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Eggs and Endorphins

Eggs and Endorphins
 

5/20/13 08:03 pm - daviddfriedman - Ted Nelson Thinks He Has Identified the Creator of Bitcoin

http://daviddfriedman.blogspot.com/2013/05/ted-nelson-thinks-he-has-identified.html

I don't know if he is right, but it is a plausible and entertaining account.
 

5/20/13 12:00 am - sheldoncomics - strip for May / 20 / 2013

http://www.sheldoncomics.com/archive/130520.html

strip for May / 20 / 2013

Jump to a Random Strip in the Archives! | Get Sheldon Books 'n Shirts | Buy This Original ArtForum Chat | Archives | E-mail Dave

 

5/20/13 07:00 am - schlock_feed - YAPSIDHTTP: Yet Another Post Saying I Don't Have Time To Post

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SchlockRSS/~3/8BP5gknVU_I/yapsidhttp-phoenixcomiccon

This acronym - YAPSIDHTTP - will never become a "thing" because it cannot be pronounced. Then again, if you read it the way you read URL bars, the HTTP is silent...

At any rate, I need to grind out two weeks of comics by midday Wednesday, because I leave for Phoenix Comic-Con on Thursday.

I WILL BE AT PHOENIX COMIC-CON and you deserve a post telling you where my table is. This is not that post. This is YAPSIDHTTP.

Also, I owe you a review of Star Trek: Into Darkness, which is my new #1 for the year. If I can let go of the principles of good science fiction for the sake of enjoying Iron Man, I can certainly make the adjustments necessary to enjoy the ongoing reboot of the first science fiction show I ever knew.

I'm going to go make comics now. Maybe I will see you in Phoenix on Friday, Saturday, or Sunday of this week!

 

5/20/13 09:51 am - itsallonething - unpacking my previous Star Trek post, plus Cumberbatch's Khan

http://shetterly.blogspot.com/2013/05/unpacking-my-previous-star-trek-post.html

1. Both villains were insufficiently established. Using Pike instead of Marcus would've deepened the part of the bad Star Fleet captain, and it would've allowed a little more time in the film to develop Khan.

2. Women fared badly. Uhura's attempt to bluff the Klingons should've worked, and any new woman added to the cast should've been memorable for more than her underwear. I was not a fan of Star Trek: The Next Generation (I rarely had access to a TV when it was being broadcast), but I thought Tasha Yar, the female security officer, was a smart response to the limited women's roles in the original show.

3. While I had summer-movie fun watching Star Trek Into Darkness, I wanted more clever solutions and fewer "hulk smash" moments.

I understand people wishing Hollywood would give more breaks to Bollywood stars, but the logic of capitalism doesn't work that way, and the notion that Cumberbatch looked "too white" strikes me as either ignorant or racist. Here's a Bollywood star who is actually named Khan:


Here's Cumberbatch:


That said, if I could've cast the part, I would've gone with Alexander Siddig, whose post-DS9 work has been great:


I haven't read many reviews of the movie, so these shouldn't be considered "best of" suggestions, but I recommend them:

Star Trek Movie: SPOILERZZZZ | Felicia's Melange

Star Trek into Darkness Hostile to Star Trek, Intelligence | Sequart


 

5/20/13 12:00 am - unshelved_comic - Unshelved on Monday, May 20, 2013

http://www.unshelved.com/2013-5-20

http://www.unshelved.com/2013-5-20/

Random House Digital Sampler
Unshelved strip for 5/20/2013
link to this strip | tweet this | share on facebook | email us | signed print

Explore our comprehensive, convenient and compact book bundles, starting at just $30

 

5/20/13 07:25 am - twentysidedtale - The Twelve-Year Mistake Part 2: The Coder

http://www.shamusyoung.com/twentysidedtale/?p=19203

ShamusIt’s September of 2000. I turned 29 last month. I’m trying to move our family from Boston to Pittsburgh. In the middle of the move, Dad has died.

Funeral

I only ever saw Dad in the context of sitting around his tiny little efficiency apartments while he drank coffee and chain-smoked. He lived alone and only ate meals that could be prepared with one hand. His kitchen table was always a mountain of incoming mail, with a small spot reserved for his plate and utensils. You can tell where his favorite seat was, because it was the one spot on the couch that didn’t release clouds of dust when somebody dropped into it. His seat was surrounded by different eyeglasses, overflowing ashtrays, coffee stains, and open books.

