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posted by jwray 3 weeks 1 day ago • 131 views

IIRC, entire ACORN scandal consists of:

1.  Out of 2 million low-income voters registered, a small percent of the workers turned in bogus forms with bogus names like Captain Crunch. Acorn was required by law to turn in ALL of the forms rather than arbitrarily discarding some of the forms at their discretion (because if the law were otherwise, people who register voters could throw away half the forms and disenfranchise half the people who thought they had registered).    Not one vote is known to have been cast under any of these bogus registration attempts.

2.  Some people dressed up as OBVIOUSLY fake pimps and prostitutes, strolled into dozens of ACORN branches until they found someone who put them on (OBVIOUSLY bullshitting them) and they took it completely seriously.   Later, they took the videos credulously to Fox news, which also believed every word in the videos was serious, because they're a bunch of morons with no sense of humor.

3.  Republicans have a ragefest and try to treat organizations as guilty until proven innocent if any ONE of their employees has been indicted for fraud (i.e. arbitrarily accused by one prosecutor, not yet put on trial or anything).   This rule inadvertently bars the gov't from funding a shitload of defense contractors, but that part is not really going to be enforced, because all they really wanted was an unconstitutional bill of attainder against ACORN.

Am I missing something?

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posted by jwray 4 months ago • 166 views

TiVo and downloaded video are very convenient, but I've been thinking about some possible benefits of watching actual broadcasts:

 

1.  You don't get a rewind/pause and you know it, so it forces you to actually focus on the program for a continuous block of time.

2.  You get up and walk around every commercial break (which is like every 10 minutes).

 

With tivo/web:

1.  You don't have to focus on it because you can ignore it and rewind or pause and use IM or go to some other website , so ADHD is multiplied by over 9000.    It may take days to finish a 1 hour video.

2.  You are less likely to get up and stretch.

 

 

I haven't watched broadcasts in months, but I haven't literally thrown away my TV yet.

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posted by jwray 5 months 1 week ago • 436 views

It seems like every fucking game is trying to incorporate features of MMORPGs.   Back in the good old days skill-based games like starcraft, counter-strike, AOE II, and CivII were kept entirely separate from grind-based games like everquest.    Then WC3 came along as an RTS with "hero units" that "level up" and all that MMORPG bullshit.   Age of Mythology did the same shit.   The civilization series felt that "veteran" units weren't enough and invented a whole BS tech tree of level-ups for units.   Age of Empires III implemented unlockable shit that totally unbalanced the RTS.   TF2 (Valve's next significant fps after counter-strike source) started out as a pure skill game but then for some inexplicable reason they decided to mingle it with MMORPG bullshit through an achievement system that unlocked additional items.  Now it is no longer a pure SKILL game, but is based heavily on how much time you spent GRINDING on achievement servers for the limited-availability items.

Now, I've got nothing against MMORPGs themselves.  I just like to keep that kind of crap SEPARATE from my FPS and RTS games.     Nowadays, almost every new FPS or RTS game throws in some unlockable bullshit that upsets the perfect balance (think original starcraft) that a game is supposed to have.   This really irritates me.  I play these games for a change of pace from WoW, not to do the same shit.

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posted by jwray 5 months 1 week ago • 383 views
Why does a loaf of bread cost twice as much as a dozen eggs, even though ecology dictates it must take an order of magnitude more grain to feed the hens to produce the eggs?   Government subsidies?   Inefficient markets?
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posted by jwray 5 months 2 weeks ago • 385 views
all your sift are belong to stephen fry
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posted by jwray 6 months 2 weeks ago • 412 views
The title of a book somebody should write about tulip mania, housing bubbles, and stock bubbles.
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posted by jwray 6 months 3 weeks ago • 332 views

Good Cheap stuff:

water

eggs

rice

bananas

mixed nuts

dried papayas

 

  Good Medium-priced stuff:

Milk

Apples

Turkey

Chicken

Dark Chocolate

Whole wheat bread

 

Expensive stuff:

V8

Guacamole

 

Stuff to minimize because it's unhealthy:

all soft drinks

all alcohol

all caffeine (except dark chocolate)

most chips / pretzels

most restaraunts

Beef

Pork/Ham/Bacon

hot pockets and similar crap

ice cream / candy

desserts in general

 

Stuff to avoid because it tastes/feels like shit:

