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Comment Re:Thoughts. (Score 1) 527

When my wife's mother died, we recorded her reading her favorite Christmas story and other favorite children's stories for us to play for our children (we didn't yet have children at that time). It was a nice way for our kids to eventually see my wife's mother.

Comment Re:I prefer targeted ads (Score 0) 71

So do I. I'd rather only see ads for what may interest me. This has to be a win for both me and the company buying the ad. I'm happier because I see stuff I'm interested in and they are happier because if I know about it I'm more likely to buy it.

I can remember complaining to Yahoo years ago about them advertising services to me that my computer didn't support. What was the point of telling me about some cool new service if Mac or Linux wasn't supported. Heck they had to know what system I was running, better they put an ad there that would actually be useful.

Comment Re:Queue . . . (Score 1) 542

My kids have a idiosyncratic food reaction to corn and corn syrup. (We discovered it when they were infants.) We pretty much don't have anything in the house with corn. I hated to give up corn bread, corn chips and popcorn but with me the only one eating it (my wife gave it up too while breast-feeding) it was easier.

No processed foods, no fast foods (all their buns mostly have corn syrup). and just a few sodas now and then that don't have corn syrup. Only a few brands of ice cream without it.

We had trouble finding BBQ without corn syrup but found a few brands. Trader Joe's now has a brand of catsup without corn syrup but we did okay without it for a long time.

I made marshmallows from maple syrup so our kids could have s'mores at camp.

It has been a pain but it has also made us more aware of the sugar in foods and we just make our own or do without. Avoiding processed foods is the easiest way.

Microsoft Demos Three Platforms Running the Same Game 196

suraj.sun writes with this excerpt from Engadget: "Microsoft's Eric Rudder, speaking at TechEd Middle East, showed off a game developed in Visual Studio as a singular project (with 90% shared code) that plays on Windows with a keyboard, a Windows Phone 7 Series prototype device with accelerometer and touch controls, and the Xbox 360 with the Xbox gamepad. Interestingly, not only is the development cross-platform friendly, but the game itself (a simple Indiana Jones platformer was demoed) saves its place and lets you resume from that spot on whichever platform you happen to pick up."

Comment Re:tap-proof? (Score 1) 154

ASL is an actual language with its own linguistic rules. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Sign_Language_grammar

Manually coded English (the more proper identification of Signed English) usually has significant trouble with homonyms and often has trouble with words built like "ice cream." Instead of using the ASL sign for "ice cream" I've seen people sign /ICE/ then sign /CREAM/. Which makes no sense when you could just use the sign /ICE CREAM/

It's written component was developed by William Stokoe for research purposes much like the International Phonetic Alphabet is used to transcribe spoken speech.

There's a lot of grammar encoded in facial expressions and body position have information much like vocal pitch and inflection convey in spoken language.

I will say that there is a continuum of languages from ASL to Signed English that most signers can flow from one to the other without too much trouble.

Government

Secret Service Runs At "Six Sixes" Availability 248

PCM2 writes "ABC News is reporting that the US Secret Service is in dire need of server upgrades. 'Currently, 42 mission-oriented applications run on a 1980s IBM mainframe with a 68 percent performance reliability rating,' says one leaked memo. That finding was the result of an NSA study commissioned by the Secret Service to evaluate the severity of their computer problems. Curiously, upgrades to the Service's computers are being championed by Senator Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, who says he's had 'concern for a while' about the issue."
Image

California Legislature Declares "Cuss-Free" Week 262

shewfig writes "The California legislature, which previously tried to ban incandescent light bulbs, just added to the list of banned things ... swear words! Fortunately, the measure only applies for the first week of March, and compliance is voluntary — although, apparently, there will be a 'swear jar' in the Assembly and the Governor's mansion. No word yet on whether the Governator intends to comply."

Comment Re:This wrong idea needs to stop. (Score 1) 552

You are a bit behind the times. Private insurance is now paying less than medicare reimbursement on many E&M codes. See link http://www.physicianspractice.com/index/fuseaction/articles.details/articleID/1434.htm

Medicare used to be the floor but it's apparently becoming the ceiling now.

I have been telling my congress critters that a public option is important to me. I'd love to start my own business but I can't afford to pay for insurance for my family without getting it through an established company.

Comment Re:It's the parents (Score 1) 1343

In some ways it's actually worse. My wife overheard parents talking about all the tough projects their kids had to do and how the parents ended up doing most of the work. When they asked my wife what she did with her kids, she told them, "We just make them do the work. How else will they learn?"

This was for elementary school. I was shocked as who cares about the kids grades in elementary school? This is the time to learn and do it yourself. My kids do their own planning for science fairs, pinewood derby, and school projects. We help and advise but they have to do the work.

Some where along the line people have forgotten how important failure is. You learn more by failing than getting it right the first time.

Comment Re:I do it (Score 1) 1324

I was able to visit one christian private school in the San Francisco Bay area was and looked at one of their geology text books. The chapter on the Earth structure started out saying that since God created the Earth and because people can never hope to fully understand God's will, mankind can never understand the structure of the Earth. I feel sorry for the kids who went to that school.
Math

Man Uses Drake Equation To Explain Girlfriend Woes 538

artemis67 writes "A man studying in London has taken a mathematical equation that predicts the possibility of alien life in the universe to explain why he can't find a girlfriend. Peter Backus, a native of Seattle and PhD candidate and Teaching Fellow in the Department of Economics at the University of Warwick, near London, in his paper, 'Why I don't have a girlfriend: An application of the Drake Equation to love in the UK,' used math to estimate the number of potential girlfriends in the UK. In describing the paper on the university Web site he wrote 'the results are not encouraging. The probability of finding love in the UK is only about 100 times better than the probability of finding intelligent life in our galaxy.'"

Comment Re:Going backwards? (Score 1) 290

Educational software/hardware has long been a bit of a scam. As much fun as it was to shoot Injuns in Oregon Trail or sell lemonade with Lemonade Stand, I'm not exactly sure what it accomplished. I think computers have their place, but this idea that they could do for education what they did for business has never really come to fruition.

As someone involved in developing children's software in the mid to late 90s at The Learning Company, we designed games to match standards and tried to avoid multiple choice questions (which is really just one of the lowest levels of Bloom's Taxometry of Learning) and try to move up the hierarchy. The problem is that you really need some kind of intelligence to interpret a child's answers when you get into more sophisticated learning.

Early games that had more sophisticated problem solving like Rocky's Boots or open ending exploring like Millie's Math House got left behind as the things turned mass market and it became important for marketing purposes to put a year in a box.

Games like Lemonade stand teach lots of things having to do with running a business. Predict your sales, market your product, price your product appropriately. Some versions are more sophisticated than others.

Sure Oregon Trail doesn't handle issues when the players diverge from what would be expected behavior on the trail and in a classroom where you are leading a unit on the Oregon Trail teachers should be watching something about what the children are doing. But if you are just playing a game then sure play to win.

And young kids should be using chalk, crayons, and other tactile objects instead of spending too much time on computers. I remember letters from parents and teachers who used my products and it helped kids learn to read but I wouldn't use those programs as a substitute for a teacher but using computer programs and a good teacher are beneficial.

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