He never discussed his friends. I inferred that he had friends by the fact that he would abruptly get new stuff around Christmas. Sometimes I’d see personal mail mixed in with the overdue bills heaped up on the table. Once in a long while he’d get a phone call during my visit, but the calls were always terse and he never said who had called or why. His life outside of coffee and cigarettes was opaque to me.

Dad’s funeral is… surprising. I can suddenly see that busy other life he lived. That other life was hidden because his friends were mostly fellow members of Alcoholics Anonymous. That was where he invested most of his time and that’s where his heart was. I suppose he was trying to save other people from the fate he’d brought on himself. I meet many of these people at the funeral, and I get a sense that he’d helped a lot of them directly.

We’d never really understood each other. I never saw the very personal work he did sponsoring people as they fought to reclaim their lives from addiction. He never got the whole “computer programmer” thing, and was always jokingly (but also earnestly) a little disappointed that I never became a writer.

After the funeral I return to Boston and begin the long job of dragging my family home to Pittsburgh and finding a permanent place to live.

House Hunting

The house search is trying for us. Buying houses takes a lot of time even when done quickly, and in the meantime we’re living with grandparents. Space is tight. Our stuff is sitting in storage. My work area is crammed in my bedroom, which isn’t optimal. It’s actually worse here than working in an office. Sure, I can wear comfortable clothes now, but Rachel is toddling around and Esther is still in diapers. Between the two of them they can make a lot of chaos and noise in such close quarters. Heather’s grandparents are good people, but they needle me sometimes. They don’t mean to, but like a lot of people we know they just don’t get this whole internet thing and they don’t really respect what I do.

Her grandparents are generally good people. They’d have to be. They’re letting our family live upstairs from them, and kids are not quiet creatures. They’re generous, but they’re also old-fashioned. They see introversion as a character flaw and they see my working from home as strange. They also don’t like that I keep such odd hours. They make a lot of suggestions: You should visit the family more. Have you thought about changing jobs? No? Have you thought about going to school? I am not respected by people in Heather’s family, and I’ve responded (perhaps petulantly) by ignoring and avoiding them. This does not improve their opinion of me. This ignoring and avoidance thing is a lot harder to pull off now that we’re under the same roof.

While the house-buying is problematic and slow, the sale of our Boston condo is simple and effortless. We technically made $35k on it, which is nearly a year’s salary for me. I’m sort of shocked at how little of the money lands in my hands. Realtor fees. Taxes. The legal costs of resolving the paperwork. Moving expenses. Paying off the credit card we stressed out when living in Boston. When it’s all over we’ve got just enough for a down payment on a new place.

Rachel, playing in her new yard.

We find a place to live in the extended ‘burbs of Pittsburgh. It’s a big house with a yard. There are enough bedrooms that we can give the kids space and still have a quiet room reserved for my office. It’s January of 2001 when we move in.

Our lives improve right away. I can give Heather the attention she needs, and she can give me the space I need. I’m able to focus on work. I get some new asthma drugs which basically stop all symptoms and let me live a normal life. Now I can stop putting on weight. Maybe I should think about getting some exercise?

I try writing a private blog for my coworkers to outline the stuff I’m doing and explain why job X was done a day early and job Y was done a day late. It’s very much a “here is the most interesting problem I’ve found today” kind of thing. My boss is worried that the public will find the thing and company secrets will be leaked. I put a password on the blog. People stop reading it.

I get a lot out of doing the blog, and I find that the process of writing actually helps me sort through and analyze problems better than just sitting and thinking about them. Despite this, I still have the mindset that the blog is for the benefit of “everyone else”, so when people stop reading I stop writing. I also have a personal blog that follows the same trajectory: Rewarding to write, but ultimately abandoned when I realize I’m talking to myself.

Coding

This game ran on Renderware.

Over the last six years with this company I’ve done mostly art, with programming filling out my minor duties. After the move I transition to all programming. I get to do a lot of cool experimental work. Some of it pans out, some of it doesn’t. That’s how it is with prototyping.