Broccoli

Cabbage

Green Beans

Alcohol

 

Stuff to avoid because it's overpriced:

almost all restaraunts

Pizza

Processed/prepared foods

Alcohol

 


posted by jwray 7 months ago • 562 views
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posted by jwray 7 months 4 weeks ago • 540 views
The many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is the ultimate violation of Occam's Razor.  It's totally unsubstantiated speculation.  You might as well be theorizing about the flying spaghetti monster.
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posted by jwray 8 months 1 week ago • 595 views

The Trouble is that ranking order determines the number of views, which determines the vote count, which determines the ranking order.  This is self-reinforcing, and amplifies random noise such as the number of people who were online at the time the video was submitted.  To get a more accurate ranking of videos there are some countermeasures we might try:

0.  Introduce some randomness to the default sort order

1.  Each view of a video (from a distinct user) subtracts a small fraction from its vote count

2.  Only videos found through searching or "random" mode can be voted.  If a user arrives at a video through a top-list, he cannot vote for it.  Videosift doesn't have enough traffic volume to try this approach, but YT does.

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posted by jwray 8 months 1 week ago • 371 views
If lowering the stock price of a company can destroy it, the company was already in deep shit.  They shouldn't rely on continuously issuing new stock to pay for daily operations.   The only way shortselling would be a bad thing is if the shortsellers spread false rumors about the company.
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posted by jwray 8 months 1 week ago • 413 views

Normally, the tap water has so many dissolved gasses and salts that I can't see through it when it first comes out of the tap, but if you let the water sit for a minute or two the gas bubbles come to the top and it becomes transparent.   Also, it has so much dissolved salts that putting tap water in a pot and boiling off 20% of it leaves a visible precipitate/residue on the bottom of the pot.    This fucking sucks.   If you run the cold water for >5 minutes before filling up from it, it comes out clear.  But the excessive dissolved crap problem is still there.   You can't boil off 20% of it without forming a precipitate.   It probably isn't healthy to drink water that has so much dissolved crap in it.   I looked up their test results, which meet LEGAL limits but don't meet EPA health guidelines or California public health goals:

http://www.ewg.org/tapwater/yourwater/system.php?pwsid=NE3110926

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posted by jwray 8 months 1 week ago • 345 views
The US ought to at least recognize the independence of Taiwan.   They've been de-facto independent for over 60 years, and they make most of the world's CPUs.    China's delusions can jump off a bridge...  It's just like Britan's delusion that led to the 100 years war.
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posted by jwray 8 months 1 week ago • 421 views

It's interesting how the text differs drastically from what was done in Iraq and Afghanistan.   It was specifically to avoid having a ton of disgruntled unemployed ex-soldiers:

We, acting by command of and on behalf of the Emperor of Japan, the Japanese Government and the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters, hereby accept the provisions in the declaration issued by the heads of the Governments of the United States, China, and Great Britain 26 July 1945 at Potsdam, and subsequently to by the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, which four powers are hereafter referred to as the Allied Powers.

We hereby proclaim the unconditional surrender to the Allied Powers of the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters and of all Japanese Armed Forces and all Armed Forces under Japanese control wherever situated.

We hereby command all Japanese forces wherever situated and the Japanese people to cease hostilities forthwith, to preserve and save from damage all ships, aircraft, and military and civil property, and to comply with all requirements which may be imposed by the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers or by agencies of the Japanese Government at his direction.

We hereby command the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters to issue at once orders to the commanders of all Japanese forces and all forces under Japanese control wherever situated to surrender unconditionally themselves and all forces under their control.

We hereby command all civil, military, and naval officials to obey and enforce all proclamations, orders, and directives deemed by the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers to be proper to effectuate this surrender and issued by him or under his authority; and we direct all such officials to remain at their posts and to continue to perform their non-combatant duties unless specifically relieved by him or under his authority.

We hereby undertake for the Emperor, the Japanese Government, and their successors to carry out the provisions of the Potsdam Declaration in good faith, and to issue whatever orders and take whatever action may be required by the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers or by any other designated representative of the Allied Powers for the purpose of giving effect to that declaration.

We hereby command the Japanese Imperial Government and the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters at once to liberate all Allied Prisoners of War and civilian internees now under Japanese control and to provide for their protection, care, maintenance, and immediate transportation to places as directed.

