Archive for the ‘From the Internet’ Category

Fresh Lemons

Monday, April 6th, 2009


My room mate Sriram shared this blog post about awful statistics with me earlier this week. Today, MSNBC.com reports, “U.S. highway deaths at lowest levels since 1961.” Clearly we must have imported a whole lot of fresh lemons from Mexico last year.

Paul Romer Agrees with Me

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

I’ve been catching up on some back issues, well I suppose they are posts, on Greg Mankiw’s blog. I ran across a link to this, Let’s Start Brand New Banks. It sounds pretty familiar to me. Although, it works from evidence instead of first principles, but I still feel justified. If only they would follow our advice.

The Guild

Tuesday, February 17th, 2009

Over this past weekend I found a wonderful new web show via Internet Superstar on Revision 3, the only other web show that I periodically watch. On my first visit in a few months, I saw they highlighted an episode with Falica Day, whom most people know from Dr. Horrible. Anyways, I keep not writing a post about The Guild, because every time I goto the site I end up watching more episodes. Actually, I’m just watching the episodes from season 1 over and over again, as I’m saving starting season two for some reason.

The guild is an independently produced and financed short web series about a guild that plays something very similar to, but not actually called World of Warcraft, and it is hilarious even to an outsider like me. Although, I have had to bone up on some lingo including QQ more and PUG. <asside>Gee thanks to all the urban dictionary users who wrote that PUG is a dog, if I wanted to know that I’d have checked a normal dictionary.</asside>

It seems for season two that they have found some sponsorship and so individuals can no longer donate directly, which is a shame. I don’t really want/need the show on DVD or a T-Shirt, but I haven’t found another way to contribute. Contrary to Saddleback ski resort, I think everyone should check out The Guild.

Department of Happiness

Saturday, January 10th, 2009

Via Bostonist I ran across this interesting music video by Boston based band The Everyday Visuals. It is not so much about the music, which just fades into the background for me, as the world painted by the video. The rest contains spoilers…

I really like the idea of a large bureaucratic entity to which you detail your problems on a standard form, and then they subsequently mail you a collection of things which they think will help you on your way to solving your problems. It’s something about the cold, all business detachment of something that may know you better than yourself. It’s similar to the rare event when Amazon.com suggests that you might like something that you either already have and love, or that you’ve been wanting for ages.

Election Something on the Way

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

I’ll have something to say on the election, I just don’t know quite what it is yet, something along the lines of On Being a Millennial. Also, It seems that my North Carolina prediction is on the cusp of coming true, if they ever call that darn state. But really, my prediction was that Ohio would continue to fail and that North Carolina was way around that problem. Which, is not what happened, and for that I offer big Thank You to Ohio and to all my friends and family there. Also, Indiana, I really, I just didn’t know you had it in you, you’ve blown my mind (and it was good). While I write an actual response to the election I ofter you this image, from digg, described as the “Saddest Picture You’ll See All Day:”

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Update:
North Carolina has finally been called, for Obama, as predicted! Also, I was thinking, whichever Gilmore Girls writer decided to have Rory follow Obama on the campaign trail as her fictional post college job, good show.

Large Hadron Collider

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008


The top news story on msnbc.com all day today was the Large Hadron Collider, and whether or not it will destroy the earth. My friend Post sent me this link today. It is a helpful site to let you know if the LHC has destroyed the earth yet or not. It even has an RSS feed, so you can just add it to your reader, and you will be notified in the evet that the LHC destorys the Earth. All that said, here is a woot podcast on the subject with, as of this writing, one very correct comment at the top, “They haven’t tested collisions yet, so you still have a chance. Continue to slack off!,” by orthancstone.

New, Must Have Appliance

Saturday, July 12th, 2008

I get letters, although some of them are junk, some of them I need opened.

This was on digg, but seems worth sharing.

Stupid Six Baseball Mascots

Wednesday, June 4th, 2008

Another hilarious installment of the stupid six from the Woot.com podcast. Really, the stupid six is the best of their commonly done skits. I really like what they have to say about numbers 6, 3, and 2. But I can’t say more without revealing anything, so go have a listen.

On Being a Millennial

Tuesday, June 3rd, 2008

Tonight’s conclusion of the democratic primary season really got me thinking about some of the things that I read with regard to the ongoing controversy over Robert Lanham’s Generation Slap article. Can’t you just hear me wanting to say Victory by Obama, but not being able to actually say it because we’re only really half way there. I still think we can’t really rest until HRC either concedes or takes the VP spot. This “Clinton acknowledges delegate math” subtitle really doesn’t calm the nerves. But why am I so nervous? Why does this matter so much? Why do I fear the personal disillusionment a Clinton victory would have caused me?

