Friday, November 28, 2008

Monies

TV - $1100
TV Protection Plan - $170
TV Stand - $150
Delivery - $100
Tax - $100

For a grand total of $1620.

Yeah. I drained my bank account, but it'll hopefully be a good purchase. I got a pretty good deal on a TV that I'll have for years, so it's nice to treat myself. It doesn't come until Saturday, though, so I have to bate my breath a little longer. In the meantime, I'll build the stand , call Comcast to enable HDTV feeds, and maybe even drop more cash on a PS3. I need my Blu-Ray!

UPDATE: 8:47am
I dragged the extremely heavy TV stand up the stairs. Ugh. I put it all together and it actually looks really great:


Sorry for the blurry crap. It's three tiered with nice glass platforms for everything. Can't wait until I put the crown on top.

Better picture from Best Buy, TV and all:

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Low Content

To continue my latest trend of very little content posts, I direct you to the following Rolling Stone article:

This was a very eye opening article, and makes me consider a free-range-only way of life, if but for a moment.

What is Money?

This week on Planet Money, Alex Blumberg and company investigate exactly that question: What is money? Monday's podcast was especially illuminating, featuring economist, author, and Harvard professor Niall Ferguson explaining what money is.

The crux of his argument isn't that money is paper and coins, bank notes and IOUs. Money is a symbol, whether tangible or intangible, that crystallizes a relationship between loaner and debtor. Money is confidence in other people and society as a whole. It has exactly the value that society assigns to it and no more or no less. If tomorrow everyone in the world decided that all money was worthless, it would be worth exactly zero.

One of Ferguson's anecdotes was of an epiphany he had while studying the past of money. He found a clay tablet that had written on it a promise to pay a certain amount of wheat to whomever possessed it. He realized that this was one of the first instances of money; an otherwise worthless object that, because of what could be considered a "confidence trick," was worth so many kilos of a commodity.

Post Tryptophan Mania

Schedule for next week, out bright and early thanks to having Thursday and Friday off. Subject to change, too.

Monday - 15:30 to 24:00 (8.5 hours)
Tuesday - 15:30 to 24:00 (17 hours)
Wednesday - 15:30 to 24:00 (25.5 hours)
Thursday - 0:00 to 4:00 (29.5 hours)
Friday - 11:00 to 16:00 (34.5 hours)
Saturday - 7:30 to 16:00 (43 hours)
Sunday - OFF

Weird. Twelve hour, day-straddling shifts are kind of cool. Plenty of movie time when nobody else is around.

Monday, November 24, 2008

AAAAGH

Why does the east coast suck so much? There are literally no grocery stores open after midnight here. WHAT WILL I DO IF I WANT GRAPES AT 3:17AM?!

Seriously I wish there was one. I want to pick up bread and milk.

Best Buy Blowout

I may have finally found it. After months of searching and waiting, I'm closer and closer to pouncing. What seems like eons of saving up has led to this point.

I think I may be buying my heralded television on Friday.

Yes, the wonderful Black Friday has once again duped me into getting excited about getting stuff for super cheap. The piece of machinery, nay artistry, is a 46" 1080p Samsung LCD model with three HDMI inputs. Half a foot smaller than I was thinking initially, but the price tag makes it the most tempting; on Friday, it'll be available for $1099.

I've been to Black Friday sales before, and haven't had a whole lot of success due to my very small commitment to it. The cold Minnesota winters don't do much for my ability to keep my eyes on the prize. Out here, though, I may have more success. I actually hope it's abnormally cold, because that may eliminate some of the competition. I may end up going out at one or two in the morning just to ensure that I'm able to get what I want.

I made up a big finance sheet today to ensure that I had enough money. I definitely do, but I did a lot of math with the numbers I came up with. Apparently when you take into account car payments, insurance of all sorts, food, rent, random purchases, cable, electric and heat, and everything else, it costs me about $85 per day to live. Awesome. That seems like a lot. Also, I spend an average of just under $3 a day on gasoline.

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Civic Literacy

I stumbled on a very good civics test here. For the most part, it's good at testing your civics knowledge, though its scope creeps a little. I tested 93%. The questions I missed tended to be more about economics and history than actual government. I don't claim to be a great economics, nor have I taken an econ class in six years, so I'm not too concerned about the fact that I don't know why free market economies work better than federally planned ones on a micro scale.

People are pretty stupid, though. The average score is 49%.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Schedule for Thanksgiving Week

This is going to be a fun one.

Monday - 14:00 to 24:00 (10 hours)
Tuesday - 15:30 to 24:00 (18.5 hours)
Wednesday - 14:00 to 24:00 (28.5 hours)
Thursday - OFF (36.5 hours)
Friday - OFF (44.5 hours)
Saturday - OFF
Sunday - 7:30 to 12:00 (49 hours)

That's a lot of overtime, ladies and gentlemen.

EDIT: Revised on Sunday, November 23 for schedule changes.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

On the Nature of Life

I've been thinking; there's a shocker. I've been thinking about the people who read this, and if I don't know them, what drives them. Even if I do know them, I'd love to know more. I think in these days, people have so little time to be introspective. They're not forced to sit in the dark at night rather than watch television and browse the internet. I'm a creature of consumption, and I'm consuming media constantly.

But what about you? I have some questions, and if you'd be kind enough to answer them, I'd be delighted. Anonymous or not, go ahead.

What's the biggest risk you've taken thus far in your life? Mine happened very, very recently. I packed up and moved to a place I did not know. A place that did not know me. I began full time employment when I had never been employed full time for more than a three month period. I left something I had never been without for so long; school, family, friends. I knocked down the majority of the castle, and am picking it up again piece by piece. I couldn't be happier with myself, with my adventure.

What do you consider to be your biggest failure? That is, a decision you made that led to a dead end. And, most importantly, how was it good for you? I've had a few. In the past few months I've let people know how I feel rather bluntly. I had a spectacular failure; what was an attempt to take a big step forward took me back to the starting line. I had a wonderful success; that success still remains with me today, and I'm thankful for it. Did I make the wrong choice in either case? I don't think so. I made a choice; every binary choice is half chance. What did it help me with? That's a little harder to pin down, but the events of the past few months have taught me a truth that you never realize as a kid. When you're young, you think that it only goes up from here, that you will be older with more money, more things, more excitement. But there's got to be a climax, a point where you hit your stride, and have attained all you need to be happy. In other words, you can't always get what you want.

How has choice and risk shaped who you are today? I used to be very conservative with choices. I was a kid who would have a crush and never really act on it for fear of taking such a risk. Recently, after rekindling old friendships and creating new ones, I've grown accustomed to taking a diving leap. Of course, it's good to look before such a leap, but you still can't always predict the outcome. I've recently realized that I have to separate things into what I can live without and what I can't. I have to be very picky about what drops into that second bucket; before I would have played it safe and dumped all my thoughts, dreams, and feelings into that category. Now I feel more discerning.

I hope to hear from you soon, readers, however few or many of you are out there. Thanks for reading this.

"Taking a risk, doing things where you actually have a chance to fail... that's what being young is."
- Ira Glass

Hunting Season, and You Know What That Means!

It's time for the amazing accidental killing of children and loved ones post!!!

Now, ladies and gentlemen, it's time to answer our final question for a fabulous prize!

Which story is true:
A) Sixteen month old shot in the chest and killed by a hunter. The man shot an Eastern White Tail and failed to kill it in the first shot. His second shot penetrated a trailer, killing the toddler residing inside. He was using .300 Magnum rifle shells - GUESS WHICH ONE THAT IS!
B) Father shoots and kills his six year old daughter while cleaning his gun. He was drinking at the time. Also among this man's awesome history is being handed a shotgun and immediately pulling the trigger, accidentally discharging what he had thought was an unloaded weapon.
C) Nineteen year old woman shoots and kills herself by accident while handling a gun that apparently belonged to her boyfriend.
D) Eight year old Massachusetts boy accidentally shoots himself in the head when firing an Uzi. The kickback caused the child to lose control of the weapon.

Oh wait, looks like all of them are true, and each of them tragic beyond words.

I understand that people want to hunt, and they have every right to do so within reason. Within reason means you don't have to use rifle shells that could kill an elephant for hunting small deer. Within reason means you don't need to let small children fire a dangerous submachine gun. Within reason means that owning a gun should be a privilege to the people who have earned it, and not the absolute right some people think it is. Whatever interpretation of the Second Amendment is used, the founding fathers were fallible. Even if they thought every citizen should own a musket for their own personal defense, why can't they have been wrong about it?

There sure are a lot of these.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Word Substitution Racism



Conservation of Angular Momentum is Great OR I Miss Physics Class

In other words, I've been listening to music spinning in my chair. Wheee.

I've done some super specific tests (watching a clock and counting rotations) to figure out my angular velocity ω. With my arms held inward, I make five rotations in seven seconds, resulting in an average angular velocity ω1 of 4.488 rad/second. With arms outstretched, I make five rotations in twelve seconds, resulting in an average angular velocity ω2 of approximately 0.417 rotations/second, or 2.618 rad/second.

Now, in both situations, my momentum should be approximately the same - L = Iω, where I is my moment of inertia and L is my angular momentum. To figure out my moment of inertia in the first case, I have to cheat a little and assume I'm a uniformly distributed cylinder. I'll assume the chair I'm using weighs about forty pounds, since it's a computer chair with plenty of steel on it, and seems to weigh about 3-4 times what my ten pound weight weighs. Added with me, that's about 92 kilograms. The me plus chair system has a varying radius, but I'll assume it averages at about fourteen inches, or 0.3556 meters. Thus, the moment of inertia is:

I1 = (mr^2)/2 = (92 kg)(0.3556 m)^2 / 2 = 5.816 kg-m^2

My angular momentum in the first case is therefore:

L = (5.816 kg-m^2)(4.488 rad/s) = 26.106 kg-m^2/s

And I can find out my moment of inertia in the second case by using the same equation:

26.106 kg-m^2/s = I2*(2.618 rad/s)
I2 = (26.106 kg-m^2/s)/(2.618 rad/s)
I2 = 9.97 kg-m^2

The only thing different between the two situations in a practical sense is the radius of my arms; we can find how much I "spread out" my weight with:

9.97 kg-m^2 = (92 kg)(r^2)/2
r^2 = 0.216 m^2
r = 0.466 m

Essentially, it's like my weight was "spread out" by a factor of 1.31 in the second scenario. This seems pretty realistic. Though my arms are a small part of my weight, my "wingspan" is fairly significant and the weight of my outstretched arms can add a lot to the moment of inertia. Think of it like a see-saw, where the further you are from the middle, the more upward force you exert on your partner's side.

Error could be introduced by my shoddy timekeeping, pushing with more or less force in either scenario, and the friction and air resistance differences in the two situations. When my arms are outstretched, air resistance can play a big part. Friction will also obviously have more effect on the second scenario, since I'm spinning for longer. Also I'm not a cylinder. Oh well though, it was just for fun. Need to do some good math here and there, even if it's just a little algebra.

The Forgotten

I've raved again and again over This American Life, and this week's episode is quite interesting and heartfelt. It's all about living alone, so I can definitely relate.

I've been living alone in my own apartment for about five and a half months now. It takes getting used to, especially after sharing not only an apartment but a room with somebody else for the past four years. It takes getting used to, knowing no one within about a thousand miles. I have work friends, definitely, but considering nobody else has set foot in my apartment for around eight weeks, the place begins to be associated with being alone. I've got a duality about me, though; I'm perfectly content to be by myself, and I'm content with being with others. In the former situation, I generally seek to speak to people via online messaging or the phone, and with the latter, the person or people I'm with often get my full attention. Either way, though, I'm happy with the situation I'm in now.

My apartment, sadly, doesn't get utilized as much as one would think; my living room, for the months of July, August, and early September, was where I would hang out with visitors. Now I only venture there to talk on the phone or lie down on the couch. It's curious how my guest bedroom door has been closed for weeks, a kind of no man's land that I don't care about or touch. I have been doing a pretty good job keeping up with cleaning, though; the shower is spotless, and I run the vacuum every week or so to keep everything tidy. I'm not a clean freak by any stretch, but I suppose it could be any day now that a friend shows up looking for a place to stay. If somebody asked me if they could stay with me in my spare bedroom, I would be absolutely delighted. In fact, my Floridian friend Whitney S. asked me if the opportunity would be there for her to move up if she had to. I agreed; a break with rent would allow me to save more money, in addition to having somebody to hang around with when I get bored.

So am I lonely? I wouldn't consider myself so. I definitely seek out interactions with other people, doing my best to make friends in the area, which has introduced several intriguing adventures over the past few months. But lonely? I don't have the time to be lonely. Between work, sleep, said adventures, and phone calls, I don't have enough time in the day. I'm ambivalent, one could say. I like doing my own thing at my own time, but there's no enjoyment that compares with sharing comedy, tragedy, knowledge, and mystery with others.

Regardless, the episode of This American Life this week included the story of a department of the Los Angeles Police that dealt specifically with those who had passed away without any obvious family (or even friends) that should be contacted. They told the story of Mary Ann, a woman who had lived alone for dozens of years, barely speaking to others who lived around her. She was unmarried, had no children, and carried nothing with her to the hospital she checked into to indicate who she knew or who she was related to.

Although a distant relative of Mary Ann had been found, they also told of the people who had no one. Their parents had already passed, they never married or were widows or widowers. They had no children to speak of, and shut themselves in, filling their lives with things instead of people. This amounts to about a thousand people a year in Los Angeles, who are cremated and stored for four years before they are buried in mass graves. Almost no one attends these ceremonies, save a chaplain and a few county employees, less than a dozen usually. It's almost poetic; people who spend their lives alone, whether by choice or not, enter eternity with such company.

The most heart-wrenching story the particular LAPD investigator cited was the death of a woman in her eighties. Her husband died sixty years earlier in World War II after being shot down in Europe. The woman had still had the letters sent to her by the government - the first telling her about the loss of his plane, the second telling of the recovery of the wreckage with no body, and the third telling her about her husband's death and the discovery of the body. She had never moved on, for that six decade period, preferring to remain in mourning for the rest of her days.

Such concepts and stories make the gears begin to turn, thinking about memory, perception, and the intangibility of both. Philosophical discussion aside, though, it's a great listen.

"Because we / Are messengers of memory / Just whispers in time."

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Grains of Wrath

Back in '83
A man came to me
And he told me, "Son,
Our way of life is done."
But I was only young.

With an eye to the fields
Speculators and yields
Rotten to the core
Monocultures whores
Entering bidding wars
On distant shores

I don't wanna be
In a land known
As destitute and free
With the grains of wrath
Blazing a path
From sea to shining sea.

King Corn

I'm sure everybody who's lived in America at any point is familiar with high fructose corn syrup. Virtually every product on the market today which contains any sweetener at all also contains HFCS rather than actual cane sugar. I've been interested in exactly why this happened for awhile now, and thought I'd share some research and thoughts on here.

Before the 1970s, high fructose corn syrup was basically unheard of. Products contained mainly beet or cane sugars, which were generally imported from several countries around the world. The United States keeps nearly all sugar it grows locally, in addition to very large imports of the commodity. This was a perceived problem in the early seventies. Imports were expensive, and importing this large amount of cane and beet sugar was a necessary evil that caused food prices to stay fairly stable. A man named Earl Butz was appointed as the Secretary of Agriculture under Nixon. The goals of the administration included reducing the amount of money the average American spent on food. This would allow them to consume more in the other areas of their lives, stimulating the economy. So how exactly did they decide to do this?

Butz was well known for encouraging a monoculture attitude when it came to farming. That is, he wanted farmers to plant their entire field with the same crop. Now, anyone who's up on their nineteenth century Irish history knows one of the big problems with monocultures - vulnerability to a single pathogen or other irritant. This is circumvented quite well by new farming technologies such as pesticides and genetic engineering, making the issue nearly moot.

Nearly.

Now, what crop did you suppose Butz and the USDA decided to focus on? What crop is the one you're most used to seeing when driving through rural areas in practically any state, in particular the nation's breadbasket? Corn, of course. The United States grows nearly half of corn worldwide. This is mainly because of extensive use of high fructose corn syrup; for this reason, the corn you see growing in most fields is engineered to be perfect for this purpose.


High Fructose Corn Syrup has recently surpassed cane and beet sugar in American consumption.

Modern field corn is different from sweet corn. It has a distinctly chalky taste, as it has sacrificed the majority of its nutrition (proteins and minerals) for starch, which makes it more useful for being broken down. This is not a unique phenomenon to corn - most crops now are engineered not for nutrition, but for yields. Under Nixon and Butz, farms were encouraged to buy and sell in bulk. Subsidies, which had been based on the size of farms in the past, were now based on yield. While this may seem reasonable at first, if one looks at the practical effects, it means the more efficient a farmer is in growing crops, the more money the government bestows upon him. Thus, it's no longer a goal to farm nutritious or high quality crops, but rather to grow as much as possible.

The shift in governmental policy coincided with the rise of big agriculture business. Farmers were advised by the USDA to "get big or get out" by Butz, and the end of feasibility for the family farm fast approached. Large corporations were able to purchase chemicals and equipment in bulk, saving them millions. Small and family farms struggled to keep up with the ridiculous efficiency of these titans, and were quickly forced to tap out of the business for good. In turn, the corporations used farming techniques like genetic engineering to increase the size of their yield (and decrease the nutrition of their crops) and thereby increase the size of their subsidy check.

Americans noticed that the quantity of food went up for their dollar while completely blind to the quality rapidly diminishing. Obesity has since become an epidemic as the demand was increased by the supply. Larger portions of cheaper, less nutritious food were offered to the masses; more food was necessary to supplement that lack of nutrition. Hence, obesity has become America's most prevalent health problem. People not only now have extremely high caloric intake, but the computer revolution has caused sedentary lifestyles to become the norm.

And it's no surprise that when the makers of the documentary King Corn had their hair tested, they averaged 56% corn in composition. The documentary sees two college friends and their quest to know the corn industry inside and out. In the process, they move to an Iowa farm to grow an acre of corn, receiving $28 in Federal subsidy for their effort. The two plant 31,000 kernels of corn in eighteen minutes thanks to modern technology; they spend about two hours farming over the entire year. Of course, owning a thousand or fifteen-hundred acres requires far more effort, but not nearly as much as it used to. The film is amazingly informative and I highly recommend it.

The corn watertower in my hometown of Rochester, Minnesota.

Friday, November 14, 2008

Digg Annoys Me

So I came across a thread about a new method the ESRB is using to get better ratings out to parents for video games. Essentially they have a website where they display a bunch of descriptions of games, telling about their content with somewhat of a context. For example, instead of just looking at TF2 and seeing it it's rated "M" and a couple of descriptions why, it could say something like "a first person shooter where two teams compete with one another in an online environment. Contains significant amounts of blood and guts in a cartoonish context." et cetera.

Now, I don't see anything wrong with this. So a regulatory agency wants to put something out there that's pretty easy to access and all in one place. Nothing changes for the average person who buys video games, right? It's not even that they're making it harder for minors to purchase games of any stripe. But of course, there is somehow still irrational hatred for the ESRB trying to deliver more information to parents to allow them to make a more informed decision:

Why bother? NOTHING will satisfy the nanny groups until every game has been turned into a PG game. Sure she praises it now, until she needs to rile up her base and starts going on the evil of games again. I think we have learned a valuable lesson to how to stop the political madness. Get a campaign started to Give money to the opposition party during election cycles and explain exactly WHY you are doing it. If enough gamers/free speech supporters/etc band together and give money to political groups who support OUR view, politicians will quickly change their tune.


This kind of slippery slope argument is really, really stupid. Sorry, I'm not fan of censorship, not at all, but taking steps to inform more people is never bad.

There's always a backlash in the video game industry to school shootings, and video game advocates always say the same thing - that parents should be more responsible for what their kids are exposed to. This is true: parents are chiefly responsible for such things. The thing about this story is the fact that it allows parents to make more informed decisions. It doesn't restrict free speech. It doesn't make games "evil".

There's a reason why slippery slope is a fallacy. Way to go, Digg.

Speaking of Digg and their blind support for everything Ron Paul, apparently he appears on every "Choose Your Own Cabinet" list that the New York Times posted. He peaks at #3 for Treasury Secretary and is #7 on Secretary of State, where for Defense, Homeland Security, and Attorney General he's somewhere in the 4-6 area. People are really stupid. At least Noam Chomsky made it in the top 20 for Defense and State:

Foggy posted:
Would [Noam Chomsky] be better in defense or state

The New Zorker posted:
merge them, dep't. of power/linguistics

Schedule 2: Electric Boogaloo

Another humdrum week for the most part. The schedule is remarkably similar to last week's, which is fine. An early wake up for a Monday, but better than waking up for a bright and early Sunday as I'll have to do.

Monday - 11:30 to 24:00 (12.5 hours)
Tuesday - 15:30 to 24:00 (21 hours)
Wednesday - 11:30 to 24:00 (33.5 hours)
Thursday - OFF
Friday - 7:30 to 16:00 (42 hours)
Saturday - OFF
Sunday - 7:30 to 16:00 (50.5 hours)

I'll probably shave down what I work on Monday on second thought. I think I can deal with "only" having six and a half hours of overtime.

In other news, I noticed something about the totals for the Minnesota Senate Ballots, shown below:

Independence DEAN BARKLEY 437389 15.16%
Republican NORM COLEMAN 1211565 41.99%
Democratic-Farmer-Labor AL FRANKEN 1211359 41.98%
Libertarian CHARLES ALDRICH 13916 0.48%
Constitution JAMES NIEMACKL 8908 0.31%
Write-In WRITE-IN** 2340 0.08%
Write-In MICHAEL CAVLAN** 13 0.00%
Write-In ANTHONY KEITH PRICE** 12 0.00%

Seriously? 2340 people wrote "Write-In" in the Write-In box?

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Friday, November 7, 2008

Change!

Though I'm weary of the whole "change" and "hope" buzzwords from Obama's campaign, it looks like his team can competently use the internet. His transition team has apparently set up this site in order to get the word out to the American people. This was one of my favorites:

Create the American Opportunity Tax Credit:
Obama and Biden will make college affordable for all Americans by creating a new American Opportunity Tax Credit. This universal and fully refundable credit will ensure that the first $4,000 of a college education is completely free for most Americans, and will cover two-thirds the cost of tuition at the average public college or university and make community college tuition completely free for most students. Recipients of the credit will be required to conduct 100 hours of community service.

This is a great idea. Not just the credit but also the community service requirement.

The ideas on his site are quite agreeable in the AGENDA column, at least for me. I know some are unrealistic, but if a small fraction of his ideas are put into motion I think we'd be much better for it. More incentive for people to go to colleges, even community college, is a great thing. A step toward intellectualism being accepted and encouraged in this country, a step away from xenophobia.

Schedule for Week of November 10

Short, sweet schedule post for next week.

Monday - 11:30 to 24:00 (12.5 hours)
Tuesday - 15:30 to 24:00 (21 hours)
Wednesday - 11:30 to 20:00 (29.5 hours)
Thursday - OFF
Friday - 7:30 to 16:00 (38 hours)
Saturday - OFF
Sunday - 7:30 to 16:00 (46.5 hours)

Plenty of overtime, and two days completely off, which is pretty nice. Hopefully I can find a way to make it to Thursday after seven full days of work ahead of me!

Who Needs Sleep?

I do, but it seems I probably won't get much tonight.

I think with the day off today my body shifted into weekend mode on a week where I won't have a weekend. Hopefully tomorrow will be exhausting enough so I can get to sleep fairly early tomorrow night to make up for it. The nap earlier was a mistake.

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Winter



"I should know
Who I am by now
I walk
The record stands somehow
Thinking of winter
Your name is the splinter
Inside me
While I wait.

I remember the sound
Of your November downtown
And I remember the truth
A warm December with you
But I don't have to make this mistake
And I don't have to stay this way
If only I would wake."

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Why McCain Lost

Now the Monday morning quarterbacking begins, only this time it's more of a November 5th quarterbacking effort. John McCain failed in his bid for the presidency. The reasons why on the surface are fairly clear - he failed to capture the 2000 and 2004 Bush states, and failed to sway Pennsylvania to shift to a more red hue. But there were underlying causes that began to doom him from the beginning.

The Charisma Gap has played a role in every election in the past fifteen years, since Clinton was elected in 1992. Clinton and W had "everyday guy" charisma, the kind that appeals to average working Joes. This played an important role in capturing the areas of the country which, frankly, may enjoy NASCAR a little too much and consider reading books to be a waste of time.

This election was a little different, but which candidate possessed the more charismatic qualities was obvious. McCain is a fairly good speaker, far better than George W. Bush ever had been or ever will be. Obama, though, is immaculate. Where McCain's technique involves jokes which aren't very funny and somewhat awkward soundbytes, Obama utilizes spotless segues and impressive inflections. Kerry and Gore were well spoken, certainly, but they spoke in a kind of monotonous fashion that made it hard to rally around them. Barack Obama was ready and willing to transcend the soundbyte culture that has grasped the media so tightly in the past eight years, and in many ways he succeeded.

Losing Control was seemingly a factor in McCain's downfall. Steve Schmidt, former Cheney aid and longtime political organizer, was given full control over McCain's campaign in early July. Schmidt comes from a school of thought that when it comes to campaigning, message isn't necessarily the most important issue; that as long as you can come out ahead in the majority of news cycles, the election is yours. This led to the McCain campaign turning quite negative, focusing on his opponent's political weaknesses rather than his own strengths. This probably also led to the strange and erratic movements of the campaign, jerking from one issue to the other as unnaturally as Sarah Palin's catwalk moves.

On the Sunday night before the last debate, McCain's core group of advisers—Steve Schmidt, Rick Davis, adman Fred Davis, strategist Greg Strimple, pollster Bill McInturff and strategy director Sarah Simmons—met to decide whether to tell McCain that the race was effectively over, that he no longer had a chance to win. The consensus in the room was no, not yet, not while he still had "a pulse."

The above quote, from a Newsweek article just released about the campaign, illustrates the little control McCain had over his own fate. The top advisors of his campaign had a hunch a month ago that things would not go well for their candidate, and they decided to not discourage him. Certainly McCain got wind of this eventually from how the polls and temperament of his colleagues and the media were moving, but it just exemplifies how weak of a grasp he actually had on his own campaign.

Probably foremost among the reasons why McCain's campaign failed so miserably was the selection of Sarah Palin for his Vice President. The pick seemed sound, at least at first. A relatively unknown Washington outsider - could definitely play for the "change" ticket. A woman to boot, to try and scoop up the rest of the Hillary vote. Sounds fairly reasonable, right?

It didn't seem to work out very well. Palin was a definite conservative, but she may have been too conservative for the American public to stomach. She galvanized the abortion- and tax-hating wings of the Republican Party, but did she also push the border cases further to the left? Was her inexperience and her penchant for disastrous interviews a death knell for the McCain campaign? I say yes. She also got off message several times on the campaign trail, "going rogue" as some put it and blathering off on her own tangents instead of sticking to the campaign line:

Palin launched her attack on Obama's association with William Ayers, the former Weather Underground bomber, before the campaign had finalized a plan to raise the issue. McCain's advisers were working on a strategy that they hoped to unveil the following week, but McCain had not signed off on it, and top adviser Mark Salter was resisting.

