March 24, 2011

Embarrasing

It is so embarrassing to sound so 'right' about something, only to find out that you are indeed wrong. I really need to bring my 'humility circuit' online more often, even in subjects I am supposedly smart on.

March 09, 2011

Matrix Screen Saver

Some days you just want a good Matrix screen saver. I downloaded three different ones to try out - and of the three, only one worked properly on my Windows 7 dual-screen monitor. It's a nice screen saver, includes some good options (like turning off after x minutes if you want, turning on/off the trace program sequence, changing speed and density of the falls), and it's free. The link to it on Download.Com is http://download.cnet.com/The-Matrix-Screen-Saver/3000-2257_4-10067722.html.
Perhaps this will save someone a few minutes of searching and testing.

February 28, 2011

The Weekend

So, what did you do with your weekend? This weekend the wife and I went to the library - I haven't been for a while and there's a relatively new branch in the main city near me. I picked up two things - "Ender's Game" by Orson Scott Card (a friend had recommended another book by him, but they didn't have it) and a book of sheet music for songs from the 70s. I brought the sheet music home and started learning "American Pie" by Don McClean on the piano. I'm certainly no virtuoso - I'm a self-taught piano player of a few years and I'm only able to play a melody with full-chord accompaniment, but it sounds fairly good on my electronic keyboard with some creative dual-voicing. I've learned up through the first chorus by heart, and with practice I should be able to teach myself the whole song before I have to bring the book back.
We also stopped at Panera bread for scones and a smoothie while we read our books. I'm about a third through "Ender's Game" and should finish it this week. Card is a very accessible author, and so far I am thoroughly enjoying the book, aside from the incredulous level of dialogue that is supposedly coming from a six-year-old. That's my only nitpick with the book concept thus far.

February 09, 2011

Jurors take their job seriously

I had jury duty yesterday. I spent all day at the County courthouse for a trial on a charge of 'failure to stop' (at a stop sign). It was more interesting than it probably should have been, and there were plenty of takeaways to share.

1. The jurists for this case (all 7 of them) appeared to be very dedicated to getting to the bottom of the matter and ensuring they followed their instructions as closely as possible. Because the case was such a simple one, I was surprised by the level of discussions in the jury room. I expected to be one of two or three dissenters, but found myself in the majority from the outset.

2. The Prosecution needs to ensure that they do their job. In presenting their case, they need to be extremely specific about focusing on the charge at hand and ensuring they present enough evidence to erase shadows of doubt. The jury takes very seriously the 'beyond reasonable doubt' clause. In our trial, most of the jury members were very adamant that they had not heard the officer testify that they saw the defendant approach the stop sign and roll through it without stopping. This planted seeds of doubt as to whether or not she had indeed watched him fail to stop, even though it was clear she saw him stop later on. The prosecution did not dwell on setting the scene and ensuring that the officer testified as to the fact that she actually knew that she saw him NOT STOP - a very specific event. Without this specificity, the jury was left to conjecture, which meant reasonable doubt (and ultimately an acquittal).

3. "You have the right to remain silent" - No better advice can be given anyone accused of a crime. The defendant did not make it easy on himself. Deliberations took hours for the jury merely because of the defendants behavior in the courtroom, introduction of unrelated evidence, disrespect, immaturity and even introduction of his own driving record (WITH MORE THAN 5 OFFENSES ON IT!!!) into evidence. [Oh yeah, and the prosecution didn't even provide the citation as evidence, which ended up being crucial in the deliberations room].

4. If you're going to represent yourself at a trial, ensure that you've prepared a logical argument and present ONLY THAT ARGUMENT. Had the defendant followed proceedings properly and taken the stand to state only the one crucial fact (his claim that he had stopped prior to the stop sign and then again after passing through the intersection to avoid hitting something else), it would have laid the reasonable doubt without prejudice. As it is, his rambling, his attacks on the character of the officer, and his other antics in the courtroom all detracted from his credibility.

4a. Oh yeah, and if you're going to represent yourself - CALM DOWN!!! You will be given an opportunity to refute testimony and present your own facts in due time. There is a structure for approaching the situation to come to a logical conclusion, and you will have adequate opportunity to address everything you need to. Take notes if you have an impetus and cannot address it in the current forum. Whatever you do, try not to sound like a stark-raving lunatic.

