- Is a baby conceived after the father’s death a survivor? NPR article on the relationship between fertility technology and tax law. Potentially relevant for a story I’m writing.
- An infographic of common logical and rhetorical fallacies.
- Matt Might’s thoughts on productivity for academics.
- David Alexander Smith’s checklist for critiquing science fiction. I’m considering writing a critique checklist for my fiction writing students next year. This one is a fairly reasonable list of basic things to consider when reading critically.
- A wonderful interactive demonstration of the scale of things in the universe.
- An article from The Verge on the Altaeros inflatable wind turbine. More story research. Here’s a video clip:
Category: Blog
A few months ago there was a meme on Facebook that I particularly liked. The core of it read:
I would like my Facebook friends to comment on this status, sharing how you met me. But I want you to LIE. That’s right, just make it up. After you comment, copy this to your status, so I can do the same.
There were plenty of fun responses. These were my favorites.
Sarah Miller
How she met me:
We bumped into the street, our glasses fell off, I accidentally grabbed yours, you accidentally grabbed mine …. little did I know that your glasses in fact housed a sentient mini-computer with decided opinions about how I ought to be living my life.
How I met her:
It’s amazing that you noticed me at all. You had been leading your tours through the cavern for the barest flash of an instant, just a decade or two. “These structures formed over millions of years,” you buzzed. “This chamber was undisturbed for millennia.” When no one else was with you, you sat silent playing your light over my face. You were nearly a child when my eyes opened, and an old wrinkled thing by the time they closed. You will surely be dead when I open them again, but we shared a moment.
How she met me:
I don’t usually chase down people in the street, it’s simply that I’m very picky about my coffee. And I told you the cup was mine, and you didn’t listen, and my head was aching, and.
Well. I’m sorry about the stitches, but the scar should be very interesting.
How I met her:
The requisition order clearly called for part #A0-73462, a self lubricating ball bearing. That you were delivered instead was not my fault, and it was a grave injustice when they severed my linkages to The Superstructure. Left bereft, I had no choice but to fall in with your anarchic league.
Dan Pinney
How he met me:
I admit, I was taken in. That Fischer dude, he is a smooth character.
So he told me, over the phone, he had a thing he had to sell, on the QT. Weird tech. I didn’t know what it was, and honestly I still don’t. I gave him ten bills for it, exchange made under the table, in a bar in Houston. I probably had too much to drink that night, but, well, you know.
So he got the money, I got something that I think, given the research I’ve done, was probably some part of the innards of a microwave or some damn thing. Him, well, you hear his name dropped on the nightly news from time to time, usually when they’re talking about some sort of green technology thing. Only green I think about when I think about him, of course, is those ten bills.
I tell you, the man is good.
How I met him:
You were showing off, of course. Broke into the hookah bar with your friends and stole a pipe and an unlabeled box of shisha that you really shouldn’t have touched. You took it back to the shed behind your parents garage, warmed the coals on a hot plate. But the smoke made you feel lightheaded in a way it never had before, and when you blew a smoke ring to impress Melanie from down the street, I came tumbling out still glistening from my bath. I hate this place with its enormous dullards and empty sky. You will know no peace until you find a way to return me to my home!
How she met me:
Oh. My. God. You know that mad scientist bloke who lives up the road? Well, I can’t expect you to believe it, but he has got the most miraculous theater built into the basement of his house. Not the basement proper, but this room, this palatial, expansive place that you can only get to through an absolute warren of tunnels. You walk and you walk and you carry on walking through the dark with only a torch in your hand (no, silly, not a REAL torch, an electric one). And you keep on walking until your nose bumps up against the heavy red of a velvet curtain, and then you have a choice. Pull it aside. Or, leave it shut. Because you know what’s on the other side, don’t you? (Oh, of course you don’t.) Nothing. There’s exactly nothing there, not til you make the choice. And then, when you do, it’s whatever the mad scientist sees fit to put there, for you, in that exact moment.
How I met her:
I had heard for years about the cosmetologist, who hasn’t? But it wasn’t until the accident, when it seemed there was nothing left worth wrapping fingers around and holding fast to that I sought you out. I chased whispers into basements and down alleys and over rooftops until I found you. You tilted me back in your chair and painted a new face on me, the face of someone else, someone who still knew how to value things in this world. I never looked out through my own eyes again.
Dana Huber
How she met me:
Church– you were the only person to realize my ‘speaking in tongues’ was actually an epileptic attack. Thank god you called the ambulance!