Here is an assortment of unrelated programming anecdotes to pad out the rest of this entry:

I come up with a compression system for 3D models. I have this epiphany about how I can make 3D data compress down. My prototype is 15% more effective than standard zip compression. If I’d thought of this four years ago it might be worth something, but the därk age of dialup is drawing to a close. Broadband is becoming widespread. Also, while a savings of 15% is pretty significant, 3D models represent only a tiny portion of the total volume of data that our users download. Eighty percent of their bandwidth goes to downloading sounds and textures. So my technique only saves 15% of 20% of their total downloads. And finally, my technique takes advantage of the fact that most 3D models are built on a coarse grid. This is becoming less true each day as computers get more powerful and artists dabble with curved surfaces. Basically, this is a clever trick that makes only a small difference for a vanishing number of people and only works on the kind of models nobody makes anymore. This is an idea who’s time has come… and gone.

I write an interface system that auto-generates a dialog of different options into a collapsible list. This makes it very easy to manage huge numbers of options in a single dialog. It’s based on the dialog style used in the Unreal Editor, and it will save us a ton of work over the next decade.

I write some code to procedurally generate trees. It’s very slick, very creative, and completely useless to our company. I end up shelving it, forgetting about it, and eventually losing the code.

Our codebase was begun in 1994. It’s a very old-school set of code, written in vanilla C and tied to Windows on a very fundamental level. Our graphics are handled by Renderware. It’s not a bad graphics engine, except our version is from 1996 and here in 2001 it is now ancient beyond reckoning. For years our codebase was maintained by two guys, who passed files back and forth by email. There are now four coders on the team, and it is decided that the time has come for us to run things with a little more professionalism.

We set up proper source control. We decide to transition from C to C++. We move to using the latest version of Renderware. (This is the same engine and version as the one used in Grand Theft Auto III, which just came out this year.) This means we’ll finally support these new graphics cards that are all the rage these days.

For those of you who don’t write code for a living: C and C++ are sort of the same programming language, except not at all. C was extended to make C++, so any valid C code ought to be valid C++ code. There are a lot of annoying little edge-cases where this isn’t quite the case, and even an experienced programmer can quickly find himself buried up to his neckbeard in esoteric minutiae. This is particularly true if you have one million lines of C code that are using software libraries written by other people in C and now you want to flip a switch and begin programming in C++.

Coding in all C was kind of like fighting with one arm tied behind my back. Sometimes I ran into problems where a C++ class was the right tool for the job, and I couldn’t use it. Now we’ve got a hybrid codebase with a bunch of strange header-juggling and a schizophrenic approach to object-oriented design, so now it’s like fighting with both hands, but hopping on one foot. I can’t tell if this is an improvement or not. It certainly makes the job interesting.

splash_confusing_road.jpg

See, the advantage of C++ is the way it shapes your program at a high level. C is a city made up of horse-roads. The roads are cheap and fast and if you want to go somewhere new you just blaze a trail directly there. The end result will be an incomprehensible roadmap of ad-hoc connections and routes. Fast to build, hard to maintain. C++ is like a nice modern city built on a crisp grid. It takes time and planning to set up, but it’s easy to use, document, and maintain. The migration we’re doing is like paving over all those horse-paths with asphalt: It’s a big improvement, but no amount of pavement will turn this tangled spiderweb into a grid.

During the conversion we find some bits of code that nobody wants to touch. Our Jpeg library was written by a fresh college grad in 1994 or so. It is, without a doubt, the most singularly horrifying piece of code I’ve ever seen. Global variables defined in the middle of the file. Mutually recursive functions. The function names are all based on the specific details of jpeg files, so the functions are all named things like JFIF_8 (), APP0_JFIF_Ex (), YCbCr (), XFF (), and so on. They’re all impenetrable and written with unpredictable mixed case. Some of these names are identical to #defines aside from case or underscore placement. So…

 
//Somewhere in the middle of the file...
 
