This is What I Have Been Saying

April 19th, 2008

Finally the numbers show that most people have gotten the message. Hillary Clinton is not honest. This Washington Post article is chock full of interesting numbers on the topic. From TFA:

Clinton is viewed as "honest and trustworthy" by just 39 percent of Americans, according to a new Washington PostABC News poll, compared with 52 percent in May 2006. Nearly six in 10 said in the new poll that she is not honest and trustworthy. And now, compared with Obama, Clinton has a deep trust deficit among Democrats, trailing him by 23 points as the more honest, an area on which she once led both Obama and John Edwards.

A Decent Cat Macro

April 16th, 2008

As you may know, I am not a big fan of cat macros (or as others insist on calling them lol cats). But I am going to volunteer at ROFLCon in a few weeks, which is a convention on internet memes, so maybe I should get more in touch. That said, here it is:
119524132666zq0pi3.jpg
It was on digg.com, this a repost, so sue me.

Woot.com Podcast

April 16th, 2008

I start every workday with the woot.com podcast. It’s hilarious like 80% of the time, catchy about 50% of the time, and kinda lame a very small percentage of the time. Anyways, today’s podcast is about the stupidest six medical shows on tv. Anyways, it was good enough to share. A direct link to the mp3 here.

Now, go listen — spoilers below. Some of you may be familiar with my disdain for medical shows. I have a rule to handle medical shows, avoid them period. I was convinced that Scrubs was good enough to make an exception a few years ago, which was correct, but that is the only blemish on the rule which has served me well. I just want to say, “Take that all you House M.D. fans!” As far as number 5 goes, I must say that I applicate my recent inclusion in the cast of scrubs.

Did I Miss Febuary?

April 13th, 2008

The latest, and not so latest AIM statistics with pretty pictures. Sorry that the pie for March turned out larger than the one for February — February had about 40% more total bytes than did March, which is not reflected in the pie charts at all.

March

Rank Bytes Name All Time Rank
1
225420 Kelly
6
2
194247 Paul
1
3
87526 Jed
12
4
34976 Josh
4
5
26406 My Parents
10
6
8694 Zack
18
7
7441 EC
16
8
7133 Rob
11
9
4859 Angad
82
10
4582 Matt
7

February

Rank Bytes Name Jan 2008 Rank
1
278174 Kelly
1
2
207910 Paul
2
3
101042 Beth
5
4
46607 Josh
4
5
44959 Jed
6
6
43532 OSU Paul
3
7
31117 George
7
8
30981 My parents
10
9
28925 Rob
11
10
22788 Matt
14

Newspaper Columnist’s Financial Knowlege Falls Short

April 11th, 2008

An unnamed associated press writer based in Washington made an ass of him or herself this week while writing an article titled “Young people’s financial knowledge falls short”. This article reports on results from a “nationwide survey released Wednesday by the Federal Reserve” in which High School students performed poorly when asked to answer finance questions. I have no doubt that this is a real problem and serious deficiency. I do not mean to marginalize it, but clearly, the author needs to brush up on his knowledge just like the High School students. The article cites the causes of the impending/occurring recession as cause for concern at the poor showing. Then it goes on to summarize the current economic situation, for the uninformed reader with this gem of a paragraph:

When the housing market collapsed, home values fell and interest rates rose. That especially clobbered people with tarnished credit or low incomes holding more risky “subprime” mortgages. As these homeowners found it increasingly difficult or possible to make their monthly mortgage payments, home foreclosures took off, some lenders went out of business and financial institutions suffered multibillion losses as mortgage-backed investments soured.