How I met her:
>run VirusScan**Scanning****Virus Detected.**>delete virus**Virus Removal Failed. See Log File.***>open log file# 2008-06-29 - [VirusScan] - Kill signal received# 2008-06-29 - [???} - Message: Hey, stop it.# 2008-06-29 - [???} - Message: This filesystem and I are just getting acquainted.# 2008-06-29 - [???} - Message: Whatever happened to basic hospitality?
How he met me:
We have never met. You do not actually know I exist. In fact, you will never read these words and retain them to memory, for the moment you read them the link between short-term memory and long-term memory will be temporarily severed.
I do occasionally appear in your dreams, or in Facebook statuses, or in glowing IMs on your computer to issue commands I’d like carried out. Sometimes they’re simple: EAT MISO SOUP. Sometimes they’re more complex emotional urges, and you wonder why you’re so attracted to that girl even though you know she’s wrong for you.
I have my own agenda. You can only hope it’s good for you, in those remaining seconds before your short-term memory cuts out and the focused blindsight I’ve induced in seeing my name in other circles kicks in again and you go on your merry way, oblivious.
By the way. You’re welcome for that writing workshop. I have plans for you there, too.
How I met him:
I was the only one who knew from the beginning it wasn’t me you wanted. After all, I was just the intern on the ship, tagging along on a seafloor mapping project for course credit. But it had become clear weeks ago that I was going to be allowed to do little more than turn winches on and off, change filters, and sit in a chair for hours making sure there were no feed interruptions. So when your zodiac bumped against the hull and your crew climbed onto the deck with your guns to take the ship, I knew it wasn’t me you were after. But when you changed the ship’s heading toward the undersea cable and explained that the internet was a more valuable hostage than any hold full off eggheads, I could tell that my bosses were almost hurt it wasn’t them you were after either. I fell in love with you a little bit for that.
I was reading through the archives of Chatological Humor, Gene Weingarten’s regular Q&A on the Washington Post site, and ran across a comment from 2009 (by someone identified only as “Hmph”) that was worth saving. Recall that in 2009 there was much news discussion of whether the US was taking prisoners to countries with lenient torture laws and submitting them to practices that would be illegal on US soil. This was when we all learned what waterboarding is. Many conservatives argued that torture (or, as they preferred, “harsh interrogation”) should be legal when there is a suspected terrorist plot. “Hmph,” reacting to this notion, opines:
I have to object to “hypotheticals” about ticking-time-bomb, massive-death, torture-will-definitely-work scenarios.
Though the situations are impossible, they’re not really hypothetical in that people want to use them to make torture legal.
It’s like posing the question, “If destroying the Mona Lisa was the only way to prevent a terrorist from eating 2,000 innocent American babies, would that be justified?”, and then pushing for legislation or executive orders on the propriety of destroying priceless works of art.
And besides the ridiculousness of the scenario, I’m just offended by the idea that folks want a law to cover their ass, just in case they might want to torture!
If there really -were- some crazy ticking time-bomb scenario, where someone is convinced the only way to avert tragedy is to torture someone, they can go ahead and break the law to torture. If they’re that certain it’s that important, they can have the courage of their convictions and face the consequences. If they can prove the circumstances were so extraordinary, they’re not actually going to get in much, if any, trouble. And if they were wrong, they should rightfully be punished for disregarding the rule of law, human rights, and tenets of a free, civilized society.
The first point, that ticking bomb scenarios don’t really exist, is one commonly made by those opposed to torture. The second point, that even if they did it wouldn’t be a reason not to legislate against torture, is novel and compelling. Well said, “Hmph.”
- On Robert Krulwich’s NPR blog, a post about the shape of stories as drawn by Kurt Vonnegut. Includes one of my favorite science cartoons ever.
- The Genderfloomp Reading List. I won a copy of Whipping Girl as my prize for being Best Dressed. I’ve only read the introduction so far, but it looks very good.
- Qik.com. This is ostensibly as service for real-time uploading of video from a cellphone to the internet. I need to look into it more. The potential implications for citizen journalism, esp. in repressive legal cultures, are huge.
- Obituary for Felix Zandman.
- “My Life as an Undocumented Immigrant.” Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Jose Antonio Vargas reveals that he is in the United States illegally, and what this has meant for his life and career. An excellent example of why the Dream Act would benefit the nation.
- “Michele Bachmann’s Holy War.” Matt Taibbi’s profile of this election’s craziest serious candidate.
- A public art installation consisting of a topographically interesting basketball court. I would like to see this turned into an all-star game event.
- “A Person Paper on Purity in Language.” Douglas Hofstadter skewering people who argue that there is nothing sexist about the English language.
- Finally, a video I liked:
PAC-MAN HIGHWAY – Level 1 (gameplay) from NotWorkingFilms on Vimeo.