5. Interesting points on juries in Fairfax County - I was unaware that (at least in this court) you needed unanimity to reach a jury decision for non-felonies. I was unaware the jury sets the sentence in Virginia. I think that's an interesting point. We were given sentencing guidelines when we entered the jury room, and asked to provide a sentence in the case of a guilty verdict.

January 28, 2011

Geek Thoughts

This morning I sat down at my desk and looked over at my picture frame. When I was in Georgetown this summer, I took a picture of the plaque that adorns the building where Herman Hollerith invented and perfected the punched card machine. This is one of the pictures that, along with family pictures, macro pictures and nature pictures cycles through the day. But for some reason, this morning I thought about the Hollerith card.
Did I remember the coding scheme used by the card? A quick Google search confirmed my memories that it was a two-zone system, with 3 punch rows in zone 1 and 9 punch rows in zone 2 (although I recalled 3/10). This gives us 40 possible values per column, with 80 columns available. But then I had this thought, which I am sure others thought of before me.. The possible values per column is actually much more. By allowing multiple punches per zone, the card could be made to handle 2^12, or 4096 possible values, by ignoring the zoning of the card, and utilizing each potential hole as a bit value. And that's only with the same hardware. Because there was space between zone 1 and zone 2, the potential for more holes is there in the card, and with a bit more machining, another hole would be possible (although this thought process also gets into the potential for phase shifting along both x and y axis, giving us much more potential).
Just some geek thoughts for the morning.....completely unimportant.

December 31, 2010

Sniper Ghost Warrior

I bought Sniper: Ghost Warrior from Steam and have been playing it for the past two days. This game is, hands down, the most fun I have had with a PC game since Duke Nukem. There are a few things I don't like about it (unclear map boundaries/movement restriction and lack of freedom in the Story mode, and the red dots that give away EVERY player's position in online Deathmatch play, even if they haven't fired their weapon). Otherwise, I give the game a solid 8 out of 10. With some improvement, I would have no need for another FPS game ever. I don't think the game is still on sale at Steam, I picked it up for $7.50 - but even at $15, if you enjoy sniper/shooters and stealth games, you will definitely enjoy this. I'm going to need to massage these knots out of my neck now.

November 17, 2010

Chip-Resistant Corelle-ware

Ladies/Gentlemen:

I am writing you today as I nurse a wound on my right hand. You see, last night, I made the mistake of having one of your Correlle dinner plates slip from my grasp and fall 6 inches into my stainless steel sink, whereupon it shattered into what, by my count, seems to be a million pieces. Many of the pieces were quite visible, but it seems that many of them were not, and could only be detected when rubbing up against human skin and embedding itself in the epidermis, searching for (and finding) the nearest capillary to open.

Your plates are sold as 'break-resistant' and 'chip-proof'. They are quite visually attractive, and I have several sets. However, in the past year, this is the third occurrence upon which I have had the misfortune of cleaning up a shattered dinner plate.

I have, in the past, dropped a plate onto the kitchen floor (approximately 3"), which is surfaced with a double-thick linoleum with extra padding. I have dropped knives and glasses at this same height, and neither the surface nor the drink-ware suffered the same fate as my Corelle dinnerware.

It seems that in making your plates chip-proof, you have increased the likelihood that instead of merely chipping (providing an easy cleanup process of a few chips and a large plate), your product seeks to ensure there is little to no evidence, by exploding upon impact. While in the past, a few sweeps of a broom and a vacuum have been able to clean up the mess, it was all the more interesting last night, since I did not drop the plate onto the kitchen floor.

I dropped it (again, about 6-8 inches) into my stainless steel sink....with the garbage disposal.

Now, I don't know what you know about garbage disposals, but I will tell you that they are not made for rapid or simple disassembly. No, they are made for chopping and grinding and staying in place. And if you get something stuck in a disposal, it can be QUITE a chore to remove it as you shove your hand down the hole meant for water and waste and attempt to fish out what you've dropped. It's that, or call a rather expensive plumber.

So I was quite upset when, rather than having to fish out 2 or 3 chips from a cracked plate, I found myself fishing out slivers of Corelle dinner plate, sized anywhere between a vein-slicing 1/2" x 4" curved-blade piece to curse-inducing micrometer sized ceramic slivers.

Despite all the care in the world, I came away with wounds I didn't realize I had until they began bleeding.

Thankfully, I did not slice anything vital, and with the help of a very trustworthy Dyson I was able to clear out the disposal adequately once I had removed the larger slices.

However, I am not sure if you've changed the formula of your plates in the past year and a half, but this most recent batch seems VERY MUCH LESS 'break-resistant' than I was led to believe or have experienced in the past.

Although, I gotta hand it to you - they really are chip-resistant....they NEVER chip....ever...I wonder if you could also maybe make them 'EXPLOSION'-resistant?

October 05, 2010

How Amazon killed music

Some time ago, Amazon purchased a controlling interest in a website known as AmieStreet. I'm not providing a link to Amie Street because Amazon shut down the service last month. In doing so, they killed off the only place on the Internet that many artists had their music available to the public. Several artists, such as Pink Stilletos and Tim McQueen no longer have a place for their music to be published and played.

While Amazon certainly has a profit motive for shutting down the website (which was probably losing money), it helps the music industry continue their power on deciding what music we listen to. Through Amie Street, I had found several bands worth listening to, and thankfully have had the opportunity to download their music. Unfortunately, others won't be able to discover these same artists and share their music with me. The Internet is supposed to be a great equalizer, but it seems that it is still part of the same game that stifles independents. Those with money and power continue to decide what is worth listening to and who will get display time on your screen. Independents without the savvy to use the Internet or the money to invest to get their voice heard have just lost a major opportunity to be discovered.

And that just sucks.

September 01, 2010

The Effects of Doing

The human mind is an amazing computer. It has adapted to learn things through a myriad of inputs. You can read something and learn about it, you can hear someone talk about something and learn important facts and aspects of it, you can watch someone do something and learn the machinations of how to perform. But if you want to get good at something, you just have to DO it.

I read. In fact, I read A LOT. When I was growing up, I used to read fiction. But as my interests matured, I have switched mostly to technical references and news sources. I read about a lot of new technology, and I like to think that I have learned about these things that I have read about. I have a cursory knowledge in a very wide swath of subjects, both technical and non-technical. I like to think of myself as an intellect, although my capacity leaves me somewhere in the area of the second standard deviation. I've never been able to pull off the Mensa scores, but I've gotten close enough to taste it (I took the ACT when I was older just to try to earn my way in - imagine taking the SAT/ACT by choice - I'm a lunatic), and I enjoy hanging out with people smarter than me.

So you think I would have learned a great deal through all of this reading. Yes....and no. I've certainly picked up a lot of knowledge through all of it. I've picked up others opinions and enough facts to try to make a decision as to where I stand on some issues. I've picked up some 'architectural' knowledge of how things fit together (constructing world view). But of all the things I tell people I've learned in the past few years, each one was something I didn't so much read about as something I learned by doing.

I asked myself this question: What have you learned (over some period of time)? Well, I've learned to juggle. Yes, at first I read a booklet (Thank you Klutz(c)). But I learned to juggle by doing it over and over and over. Through hundreds of failures I found success. I've learned to play the piano. With all of the missed notes, and the inordinate patience of my family that has listened to me practice for hours, I can passably play the piano. I've learned Pi to the 133rd digit (what has kind of spurred this post). I've learned to play chess well enough to beat just about any non-chess-player. I've learned some technical things as well, but that's my job, after all. All of those things I feel I've learned have not been through reading and understanding - all of them have really been learned by practicing, repetition, embedding these things into my muscle memory...like riding a bike.

I think this gets back to the question: What is meant to know something? When you KNOW something, you can just do it. Your mind gets out of the way of your ability to perform, and you enter a new level of constant change (and improvement) that is done subconsciously.

Not sure why any of this matters - just a random thought that crossed my mind and I felt like writing it down. So my new motto is 'Just Do It' - thanks, Nike.

August 12, 2010




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