First we have “increasingly difficult or possible” clearly those are synonyms </sarcasm>. I know I get stuff like that wrong all the time, but the author is a professional in the field of writing and should be held to a higher standard. Now, lets look at how things actually happened:

  1. “People with tarnished credit or low incomes holding more risky ‘subprime’ mortgages” saw their interest rates rise as their mortgage contract specified would occur years in advance.
  2. “These homeowners found it increasingly difficult or impossible to make their monthly mortgage payments” due to poor planning or other excuses. It’s not like it blindsided them; they knew their rates would increase. Subsequently many defaulted on their mortgages pushing their homes into foreclosure.
  3. This repeated a few times as each month’s worth of subprime loans lapsed beyond its below market initial interest rate and into an appropriate interest rate for the risk. This contracted and expected increase is what I take the author means by “interest rates rose.”
  4. As this process repeated, more and more people default and are pushed into foreclosures, which have begun to glut the market for homes driving down prices as excess supply is prone to do.
  5. With rising foreclosure rates banks begin to see the follies of their ways, stop offering subprime loans and raise rates on normal loans to cover the money they are losing when people default. This is the so called credit crunch. “Financial institutions suffered multibillion losses as mortgage-backed investments” dropped in price reflecting the actual amount of risk they represent. (Risky investments cost less.)
  6. Only now, that foreclosures have sored and all interest rates have risen does the housing market actually collapsed. This is the start of the feed back cycle where home values have become less than the amount left in mortgage payments, leading to defaults and foreclosures leading to lower home values.
  7. Following the collapse the Federal Reserve has stepped in a lowered interest rates significantly to stabilize the market. This is the traditional method by which interest rates fall.

So lets examine: rising interest rates (if you want to call contracted, expected increases rises) and falling home prices due to sudden oversupply were the causes of the housing market collapse, not the results of it. Granted that home prices continue to fall as a result, but it is clearly incorrect that interest rates rose as a result of the collapse — they have fallen as a result. It is not so much that these factors “clobbered people with tarnished credit or low incomes holding more risky ‘subprime’ mortgages,” as these people clobbered themselves and each other by not planning ahead for their contracted rate increases.

This writer, and many people, portray these people as the victims. I portray them as the antagonists. If subprime loan holders were able to continue to pay their contracted mortgage interest rates we would not have a housing market collapse. Some argue that it is the fault of predatory lending practices by unscrupulous banks who sucked these people into these loans. This hides the truth of the matter, which the national survey this article is about brings to the forefront: predatory lending practices do not work on a financially well educated customer. Such a customer can plainly predict that they will be unable to make payments in the future given reasonable income prospects, and seeking to not go into debt will not take the loan that is sure to bankrupt them. This shifts the blame back to the loan holders, and to this syllogism: if subprime loan holders weren’t so stupid as to hold subprime loans we would not have a housing market collapse. Now, I will grant that once the collapse occurred people who would have otherwise remained in good financial standing in line with their predictions were placed between a rock and a hard place, perhapses, despite their own due forethought. This is unfortunate; I do not mean to paint such individuals as part of the problem. The economic understanding of exactly how we ended up in this mess as presented by this unnamed author clearly demonstrates the widespread problem that is what I think actually got us into this mess. Now, why do we have this education problem? maybe something from the survey can shed some light:

In this year’s survey, only 16.8 percent correctly answered that stocks likely would offer the higher growth over 18 years of saving for a child’s education, while 37.3 percent thought a U.S. savings bond — one of the most conservative investments — would offer the highest growth.

Clearly the one with the higher rate of return over the next 18 years is a prediction, there is not a correct answer. If you study the last 18 years the answer is clear, but as they say, past performance is no indicator of future success. If one were to predict that the stock market is seriously overvalued, and that the rising specter of oil prices will, over the next 18 years, wreak havoc on the profit margins of companies leaving the stock market lower than it is today you may correctly conclude that a U.S. savings bond, with its gaurneteed rate of return, will offer higher growth. To sway the answer to the question (which asks which is more likely) you would need to attach at least a 50% probability to scenarios like this where you expect the market to grow by less than ~3% over 18 years. Of course were that the case an investment tied to the inflation rate, or in precious metals would almost certainly outperform the savings bond, which would likely acrue interest at less than the inflation rate is such damaging scenarios.

The point here is that it may not be an invalid assessment of risk to choose the savings bond. The response I have provided here, or one similar, is pretty much the only actually correct answer to that question. The fact that the questions was provided as multiple choice and did not include such a response indicates why we have such a poorly financially educated population. We fail to even attempt to educate them properly. I personally did really learn all I needed to know about this kind of stuff until my Junior and Senior years of college.

