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Comment Stanford is not in Maine (Score 1) 22

Does anyone know why the Maine Attorney General is involved? Palo Alto is pretty fair from Maine and I didn't see any explanation in the article. Does Maine have better disclosure laws than other states? There is a filing which includes:

Total number of persons affected (including residents): 27000
Total number of Maine residents affected: 3
If the number of Maine residents exceeds 1,000, have the consumer reporting agencies been notified:
Date(s) Breach Occured: 05/12/2023
Date Breach Discovered: 09/27/2023

so who knows if anyone would know about this were it not for the involvement of the Maine residents...

Comment Donor potential (Score 3, Insightful) 62

People think of legacy as a binary input: is the applicant a child of parent (grandparent in some cases) who went there. It is far more graduated, and reflects the previous donations of the parent who went there. Consider three different alumni along a continuum:

1) An affluent alum who has already given generously, been active in alumni activities (fundraising, etc.), arranged internships for students, is employed in an industry (finance, law) where connections are extremely important, has been bringing their kid to reunions for years, and who may have been a legacy admit themselves many years ago.

2) An affluent alum who has not given generously yet but has some potential (admissions will have a least an estimate of amassed wealth) , is in engineering/software where connections are important but not as crucial, has some connection to the institution, comes to reunions, but does not have a track record already of generous giving.

3) An alum who is not affluent, works in education or public service, who has not had much to do with the institution since graduating, but has fond memories of the institution.

These would all three be considered "legacy" applicants but it is certain that the admissions office would regard #1 as a much better "fit" for the institution than #2, and #3 may as well be someone with no connection to the campus.

Comment Linux Router Project (Score 1) 100

There was an excellent Linux Router Project active around 2000, which ran on commodity PCs, booting from a floppy, running in RAM, no hard drive needed. For less than $50 (an old x86 box that someone would pay you to take off their hands, and maybe one or two ethernet cards) you could set up something that outperformed commercial routers that cost far more. I happily had a machine serving as my home router (named Wheezer after its somewhat noisy fan) for years but then it became common for wireless access points and routers to have that functionality.

Comment Re:Mathgen automatically generats mathematics pape (Score 1) 64

ps. The first Mathgen paper was accepted despite being written by "Professor Marcie Rathke of the University of Southern North Dakota at Hoople", which shows the level of scrutiny some journals give to submissions, see https://thatsmathematics.com/b...

Comment Mathgen automatically generats mathematics papers (Score 1) 64

Ten years ago, Nate Eldredge wrote Mathgen, a system for generating math research papers:

https://thatsmathematics.com/m...

These were pretty early efforts by current standards but some of the results have been accepted by journals, see https://thatsmathematics.com/b... showing that somehow not all mathematics research journals give the greatest scrutiny to submissions.

With the intervening advances, it seems likely that these will become more common.

Comment Re:US Domestic Legal/Political Podcasts (Score 1) 277

Lawfare is generally excellent although some of the topics are overly specific and the production quality varies a bit. The "Report" series from Lawfare was exceptionally well done and produced thoughtfully.

A fabulous political/justice-oriented one is Stay Tuned with Preet Bharara, available everywhere including Cafe.com. The premium episodes require a subscription but the free ones are fabulous and there are usually the best bits of the "insider" ones available for free anyway. Anne Milgram is fabulous and the back-and-forth between her and Preet ranges from hilarious to insightful to deeply moving. Those two former prosecutors are true public servants and we are very fortunate to have had people that smart willing to work in public service.

In his post-DOJ gig as a podcaster, Preet is a gifted and thoughtful interviewer with a range of remarkable guests. His interview with Brenda Berkman was exceptionally moving, recounting her fight to become the first NYC firefighter and her experiences in the WTC attacks.

Comment top-end price vs. Mac IIfx (Score 1) 273

Apple has often had a premium high-performance machine that is not priced for those looking for best performance per dollar, so this echos previous efforts on that front.

