normal life. Park far away and walk. Take the stairs. When you’re carrying things, do curls. Stand on one leg in line. Anything you can think of to add a little bit of exercise into your day. Additionally, you’ll have to do actual exercise, but every little bit helps, and stuff like those examples are basically free. You should also try to go on walks and figure out a basic fitness routine. I recommend slowly building it up so you find an amount of exercise that fits into your schedule and won’t drive you crazy. As you get stronger you can up the amount of effort expended, but keep the time constant. This way you don’t end up skipping exercise entirely because you “don’t have time”.

Fourth, and I know there’s a theme here, but if you find that these smaller things aren’t working for you, and you are thinking of trying harder, more strict controls on yourself, do some slowly. Don’t all of a sudden eat half as much as you normally do, or go jogging for an hour a day. If you aren’t happy with your health as it is do some small things and maintain them for a while. You won’t know how big an impact they have right away, and you also won’t know if you can sustain that level of discipline and effort. Take things slowly, determine what sacrifices are worth the benefits, and soon you’ll have a life not tortured by constant pain from deprivation, or discontent from ill health.

I know some people do not believe this calories in calories out argument I ascribe to. Partly this is because of the fad diets are doing such a wonderful job arguing against it. Partly it’s because people don’t want to believe it. Partly it’s because it seems somewhat old style. Partly it seems too simple. I admit that it is an over simplification, and I don’t contend that there are not other factors to consider. I’m sure that if you exercise more, you will get hungrier and maybe eat more as well. I’m sure if you eat less you body reacts by more efficiently extracting calories from what you do eat. These complications, and many more, are why you have to take things slow and give all the complex systems involved in human nutrition time to stabilize and the effects to accumulate before you make an assessment of its value. Ultimately calories in calories out wins for one simple reason… physics. We, in the end, are subject to the same fundamental laws that govern everything else in the universe. Energy can be neither created nor destroyed, only moved and transformed. The first law of thermodynamics says if you eat less energy than you expend, eventually, you will lose weight, and I’ll trust it over any nutritionist peddling a book every time.

tl;dr

Diets that say one thing is making you fat/unhealthy are wrong, unless that one thing is eating too much and moving too little. If you want to make changes in your life, do them incrementally, and slowly, instead of all at once.

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LaurenSaver

I’ve written a screensaver. I wrote it for Lauren, cause she said she wanted one, so it’s mostly a gift for her, but you all can have it as well if you want. It was inspired by her love of the etsy.com color picker. There is no version for you Mac or Linux people… so sorry. What you have to do if you want to try it out is

1. Download it (first link in this post)

2. Move the LaurenSaver.scr file into your C:/Windows/System32 folder

3. Go to your screensaver settings (depends on your version of Windows but you probably know how to do that right?)

4. Change your screensaver to LaurenSaver

5. Click Settings to customize the settings. LaurenSaver has a setting for everyone! šŸ™‚

6. Enjoy

If you have any problems let me know. I am also interested in bug reports and feature requests, just get a hold of me somehow. And if you are some coder guy who wants the source code I can give you that to, just shoot me a message.

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WIDLM: The Rich

Hah! Inflammatory again. I like the rich fine. I’m not a commie or anything. Geez, guys, put down your second amendment protected arms.

What I really don’t like, is when people are so rich that they don’t feel the penalties for doing something wrong. This is most obvious with corporations. They get hit with lawsuits, or even fines for law breaking, but it doesn’t matter cause the fine is a fraction of the money they made doing whatever evil thing they did. A recent example would be Reebok’s EasyTone shoes. You might have heard of them. They are those stupid curved shoes that are supposed to exercise your butt or something, but actually do nothing, except maybe give you back problems. They got slapped for false advertising to the tune of $25M, but they’ve already made $1.1B, so what do they care?

Sometimes individuals are so rich they can do the same thing. The one that has me thinking of this is good ol’… really ol’… Rupert Murdoch. He recently decided to pay out Ā£2M to the family of the girl who died, whose phone his newspaper hacked. He’ll give another £1M to some charities of their choice. Great. That’s a lot of money. Except he’s worth an estimated $7.6B. I’ve done the math for you, that’s .06315% he’s giving away. I know, it’s not really the same thing, since he doesn’t technically have to give anything, but just want to put it into perspective. You giving a bum a couple bucks is probably more generous, from a percentage perspective.

Sometimes the comparison between person and company is better as well. For Murdoch we can’t really know he made more than he’s giving away, since there are so many variables. There are, however, straight up hucksters like Kevin Trudeau, the author of books like, Natural Cures “They” Don’t Want You to Know About, who makes tons more money lying than he pays for being convicted of lying. When that sort of thing happens, you know the system is broken.

Rich people have it easy, and that’s sorta how capitalism is supposed to work. They can relax and not worry about losing their job or dinging their car door or paying for their kid’s tuition. They should, however, still have to worry about the law. It is pretty impossible to do perfectly, I know. And I’m also aware that they can’t just do anythingĀ that they want, hopefully. But I’m still pissed off when the system fails in this regard.

When I’m in charge penalties will be determined based on your assets and income. That goes for companies too.

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WIDLM: Christmas Lights Before Thanksgiving

I’m gonna be ahead of the curve on this one. I don’t really like Christmas lights in general, waste of electricity, but it bugs me way more when people put them up before Thanksgiving. Makes me feel like they’re skipping Thanksgiving, or merging it with Christmas, which I’m not okay with.

Thanksgiving probably means something different to everyone, but what I think it’s supposed to be about is taking of a bit of time to recognize and be thankful for what we’ve got, especially the simple necessities we take for granted (because we have it so good), and to remember how we got here. That’s just a good thing for a holiday to be built around, and way more important than the other popular holidays, I think. It merges European and Native American traditions, one of the few ways we typical modern Americans recognize the Native American contribution to our prosperity. Also, it is a national holiday, with no real tie to religion, one of the few we have, so it’s truly inclusive. I don’t have to buy anyone gifts, which is a plus. Also, I like turkey.

Sure there’s a bit of gluttony involved, but at least it’s real food gluttony. It’s more to do with meat and stuffing and less to do with cookies and candy. Plus, the ability to be occasionally gluttonousĀ is one of the things we’re celebrating and being grateful for. Of course Thanksgiving is being ever more tainted by Black Friday and ridiculous nonsense like that, but some people can ruin anything.

At it’s core Thanksgiving is a better holiday than Christmas, and even if you don’t agree, you should at least agree that Thanksgiving deserves its limited time and should not be skipped over, even symbolically.

Please, think of the children. Wait until December to start wasting electricity.