College Buddies
The Harvard Crimson chronicles two college buddies who turned out to be stars in the same field.
Tuesday, June 26, 2007
Facebook v MySpace
I started using Facebook back when it was only for one school. MySpace, for me then, was just "there". Now here's an ethnographic account (sorta) of the two social networking sites and the kind of people who tend to use them, basically reflecting class division.
I started using Facebook back when it was only for one school. MySpace, for me then, was just "there". Now here's an ethnographic account (sorta) of the two social networking sites and the kind of people who tend to use them, basically reflecting class division.
Saturday, June 16, 2007
Diaspora calling
My intersecting interests in both Filipino diaspora and information technology recently got engaged with a report from the Economist [7 June 2007]. With the falling cost of IP telephony, everybody should be calling, right? Not so fast. It looks like in general there's really not much increase in the time we spend calling other people. But look who's dialing who over the Internet? Peoples in diaspora. Hmmm... no surprise there for me, since I myself spend a great deal of time talking to friends and family abroad. But other than the fact that these people are using Skype or Yahoo or what-have-you more than other groups, availability or accessibility of the VOIP technology doesn't automatically translate into its increased use.
My intersecting interests in both Filipino diaspora and information technology recently got engaged with a report from the Economist [7 June 2007]. With the falling cost of IP telephony, everybody should be calling, right? Not so fast. It looks like in general there's really not much increase in the time we spend calling other people. But look who's dialing who over the Internet? Peoples in diaspora. Hmmm... no surprise there for me, since I myself spend a great deal of time talking to friends and family abroad. But other than the fact that these people are using Skype or Yahoo or what-have-you more than other groups, availability or accessibility of the VOIP technology doesn't automatically translate into its increased use.
Friday, June 15, 2007
"Scientific Consensus"
Here's one for my friends teaching Science, Technology and Society. "Scientific consensus" is supposed to be a good thing. But what if it stifles dissent and fosters false finality in debates over issues? Is science about consensus, to begin with? The Czech president makes his point.
Here's one for my friends teaching Science, Technology and Society. "Scientific consensus" is supposed to be a good thing. But what if it stifles dissent and fosters false finality in debates over issues? Is science about consensus, to begin with? The Czech president makes his point.
Friday, June 08, 2007
Booked in NY
When I'm in New York, I stay with my sister. So this is probably something I can't experience for myself. But for my literate friends who are looking for a place to stay in the Big Apple, the Library Hotel is an enticing proposition.
When I'm in New York, I stay with my sister. So this is probably something I can't experience for myself. But for my literate friends who are looking for a place to stay in the Big Apple, the Library Hotel is an enticing proposition.
Thursday, June 07, 2007
Internet--the biggest generation gap since rock-n-roll
NY Mag has done a wonderful piece on Internet being a dividing line between Before Netters and After Netters. After Netters, the generations that grow up with the Internet, may complain that Before Netters, the folks who might know or not know how the Internet works, are clueless what privacy entails today. Do you have a Facebook profile? A YouTube video? A MySpace account? Oppss... don't tell. What you say might give away your age.
NY Mag has done a wonderful piece on Internet being a dividing line between Before Netters and After Netters. After Netters, the generations that grow up with the Internet, may complain that Before Netters, the folks who might know or not know how the Internet works, are clueless what privacy entails today. Do you have a Facebook profile? A YouTube video? A MySpace account? Oppss... don't tell. What you say might give away your age.
Friday, May 04, 2007
Monday, January 08, 2007
Saturday, May 20, 2006
An honest wage for a day's honest work
In saying this adage, people may only be agreeing verbally. Reality can't possibly be that easy. Take any computation of *real* wage. You'd expect it to be as straighforward as your pay slip. Not so fast, if we look at this calculator of real wage. Indeed, real wage is function of many things, and your wage, brother, is not even real, much less honest.
In saying this adage, people may only be agreeing verbally. Reality can't possibly be that easy. Take any computation of *real* wage. You'd expect it to be as straighforward as your pay slip. Not so fast, if we look at this calculator of real wage. Indeed, real wage is function of many things, and your wage, brother, is not even real, much less honest.
Sunday, May 14, 2006
Writing your mom a paycheck?
O, well, mother's day, and society is abuzz with mushy adverts on the *idea* of momhood. Momhood, however, may represent opportunity cost. Isn't it better if someone actually compensates your mom?
O, well, mother's day, and society is abuzz with mushy adverts on the *idea* of momhood. Momhood, however, may represent opportunity cost. Isn't it better if someone actually compensates your mom?
Saturday, May 13, 2006
Bike to work
Sometime ago we did a class report on campus biking. I bike to school and to work 99.99% of the time. Elsewhere the idea is getting more hip everyday, and the Americans are riding along. "Maki-bike ka! Wag matakot!"
Sometime ago we did a class report on campus biking. I bike to school and to work 99.99% of the time. Elsewhere the idea is getting more hip everyday, and the Americans are riding along. "Maki-bike ka! Wag matakot!"