2008 Boston FIRST Robotics – Sunday

April 9th, 2008

EC Coding as a Senior

EC stayed an extra day, taking up the spots on the couch vacated by Rob and Josh as they drove back home on Sunday. It has been a very long time since EC and I talked. She is one of my girls from the team. Pretty much anyone I directly mentored falls into that category, but the more I was able to teach them more I consider them in that group. She was the first, and I probably taught her the most. She was so easy to teach, and so eager to learn. A teacher’s (or mentor’s) dream student. Its just amazing how far she has come. For the uninitiated EC has come to be a pillar of the team. From two years as a student to two years as a mentor and now, already, one year of leading the team. She has come a long way from when I met her, and the team has come with her. This was made clear by her winning of the Woodie Flowers’ Award, which goes to in simple terms, the best mentor at the regional. It has been fun to watch, and I’m very proud of her.

On Sunday after dropping of another my girls, Katie, who had some special return trip circumstances EC and I made our way to a meeting with a CSG and team 677 alum, Mikell who was part of the team running the regional and also won an award. EC was really looking for some direction on how to take the team to the next level and win the highest awards, that have, in the past, felt out of reach. At least from my perspective. Mikell had some excellent advice that I won’t bother you with. Sitting in on the meeting made me want to get back in to volunteering with FIRST, although maybe not on a team. I think I picked up a bit of EC’s wanting-to-be-Mikell virus.

Afterwards EC and I attempted to get a beer and a burger at Harvard Square’s Bartleys’ burgers, but apparently they are closed on Sundays. What kind of hippies run that place I’m not so sure about anymore. So we stumbled upon John Harvard’s Brew House, which had beer, but no burgers. Their microbrews were interesting. Not being a beer person I didn’t like all of them, but the Pale Ale was alright. EC was fond of that and something that was essentially a hybrid between an Irish Red and a Guinness. We talked there engaged for hours, oh how I wish that was a more common occurrence.

It was so great, that I didn’t notice that my dinner group, who came up many times in conversation, was actually coincidentally sitting at the table behind me. Granted, if I had been facing them I would have seen them, but I was not. Carney came over while EC was in the restroom to say hi, I was so surprised. Apparently they had been there for quite a while. They were trying to discern my relationship with the girl across the table, was it a date, was it not, who was this girl. They arrived at the conclusion that she was most likely my sister. Score, that made my week, go WND Group! That is exactly the kind of relationship I strived for with the girls I was mentoring. Although, it did make me a little self conscious that I was talking a little too loud, as have a penchant to do.

2008 Boston FIRST Robotics – Pictures

April 9th, 2008

Ok so things are a bit out of order. The Ski trip occurred before the robotics team arrived. I don’t have detailed daily posts, but here are some fun pictures from the event. Pictures appear in chronological order.

3/28/2008 @ 4:36pm
Steve Wozniak

3/28/2008 @ 5:03pm
EC Wins the Woody Flowers Award

3/29/2008 @ 12:53pm
Blue Man Group

3/29/2008 @ 1:10pm
The Robot

3/29/2008 @ 1:17pm
Tessa and Josh Looking at Code

2008 Boston FIRST Robotics – Wednesday

April 9th, 2008

On Wednesday of last week I got a surprising IM, EC and my former FIRST Robotics team were in town. I expected them Thursday, but they decided to come a day earlier for logistical reasons, and so began a long, hectic, fun week. I left from work to Coolidge Corner (where their hotel was) directly. Coincidentally WND was also in Coolidge that day, which made for easy planning. I went and said hi to EC and Mike who were already at the nearest Radio Shack (of course), but they had eaten, so I went and had dinner with my dinner group at a run of the mill Indian restaurant called Rani. I didn’t think it was as good as India Quality from a few months back.

