silveradept: A cartoon-stylized picture of Gamera, the giant turtle, in a fighting pose, with Japanese characters. (Gamera!)
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One class looks like it’ll be tough but bearable, the other class looks like it’s going to try and drown me in paper and then sneak assignments in while I wasn’t looking. I think I’m going to need a good three-ring binder for that one. Ordered my books, though, so those should arrive with sufficient time to read. And then next week begins, and I’m at the class thing for real. Also going to try my best at picking up pocket change/possible BC funds/ACen funds doing what I may be least suited to doing - referee work. (chuckle)

Oh, look. Gigantic ice scultupres. We could have some of our own. that is, assuming we got snow instead of the rain we’ve been getting for a while now. It’ll be March when the blizzards arrive, I guess, late from getting held up in Colorado. It’s getting to the point where all the snowmen are made of concrete.

Reaching out to the new Congress, either in earnest or in a calculated political move, Mr Bush outlines what he wants to do with the incoming Congress. In other Congressional matters, The House of Representatives will now be working a five-day week, according to the new Speaker’s schedule. How interesting - legislators staying at work to, y’know, legislate. Maybe they’ll start earning the money they make. I’d like to see Congresspersons and Presidents making minimum wage and having to work as long and as many days as the average American, too, and see if that won’t instill in them an appreciation for getting good wage and time off.

The Book of Lists, a book that holds facts that you may or may not have ever wanted to know, in a list-like format. So when those odd trivia questions appear, you can rattle off things like 14 Nations With More Sheep Than People with a grin. The Book of Lists might be a very useful thing for my collection. Maybe I’ll have to see about getting one at some point. Speaking of lists, here’s Wired's list of coder resolutions for the new year. I might have to follow some of them, with this web page design class.

Taking things perhaps a little too far, iPod is inspiration for a 24-story tall iPad. Yep. A building modeled after the design of an MP3 player. Now tell me, do all the people who walk in turn immediately into white earbud-sporting shadows of themselves?

A 14-year old British boy sails into the record books by piloting Cheeky Monkey across the Atlantic solo. Skipped school to do so, but his father was not too far behind, so he couldn’t skip out on anything else.

Popular Mechanics talks about what librarians and archivists already are trying to solve - how do you keep old data readable? Migration forward is a good idea. Emulation backward has some advantages, sure. Truth be told, though, we’re already losing data at a rapid rate. We have to make decisions on what we think is going to be important to our descendants. I wonder how wrong our guesses are going to be.

The next generation of robots up from Aibo and Furby will be more expensive - but as Wired reports, it's probably going to be a lot more lifelike. Pleo is the next step in developing companions. Although I’d really appreciate that robotic chair that gets discussed at the end of the article.

A missionary walks in the places that most people avoid, bringing Zen to the populace. I’m not entirely sure that “missionary” is the right word to use, but I am going for the dissonance that happens between “missionary” and “Zen” for most people.

If you’ve ever wanted to call a company and get a human, but keep getting lost in menu after menu after menu of automated messages, then Gethuman.com may be your salvation, as it demonstrates the fine arts of confusing or engaging the machine sufficiently that you receive a human to help you with your problems or queries. (Link is to United States corporations and numbers. There may be other sequences for other countries.)

I’m not sure how to caption this. But it appears that if a senior accept Medicaid help for senior citizen care, then the state you are in is obligated to try and recover the costs of caring for them from their estate. This has, understandably, caused significant alarm. What’s even worse, is that all of these assets seized, on average, amounts to about 1% of the total cost paid out in support care. The government seizes assets for 1% of the costs. At that point, I think it would be safe to say that it’s not worth the hassle. Even more so, though, the cost of care is bankrupting the children. (NYTimes) Some are delaying their own retirements, borrowing against their own assets, and potentially running themselves into the ground because they want to take care of their parents, and there’s really no help forthcoming from anywhere - not insurance, nor government programs.

Health care is, as always, expensive. David J. Bordeaux suggests, however, that if we stop thinking of medical care as a human right, it will get significantly cheaper. His reasoning suggests that people will use medicine more sparingly, knowing that they won’t have such things as insurance from either employers or government sources and all of their costs will be out-of-pocket. In that way, he reasons, waste goes down, the market takes over, and prices drop of their own accord because of competition. While I can see the wisdom of prices going down, simply because there won’t be insurance to make inflated bills to, I don’t think I can go along with the premise that prices will go down due to market forces. Even simple medical procedures are expensive, as I found out, shelling out $100 to be given a scrip and see a doc or two because my insurance didn’t have me covered when the bill came due. We’re paying for the debts of med school, among other things, when we get those costs. Is there a logical fault somewhere, either in his argument or in mine? Cheaper medicine would be a benefit to everybody, especially if we could get it to be cheaper worldwide.