#define JFIF8     (something inscrutable)
#define YCBCR     (something inscrutable)
 
//Then, several hundred lines later...
 
void JFIF_8 (JPx jx, JPy jy, J2* j)
{
  /*
  a half page of math and bit-shifting
  */
  if (rV > gV || yV == YCBCR) 
    return YCbCr (&j);
  /*
  now a bunch of block memory copies using global pointers. Good luck finding 
  where they're freed, because it's nowhere CLOSE to where they're allocated.
  */
}

(Seriously. I wish I still had access to this code. The stuff I wrote above is just an imitation of the style. I don’t actually remember the specifics these days. The original is much better. It’s poetic in its awfulness.)

Some of this old code is completely inscrutable. We don’t have enough time to properly go and re-write everything to follow C++ conventions, and nobody wants to touch the crazy minefields like the JPEG decoder. So we can’t just make a clean break. Instead, we kind of split the codebase between new and old using stuff like extern C { ... }. This is sometimes messy and problematic.

Work is fun and challenging, but big changes are on the way…

 

5/20/13 01:15 pm - giantitp_comics - Order of the Stick 889: Get Real

http://www.GiantITP.com/comics/oots0889.html

http://www.GiantITP.com/comics/oots0889.html
 

5/20/13 12:00 am - unshelved_comic - Introducing @bookblrb

http://www.unshelved.com/2013-5-20/Introducing%20@bookblrb

http://www.unshelved.com/2013-5-20/Introducing%20@bookblrb/

by Bill ( link to this post | email me | my twitter )

bookblrb logo

How short can a book talk get? Let's find out.

Gene and I have spent the last few months going through hundreds of our book recommendations, turning each into a very, very short blurb. How short? Each fits in in a single tweet along with a link to find out more. In fact they're so short that even the phrase book blurb starting feeling ponderous, so we shortened it to bookblrb™ .

We will send a new one out every day. Twitterers can Follow @bookblrb, and Facebookers can Like our Bookblrb page. The rest of you can find @bookblrb on our home page, and we hope to add it to the email and RSS feed very soon.

We hope @bookblrb helps you find even more great books to read and share.

P.S. While we were going through all those reviews we also tagged them all.

P.P.S. There's also a Facebook page for Unshelved. Twitterers can follow me (@billba) and Gene (@ambaum) and get strip and blog updates at @unshelfeed.

 

5/20/13 09:37 am - outofambit - Last test. (Just trying to figure out a peculiarity of image…

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OutOfAmbit/~3/60kmHhx2320/

http://dianeduane.com/outofambit/?p=3167

Last test. (Just trying to figure out a peculiarity of image...



Last test. (Just trying to figure out a peculiarity of image (non-)display…



This was crossposted from DD's tumblr http://dduane.tumblr.com/post/50896555923, where it was published on May 20, 2013 at 10:24AM

The post Last test. (Just trying to figure out a peculiarity of image… appeared first on Out of Ambit.

 

5/20/13 09:07 am - outofambit - jenesaispourquoi: dontblinktheangelshavecamelot: Look! There…

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OutOfAmbit/~3/jPiuq7yVmgc/

http://dianeduane.com/outofambit/?p=3166

jenesaispourquoi: dontblinktheangelshavecamelot: Look! There...









jenesaispourquoi:

dontblinktheangelshavecamelot:

Look! There was a fan fiction article in today’s  Washington Express (a free daily I newspaper put out by the Washington Post in Washington DC)

Link to the article online

Article credit, Beth Marlowe (Express)

Art credit, Patrick Leger (For Express)

You don’t have to sign up to read stories on ArchiveOfOurOwn though. Just to post them :)

I’m just sitting here chuckling at the illo.



This was crossposted from DD's tumblr http://dduane.tumblr.com/post/50895648220, where it was published on May 20, 2013 at 09:53AM

The post jenesaispourquoi: dontblinktheangelshavecamelot: Look! There… appeared first on Out of Ambit.

 

5/20/13 08:52 am - outofambit - Another test. I’ll be done with these soon, honest.

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OutOfAmbit/~3/iCUS-XcqCiY/

http://dianeduane.com/outofambit/?p=3162

Another test. I’ll be done with these soon, honest.

Another test. I’ll be done with these soon, honest. This was crossposted from DD's tumblr http://dduane.tumblr.com/post/50895460691, where it was published on May 20, 2013 at 09:47AM

The post Another test. I’ll be done with these soon, honest. appeared first on Out of Ambit.

