Saturday, November 05, 2005
More riding
Up Old La Honda, down 84, up Alpine road, down Page Mill. 50 miles, and 1400m of climbing (4593 feet). It was gorgeous, of course.
Thoughts from the ride: it's hard to make friends as you get older. For one thing, everyone's incredibly busy, with kids, with work, or with their existing friends. The days of saying, "Can you come out and play?" and then spending the day hanging out and doing stuff are perhaps one of the luxuries we don't get when we're adults. But when you do get a chance to do so, it's a lot of fun, and really something to treasure.
I thought of us
So hard to talk these days
Did we change
Or were we strangers all along
Tell me what caused us to turn away
--- Wall of Silence, The October Project
Up Old La Honda, down 84, up Alpine road, down Page Mill. 50 miles, and 1400m of climbing (4593 feet). It was gorgeous, of course.
Thoughts from the ride: it's hard to make friends as you get older. For one thing, everyone's incredibly busy, with kids, with work, or with their existing friends. The days of saying, "Can you come out and play?" and then spending the day hanging out and doing stuff are perhaps one of the luxuries we don't get when we're adults. But when you do get a chance to do so, it's a lot of fun, and really something to treasure.
I thought of us
So hard to talk these days
Did we change
Or were we strangers all along
Tell me what caused us to turn away
--- Wall of Silence, The October Project
Friday, November 04, 2005
Wednesday, November 02, 2005
Scott Burns predicts a recession
And I believe him. Together with the imminent collapse of the housing bubble, we're going to see some tough times:
... Skeptics should consider this brief list:
•The rising cost of gasoline. With the typical household consuming about 1,000 gallons a year, an increase from $1.50 a gallon to $3 meant a purchasing-power loss of $1,500.
•Rate increases for electricity and natural gas.
•Rising medical co-pays and other out-of-pocket expenses for health care, plus rising employee health insurance premium costs. Premium costs were up 10 percent in 2004 alone.
Another way to see the same thing is to examine wage gains.
In 2004, the average weekly earnings of private nonagricultural workers rose only 2.2 percent. The consumer price index rose 3.3 percent over the same period.
And I believe him. Together with the imminent collapse of the housing bubble, we're going to see some tough times:
... Skeptics should consider this brief list:
•The rising cost of gasoline. With the typical household consuming about 1,000 gallons a year, an increase from $1.50 a gallon to $3 meant a purchasing-power loss of $1,500.
•Rate increases for electricity and natural gas.
•Rising medical co-pays and other out-of-pocket expenses for health care, plus rising employee health insurance premium costs. Premium costs were up 10 percent in 2004 alone.
Another way to see the same thing is to examine wage gains.
In 2004, the average weekly earnings of private nonagricultural workers rose only 2.2 percent. The consumer price index rose 3.3 percent over the same period.
Sunday, October 30, 2005
To the best of our knowledge interviews Margaret Atwood
They interview her about her latest book, Oryx and Crake. Scarlet should listen to this because at one point Margaret Atwood denies her existence. She says, "Girls/women don't spend hours and hours in front of the computer playing strategy games." Scarlet is much more capable of doing that than I am, though I'm sure that Evan has cut into her gaming significantly. Yet I suspect that Scarlet will not be the kind of person who would consider video games to be rotting her kids' brains.
They interview her about her latest book, Oryx and Crake. Scarlet should listen to this because at one point Margaret Atwood denies her existence. She says, "Girls/women don't spend hours and hours in front of the computer playing strategy games." Scarlet is much more capable of doing that than I am, though I'm sure that Evan has cut into her gaming significantly. Yet I suspect that Scarlet will not be the kind of person who would consider video games to be rotting her kids' brains.
Review: Freakonomics
Freakonomics
Yes, I'm late to the party. Levitt & Dubner actually visited Google a few months ago, but by then I already had the book on the queue at the Santa Clara County Library. It's a great read, covering everything from crime to sumo wrestling and the defeat of the Ku Klux Klan by Superman (a true story!). Highly recommended!
Recall for a moment the two boys, one white and one black, who were described in chapter 5. The white boy who grew up outside Chicago had smart, solid encouraging, loving parents who stressed education and family. The black boy from Daytona Beach was abandoned by his mother, was beaten by his father, and had become a full-fledged ganster by his teens. So what became of the two boys?
The second child, now twenty-seven years old, is Roland G. Fryer Jr., the Harvard economist studying black underachievement.
The white child also made it to Harvard. But soon after, things went badly for him. His name is Ted Kaczynski.
Yes, I'm late to the party. Levitt & Dubner actually visited Google a few months ago, but by then I already had the book on the queue at the Santa Clara County Library. It's a great read, covering everything from crime to sumo wrestling and the defeat of the Ku Klux Klan by Superman (a true story!). Highly recommended!
