Friday, May 30, 2003

Indian Take
"Take on Gates!," an Indian president tells techies at the Indian Institute of Information Technology. Here's the text of his speech where he also outlines his vision of technological convergencies as well their uses to power rural life.
Txting in America
is relatively new, but Americans are catching up. By 2007, there will be as many as 75 million American SMS users. Hmm... better remind them that txting hurts. :)

Tuesday, May 20, 2003

Aristotle got it wrong again!
His 'Great Chain of Being,' in which animals are arranged in scales according to their degrees of 'perfection' beneath humans, collides with a recalcitrant fact: Chimps belong to the human genus. They may even have culture, social behavior, language, and other things we consider "human."

Further info from: Jane Goodall Institute | Discovery Channel
Care for tea?
--the very words of my partner Helen every morning. Turns out that tea, especially green tea, is good for dental health (in addition to its vitamin-like substances).

Sunday, May 18, 2003

Is Math a Young Man's Game?
the Slate asks.
Grade Inflation

Professors of Harvard and other leading universities have reportedly been inflating the grades of their students for various reasons. But who really cares? Perhaps Bush does not. But Mansfield does.
In Search of a Distro
I've been dealing with linux since the second half of the 1990s. Started with Slackware, tried Caldera, RedHat, Mandrake. Lately, I've tested CD-based distributions like Knoppix, Dynebolic, and Freeduc. Gentoo is by far my choice, and here's why.
Sydad's Moral Dilemma
What if in the course of a syad's job of tinkering with computer files he'd stumble into a faculty's hoard of illegal materials, would he blow the whistle as was done here? And the boss's response?: Fire the whistle blower! The "official" word here.
Human Free Will as "computational irreducibility"
What if the human free will is just a consequence of a "computational irreducibility" (its maximum complexity), and, just like other systems, the only way to know what it will do is to just let it be? Our minds, if not our souls, claims Wolfram, are computational consequences of simple rules and are the "computational equivalence" constitutive of the actual states of affairs. Allegedly the most complicated behavior imaginable arises from such very simple rules.

The principle of computational equivalence necessarily puts limits on science itself. Many questions simply could not be answered a priori, since the only way to discover the consequences of many complex processes, like the human free will itself, is to let things proceed naturally. There's no shortcut, maintains Wofram, "since our own computational tools are at best only as powerful as the complicated systems we hope to study."

[ Sources: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 ]

Wednesday, May 14, 2003

Neo Metaphysics
How about film as metaphysics? Or 'Neo' as the One? Hmm... I'm really tempted to list in the census with 'Jedi' as my religion. :)

[ more Matrix-religion stuff... and more. From NPR | NY Times ]
Philosophy of Language
Or, is it 'taste' of language? This article accounts for the eccentricities of programming languages and hazards that, in the final analysis, they're all the same. Meantime, I'll practice my Klingon!

Tuesday, May 13, 2003

Neo Metaphysics
How about film as metaphysics? Or 'Neo' as the One? Hmm... I'm really tempted to list in the census with 'Jedi' as my religion. :) [ more Matrix-religion stuff ]

Thursday, May 08, 2003

BOFH
Here's one reason why you should be kind to your sysad, even if he sometimes acts like a bastard operator from hell. On seccond thought, though, BOFN (a sampler) is now a passé, isn't s/he? :) Mwahahahahahahaha!

Friday, May 02, 2003

SARS and AIDS
What do they have in common? Obviously both kill! But they came at different times: the latter at a time of less openness and less sharing of information; the former at a lot more open time. It took years to discover the causative agent of AIDS while it only took months to uncover the "bug" for SARS. Hail the Internet!

Meanwhile, there's anecdotal evidence that garlic helps prevent SARS.

[ Science Mag's SARS page ]
Sonya's Garden
N 14° 05' 16.7" E 120° 50' 55.9" -- This unpretensious place serves veges and stuff straight from the garden. No menu, no fancy food. Just great dressing that comes with fresh, organic green edible stuff. It's supposed to be "slow food" (as opposed to "fast food," I suppose). We went there yesterday (which happened to be a holiday and people where wondering in the garden while waiting for their turns to dine.) When we were finally sitted, first there came the salad. Then pasta, mint tea, dessert. And that's it! Sonya's Garden really made my day.

What people have to say about the place: 1 | 2 | 3
Winsock Problem
Darn Micro$oft! I was doing some network stuff using my HP laptop to try out new Wi-Fi connections when I got this stupid winsock problem:

An operation was attempted on something that is not a socket

Well, this wasn't even apparent as I had to do some digging before I could uncover this error message. And that's 2 days! 2 days wasted, Bill! Your Knowledge Base was not even of any help. What helped me was some guy's patch somewhere in Canada. Tsk, tsk, tsk... I'm really not suprised why some people are having so much MS rage these days.