Found a nice free hosting service for #django projects -- alwaysdata.com
TPers are history-blind -- http://bit.ly/1Lwtqt how can someone be Hitlerite and Communist? Someone deserves it more: http://bit.ly/3wSnpN
#TSA vs. the toddler menace - security theater at the taxpayers' expense (http://ping.fm/WjGmA)
Samuel Huntington's self-fulfilling prophecy? Adherents of islam with paranoia about other culture s, esp. judaism http://bit.ly/ffUZf
Avoid Farm Bloomington; service has gone completely downhill: wait staff make you feel invisible! #restaurants #food #bloomington
Renault may quit #F1 over Singapore: surely RBR will now switch? (http://ping.fm/gsTvU)
While bedridden, I serendipitously discovered this amazing new TV series -- it does not even have enough user ratings yet -- starring Tim Roth as a House-esque face-reader.
Surprisingly thoughtful, well-plotted, and with a diverse range of cases. People who find House too preposterous ought to give this one a try -- they're on Hulu.
Surprisingly thoughtful, well-plotted, and with a diverse range of cases. People who find House too preposterous ought to give this one a try -- they're on Hulu.
"If there is anything that I can do in terms of assisting there and allowing the credence, the credibility that that great vocation, that cornerstone of our democracy called the press, if I can help build up that credibility in the press and allow the electorate to know that they can believe everything that is reported through the airwaves and through print, I want to be able to help."
-- Sarah Palin to Larry King
-- Sarah Palin to Larry King
Some men see things as they are and say, “Why?” I dream of things that never were and say, “Why not?”
-– George Bernard Shaw
It is easy to be apathetically indifferent. The world has its problems, sure, but hey, life is short and one should take care of oneself first, no? Yet the danger is that there are a *lot* of issues on which the silent majority is not sufficiently aware to care one way or another, and a small but outspoken minority gets to drive their agenda, because the other people who know the first group is wrong find it too uncouth to engage them in debate. To spread the word to the masses. To do something.
Read more...
Quoting David Berlinski [Commentary magazine]:
What the neo-atheists tend to ignore, when assembling their pantheon of scientists that whittle away the gaps where the divine, in their opinion, is reduced to, is the contributions made by the Socrates of our time: Kurt Goedel.
In showing that there are truths that are impossible to prove, Goedel opened the way for a stable coexistence between faith and science: unless science directly contradicts a particular article of faith, in which case it has to adapt, having faith itself is hardly an irrational position.
In a remark now famous, Feynman observed with respect to quantum electrodynamics that its control over the natural world is so accurate that in measuring the distance from New York to Los Angeles, theory and experiment would diverge by less than the width of a human hair. Einstein’s theory of general relativity is in some respects equally accurate. We cannot account for these unearthly results. The laws of nature neither explain themselves nor predict their success. We have no reason to expect such gifts, and if we have come to expect them, that is only because, as the saints have always warned, we expect far more than we deserve.
Foremost among the undeserving are evolutionary dogmatists of the brand represented by Richard Dawkins and Daniel Dennett and marketed by their apostle Hitchens. Although theirs is not an undertaking notable for imaginativeness, it does seem to have conjured up a kind of god. Unlike the God of old, who ruled over everything, this god rules over lapses in argument or evidence. He is a presiding god, but with limited administrative functions. With gaps in view, he undertakes the specialized activity of incarnating himself as a stopgap. He may be called the god of the gaps.
As a rhetorical contrivance, the god of the gaps makes his effect contingent on a specific assumption: whatever the gaps, they will in the course of scientific research be filled. It is an assumption both intellectually primitive and morally abhorrent—primitive because it reflects an absence of curiosity, and abhorrent because it assigns to our intellectual future a degree of authority alien to human experience.
What the neo-atheists tend to ignore, when assembling their pantheon of scientists that whittle away the gaps where the divine, in their opinion, is reduced to, is the contributions made by the Socrates of our time: Kurt Goedel.
In showing that there are truths that are impossible to prove, Goedel opened the way for a stable coexistence between faith and science: unless science directly contradicts a particular article of faith, in which case it has to adapt, having faith itself is hardly an irrational position.
From Paul Lamere's Duke Listens!:
Sounds really interesting. MovieLens, LibraryThing, etc. have been around for a while, but even though in a way they are 'Web 3.0' services (peer recommendations), in another way they are still stuck in the past, when it comes to integration: sure, you get access to the IMDb or Amazon page for the item, but that's the extent of integration offered.
ffwd promises that -- the video is available in the same interface, so you can quickly act on a recommendation. There's still a problem, in that the service still relies on network effect in what is nearly a zero-sum game: more users here means less users for other peer recommendation services. Some people would be using multiple services, which means their data likely won't be up to date in all, which means the services will offer suboptimal recommendations (so it's bad for all concerned).
Take the new Data Portability initiative into account, though, and a market in recommendation services could soon spring up. Use various services, and give them authorization to pull your rating data from each other. The user gets to experiment with which site has the algorithms and user base to provide good ratings in which situations, and the services get to compete on how good they do their jobs, not merely how well they can gobble up and lock their market down (think Wintel).
ffwd is new service (still in private beta), that is hoping to help you find discover web video. I've taken it for a quick spin. They have a pretty nifty enrollment process - where you click on shows that you like so they can get an idea of your taste. Once you've selected your shows they assign you a video personality based upon your selections (I'm a 'comedy writer', apparently I like comedies). Once you are enrolled you can start to discover videos.
