Comment Re:Meyers-Briggs on Facebook? (Score 1) 5
From what I hear it's not accurate at all. I haven't bothered to take it myself: http://apps.facebook.com/whatsyourmye_fiukha/?refsrc=feed_short1&_fb_fromhash=05e2f9689bf6e1e7cca839d4511ed6a9
From what I hear it's not accurate at all. I haven't bothered to take it myself: http://apps.facebook.com/whatsyourmye_fiukha/?refsrc=feed_short1&_fb_fromhash=05e2f9689bf6e1e7cca839d4511ed6a9
It's been a while since I've darkened the door here. What with all the shifts to a different account, then Multiply, then a few of the "Social Networking" experiments. So I just got a hankering to come back here for a night.
Cubase or ProTools
Damn, did you just open one hell of a can of worms...Because there is a hell of a big world beyond Cubase and ProTools.
Cubase hasn't been considered a joke for a while, which is good. It's not a bad program.
A large number of the current DAW systems are very, very good, and have a place amongst serious musicians, mixers and composers.
Digital Performer still ranks supreme for a lot of music producers and film/TV composers (Zimmer, Elfman)...And it can utilize the PT audio system, cards and interfaces. It still has superior MIDI capabilities in some areas and does some nifty things with monophonic pitch detection.
Logic also has a place amongst the serious, though a smaller place.
And speaking of Steinberg, Nuendo is Cubase+everything needed for film, complex surround, specialized file formats etc. Cubase is the low-midgrade Steinberg product: Nuendo is, and always has been the flagship, dating back to its very, very brief days on the Irix platform (no, really).
Now, if we look at the very high end, we have some tools like Merging's Pyramix, Fairlight's impressive stuff, and for hardware, Euphonix, Harrison, Studer (yes, they make digital consoles), and even Otari for broadcast. But I digress.
Of course, the biggie DAW on Linux is Ardour. It supports CoreAudio (OS X) or ALSA/FFADO...No support for Windows users though. But why bother trying to program around Microsoft's inefficiencies? Ardour is very much a serious player. They had a partnership with Solid State Logic for a while, and put out a good package.
Cubase occupies a place in the market that I would describe as prosumer to pro...I wouldn't describe it as one of two 'serious' options. I would describe Cubase as the Honda of the audio production world: It does everything it needs to, but it's no Cadillac, no Rolls, and definitely no Oshkosh truck.
Shut yer analog pie hole...yeah...or something.
OK, instead of debating pot (Sched. 1), why don't we debate the equivalent, legal, pill. After all, your entire last sentence describes the symptoms of our war on drugs, NOT the symptoms of marijuana use.
Sure. People die from impairment. Pot, booze, opiates, Oxycontin...cell phones, pets or children in the back seat...dashboard TVs...but I digress.
Marinol (Pure THC) is a schedule 3 drug. What we have is a tacit acknowledgment by the pharmaceutical industry, the FDA, the US government, and state governments across the nation that pure THC has a valid medical use and is of so little risk that it is a schedule 3 drug.
Yes, pot has problems. yes, it causes cognitive and memory loss issues...the problem that most people have is one of disproportionate response. THC is less dangerous than alcohol or tobacco, and that has been clinically shown.
When someone gets drunk, orders a pizza and masturbates in the privacy of their home, you don't automatically respond with a SWAT team. When someone smokes an 8th and drives, then we rightfully throw the DWI book at them...however, we also send them to jail for years, whereas a drunk gets probation.
It is a matter of proportionate response, and right now, we are seeing cancer patients getting tossed in jail, a mayor's dogs getting shot in a botched SWAT raid, and the symptoms of a war on drugs that are doing more harm than the drugs, per your last sentence.
In parting, a little trivia: MDMA (Ecstasy) was used clinically on and off for quite a while after its initial discovery in 1912 until its scheduling (I) in 1985. We are now studying this 'dangerous raver drug' as a possible treatment for PTSD. Our perceptions about an individual drug are rarely shaped by medicine, but routinely shaped by politics and FUD.
The point is if you don't file your plans the town will send a poor fucking co-op student out there to mark the fucking thing on the map.
The thing about Northern Virginia is that the rules are different. Nobody wants to know, and nobody cares about random fibre lines. The local governments just want to ignore it. Fort Belvoir, CIA, NDRO, Tyson's Corner complex, the multitudes of defense contractors linked to or serving active DoD operations (Lockheed, EADS, Boeing, SAIC, Northrop, Raytheon, GD, UT, L-3 Communications, ATT, etc.) all have 'off map' needs. No Northern Virginian government just sends their poor co-op students out to map stuff. The local governments don't want to touch that mess. Better to just make it someone else's problem. Fairfax County doesn't care if 'black' lines get cut, because the Fairfax County voters don't care if lines get cut. I know a guy at a datacenter in Reston who was bird watching. He had a pair of decent binoculars. After a few minutes on his lunch break outside his building, a black SUV shows up, and they pester him with questions before telling him to stop and go back inside. He still has no idea which of the dozen building visible from his the US government has interests in.
