conversations

At my wee job — a few hours a week, just enough to deter me from a life of crime but not enough to make me rich — I was chatting with their one man CTO/IT department (a three person shop, so all of that fits on one plate) about RSI and carpal tunnel. We covered ergonomic keyboards, chording keyboard, foot pedals, Qwerty/Sholes vs Dvorak, etc. We mentioned speech recognition, and he thought it was a bad idea for programmers, but I argued, what if you could use some macros to get around the awkward bits (opening and closing parens, brackets, etc.).
You could issue instructions like
open block
if var interval is less than one set var interval equal to one
and get
{

if ($interval < 1) { $interval = 1;)

It seems dangerously close to “do what I mean, not what I say.â€?

from fortune(6):

When someone says “I want a programming language in
which I need only say what I wish done,� give him a lollipop.

another long bet

How long before corporations and small businesses alike demand a simplified, universal, single-payer healthcare system to level the playing field and allow small businesses to attract the same talented workers as bigger ones can?

One of the reason for staying at an organization is for the benefits — perhaps someone in the family has some long-term or chronic healthcare issues: to change employees might mean losing continuity of care or even basic coverage, not a risk a responsible person wants to take.

How long? 20 – 25 years?

Cascade Bicycle Club: Chilly Hilly

Cascade Bicycle Club: Chilly Hilly:

Chilly Hilly reminds you that winter is no excuse to stop riding because spring is just around the corner.
Who Rode in 2004:

  • 3739 riders (239 more than 2003 – a 6.5% increase)
  • Riders came from 17 states (including New York, Alaska, Arizona, and North Carolina), plus British Columbia
  • 27% female riders, 63% male riders
  • Registered riders ranged from age 3 to 85 (we cannot tell the youngest rider that actually rode on their own)

It’s that time again. <yawn> time to pump the tires up, dust off the saddle, and get rolling.

Some friends want to do it for the first time (after realizing that I can do it, anyone can — she’s a tri-athlete, he’s a serious cyclist — so I don’t why they haven’t done it before now), so perhaps that will induce me to sign up for a second run.

nerdvana

Video of Jobs introducing the Macintosh in 1984:

That page is super slow right now, so I’ve compiled a few links to the video (QuickTime, 20.9 MB). Enjoy:

Torrent file (use this if at all possible)
Torrent file (use this if at all possible)
preinheimer.com
cm.math.uiuc.edu/~staffin/
kappesante.com
brooksnet.plus.com
bluehome.net
afsheenfamily.com
kottke.org
cluecoder.org/~bene/
publicvoidblog.de
php-schmiede.de
mac-software-updates.de
homepage.mac.com/sdomanske/

Steve when he had lots more hair and not as much fashion sense . . . but the smirk is timeless.

Norman Mailer’s One Big Idea

I’m not a regular reader of Parade magazine — the local Pacific Northwest magazine is lots better — but I picked it up and was drawn to this article by Norman Mailer on the power of reading as the basis of all learning.
 Images Embargo Gifs 2005 0123 Embargo Cover
I think Mailer’s point is a good one. He makes a stronger, more-focused argument about how television watching undermines education than I have seen so far: his point is that the constant interruptions — as shows end and begin every half hour as well as commercials of ever shorter durations — make it difficult for kids to develop the “mental muscles”? required to concentrate and truly master difficult material. A century ago, people could and regularly did read for hours, while fewer and fewer do today, though not from a lack of books or even a lack of interest: in many cases, they’ve never mastered the skills of concentrating for long periods.

The article is embargoed until next week: I’ll try to update the link and pull out a few choice quotes, but if you get a Sunday paper, you already have a copy. I urge you to check it out.

Continue reading “Norman Mailer’s One Big Idea”

what the browser war prevented

This post on Crooked Timber made me look into how to do these: I guess that a &circ; was the right combination — that time spent learning diacritical marks in French occasionally proves its worth — but how to do it in text, not HTML? On the Mac, it’s ‘option-i’ to get the circumflex and then whatever you want under it.

WWW-Talk Jan-Mar 1993: &AElig;, &Aacute;, &Acirc;, etc.:

Are the mnemonic representations of ISO Latin 1 characters (e.g. in the subject or in
http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/Connolly/930106/ISOlat1.html) really necessary for HTML?