I first stumbled upon this whole debate two weeks ago from a digg link to this seemingly copycat and less in-depth post. I was reading some more about it today because Tim’s blog brought up the topic and linked to a really well done rebuttal. The rebuttal really got me thinking, especially with the political aspects he brought up. I’m not one to really competently argue music culture with anyone educated on the subject, which was another aspect he hit on. But I’m highly invested in politics, which has surprised even myself. This is the bit I’ve been reflecting on:

[Generation X] got all the cool traits! Disaffection! Nihilism! Cynicism! Ironic distance! People just keep calling us idealistic….

As we grow up, it continues. According to the Washington Post, we’re “collegial.” And “Millennials, more than their elders, believe that U.S. political institutions will deal effectively with concerns the nation will face in the future.” We’re “sociable, optimistic, talented, well-educated, collaborative, open-minded, influential, and achievement oriented…”

Our optimism is every bit as ignorant as [Generation X’s] cynicism is lazy….

…here’s the thing about our starry-eyed good faith in the system: We might very well be the first generation to elect a black president. That’s thrilling.

Alex Pareene

This is thrilling. What really struck me, and reinforced things enough to write about it is that this is effectively the same sort of thing that Tom Brokaw said tonight while discussing race, youth, Obama, and tonight’s place in political history. I will assert that I do believe that government institutions will, by implementing well designed and thought out policies, solve the problems facing my generation. Why do I think that? Maybe because if it doesn’t then we’re all screwed, that’s sort of a proof by contradiction for you. On the positive side the resounding and successful defeat of the gas tax holiday idea is a big, recent sign that governments can make correct policy decisions for the right reasons.

It took someone else to say it for me to realize it, exactly how much idealism drives my motivations. This is why I am a democrat despite the fact that I’m not convinced that their solutions are the right ones. This is why, I, and the vast majority of my generation support Obama, who promises to deliver a reintroduction of reason, honesty, and the big Millennial thing – openness – to government. Openness is the ground work for debate that works to provide solutions. The open source movement and other open/transparent entities have shown what you can do with that kind of groundwork in place.

The interplay between the discussion and the real world affirming events have me really embracing and feeling a connection to my generation, which has not been a common thing for me. The feeling is not so much as a coalescing in response to attack, but positive thing. When I read the initial article I wasn’t even sure if I was being attacked. As I am among the eldest of the Millennials I’ve never been sure which side of the blurry line I fall on. This discussion has done much to clarify that for me.

The personal disillusionment avoided by the presumptive selection of Obama as the democratic presidential candidate is so affirming because he alone, of the three, offer this open and transparent path. Without that path — with the, as Jon Stewart put it last night, “willful deception” of Bush; the blatant, trivial, and outright lies for Clinton; or the complete disregard for once held upstanding principles of McCain — the process I am counting on to solve our problems does not work. If we can’t solve our problems through government then I think disillusionment is the result, and so now that we have a good choice, we must make that choice in November!

Charging for the First Checked Bag

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

American Airlines will start charging $15 for the first checked bag…

Come on! That is a lot ridiculous. You might as well just increase fares by $15 across the board. The only real difference is the marketing angle. People are used to fare increases, they don’t like them, but they expect them. Increases in extraneous fees that you must pay just make people feel like you are ripping them off. The marketing can’t possibly favor the fee, now that it is no longer, hidden having been reported in the press.

I, personally, like to travel light and make a quick getaway from the airport. Until the asinine no liquids TSA rule was made I never checked a bag (when possible). The current, exceedingly annoying liquids rule results in the same behavior. The alternative, of course, is to purchase shampoo and such at your destination. This takes time, but probably only costs on the order of $5. By charging for a checked first bag American makes this option more desirable, probably more desirable than checking the bag. Although, it may be easier to for business travelers to get reimbursed for the fee than for the cheaper incidentals.

Of course, encouraging people not to check a bag does nothing to decrease the weight of the plane (saving fuel), it just makes them carry it on. With the planes packed as full as they are these days, there is already not enough space for everyone to carry on their two bags. This will only make things worse in that area, and further increase the importance of getting seated early in the boarding order. When the space on the plane is exhausted there will be an interesting choice — do you charge for baggage that must be checked at the gate due to over crowding? That is a damned if you do, loophole if you don’t situation.

The only saving grace of all this is that, for now,

Rival Delta has no current plans to match American’s fee for the first checked bag…

But we all know how this oligopoly works, everyone follows suit rather quickly. Of course, given the bone headedness of this idea compared to the easier to implement fare hike, maybe they wont all be lemmings. Come on, the cost to implement charing for a first checked bag has got to cost more than $15 per bag.