About a month ago, the PBS Newshour ran a segment about the 75th anniversary of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, the oldest writing MFA program in the country.
At 1:16 in the above video, the segment cuts to workshop director Samantha Chang standing in an office filled with crates full of manuscripts in red folders, explaining that over 1,200 people applied to the workshop that year. The picture then zooms in on a crate containing “the lucky twenty-six who were accepted.” Somewhere in that lingering shot are 58 pages that passed through my printer before getting to Iowa City.
In the fall of 2011, I will begin studying for an MFA in fiction at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop.
I decided I wanted to attend graduate school for the time it would afford me to focus on writing, and because I wanted to be in a place that would provide me with extrinsic motivation to create fiction. I had also learned at the Clarion Writers’ Workshop how fantastic it is to be in group of similarly impassioned people, and wanted more of that. It was my original intention to apply to MFA programs immediately after attending Clarion in 2008, but instead I spent most of the next year bedridden by Crohn’s disease. It took me until 2010 to get my life sufficiently orderly to pursue those plans again. So my first steps toward making writing my main focus were fairly stumbling, but things seem to be going smoothly now.
There are still some foreseeable difficulties though. Most notably, that I’ve spent the last 26 years living in a place where the annual temperature looks like this:
and now I’m moving to a place where the annual temperature looks like this:
I’m going from a place where it almost never gets below freezing to a place where I can expect to see frost for half the year. I am flatly terrified that I am going to find a way to die of exposure walking between classes. But I have chosen to fight terror with terror, and, in a effort to curry the favor of the elder gods, have purchased one of these to protect me:
Bring it on, Iowa.
- LGBTQ Newsblog Revel & Riot — I like the layout of this news/culture aggregator. Two side by side columns, one for things to celebrate and one for things to decry.
- Manqué — Useful word. I sometimes think of myself as a physicist manqué.
- A blog post on botanical “fascination”
- “Omega and why Math has no TOEs” — Article by Gregory Chaitin on his construction omega, in which he provocatively argues that the proof standard may be holding mathematics back and it might be reasonable to pursue it more like an experimental science. (See also: Wikipedia article on Chaitin’s Constant.)
- Excerpted analysis from the book Spousonomics on why most advice for how married couples can improve their sex lives is wrong.
- A documentary on the Arduino microcontroller.
- Making a bootable hackintosh thumbdrive.
- “Space Stasis” — Neal Stephenson writes about the history of rocket science and the phenomenon of lock-in.
Remember how I wrote a haiku last week for a contest to have my name given to a character in John Scalzi’s next novel?
That’ll do, haiku. That’ll do.
Work is consuming my days and rehearsal for the sketch show I’m going to be in come February is consuming my nights, leaving me largely offline. To kill some time, please enjoy a favorite cartoon from my childhood, “The Dot and the Line: A Romance in Lower Mathematics.” It’s a collaboration between Chuck Jones (of Looney Tunes fame) and Norton Juster (most famously the author of The Phantom Tollbooth).
This is not my first blog. There have been others, some euthanized and some abandoned. The ruins of my former blogs are filled with rotten links and gutted by expired hosting. There is, though, an occasional post worth saving. This was originally posted on May 14, 2008.
—
Some time in 2005 I was studying for my Differential Equations final exam, thinking to myself, “I can have a computer solve all of these problems for me. I will never do this again.” I had thought this in frustration many times throughout my mathematical education, and to be honest it was getting less and less true as the math got more advanced. This time, though, I followed that thought up with another one that hadn’t previously occurred to me: if computers can be given explicit instructions that allow them to solve differential equations, I should be able to write down similarly explicit instructions for myself. Verbalizing the specific steps necessary to solve the problems I was working on seemed like a good study activity. Additionally, I was allowed a page of notes to use on the exam, so if I could organize the steps so that they all fit on a page I could actually use this work during the test. I ended up spending a couple of hours in a study room with my textbook and a pad of graph paper, creating a flowchart for solving second order linear differential equations with constant coefficients. I tied with one other student for the highest grade on the final.
Recently I’ve been playing with Ubuntu, and as a way of gaining some familiarity with the OpenOffice suite of productivity apps I decided to create a digital version of my SOLDE flowchart. It is sized to fit on a sheet of 8.5×11 paper, and I am releasing it under creative commons license. If you think it would be of use to you, or know others who might like to use it, feel free to email it, print it out, pass it around. I think it might make a good handout for differential equations students. (It’s under a share-alike license, so you can make derivative works as well, provided they are also creative commons licensed. One possible improvement might be to create a flowchart for variation of parameters, which gets glossed over on this one.)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.