As far as I can see, the question translates to ‘Is there anyone who’s going to be typing in these things by hand that can’t type the numeric references instead?’ and ‘Aren’t HTML editors going to be used to produce documents with these characters anyway, and can’t editors use the numeric representation just as easy as the mnemonic representation?’

This message — between Marc Andreessen, pre-Netscape, and Tim Berners-Lee, pre-knighthood — is almost exactly 12 years old: what do you think of the progress we’ve made?

When I see things like this and recall the battle for mindshare — I’d love to see a list of all the now-discontinued tags from the late 90s browsers — and think what an enormous waste of resources that all was. Are things better now? Is CSS better than tag soup? Undoubtedly. Could it have happened sooner and without a lot of wasted effort, by programmers devising these features and web designers using them, only to see them go away? I think so. I look at a tool like ecto, which I use to create these scintillating observations, and consider how quickly it came into existence, matured, and is now in its second release after a redesign — and with one programmer (albeit a very good one). Perhaps it’s not possible to do something like this in a group: would Linux have happened with more than one person at the earliest stages?

It would make a big difference to how people use software if features and chrome were more carefully weighed against usability from the user’s point of view. Again, to use ecto as an example: I think I have access to every menu, every option, and I still have a lot of room on my 12 inch iBook screen. Would that be the case in Word?

Using automount on Mac OS X

I found jmates’ Using automount on Mac OS X notes to be useful in making regular backups happen. I use Apple’s Backup utility but I don’t want to get in the habit of backing up to a CD or anything like that. Backing up to another drive is just fine, but if it relies on user input — authentication, for example — it’s not good. Enter automount(8). Using Jeremy’s notes and a fair bit of trial and guess about the bits I was fuzzy on, I now have automounting working so backups get written to a remote volume. Now I have to work out some way of backing that up without burning CDs or otherwise wasting money (there is a tape drive in there, after all). So now to set up automount elsewhere and make sure we’re protected.

making a bet

 Img Thepurpose

I considered making a prediction at Long Bets and may still when I can scrounge up the $50.

My prediction is that it will be possible to buy a car or other human transporter without a powerplant, leaving the choice to the buyer (electric/hybrid/internal combustion [gasoline, diesel, biodiesel, methane, hydrogen]). The underlying premise is that the drivetrain fittings will become standardized like radios and CD players. The form factor of the different types of cars now — everyday I see hybrids, biodiesels etc. — so it makes sense for manufacturers to disintermediate themselves, offering styling and comfort level with your choice of powerplant.

I figure 25 years before this is an option, and it need not be a mass-market option: it could be some clever small manufacturer who wants to leverage value(s) instead of pure market efficiency, ie, cost. I think this could lead to some innovations in the body and passenger compartments as well as people specialize in those.

conversations

I have been trying to add some exercise to my daily regime and one easy way to do that is to walk the path around green Lake once the kids are safely ensconced in their classrooms. So today was the fourth time in two weeks I have managed it — go, me! — and we — the other mom-to-a-school-age-kid I went with and I — had a wide-ranging discussion, mostly on family and child-raising issues. Takes about 45 minutes to do the 3+ miles so you can cover some conversational ground as well.

One of the topics was faith/religion and how to handle that with kids. We, the adults in my house, are not particularly religious, and the kids have not shown a lot of curiosity about it, but that seems to be coming up as they are exposed to different kids and their traditions. My take on it was that if I decided to go to church this Sunday, where would I go? MapQuest lists 20 places of worship within 1 mile of my house, 150 within a larger radius.

My argument was and is that few churchgoers pick their faith or house of worship for doctrinal reasons: there’s nothing in the liturgy or sacraments that draws them. It may be the faith they were raised in, the nearest church, the most compelling preacher, the fact that it’s next to a donut shop. So given that, can you let a kid choose a faith and should they be made to feel any loyalty to the faith they were raised in?

I feel some kinship to the Anabaptists, the sect who felt infant baptism was wrong, that only adults who could willingly profess their faith were fit for baptizing. My walking companion was raised as a Catholic but has lapsed, though not without the trademark guilt. If your memories of churchgoing are not ones you’d like to repeat or visit on your own kids, how to choose a faith that fits?

Now playing: Prove It by Television from the album “Marquee Moon” | Get it