I’m more convinced that LiveJournal has some sort of embedded Trackback or similar feature, as I got an IM from one of the people I recently linked to thanking me for citing him. Which always brings up the question “Just how did you manage to find that?” Either that, or I’m good enough that I’m starting to make impacts on server logs from people who follow my links. Which is a really scary thought - wielding actual Intarwebs power, even unconsciously, would only make me more nervous in front of the readership.

Last appearing is something that probably deserves more thought on wider subjects than what it was posted to. It’s a definition of "fluffiness" in paganism, but I think several of the precepts there could be applied to other places. I wonder if in other places there are similar definitions and attitudes towards those starting out, or those who persist in being “fluffy” for whatever reason. In some places, though, the attitude tends to take a harder eye at people who want to be “EXTREME HARDCORE X” and try to motivate the fluffies into becoming more like them. This seems to be a pretty good case of two factions pulling in their opposed directions. Is this the norm for social/religious/etc groups, or so I just have a knack at being able to pay attention to groups that do have that tug-of-war going on?

So tell me about your experiences with fluffs, or the hardcore, or whatever. I’m curious.
Depth: 1

Date: 2007-01-05 07:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] annaonthemoon.livejournal.com
....an iPod building....right. I've seen it all now. That's....weird.

And remember, a printed copy is sometimes the best form of backup

that made me giggle. it's probably true though - paper seems to last longer than a CD, at any rate. I think emulators are good, but the problem is when the emulator doesn't WORK. I had a Mac LC in high school and at least the first two years of college. I have a box of floppies that were formatted for my mac that have all my old short stories and poems on them, but because anytime you stick them into a windows based floppy drive (somewhere i have a usb external floppy), windows wants to format it, I never get a chance to use the mac emulator to drag the files off...and then I'd still need emulators to open the darn things, since they're all claris works files (do they even MAKE claris anymore?).

This situation leads to monstrously inefficient consumption of healthcare. Some people consume too much, while many others with more pressing needs do without.

How can you consume "too much" healthcare? I mean, if you're not sick, why would you go to the doctor?



Depth: 1

Date: 2007-01-05 08:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neva-butterfly.livejournal.com
Sorry to jump in. I actually know people who over consume health care. It goes along with mental issues I guess, so maybe that's a whole different issue. My mother for example has gone to the ER many times when she wasn't sick, I know she's twisted, but it's kind of like she'll fight with my sister and then complain of chest pains and go to the ER. I have a friend who will go to the ER for things that are probably treatable at home with over the counter stuff like antacids, and while I can totally understand making that mistake once ("Oh no, I'm dying") it's harder to understand making it several times in a row.

My Dad has health issues, serious one obviously, but even with him I worry. Like he had high blood pressure and they got that under control finally, but they were worried he had damage to his heart so they did a bunch of tests and his heart is fine. They tested his cholesterol and it was actually good (within normal ranges now that he's been eating better). So when I noticed he was taking a cholesterol lowering drug every day I was like "Dad, your cholesterol is already low, why are you taking this?" And he said, "My general practice doctor said at my age I need to control cholesterol." Ummmmm, I thought you were only supposed to take drugs for diseases you have???
Depth: 1

Fluffy

Date: 2007-01-05 08:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neva-butterfly.livejournal.com
Ummm, once my family had a party and for some reason only our Muslim friends and neighbors showed up. So for part of the evening I was the only non-Muslim in a conversation. And a few actually started talking about other local Muslims in that way. They were like "You know, she isn't serious about Islam because I saw her at that gallery opening and she was sipping wine." and then someone else would be like "That's nothing, I saw her husband eat some bacon and when I said something he claimed he didn't know it was pork. Yeah right."

But I think sadly nearly every group does this kind of infighting and criticizing.
Depth: 1

Re: Fluffy

Date: 2007-01-08 05:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neva-butterfly.livejournal.com
Yeah, but these people didn't seem that extreme. Not a head-covering among them, politically liberal, very Americanized, and so on. So it was odd.

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silveradept: A kodama with a trombone. The trombone is playing music, even though it is held in a rest position (Default)
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