i spoke briefly about flashmobs the other day with dan chang from his the miami herald, the article is a nice, short culture piece. have a look.
RSS | Comments RSS | Atom
i spoke briefly about flashmobs the other day with dan chang from his the miami herald, the article is a nice, short culture piece. have a look.
Donald Davidson dies. IN MEMORIAM Donald Davidson (1917-2003) Professor Davidson died yesterday in Berkeley. As soon as memorial notices are available about his… [The Leiter Reports: Editorials, News, Updates]
—-
Oh i remember reading some of his work when i was an undergrad.
while it might appear that i experienced death in a remote manner above, it should also be clear that i experienced it by relating it to my life, and that through that i sympathized with others or would not have posted it.
Bush and The Philosophers. Speaking of memes, check this one out. Back on August 5, Mark Kleiman wrote a post that concluded with the observation that “There's a great essay to be written about the second Bush Administration as our first truly post-modern Presidency.”… [Matthew Yglesias]
wierd thing is that i just had a discussion with a colleague on this who argued that bush's presidency is the highest perfection of machiavellian modernism, where i argued that under the conception of 'pluralist idealological conflicts' it was post-modern.
Tax the rich the same as the average people, Camejo says
Green Party gubernatorial candidate Peter Camejo on Thursday unveiled one of the recall campaign's most detailed and liberal proposals, one he contended would lift California out of its budget morass.
Camejo, who heads an investment brokerage firm he founded, called for strikingly higher income tax rates on Californians who earn more than $500,000 a year, changing Proposition 13 to allow reappraisals of many corporate properties and tax cuts for low-wage earners.
“We have a crisis,” Camejo said. “At least (the wealthy) should pay what the average person pays, and that would balance the budget.”
Heck, maybe the rich need to be taxed even more than the average person…
[Politics in the Zeros]
Disparity in wealth is killing democracy, scholar warns
One scholar argues that representative democracy is effectively dead ö done in by the biggest shift of income and assets to the super-wealthy since the 1920s.
“President Bush's tax cuts increased the political power of the richest Americans,” says Walter Williams, University of Washington professor emeritus of public affairs. “Their gains fueled the huge increase in campaign contributions and made big money the driving force in national politics.”
Walter Cronkite clears his throat. Walter Cronkite's Ten propositions for the Democrats I respect Cronkite like I respect my grandmother. I'm also a democrat. Please someone, anyone, destroy Walter Cronkite's levelheadism here. Please. [MetaFilter]]
everyone should read this, it is about democracy, and equality in the future.
1000+ apple computers = top 10 supercomputer at Virginia tech
well, news just hit slashdot that Virginia Tech, where i teach, is building a top 10 supercomputer cluster out of Apple G5's. it is supposed to attract researchers interested in using it to virginia tech, though there are already several groups on campus with clusters and grids opeational already…. well, it is a good way to maintain our reputation in this area at least.
lots of people are viewing this, there is just as much info at slashdot.
http://www.macrumors.com/pages/2003/08/20030830151942.shtml
http://www.computing.vt.edu/research_computing/index.html
http://www.eng.vt.edu/odlc/computing/advanced_computing.shtml
evidence
http://www.ita.vt.edu/archive/docs/tabsheets/FY2004/646457.txt
—–
Too much to read!. You know, this just shouldn’t be allowed. In fact, I think it ought to be outlawed. It’s just bloody not fair that the 2003 Extreme Markup proceedings come out just as I really ought to be getting a head start on fall reading. Oh, and, um, I guess we won’t… [Caveat Lector]
this has an insightful comment and link to interesting proceedings. 'specially the link to http://www.mulberrytech.com/Extreme/Proceedings/html/2002/Rosenblum01/EML2002Rosenblum01.html
Code reading and literary criticism. Brian Marick has posted a wonderful essay on the subject of commenting code. “I do believe that code with comments should often be written to be more self-explanatory,” he says. “But code can only ever be self-explanatory with respect to an expected reader.” To illustrate, he shows an algorithm in C, then translates to the kind of Lisp a C programmer would write, then retranslates to the kind of Lisp a Lisp programmer would write. Then he walks through the Lisp code line by line, exploring how the code itself sets up and then satisfies expectations in the mind of a reader who is presumed Lisp-proficient.
… [Jon's Radio]
this actually tails in with some of what i'm arguing in my dissertation… i/m saving a copy.
My view is that the success of business processes–including software–depends on subtle issue of execution, rather than on the concepts that you can explicitly patent. So I think I'm sympathetic to Paul David, et al, who argue against a proposal for the EU that would encourage software patents.
[Corante: Bottom Line]
Bessen and Hunt found that the correlation between R&D and patenting in the U.S. over time has been significantly negative. In other words, as software patenting rates have risen, R&D investment in sectors using information technologies has declined. Whether there is an underlying causal relationship remains unestablished, but the U.S. experience warrants scepticism regarding claims that software patenting would contribute to the goal of raising the software R&D investment rate in the European Research Area.
I'm pretty much anti-patent toward anything that can be covered by a lesser form of license or other property protection.
actually this is a game that should be played by everyone, not just college students. you already play it so, perhaps you should know what your playing with. in any case, i recommend distributing this game to your students and friends.
Discover: Built-In Spam. Steven Johnson. Software designers are quietly integrating commercial transactions into ordinary applications. Before too long your spreadsheet may start selling you stock tips, and for the low, low price of $1.50, your word processor might offer to clean up that last paragraph you wrote. [Tomalak's Realm]
Gack, one more reason for open source software.
Tyranny of structurelessness. 'The Tyranny of Structurelessness' by Jo Freeman should be compulsory reading for any libertarians, funky-businessmen, self-organisation enthusiasts, hippies, entrepreneurial gurus,… [iWire]
Two articles from the Washington Post today, Haliburton making nearly $2 billion from war in Iraq and Bush holds Federal employee pay raise to 2 percent.
I wonder whether Haliburton will pay any taxes on that 2 billion, because i know federal employees will pay taxes on their 2 percent. I strongly suspect that there is some sort of tax waiver in effect for Iraq companies already isn't there?
Perens: IT Pros Must Lobby for Open Source. 27 Aug 2003: Open-source pioneer and evangelist Bruce Perens urges IT managers to lobby for the protection of open-source software from the infringing threat of software patents and legal liability.Read the short interview [RootPrompt.org -- Nothing but Unix]
Blasted!. Ouch. The Cornell College ResNet system, which connects students to the internet and the college network has been slammed with the W32/Lovsan.worm (MSBlaster) virus. This means that students will be disconnected from the network (and internet access) until things are… [Eat Your Vegetables]
—-
i expected this to happen at many more campuses, all those fresh new unprotected pcs plugged in at once, and blammo, worm/virus/cracker heaven….
| Designed by Kaushal Sheth | Based on Andreas02 and GreenTrack | Powered By WordPress |