She seemed like quite the loose cannon, and some of her behavior toward the end of the campaign seemed to be motivated by her own ego rather than the ticket she was promoting. It seems like things may work out for her as well - in Alaska, where she remains remarkably popular, a Senate seat seems like it'll be up for grabs in short order. With most of the right-wing media calling the McCain campaign a failure because its candidate was not conservative enough, her status of a pariah may stand as a badge of honor.

McCain himself rarely spoke to Palin during the campaign, and aides kept him in the dark about the details of her spending on clothes because they were sure he would be offended. Palin asked to speak along with McCain at his Arizona concession speech Tuesday night, but campaign strategist Steve Schmidt vetoed the request.


Source.

Sad Songs Are Nature's Onions

Struggling Americans Forced To Work Extra-Dimensional 4th Shift

"I age an extra eight hours every time I work the fourth shift, and it's really starting to wear me down," Vernacini continued. "And having to buy a new shirt every time my body is flattened out to 4,000 times its usual surface area is one more strain on my budget that I don't need."

Some businesses have already installed a rip in the space-time continuum in their break-room areas so that employees can report for work in the other dimension as soon as their Earth shifts end. People who regularly work the fourth shift have reported that the tasks they perform are more or less exactly the same as during their other shifts, though they have to contend with frequent plasma storms and occasionally meet themselves leaving for one shift as they arrive for another, which can be demoralizing.

"The worst part about my job in the other dimension is trying to digest the silica-based food product they serve in the cafeteria," said Thomas Kinney, a line inspector who takes on a fourth shift three days a week at the Coca-Cola bottling plant in alternate Atlanta, GA. "It's probably the most painful part of working a fourth shift. That, and not getting to see my kids grow up."

Election Results

Well, last night certainly was eventful. The results I was watching closely are below.
  • Barack Obama and Joe Biden defeat John McCain and Sarah Palin for the presidency and vice-presidency of the United States of America.
  • Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey retains his Senate seat over challenger Dick Zimmer.
  • Senator Norm Coleman of Minnesota is locked in a recount race with challenger Al Franken. The current margin is 42%-42%, with Franken trailing by less than 600 votes.
  • It appears Ted Stevens of Alaska has won his seat over Anchorage mayor Mark Begich, despite Stevens' recent felony conviction on charges of corruption. If Stevens does indeed win, it is likely that he will resign and a special election will be held within ninety days for his seat. Look out for Palin trying to take his place and burst onto the national scene.
  • Michele Bachmann retains her Congressional seat for Minnesota's 6th District, defeating Elwyn Tinklenberg. The race was closer than it would have been if not for Bachmann's McCarthy-esque statements on Hardball with Chris Matthews a few weeks ago.
  • John Adler defeats Chris Myers in my home Congressional district, New Jersey's 3rd. This represents a pickup in the House for the Democrats, as Adler replaces retiring Republican Jim Saxton.
  • Tim Walz retains his seat as Congressman from Minnesota's 1st District, defeating Brian Davis handily.


  • Arizona, Florida, and apparently California have voted to ban gay marriage within their states.
  • Arkansas has voted to ban gay adoption, preventing homosexual couples from adopting children.
  • Colorado overwhelmingly shoots down an amendment that would define life as beginning at the moment of fertilization within every constitutional context. This would have essentially given a day old embryo the same rights as a forty-year-old person.
  • Maryland votes to allow video slot machines in certain areas within the state, with procedes being directed to the education system.
  • Massachusetts denies a ballot initiative that would abolish the state income tax.
  • Michigan votes to legalize medical marijuana and permit stem cell research with embryonic stem cells.
  • Washington state votes to allow doctor-assisted suicide.

Overall, a mixed bag. The Stevens and Franken races have yet to be called, so I'll update this once everything comes out in the wash. Apparently the Coleman-Franken race could be awhile, though - those from Washington state who remember the governor's race a few years back know what I mean.

Thus far today at work I've been reading meltdowns from various conservative sources around the internet. One of them unironically suggested that people who don't have a job should not be able to vote.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Hoagies

Election Day Hath Begun

Dixville Notch goes for Obama, 16-5. Booyah.

Time to get some rest and then hit the poll in the late morning. Hopefully it won't take too long to get out my vote.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Collegiate Adventures

Obviously, throughout my collegiate academic career, projects and labs were a part of the Electrical Engineering lifestyle. Returning to the University of Minnesota campus and conversing with some team members on said projects jarred some great memories and late nights of working on these sorts of things.