After dinner I went up and lent a mentoring hand to Tessa with the robot code. Tessa, on her first year programing was doing impressively well, and she had at least one well organized component design team member helping her out. The programing mentor for this year didn’t make the trip, so Tessa has some questions, which I tried to clear up. I wasn’t much help. She fixed it the next day, and it wasn’t anything I said it might be. I was also happy to see echo’s of the methods and design I tough two years ago had been passed down by the girls, and were evident in this years code. I had tired really hard to find an easy, straight froward design to weave together the code the girls were writing. This was for the very purpose that, with a good design (the hard part) laid out the girls could take more ownership of the code, and not have things bog down as they easily could with a bad design. That this is exactly what has happened makes me very happy. More to follow as I have time to write it.

Utah Skiing 2008

April 7th, 2008

From March 19th through March 24th I was skiing in Utah with my friend from back home, Paul, his dad, his roommate, his roommate’s girlfriend, and his roommate’s girlfriend’s roommate. It was a blast. The second two days were the very best skiing I’ve had in my life, which skiing wise is still rather short mind you; anyways, it was great. But I’ve gotten ahead of myself. I’m going to tell this story in short form with pictures, be sure to click on them to read the captions.

Gondola @ Snowbasin We spent the first two days at Snow Basin, host to the 2002 Oylmpics Downhill course, and probably others. We however stayed mostly on the green slopes here teaching the girls to ski. I did make it up the gondola at least once the first day, and skiing down from there was really tiring. Much more tiring than anything I did the previous week during my warm-up in New Hampshire. (The warm up post is not forthcoming, its just lost with all the busyness. ) The second day at Snow Basin I got a little more advanced skiing in, and it was not as tiring.

On the third day we switched to Powder Mountain, which is nearby and known (apparently not very widely) for not having crowds ever, even on weekends. I’m pretty sure this view looks into the salt lake basin to the northwest, which is away from the city.

Powder Mountain Panorama

Despite that it snowed only very little, if at all, while we were there Powder Mountain still had untracked powder if you looked in the right place. Of course, learning to ski in Ohio I’ve never skied on such stuff before. It was difficult but I got the hang of it.

Glade at the Bottom of the Run Jason and Klaus in the Powder

On the second day at Powder Mountain (the last day overall) Paul, his dad and I again went in search of some untracked powder. It was harder to find that day and we ended up having to walk up this ridge a bit. In the end we found it too dangerous and skiied down the back side, where it was less steep and had fewer trees. But as we went down we looped around and had some fun darting through the trees.

Paul on the Ridge

By the end of the trip my confidence in my skiing abilities was way up. Too bad I didn’t start skiing until the end of the season.
Sunset on the Trip

Harvard Square Chipotle

April 2nd, 2008

Harvard Square Chipotle

About a month or so ago, on March 12, Chipotle finally opened a restaurant in the most brain dead obvious place in the entire city. This, more than a year after opening their first Boston restaurant in what amounts to the middle of no where. It was a Wednesday, and WND can’t go to a (non-local) chain, so we had a pre-dinner at Chipotle to check it out.

The Harvard location holds a lot of promise. Like Davis Square, and just about every where else in Boston there is stiff burrito competition. Of course, Chipotle tops them all, but they pulled out all the stops on the first night. They were ready to go with tons of food and enough people to keep everything on the line fresh, continuously, as people streamed by for hours. I have to say the freshness made a lot of difference; it was the best burrito I’ve had in quite some time. That will hopefully convince everyone who was there of Chipotle superiority.

I say hopefully because I don’t have to stand in line at the Harvard location — I’m going to still be going to Davis because its much closer to me most of the time. Davis, does have some problems, that the Harvard location would do well to solve. Davis lacks room, and they often have just one employee on the line, and at most two, even at peak times. Also, Davis lacks seating, it can seat about 34 people by my rough count, but only 16 of those are in chairs; the rest are stools. The Harvard location is much more equipped to handle lots of people. In fact we didn’t even have trouble finding a seat in the free-for-all. They also have a huge 8 person table, which is a good addition.

After pre-dinner we went to Lizzy’s Ice Cream, my choice. It was small, but kind of alright, sort of. It was better than Herrells, but just goto JP Licks, you’ll be happy you did.