Sounds really interesting. MovieLens, LibraryThing, etc. have been around for a while, but even though in a way they are 'Web 3.0' services (peer recommendations), in another way they are still stuck in the past, when it comes to integration: sure, you get access to the IMDb or Amazon page for the item, but that's the extent of integration offered.
ffwd promises that -- the video is available in the same interface, so you can quickly act on a recommendation. There's still a problem, in that the service still relies on network effect in what is nearly a zero-sum game: more users here means less users for other peer recommendation services. Some people would be using multiple services, which means their data likely won't be up to date in all, which means the services will offer suboptimal recommendations (so it's bad for all concerned).
Take the new Data Portability initiative into account, though, and a market in recommendation services could soon spring up. Use various services, and give them authorization to pull your rating data from each other. The user gets to experiment with which site has the algorithms and user base to provide good ratings in which situations, and the services get to compete on how good they do their jobs, not merely how well they can gobble up and lock their market down (think Wintel).
Hillary is *leading* in NH ?!!
96% Chris Dodd
92% Hillary Clinton
92% Barack Obama
89% John Edwards
84% Bill Richardson
79% Joe Biden
66% Mike Gravel
65% Dennis Kucinich
60% Rudy Giuliani
53% John McCain
39% Mike Huckabee
36% Mitt Romney
35% Tom Tancredo
24% Fred Thompson
16% Ron Paul
2008 Presidential Candidate Matching Quiz
92% Hillary Clinton
92% Barack Obama
89% John Edwards
84% Bill Richardson
79% Joe Biden
66% Mike Gravel
65% Dennis Kucinich
60% Rudy Giuliani
53% John McCain
39% Mike Huckabee
36% Mitt Romney
35% Tom Tancredo
24% Fred Thompson
16% Ron Paul
2008 Presidential Candidate Matching Quiz
- Location:@home, Bloomington, IN, USA
- Mood:
accomplished - Music:NPR's Frank Sinatra profile: 'The Voice'
Huckabee's 35% is a whopping 11% over Romney's. McCain came in fourth with 12%, barely topping Ron Paul (11%, fifth). This is almost as good as he was expecting -- Thompson came in third with 14%, so he probably would not withdraw yet, but apart from that this is as good as can be expected going into the New Hampshire primaries.
Obama just beat Edwards and Clinton, 33-33-32. Not sure if the vote tally is finalized (edit: it is), and this is technically a 3-way tie, but this is almost Hillary's nightmare scenario!
Looks like each party's most phoney candidates are on the way out.
Update 22:02 -- over 120,000 people in the Republican caucus, and over 200,000 people in the Democratic caucus! Whoa
Update 23:28 -- Obama is substantially ahead of Edwards and Clinton (38-30-29), and McCain is actually much closer to Thompson (and further ahead than Paul -- 13-13-10) than earlier projected [wapo].
Obama just beat Edwards and Clinton, 33-33-32. Not sure if the vote tally is finalized (edit: it is), and this is technically a 3-way tie, but this is almost Hillary's nightmare scenario!
Looks like each party's most phoney candidates are on the way out.
Update 22:02 -- over 120,000 people in the Republican caucus, and over 200,000 people in the Democratic caucus! Whoa
Update 23:28 -- Obama is substantially ahead of Edwards and Clinton (38-30-29), and McCain is actually much closer to Thompson (and further ahead than Paul -- 13-13-10) than earlier projected [wapo].
I know very little about some of the people on my friends list, and some of the people in the wider blogosphere. Some people I know relatively well. (Some I know too well. ha!) I read your journals, or we have something else in common and we chat occasionally. Some of you I hardly know at all. Perhaps you lurk, for whatever reason. But you friended me and I thank you for your interest in my words.
But here's a thought: why not take this opportunity to tell me a little something about yourself. Any old thing at all. Just so the next time I see your name I can say: "Ah, there's so and so...they listen in rapture to the love-music of she-turnips." (Think of it as your Chanukah/Christmas/New Year present to me!)
I'd love it if every single person who friended me would do this. Yes, even you people who I know really well. Then post this in your own journal and see what gems of knowledge appear. C'mon I've got 77 Livejournal friends on top of an unknown number of people outside of Livejournal. Surely some of you can answer this, yes?
(taken from
rfmcdpei with minor modifications)
But here's a thought: why not take this opportunity to tell me a little something about yourself. Any old thing at all. Just so the next time I see your name I can say: "Ah, there's so and so...they listen in rapture to the love-music of she-turnips." (Think of it as your Chanukah/Christmas/New Year present to me!)
I'd love it if every single person who friended me would do this. Yes, even you people who I know really well. Then post this in your own journal and see what gems of knowledge appear. C'mon I've got 77 Livejournal friends on top of an unknown number of people outside of Livejournal. Surely some of you can answer this, yes?
(taken from
- Location:Jakarta, Indonesia
Wishing you all a happy Christmas/Chanukkah/Kwanzaa/Winter solstice
This one is for Say-hien:
spent hours trying to rhyme hat
until I say, well screw that
writing can be such a bore
lost count of pages I tore
spent hours trying to rhyme hat
until I say, well screw that
writing can be such a bore
lost count of pages I tore
- Mood:
amused