Wednesday, May 03, 2006
Americans are sicker than Brits
so says this story. How do Americans and Brits differ with respect to health? Well, one: vacations! Government mandated time-off is much greater in UK than in America. There could be other more nuanced factors, of course. Skim through a /. discussion on this.
so says this story. How do Americans and Brits differ with respect to health? Well, one: vacations! Government mandated time-off is much greater in UK than in America. There could be other more nuanced factors, of course. Skim through a /. discussion on this.
Saturday, April 29, 2006
Be able to kill your students
Oops, that's just a quote from the Ninja master Masaaki Hatsumi. How I wish I can truly appropriate that for certain students. :) But before you really get too serious about this killing stuff, go ask a Ninja yourself!
Oops, that's just a quote from the Ninja master Masaaki Hatsumi. How I wish I can truly appropriate that for certain students. :) But before you really get too serious about this killing stuff, go ask a Ninja yourself!
Monday, December 26, 2005
Structured Procrastination
Not all procrastination is bad. One can efficiently structure it to be productive. It may in fact be key to great work.
Not all procrastination is bad. One can efficiently structure it to be productive. It may in fact be key to great work.
Wednesday, September 14, 2005
Thursday, June 09, 2005
Thursday, January 20, 2005
Free Mac mini Desktop
Recently I've been making this pitch to my friends and their friends:
Hi friends and friends of friends! We're close to getting a free Mac mini Desktop, and we're sure we'll get it with a little help from you.
Yep, we're kuripot, they say. Recently we got free DVD rentals. So my partner Helen and I have been watching a lot of movies these days. If you want to know how, email us and we'll share the info with you. Good things are meant to be shared. :)
So here's the 'title belt' I'm going for this time: Free Mac mini Desktop! Of course it's a promotional stuff, but you don't have to eat their marketing bull$%17 nor spend a dime. How? Just choose the trial subscription of eFax, for instance, and cancel it before it expires if you think you don't need it. There are other offers, like the Blockbuster DVD rental that I got. But you decide for yourself.
So the promo is for FREE Mini Macs! No kidding! we've joined and we think you should as well... even if you don't need a Mac. :) Get it here:
http://www.FreeMiniMacs.com/?r=14202315
Thanks for your help in advance!
peter
PS
If you're still skeptical, my middle name is 'skeptical' myself. :) Isn't the deal too good to be true, I asked. Doesn't Economics tell me 'There's no such thing as free lunch'? Isn't it just another pyramiding scam? So I did research on this. Well, it turned out that the deal, IN FACT, is real. It's coming from a marketing company that's been handing out free iPods. See, for instance, the accounts from Wired Magazine and New York Times:
http://www.wired.com/news/mac/0,2125,64614,00.html?tw=wn_story_page_prev2
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0A13F63A540C758EDDAB0994DC404482
After reading those accounts, please tell me if the deal still doesn't make any economic or marketing sense. Ok?
Recently I've been making this pitch to my friends and their friends:
Hi friends and friends of friends! We're close to getting a free Mac mini Desktop, and we're sure we'll get it with a little help from you.
Yep, we're kuripot, they say. Recently we got free DVD rentals. So my partner Helen and I have been watching a lot of movies these days. If you want to know how, email us and we'll share the info with you. Good things are meant to be shared. :)
So here's the 'title belt' I'm going for this time: Free Mac mini Desktop! Of course it's a promotional stuff, but you don't have to eat their marketing bull$%17 nor spend a dime. How? Just choose the trial subscription of eFax, for instance, and cancel it before it expires if you think you don't need it. There are other offers, like the Blockbuster DVD rental that I got. But you decide for yourself.
So the promo is for FREE Mini Macs! No kidding! we've joined and we think you should as well... even if you don't need a Mac. :) Get it here:
http://www.FreeMiniMacs.com/?r=14202315
Thanks for your help in advance!
peter
PS
If you're still skeptical, my middle name is 'skeptical' myself. :) Isn't the deal too good to be true, I asked. Doesn't Economics tell me 'There's no such thing as free lunch'? Isn't it just another pyramiding scam? So I did research on this. Well, it turned out that the deal, IN FACT, is real. It's coming from a marketing company that's been handing out free iPods. See, for instance, the accounts from Wired Magazine and New York Times:
http://www.wired.com/news/mac/0,2125,64614,00.html?tw=wn_story_page_prev2
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FB0A13F63A540C758EDDAB0994DC404482
After reading those accounts, please tell me if the deal still doesn't make any economic or marketing sense. Ok?