I've done it...
Not only have I played with a monotype, but I know some people who have computer controlled solenoids on the air tower. Basically, they can run their monotype via computer. A text document is rendered into a virtual paper tape, then spat out via the control board to a solenoid manifold on the air tower. Awesome stuff.
Newspaper Linotypes could be linked to a teletype, and could take wire service stories and cast them in real time while receiving. It ran the machines really, really hard.
Now, we could go back further: I have cast type the way Gutenberg did...With a hand mould and matrix. The first mass reproduction technology...
I didn't expect to see any typecasting comments in this article. It was a fun surprise.
Depends...do you count raw tonnage of servers, or do you include the ancillaries like cable runs, UPS, cooling etc?
Easy way to win:
My Eniac replica, combined with my replicas of Mayan and Egyptian pyramids (purportedly used as astronomical computers...you know, by the illuminati, etc
Except you don't pay by volume.
Take Google's Dalles datacenter in Oregon. They pay for their water by the diameter of the pipe. They have (iirc) two 6 inch pipes. It doesn't matter if a drop or a hurricane flows through them.
Same thing with the power for that datacenter. Bonneville Power charges them based on the peak monthly load, not the total consumed power. So 500 megawatt load for an hour is a lot more expensive than 250 megawatt load for a month.
It is the diameter of the pipe that is expensive, not how much goes through it.
So, the administration identified the 'drug' in question as ibuprofen...They knew what they were looking for. They knew what a student had previously gone to the hospital for taking.
The LD50 of that drug is something close to 636 mg/kg. The child (weighing about 45kg) would have had to take 28 GRAMS to OD. That's something like 40 tablets of the prescription strength stuff.
Both OTC and prescription painkillers in the Advil/Ibuprofen or Tylenol/Tylenol with codeine class are designed to be very hard to OD on. You will throw up most of the 40 pills long before they reach your kidneys and liver, which then cause a slow 2 week death without treatment.
If they were SO WORRIED about her 'health' or the health of other students, they should have called poison control or 911. They might have been able to address health concerns faster that way. The fact that they searched her indicates they had little care for her health, and only cared about discipline. They even lectured her about 'telling the truth' after the search.
It's simple: After searching her belongings, a legal representative should have been there before searching her person. The early teenage years are perhaps the most vulnerable years a human has psychologically. If anything, her age makes the search that much more egregious. Go back a few years and look at the "Voices from the Hellmouth" series that was on slashdot.
The fact that it happened 6 years ago is inconsequential. 6 years ago, a violation of a person was committed without consent, and allegedly without legal cause, which by any sane definition is assault. The fact that it is 6 years later has everything to do with our lengthy appellate process, and no bearing on the crime in question.
I did read "Blink" and found that while he provided lots of anecdotes to support his premise, there was no mechanism, no measurement, and no way to verify it. In fact, he provided a number of other anecdotes that showed just the opposite.
What he did in that book, I think, was to state a premise that we'd like to believe, that our gut instincts are right, and tell stories to reinforce that, but never go so far as to make a claim that could be verified. I'm not alone in this view.
Based on what I've read so far, "Outliers" seems like more of the same.
You might be interested in Antonio Damasio's book "Descarte's Error" in which Damasio scientifically presents evidence that the majority of our reasoning is in fact mediated by emotion and "gut feeling" linked to situational stimulus. Damage to the pre-frontal cortex of the brain (see: Phineas Gage) impairs this "secondary" emotional system and causes quantifiable decision-making deficits. Gladwell is referring to just this system in Blink, and although he does occaisionally lapse into pop-sci there is a significant body of work that supports his main conclusions.
As another interesting aside, this is why teenagers have such a poor time making good long-term decisions. The pre-frontal cortex is one the last places in the brain to fully mylleinate (develop), and so their emotion-based reasoning system does not fully come on line until they are 18-22. As the insurance commercial goes: Why do teenagers driver like they're missing a part of their brain? Because they are.
My only comment on Election 2008:
It's not left vs. right, or republicans vs. democrats. It has nothing to do with political parties. Instead the simplest two sides in the most general terms are:
People who don't have much power (financial, political, business, etc...)
vs.
People who have all the power (financial, political, business, etc...)
I was researching crime before a move as well. I was stuck using an absolutely horrible web-enabled wannabe GIS thing. Having used ArcGIS, I know what a decent GIS is capable of. Google Earth is well on its way to being able to display information the way ArcView does. A buffer wizard type tool would be a wonderful thing in Google Earth...The analytical side of things is not really suitable for the Google Earth architecture though.
Yeah, Google would do well to integrate even census data (which includes some crime, pollution and economic data) into Google Earth.
I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato