Thursday, August 24, 2006
Wednesday, August 23, 2006
Wow...
Last year, when I went to OSCON, I met Miguel de Icaza (the GNOME master). During OSCON, he had a keynote address about the new generation of GNOME technology..and it involved wobbly windows. I saw it and I couldn't !@#$!#@ believe it. I have been waiting and waiting to put this on merman (my computer's name...my laptop's name is trapjaw).
You have to see it...here and here.
Vista, eat your heart out.
Friday, August 18, 2006
Thursday, August 17, 2006
Ohio...where are you?
First, require all students to take rigorous course work that will prepare them for the workforce or college – this means four years of math, including Algebra II; three years of science, including biology, chemistry and physics; four years of English; three years of social studies; and at least two years of a foreign language. To give families and schools time to prepare, the core curriculum should apply to students in the graduating class of 2011.
That's all very nice Mr. Taft but do you know that we have a hard time keeping teachers as it is, especially in math and science. You are creating more need for teachers in districts that you are still unfairly funding. You and former Governor Voinovich are to blame for this and should be jailed until there is an equitable means to fund Ohio schools.
After that, you could do what Indiana is doing. Instead of rendering unto Microsoft, you could take the Linux route in placing computers in clasrooms. For what high schoolers learn on computers, whether it be word processing, use of a spreadsheet or a web browser to web design and development, the rudimentary principles (and sometimes the apps are the same -- e.g., Firefox) are similar enough to translate. In some applications, such as programming, Linux is superior because of the number or programming language options available at little to no cost.
If Indiana can do it, we can.
Wednesday, August 16, 2006
Wednesday, August 09, 2006
Sunday, July 23, 2006
Malls and Development
Why are malls like Rolling Acres and Randall Park beleaguered when smaller malls that predated them like Richmond, Chapel Hill and Summit Malls have survived? What can we learn from their fates?
Giffels asks:
One of the great themes of our age is the upward spiral of consumerAlso,
culture. The question underlying that theme is how far it can be built
up before it can no longer sustain itself.
The local answer: Rolling Acres.
Every so often we have to stop and wonder: how much is enough? HowIf there is a time to really think about development of retail in our region, it's now. I think that our failures (and, yes people, Rolling Acres is a failure) have more to teach us than the successes because who is to say that Montrose won't be the next generation's failure?
is it possible that all of these businesses can survive while feeding
on the same host? And what does it say about us that we seem to need
this many places to spend money?This is one of those times to wonder.
Someone long ago probably stood at a then-makeout point for Kenmore teens on the Akron/Barberton border and thought that it would make a great spot for a mall...thirty-one years later, we see how that turned out.
Wednesday, July 12, 2006
Why I am glad that I don't believe in the death penalty
Not just any trial. This trial.
There are a couple of reasons why I am glad I wasn't on the jury:
1. I don't believe in the death penalty.
Why not? I believe that, quite frankly, too many states fuck it up. What else can you call it when innocent people die? It's bad enough that the victim dies innocently. Adding to that by killing the wrong person in retaliation is not the smartest thing in the world. Also, there are considerable racial and class rammifications in sentencing in capital cases which no one wants to look at. Also, execution of the mentally retarded (which is one of our president's hobbies as governor of Texas) is totally inexcusable.
2. I don't feel that I have the right to determine if another human should die.
With the notable self-defense exception, I don't feel that I should hold someone else's life in my hands. Sure, Clarence Fry is more fucked up than a Pinto in a NASCAR wreck but I am still not God.
Tuesday, June 27, 2006
The World Cup...
According to this article, the strong performance of Angola (who got 2 ties) and Ghana has inspired folks all over Africa. Coupled with the fact that South Africa will be hosting the 2010 World Cup, the time for the rise of African football is coming. I am an international soccer newbie but seeing all of the countries putting great teams together will only make the World Cup more exciting. And, if this can create some dialogue on equal footing, all the better.
Wednesday, June 14, 2006
Tuesday, June 13, 2006
The Americans and their Cars
The car is repsonsible for a lot of our pollution.
The car has irreparably changed housing patterns, facilitating the birth and growth of suburban America. Twice. (after both world wars)
The car has even changed how we watch TV. Have you ever wondered why TV shows premier episodes in September? Think about this: when do new car models come out? Exactly, the fall. Car and car-related companies (e.g, Texaco) financed early TV programming.
The car (along with the Cold War) is responsible for America's rollback of public transit (included in this is passenger train and intercity bus transit). Eisenhower felt that America should have a national network of highways to facilitate easy travel between and among metropolitan areas in the event of an attack. The attack never came but the freeways are still here...and so are the orange cones and resurfacing projects that only get more and more costly and time-consuming...remember what aspalt is made of. Oil byproducts.
Did I mention oil? We won't even get into that.
Cars have been usurping control of our lives for years. When are we going to take it back?
Saturday, May 13, 2006
Ghost is for the Parents...
Listen, man, you got to chastise your kid. If you dont lay your foot down, your kid is going to be [saying], Fuck you. And you going to be sitting there crying [in a high-pitched voice]: Oh, what have I done; I havent done nothing to this boy. And that little motherfucker barking on you [in a little boys voice]: Nah, fuck you, mommy. Im going outside with my friends. I dont give a fuck what you say. Parents get that when they dont put they foot down. Niggas got to start going hard on they kids again. Aint no law and order any more. I am not saying you got bust your kids ass everyday, but you got to go back to the ole remedy. I dont know about you, but I used to get my ass whipped, and that kept me on a straight path. If I did something wrong or said something wrong to somebody, fuck around and get popped in my fucking mouth, and thats just what it is, G.
I have always believed that parenting is a benevolent dictatorship. Some parents are too benevolent (the parents on Maury and some are too dictatorial (think Carrie's mom from Carrie). It's about that balance. Kids will be kids but if a kid gets out of pocket the way a grown person would, you have to remind them...no one talks to you like that, ESPECIALLY not your kid. Spanking, denial of privileges, that's up to you to decide. But you have to punish them...otherwise, they will think that they can fuck up with no repercussions. That's just not how life is...unless you are Ken Lay or Dubya.
Wednesday, May 03, 2006
why I love and hate reading Roldo...
- He challenges the reader to find out what some of the things he talks about means
He pulls no punches
He does not talk down to his readers
Now, why I hate reading his writing:
- He paints Cleveland as a city where the rich continuously take advantage of their "stroke" to deny resources to the poor and needy
Oh...wait, the rich in Cleveland do do that...
Never mind about the hate part.
Friday, April 28, 2006
Jesus Christ: Lord, Savior....killer app?!?!
Perhaps America's best example of the tech-savvy house of worship is the Houston-based Lakewood Church, which last year recorded a weekly attendance of 30,000. Pastor Joel Osteen needed the Compaq Center, a former basketball arena that was once home of the National Basketball Association's Houston Rockets, to serve as his chapel.
Osteen employs three massive video-display screens to project his image to people sitting in the nosebleed seats. Illuminating the walls and the giant globe spinning behind Osteen's pulpit are Altman Micro Strips, strip lights that use a range of tungsten halogen lamps to create different lighting effects.
Here's my question: what about Free/Open Source Software in the church? I have seen a couple of bible apps in Free/Open Source but not much else. If you are trying to save money while maintain functionality, Free/Open Source would be the way to go.
Praise the Lord and pass the install disks.
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
Performancing...the best thing on earth.
(slobber....)
Wednesday, March 22, 2006
I don't normally....
things that rhyme with 15
Reese, I know you will laugh....
Sunday, March 19, 2006
name change...
Enter, a subset of derek.
subset (noun): a set each of whose elements is an element of an inclusive set.
Source: Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary.
So, a subset of derek is merely part of a whole. I am pursuing a Bachelor's degree in mathematics, as many of you know. Subsets are merely parts of a set. Subsets are also crucial to proving set equality. If two sets are subsets of each other (meaning that there is no item that can be found in A that cannot be found in B and vice versa, given that A and B are sets, of course) then they are equal. This reminds me of a problem that I need to be working on...
Later all...
Thursday, March 02, 2006
come on...
Come on, sex with geeks isn't that bad...
Monday, February 27, 2006
finally....
I think that the sanctimony of some "pro-lifers" is absolutely disgusting. Once the baby is born, no one gives a damn...especially if the baby is any or all of the following:
a child of color
a girl
poor
addicted
mentally retarded
That is why it was heartening to see an anti-abortion group and the ACLU in support of the same single teacher that got fired for being pregnant. from the original ABC News article:
"If you take away the resources, you could unintentionally drive a woman to having an abortion," said Foster.
"It is not pro-life to take away the resources and support that women need and deserve to bring children into this world," Foster says. "The appropriate response for the employer when they found out she was pregnant, is to say, 'Congratulations,' and, 'How can I help?' "
Here's an interesting insight into the impetus behind most abortions:
Why do I believe women have a choice? I respect women as equal human beings, capable of intelligent thought. That's really it. As my man, Butterfly says of Digable Planets in La Femme Fetal on their first album reachin'(a new refutation of time and space):A 2004 survey by the Guttmacher Institute, a research organization that supports abortion rights but is cited by both sides in the abortion wars as having reliable data, indicated that 73 percent of those seeking an abortion were doing so because they could not afford to have a baby.
"We have to systematically eliminate the reasons that drive women to abortions, and the root causes are lack of resources and lack of support," Foster says. "Women deserve both."
Hey pro-lifers need to dig themselves
because life don't stop after birth
and to a child born to the unprepared
it might even just get worse
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
Yahoo! Sports : Why Figure Skating is Not A Sport
Sooo, by his logic, Division I-A college football isn't a sport either. All of the people who determine the championship (or computers whose algorithm had to be written by someone) are not players...they are pretty much judges too. The BCS is like that horrible French judge from a few years back...