The authority of the Emperor and the Japanese Government to rule the State shall be subject to the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers, who will take such steps as he deems proper to effectuate these terms of surrender.

Signed at TOKYO BAY, JAPAN at 09.04 on the SECOND day of SEPTEMBER, 1945

Mamoru Shigemitsu
By Command and in behalf of the Emperor of Japan and the Japanese Government

Yoshijirō Umezu
By Command and in behalf of the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters

Accepted at TOKYO BAY, JAPAN at 0908 on the SECOND day of SEPTEMBER, 1945, for the United States, Republic of China, United Kingdom and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, and in the interests of the other United Nations at war with Japan.

Douglas MacArthur
Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers

C.W. Nimitz
United States Representative

Hsu Yung-Ch'ang
Republic of China Representative

Bruce Fraser
United Kingdom Representative

Kuzma Derevyanko
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics Representative

Thomas Blamey
Commonwealth of Australia Representative

L. Moore Cosgrave
Dominion of Canada Representative

Jacques Leclerc
Provisional Government of the French Republic Representative

C.E.L. Helfrich
Kingdom of the Netherlands Representative

Leonard M. Isitt
Dominion of New Zealand Representative

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posted by jwray 8 months 1 week ago • 384 views

The way most of the scientific literature is split up over 100 different pay-sites with 100 different logins and outrageous pricing schemes ($20 an article!) is a pain in the ass that retards the progress of science.   When I publish stuff I'm going to GPL it so that it will be *illegal* for derivative works to be sold exclusively on pay-sites.  That's the way science is supposed to be: free and open to the world.

Also, fuck the tradition that requires every advanced degree to be hyperspecialized to the point of tunnel-vision.

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posted by jwray 8 months 3 weeks ago • 299 views
There's no circumstance in the English language where the pronunciation of "x" even resembles the typical pronunciation of x in a transliterated chinese surname.  That sound is indistinguishable from "sh" to English ears, so they should have just transliterated it to "sh" instead of "x".   Match phonemes to phonemes, not random characters to random characters...
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posted by jwray 9 months ago • 447 views

It's bloatware, with a shitty interface.  They really should have put more thought into the multiplayer server-finding interface.

 It is:

1. Hidden below 4 or 5 layers of menus with a bloatware "animated book" thing slowing down every command.

2. Lacking any ability to filter by ping, number of users playing, etc.  These are basic features that have existed in every good multiplayer game for over 10 years.

Any multiplayer game without a good interface for finding servers is like a car without any engine.  They really should put at least as much effort into the server-finding interface as they put into the bloatware graphics.   The original Call of Duty, the original Unreal Tournament, and CS:S are all superior to Far Cry 2 for multiplayer.

 So it was a total waste of money.   TF2 is still king.


posted by jwray 9 months 1 week ago • 374 views
The bad news is that JamesBurkeFan's youtube account was deactivated, so nearly all James Burke videos on the Sift are now dead.   The good news is that it has recently become possible to purchase Connections DVD sets from Amazon.com for a about the same price as DVD sets of other TV series.   Previously they were almost unobtainable.
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posted by jwray 9 months 2 weeks ago • 342 views
I really wish they hadn't dubbed over Sir David Attenborough's voice in the US version of Planet Earth.   The photography is great, but the narration is garbage.
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posted by jwray 9 months 3 weeks ago • 395 views

Here are three kinds of income:

1. Someone is paid to do something useful

This is ordinary, productive work.

2. Someone is paid unconditionally

This is wealth redistribution

3.  Someone is paid to do something useless

This is like wealth redistribution in that the payer recieves nothing significant in return. However the reciever is required to destroy his income by wasting the time-equivalent of it.    In that manner, it is always worse than #2.   #3 is the cousin of the broken window fallacy.   The BWF argues that breaking a window is a net gain for the economy via employing all the people involved in fixing it, and secondarily all the people with whom those artisans spend their income.    In reality, the broken window is a net loss, because the money spent to repair it would have been spent in some other way.     All labour and capital will be used in some way (in the broadest sense) no matter what, and the trick is ensuring that it is used productively.   In the long run, the effect of any stimulus package will be measured in terms of the amount of productive work it accomplishes, and how efficiently it accomplishes this, not how many questionably-necessary jobs it creates.

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