 

5/20/13 08:52 am - outofambit - Just testing an IFTTT recipe here

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OutOfAmbit/~3/k1gUH_A7YOM/

http://dianeduane.com/outofambit/?p=3161

Pay this no mind.



This was crossposted from DD's tumblr http://dduane.tumblr.com/post/50895281224, where it was published on May 20, 2013 at 09:41AM

The post Just testing an IFTTT recipe here appeared first on Out of Ambit.

 

5/20/13 08:37 am - outofambit - Still Life with Bluespoon Earpiece on Flickr.

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OutOfAmbit/~3/xizorWq0Nps/

http://dianeduane.com/outofambit/?p=3160

Still Life with Bluespoon Earpiece on Flickr.



Still Life with Bluespoon Earpiece on Flickr.



via tumblr http://dduane.tumblr.com/post/50895146425 published on May 20, 2013 at 09:36AM

The post Still Life with Bluespoon Earpiece on Flickr. appeared first on Out of Ambit.

 

5/20/13 08:06 am - otherdeb_feed - 21-Day Simplify Challenge: Day 10

http://otherdeb.wordpress.com/2013/05/20/21-day-simplify-challenge-day-10/

http://otherdeb.wordpress.com/?p=656

Well, that was easy.

Donation Box © 2103, Deborah J. Wunder

Donation Box © 2103, Deborah J. Wunder

Today’s challenge was to create a donation box. Since December, I’ve had a donation box (I call it a freebie box) on my living room table.  So far, friends have taken books, lotions, and other things from it, giving them good homes and getting them out of my house.  I actually started the box when I decided that the roomie and I needed to get rid of some of the several tons of books we own. She agreed, but was loathe to just throw them out, and we have far too many to lug to the one used bookstore near us. We thought about giving them to the local library, but they stopped taking donations of used books a while ago.

The current plan is that we leave the books (or whatever) in the box for a certain amount of time. If they are not picked up or adopted within that time, one of us will lug them up to the Goodwill thrift shop four blocks away and give them away. the main thing is that we are getting them out of the house. Once I am ready to start purging clothing, I will do the same with it.


 

5/19/13 11:46 pm - otherdeb_feed - 21-Day Simplify Challenge: Days 8 & 9

http://otherdeb.wordpress.com/2013/05/19/21-day-simplify-challenge-days-8-9/

http://otherdeb.wordpress.com/?p=653

Sorry about not posting yesterday – just had too much to do and too little day to do it in.

Day 8 was about simplifying your morning routine.  Mine’s pretty simple:

  • Meditate
  • Breakfast
  • Straighten bed
  • Check email
  • Check in with London client
  • Write
  • Edit

My prayer beads © 2013 Deborah J. Wunder

My prayer beads © 2013 Deborah J. Wunder

 

The problem comes when I am not feeling well. Unfortunately, the congestive heart failure seems to have left me with a somewhat lowered immunity, in addition to energy levels that vanish suddenly, often in the middle of doing something interesting. I am working on getting them back, but it is taking longer than I was hoping it would. 

The photo is of my prayer beads, which are malachite. I wear them all the time, and use them each morning for meditation.

 

Day 9 is about Other People’s Stuff.  I don’t have much trouble with that, since the roomie and I each tend to keep our messes in our own rooms.  However, there are a few chores that I wish I didn’t have to ask her specifically to do each time they need to be done.

I don’t nag her, though. If I remember to ask her to do it, she will, and she does so much of the stuff I can’t do right now that it wouldn’t be right to nag her. So I am concentrating on my stuff this Challenge.

 


 

5/20/13 05:15 pm - userfriendlyrss - Cartoon For May 20, 2013

http://ars.userfriendly.org/cartoons/?id=20130520

Cartoon for Today, May 20, 2013
 

5/20/13 04:00 am - weregeek_comic - 05/20/2013

http://www.weregeek.com/2013/05/20/

 

5/20/13 04:00 am - sluggy_feed - Comic: 05/20/13

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/sluggy_freelance/~3/BWK6bgyhzTc/COMIC130520

Ads by Project Wonderful! Your ad could be here, right now.
 