1) Calculator.java - it may seem innocuous and simple. It may seem utterly useless. And it was all these things, but it was really the first programming project I went through that felt complex enough for me to be proud of. The goal of this project was to create a Postfix Calculator. Essentially what this meant was to make a calculator in Java Swing that would take input like 3, 4, and + and spit out 7, for example. It honestly wasn't too hard, and creating the Swing frame was a fairly involved and interesting process. This is also one of the first times where a nasty habit of mine began to rear its ugly head: I am a code hog. I get on rolls where I will simply sit down and code for 5-6 hours at a time unheeded. This means I finish projects rapidly and sometimes when group members are not available to observe or help. This project specifically exemplified that, when I did a good 70% of the project before my group members were even involed. Oops!


2) The Magic Cubes - ah yes, our Senior Project. I have to explain this quite frequently to people who ask me about big projects I had completed during my time at the U of M. Essentially, they were intended to be an interactive piece of furniture, which was initially a large plastic couch. When the couch showed up and lacked transparency, we sent it back and instead ordered a set of three cubes which were intended to be lit from within as dual-purposed lightning and seating elements. These proved much more suitable for the task, and we set to work creating multi-coned inner pieces to which LEDs could be affixed, and the cones could (mostly) direct lights to a single side.

The LEDs we used had a ridiculous three watt power maximum. For power transformation, we used a single ATX power supply which peaked at a couple hundred watts, which was more than sufficient for our purposes; namely, fifteen of the KingBright RGB LEDs. The LEDs were driven by PWM generators made by Texas Instruments, which in turn were driven by Arduino microcontrollers. The Arduinos were ridiculously easy to figure out and program, even with the serial communications required by the PWM driver. Sensors were also integrated that could "hear" sound and "see" changes in lightning, allowing the piece to react to human interaction.

Regardless, the entire thing worked out pretty well, which a vast array of colors available for each side of each cube. It was fun to work on, but there were several long days and late nights trying to finish the stupid things. Matt Oehrlein managed to do some work on them over the summer, which can be viewed here.


3) GeneriQuest 4000 - another programming assignment that I worked on with some close friends. Our task was to author a MUD, a text-based network-enabled and multiplayer game, which was original and interesting. Obviously, the largest criteria was to create something that allowed several people to play using telnet clients. What we created was somewhat like the run-of-the-mill fantasy MUDs, with wizards and swords and MOBs.

The overall coding was certainly bloated and filled with the possibility of buffer overflow exploits, but the game actually worked and could be played to completion. From start to finish with three people, the game took about forty-five minutes. The classes, Wizard, Fighter, and Cleric, had to be meticulously balanced against one another lest one be overpowered and overshadow the rest. It was a lot of fun and a little strange to have a spreadsheet with different attacks available to each class, crunching numbers about scaling options. Also quite amazing was the beta testing phase. One incident which sticks in mind is when I was testing higher level behavior and buffed a character for Jason. Essentially it allowed him to kill a level one or two player in one hit fairly easily. Andy logged in only to be instantly cut down by a single attack from Jason. The game then became how fast could Andy run around and dodge Jason, who was hell bent on smacking the crap out of him.

Obviously, the game had some big flaws - for instance, the only way we could make fighting monsters even remotely fair for the monsters was to have them counter-attack whenever a player made an attack on them. This made the Cleric class fairly essentially, since they were the only one that could replenish hit points quickly. We also made (what I thought was) a cool tick system, where regeneration and attack rate were throttled by a counter, which I believe was on a two or three second timer. Players could only attack once per tick, and would regenerate health once every few ticks. We also hard coded the game map instead of making it more dynamic, which was certainly a mistake, but in retrospect we had spent enough time on it. We won the "most original" award from our professor, conferring to us ten bonus points, which clued us in that we may have spent exactly the right amount of time on the little C program.

Fusion Power

Apparently, I left a couple things back in Minnesota. Unfortunately, my razor was among those things, so I had to stop by Wegman's to grab a new one today. I looked for the same kind I was used to - a Gillette Fusion razor I got in the mail a few years ago. It worked adequately as long as I replaced the blade every few weeks.

I got to Wegman's today and the shelves were full of several different Gillette Fusion products, but none that matched up with my old razor. I had to settle with a new model - it looks like it shares the same type of razor that my old one did, but with one subtle difference.

This one came with batteries.

Yes, apparently it's necessary now to needlessly toss in a triple A battery and make the razor jiggle as you shave. Will it make a difference? Only time will tell...