Just to remind people that in 1992, Apple sold a Mac IIfx which was configurable to about $12,000, which would be about $22k now. With various external high-speed SCSI drives and monitors at the time, probably it could have been spec'd to something comparable in price to the top Mac Pro presently. But not many IIfx's were sold at that high price- the price dropped and other machines became more comparable in performance, as the 68040 came out not long afterward and became a commodity.

(I later bought a IIfx used and boy was its SCSI interface the flakiest thing ever to deal with, bleh!)

Comment not a large fraction of problems (Score 4, Informative) 123

I have a vehicle affected by this and was trying to gauge the appropriate level of alarm. The best info I can find indicates that there have been 88 "rupture" events out of 1.2 million deployment as of last year. So I do not think it makes sense to worry too much at this point, as those are pretty unlikely events, even if it is really more like 1000 bad explosive deployments so far. There do seem to be some concerns about high humidity areas and strong temperature variation locations being more likely to have issues and originally the recalls were focused on the southern US and other warm areas, though now the plan is to replace them all.

Much of the coverage has been alarmist- "your car is going to kill you!" so it was good to see that the fraction is low. But it was very troubling to read about how evasive and duplicitous the manufacturer has been as the problems should have been detected and addressed much earlier.

Submission + - NYT article about more open publishing for biologists

call -151 writes: Mathematicians and physicists have for years embraced the arXiv preprint server, where people upload versions of their work before submitting them to (often for-profit) journals for consideration for publication. This works well to propagate new research quickly- eventually, perhaps, the journal accepts the article, possibly with changes, etc. but people can get the gist of what is going on with essentially no delay. The culture in life sciences (and particularly medicine) has been for journals to embargo dissemination of submitted results until they appear in the journal, which can take a while. The New York Times has an article about how some biologists are now adopting the math, CS, and physics approach with rapid, free dissemination of the current research by submitting to the arXiv before submitting to the journal.

Comment Martin Gardner books (Score 2) 238

There are a bunch of good Martin Gardner books to consider. A couple of possibilities are:

  • "Entertaining Mathematical Puzzles" has a great range of puzzles across a range of topics
  • "Codes, Ciphers and Secret Writing" though not explicitly about math, has lots of good engaging content. Kids of that age often love codes.
  • Various "Aha" /"Gotcha" series ones
  • various logic puzzle ones

These are generally good in that they encourage mathematical thinking and analysis and don't rely much on prerequisite material. And they are well done, with a good playful attitude about things. And they are often Dover books and reasonably priced, as well!

Comment Alon Levy's analysis: barf ride (Score 1) 172

Alon Levy, transit expert (particularly about costs of construction,) has this recent update about the proposal. His earlier analysis brought up a number of concerns about cost and how it would actually work. Basically, at the speeds that are claimed, the required gentleness of the curves means expensive construction. Or just going fast and cheap and thus having barfing passengers.

Comment Re:Science journals have done this as well (Score 1) 135

I wouldn't call that "getting around journal issues." A better name for it is "cashing in on Springer's undeserved reputation as an arbiter of quality" to sell weak books to people who think "Springer = quality" because they do publish some selective quality journals. In fact, Springer/Elsevier/etc. have shown time and time again that they are far more interested in profits than in genuine scholarship. And indeed, it is a problem that librarian book selections are often not well-informed, but to be fair, faculty do not generally get involved in those decisions, despite the fact that they are often much better qualified to make such decisions.

Comment Re:Science journals have done this as well (Score 1) 135

Open search is a plus but I don't think the central issue. Since in my research fields, it's common to post the preprint of the work (either on the arXiv or on their own webpages) generally search engines find stuff and just searching for the article title gets a decent version of the work. Not all authors are good about this but even if people do put all their stuff where it can be found, it is still unhealthy for the research community to have overpriced journals by for-profit publishers as there are a number of bad outcomes that arise from publishers' economic incentives.

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