Tuesday, January 04, 2005
Reductio ad absurdum in computing
This Kerneltrap interview with Richard Stallman notes of a technique (called 'dependency-directed backtracking') in programming that basically deploys reductio ad adsurdum:
'You make some assumptions, and with those together with some given facts you draw a conclusion. You may reach a contradiction; if so, at least one of your assumptions that led to that contradiction must be wrong. You also record which combination of assumptions actually related to the contradiction, so you can deduce that that combination of assumptions cannot all be true. Then you backtrack by changing assumptions, but you never try a set of assumptions that includes the combination that you know are contradictory.'
This Kerneltrap interview with Richard Stallman notes of a technique (called 'dependency-directed backtracking') in programming that basically deploys reductio ad adsurdum:
'You make some assumptions, and with those together with some given facts you draw a conclusion. You may reach a contradiction; if so, at least one of your assumptions that led to that contradiction must be wrong. You also record which combination of assumptions actually related to the contradiction, so you can deduce that that combination of assumptions cannot all be true. Then you backtrack by changing assumptions, but you never try a set of assumptions that includes the combination that you know are contradictory.'
Thursday, December 16, 2004
Barnyard Economics
Some people just toss this term around without much thouhght about its meaning. A friend of mine, who took an exam where this term appeared, tried to google it without much success. So I thought I'd do the googling myself and see what would come up.
Barnyard economics
Sense 1:'practical economics' as opposed to one influenced by inclinations and desired. Relevant article: "Barnyard Economics" by Denise Eby Konan, Associate Professor of Economics at University of Hawaii. URL (accessed 16 Dec 2004): http://www.colorado.edu/Economics/newsletter/summer01-konan.htm . Relevant book: Everything I Needed to Know About Business I Learned in the Barnyard by Don Aslett.
Sense 2: 'real world' economics as opposed to textbook economics. Textbook economics, for instance, says markets equilibrate; 'barnyard economics' denies it. Sample passage: "The real basis of economics was detailed in George Orwell's Animal Farm which made the astute observation that equality is variable. Nowhere is the application of such barnyard economics more obvious than in the stock market. Though laws have been passed to keep the large predators at bay, there is still enough size difference between the inhabitants of the barnyard to illustrate the fundamental Orwellian principle that some animals are more equal than others" (Dallas Brozik, Sharks and Lemmings: How the Stock Market REALLY Works. URL (accessed 16 Dec 2004): http://webpages.marshall.edu/~brozik/sharklem%20web.pdf
Sense 3: 'fundamental economics' taught through engaging methods other textbooks or classroom lectures. Relevant project: 'Barnyard Economics'. URL (accessed 16 Dec 2004): http://www.oup.org/pubs/curentp_2/vol.html . Sample passage: "Bill began a talk 'Barnyard Economics' as a hobby became popular with church groups, lodges, school, civic service and foreman's clubs. This talk was made throughout the Eastern half of the United States. "Barnyard Economics" took the mystery out of the principles of economics by reducing them to the shopman's language." URL (accessed 16 Dec 2004): http://www.communities.ninemsn.com.au/MorganCountyKentuckyGeneology/johnston.msnw?action=ShowPhoto&PhotoID=137
Some people just toss this term around without much thouhght about its meaning. A friend of mine, who took an exam where this term appeared, tried to google it without much success. So I thought I'd do the googling myself and see what would come up.
Barnyard economics
Sense 1:'practical economics' as opposed to one influenced by inclinations and desired. Relevant article: "Barnyard Economics" by Denise Eby Konan, Associate Professor of Economics at University of Hawaii. URL (accessed 16 Dec 2004): http://www.colorado.edu/Economics/newsletter/summer01-konan.htm . Relevant book: Everything I Needed to Know About Business I Learned in the Barnyard by Don Aslett.
Sense 2: 'real world' economics as opposed to textbook economics. Textbook economics, for instance, says markets equilibrate; 'barnyard economics' denies it. Sample passage: "The real basis of economics was detailed in George Orwell's Animal Farm which made the astute observation that equality is variable. Nowhere is the application of such barnyard economics more obvious than in the stock market. Though laws have been passed to keep the large predators at bay, there is still enough size difference between the inhabitants of the barnyard to illustrate the fundamental Orwellian principle that some animals are more equal than others" (Dallas Brozik, Sharks and Lemmings: How the Stock Market REALLY Works. URL (accessed 16 Dec 2004): http://webpages.marshall.edu/~brozik/sharklem%20web.pdf
Sense 3: 'fundamental economics' taught through engaging methods other textbooks or classroom lectures. Relevant project: 'Barnyard Economics'. URL (accessed 16 Dec 2004): http://www.oup.org/pubs/curentp_2/vol.html . Sample passage: "Bill began a talk 'Barnyard Economics' as a hobby became popular with church groups, lodges, school, civic service and foreman's clubs. This talk was made throughout the Eastern half of the United States. "Barnyard Economics" took the mystery out of the principles of economics by reducing them to the shopman's language." URL (accessed 16 Dec 2004): http://www.communities.ninemsn.com.au/MorganCountyKentuckyGeneology/johnston.msnw?action=ShowPhoto&PhotoID=137
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)