Recall for a moment the two boys, one white and one black, who were described in chapter 5. The white boy who grew up outside Chicago had smart, solid encouraging, loving parents who stressed education and family. The black boy from Daytona Beach was abandoned by his mother, was beaten by his father, and had become a full-fledged ganster by his teens. So what became of the two boys?
The second child, now twenty-seven years old, is Roland G. Fryer Jr., the Harvard economist studying black underachievement.
The white child also made it to Harvard. But soon after, things went badly for him. His name is Ted Kaczynski.
Labels:
books,
recommended,
reviews
Hidden Order: The Economics of Everyday Life
An excellent book covering what's essentially "Economics 101" for non-economists or for people who skipped that class in college (or high school). It unfortunately doesn't cover some of the complexities that are in typical economics textbooks (such as network externalities and increasing returns to scale), but given the limited space, that's understandable.
Recommended if you're not already an economics junkie.
An excellent book covering what's essentially "Economics 101" for non-economists or for people who skipped that class in college (or high school). It unfortunately doesn't cover some of the complexities that are in typical economics textbooks (such as network externalities and increasing returns to scale), but given the limited space, that's understandable.
Recommended if you're not already an economics junkie.
Wednesday, October 26, 2005
The Talent Myth
Gladwell came to give a talk at Google, which prompted me to mine his web-site for more good stuff. The Talent Myth is great reading, and has a lot of very good lessons for smart people, who tend to overvalue smartness.
Gladwell came to give a talk at Google, which prompted me to mine his web-site for more good stuff. The Talent Myth is great reading, and has a lot of very good lessons for smart people, who tend to overvalue smartness.
Monday, October 24, 2005
Republicans are Evil, part III
Well, the U.S. government has to get money from somewhere. As a two-term former Republican senator from Florida, where do you suggest we get money from?
What money?
The money to run this country.
We'll borrow it.
<>I never understand where all this money comes from. When the president says we need another $200 billion for Katrina repairs, does he just go and borrow it from the Saudis?>In a sense, we do. Maybe the Chinese.
Is that fair to our children? If we keep borrowing at this level, won't the Arabs or the Chinese eventually own this country?
I am not worried about that. We are a huge country producing enormous assets day in and day out. We have great strength, and we have always adjusted to difficulties that faced us, and we will continue to do so.
Sunday, October 23, 2005
List of 2005 Book Reviews
I've decided that it's a good idea to put links to all my book reviews in one post, for my own needs. They're not listed in any particular order, though what I've done is for series of books, to place the books in series order (i.e., the order in which they're intended to be read) Having this list will let me select books of the year (at the end of each year), and also provide a handy link off to the right so new readers can have a collection to jump to.
The best books of 2005 get special mention in their own post.
Fiction
The best books of 2005 get special mention in their own post.
Fiction
- Excession
- The John Varley Reader
- The Drawing of the Dark
- Iron Sunrise
- A Deepness in the Sky
- Year's Best Science Fiction, 22nd Annual Collection
- The Rhythm Section
- A Fire Upon The Deep
- The Time Traveller's Wife
- Idlewild
- Cavedweller
- The Golden Compass
- The Subtle Knife
- The Amber Spyglass
- The Black Company
- Shadows Linger
- The White Rose
- The Silver Spike
- Shadow Games
- Never Let Me Go
- British Walking Guide: Coast to Coast Path
- A Cost to Coast Walk
- Fantastic Voyage
- Freakonomics
- Hidden Order
- The Future of Success
- The Cheating of America
- The Search
- The Wright Exit Strategy
- Hanging out with the Dream King
- Climate Crash
- Fooled by Randomness
- Blink
- The Long Emergency
- The World Is Flat
- Why We Buy
- Collapse
- Moneyball
- Fever Pitch
- Dealers of Lightning
The John Varley Reader
John Varley's recent books have been unfortunately lightweight, though still fun to read. This collection of his short stories, however, shows off how versatile he is, and how far ahead of his time he was. Nearly every story is exciting and a good read, and you can see the themes showing up in his "8 worlds" milleu. Highly recommended!
John Varley's recent books have been unfortunately lightweight, though still fun to read. This collection of his short stories, however, shows off how versatile he is, and how far ahead of his time he was. Nearly every story is exciting and a good read, and you can see the themes showing up in his "8 worlds" milleu. Highly recommended!
Ran into Neil & Julie Hunt at the top of Black Mountain today. The hike itself took Shyam and I 1:50 minutes to the top (Neil & Julie did it in 1:30, which goes to show that the decade between Pure Software and Netflix has not slowed him down at all). Neil is the Chief Product Officer at Netflix and as the former VP of Engineering built most of the software that runs the site. He happily showed me his new toy --- a weather station at his vacation home that regularly reports the current conditions over the net to his blackberry.
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