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How very like Fred Rogers for there to have already been a page up at the
Mr. Rogers website this morning to
help parents talk
to their kids about his death. It's very nicely done, and it's very sad
to have to be reading it.
I make myself write a sentence or two about every book I read, for my own
future reference, but isn't the internet all about sharing odd lists with
the world? I've finally compiled and formatted my ratings and comments on
the books I
read in 2002. Essential stats: I read 52 books total, with a rating
distribution of 36 '+'s, 14 '0's and 2 '-'s, and my favorite books of the
year were England, England by Julian Barnes, Beggars in Spain
by Nancy Kress, Arrowsmith by Sinclair Lewis, The Code Book
by Simon Singh, and The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark.
Let me put some love out there for the local utility companies. This
morning when I got up, there was no heat, no hot water, and no gas coming
out of the stove. Not only have they kept my house from blowing up from
the gas main which had accumulated water, but they're still out there
now tearing up the road and such, and think I'll be hooked back up by
midnight. With the low tonight forecast at an entire degree
above zero, it will be appreciated.
I've heard a few talks about the research in this article about
analyzing
text collections (such as e-mail!) for "word bursts" to organize texts
or identify trends over time, and I think it's really cool. The article
even includes a speculation about applicability to weblogs for tracking
social trends (and notes that Google already does something like this,
though no mention of Daypop which is
sort of the same though just using URL's), but integrating this into an
e-mail organizational tool intrigues me the most (which is
described
in a little more detail over at Scientific American).
I can imagine a number of uses for this
search tool
I just found which
lets you search not just the titles but also the text of every book
in the
Project Gutenberg collection. Go to
the "Preferences" page to activate boolean searching.
I've been meaning to volunteer with
Project Gutenberg for a couple of years,
but I finally signed up to help proofread scanned and OCR'd texts. The
Distributed Proofreading
project makes it very easy. Sign up, read over the proofreading guidelines
document, and then you can view page scans and the OCR'd text side by side
in their web browser tool and edit the text to make any necessary
corrections. They manage to coordinate the proofreading of between 500 and
1500 pages a day. It's a very easy process, and a single page isn't too
time consuming, so think about signing up yourself!
I'm a Miss Manner's fan, and it is surely poor manners to admit that my favorite bits are when she repremands the "etiquette police" for their own poor manners. But last weekend she wrote a wonderful editorial about nostalgia and idealization of old-fashioned courtship in which she comments on why 50's style dating disappeared. She says: Dating was universal in theory, but not in practice, leaving plenty of people lonely, if not ashamed, for lack of Saturday night alternatives. The presumption that a date was the only natural way in which the sexes could mix put a damper on nonromantic relationships that now provide a variety of other social activities. [2.13.03]
Because it's good to focus on the positive as well as the negative:
Conferees
in Congress Bar Using a Pentagon Project on Americans, and Total
Information Awareness is on hold until the privacy and civil liberties
impact can be more thoroughly examined.
Last year, I made a resolution to reduce my unread book pile, which was
only a moderate success (how I managed to read over 50 books last year and
still have a
stack of 90 still
staring at me is beyond me). This year, I'm turning my attention to
my absurdly large yarn stash, which is spread across too many rooms to
even show you a picture. I will not buy any yarn this year unless
it is to make a present for someone, and even then I will consult the
stash first. As a first step on this project, I'm thinking of making up
this zip-up vest
with some fuscia wool I picked up on sale with no particular project in
mind.
I have been hearing good things about
SpamOracle from
a friend, and I think it's cool that it uses a Baysian classification
algorithm to learn what is spam given your particular e-mail patterns.
Even more cool is that it's compatable with unix-based e-mail and procmail,
which I already have set up. This may be my next computer maintanance
project.
The Kasparov-Deep Junior chess match ended in a draw yesterday after
Kasparov forced the draw in the final game to avoid losing to the computer.
Overall, Kasparov and Deep Junior each only won one game a piece in the
six game match. There's coverage at the
World
Chess Federation, of course. They even have
online
animation of all of the games; I recommend ignoring the applet running
on that page and clicking through to the individual match you want at the
top of the page to get an interface where you can step through
play-by-play. ChessBase
also carries a lot of coverage including commentary on the games and their
own interactive animations of the games (except, it seems, for game
six...).
This page's sidebar images were taken near my house during the long cold
snap we had during the end of January; I've put together a larger (in
number and size) collection of my favorite images from my
visit to Cascadilla Creek.
The key to a good personality quiz is to make the questions as entertaining
as the potential results. The always funny
BBspot offers up
Which OS Are You?,
and I'll admit that my enjoyment of it doubled when they were on-the-ball
enough to peg me as HP-UX, the only old-time unix variant included. Wheee!
[via PCJM]
If that isn't enough fun for you, go scan the features archive for their
reviews of movie trailers - one of my favorite parts of their site.
For those who are claiming NASA accomplishes nothing of value besides being
a sort of "extreme-science" for thrillseeking nerds, I suggest you visit
Space
Research at NASA's Office of Biological and Physical Research (a huge
list of technical articles about research out of NASA with nice summaries)
or
NASA's Earth Science page. I
commented in a private forum earlier today that even beyond these results,
I have no problem if we haven't seen the fruit of all of this research yet.
Arguments against funding pure research when people are
suffering are as old as government, as are the arguments for. Personally,
I see the quest for knowledge of our world to be one of the admirable
and selfless activities our government takes on. For the many criticisms
I have of the scientific community, I think it is one of the few truly
international communities. I can't think of anything (including going to
war!) that the US feels it can only do with cooperation from other
countries - except build and maintain the International Space Station.
Putting aside the many scientific advantages, I like that there is one
national priority we have that we admit we can't do on our own.
If I thought I was disturbed when, around about Thanksgiving this year, I
heard John Madden rambling about some Turducken abomination, I am even
more disturbed that you can see
upclose-and-personal
Turducken photos, from someone who ordered one off the internet and
actually served it to their friends.
(Of course you can order Turducken off the internet....)
[via Anita
LOL]
So far, the best on-line coverage I've found of the Columbia tragedy is
at Spaceflight Now. They are
updating continually on their
Mission
Status Center page, and you can read back through their coverage of
the entire mission and the reaserch being done.
[via Eatonweb]
I detest the media. The Columbia destruction is a tragedy for both the
astronaut's families and everyone at NASA associated with the project. I
am sure that nobody there is feeling relief that Bush said we will
continue space exploration, as the pundits started saying after he spoke.
I can't imagine they are feeling anything but grief over the loss of their
teammates lives and the failure of the mission, and agonizing over whether there
is anything they could have done to have prevented it. I hope that people's
thoughts and prayers go out to them as well. The loss of lives that were
in their hands must be personally devastating.
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Current Reading: A Beautiful Mind; Sylvia Nasar Set This House In Order; Matt Ruff The Big U; Neal Stephenson The Double Helix; James D. Watson The Shipping News; E. Annie Proulx The Ground Beneath Her Feet; Salman Rushdie
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