5/20/13 12:00 am - misfilecomic - Comic Posted: Mon, 20 May 2013

http://www.misfile.com/?date=2013-05-20#comic

http://www.misfile.com/?date=2013-05-20#2299

The new comic for Mon, 20 May 2013 has been posted.
 

5/20/13 04:24 am - makinglight - Star Trek Into Obscurity ***SPOILERS***

http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/015104.html

If you absolutely have to talk about the herd of laser unicorns that so unexpectedly appear at the climax of the latest Star Trek movie, but do not dare do so in public because your friends will look at you sadly for spoiling the film for them, THIS IS THE PLACE to talk about the laser unicorns.

For here there be SPOILERS!

 

5/20/13 04:00 am - skinhorsecomic - Today’s Comic

http://skin-horse.com/2013/super-soldier/

Today’s Comic

 

5/20/13 05:15 am - outofambit - Recent tweets…

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OutOfAmbit/~3/4r6_zdr5sfU/

http://dianeduane.com/outofambit/2013/05/20/recent-tweets-7/

The post Recent tweets… appeared first on Out of Ambit.

 

5/20/13 12:00 pm - narbonic_dircut - Narbonic: Director's Cut: 2006-12-18

http://www.webcomicsnation.com/shaenongarrity/narbonic_plus/series.php?view=archive&chapter=52824#212495



 

5/20/13 04:00 am - xkcd_rss - Geoguessr

http://xkcd.com/1214/

I'm not sure if you can get Epcot, but my friend just got LegoLand. He guessed California but it was the one in Denmark. Meanwhile, I'm rapidly becoming a connoisseur of unmarked dirt roads over flat, barren landscapes.
 

5/20/13 04:00 am - enjuhneer_comic - 513 – The People You Meet – Lounge Edition

http://www.enjuhneer.com/archives/513-the-people-you-meet-lounge-edition

http://www.enjuhneer.com/?p=2159

513 – The People You Meet – Lounge Edition

So RPI graduates on this coming Saturday, and I like to nod to it however I can. This is how I celebrated my own. I did this a couple years ago, and unfortunately didn’t do one last year due to the hiatus.

You guys know who you are, and I love you all dearly and wish you the very best of luck in whatever you do. Congrats RPI Class of 2013!

 

5/19/13 10:00 pm - schlock_feed - Schlock Mercenary: May 20, 2013

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SchlockRSS/~3/hqx2TcFuBBM/2013-05-20

Schlock MercenaryFirstPreviousArchiveShop

 

5/19/13 04:24 pm - daviddfriedman - A Different Sort of Bullying

http://daviddfriedman.blogspot.com/2013/05/a-different-sort-of-bullying.html

There has been a good deal of talk in recent years about the evils of bullying and what to do about it. Almost all of what is discussed seems to be bullying of low status people by low status people, largely schoolchildren bullying schoolchildren. There is another sort of bullying that is unfortunately common in our society, arguably a more serious problem, and the subject of less, or at least less uniform, condemnation. Some examples are illustrated by two of my recent posts and one older one.

The first is anti-smoking rules carried beyond the point at which they can plausibly be defended as protecting non-smokers. My example is a proposed rule to ban all smoking from my campus. Smoking is already forbidden in buildings and, I'm pretty sure, near the entrance to buildings, so the proposal would have only a tiny effect on exposure to second hand smoke. I am a non-smoker, find cigarette smoke mildly unpleasant, and cannot remember having ever been significantly bothered by it on campus. The document circulated on the ban asserted a number for total excess mortality due to second hand smoke that I argued in my post on the subject was doubly bogus—it misrepresented the claim it was based on, and that claim was almost certainly based on cherry picked data. And, even if the number were correct, it would say little about the effect of the small additional reduction due to the proposed rule.

One motive for such a rule—whether it has passed or will pass I do not know—is probably paternalism, the theory that if you make smoking sufficiently inconvenient smokers may give it up. But I suspect that another motive is bullying. People, unfortunately, enjoy pushing other people around. Such a rule lets people who disapprove of smoking make life more unpleasant for those who smoke,  demonstrating the power of the former over the latter.

My second example is the behavior of police officers. There are obvious reasons why police officers would wish other people to be deferential towards them, since the more extreme forms of non-deference can, in that context, be lethal. If the only people who talk back to them are criminals, mostly criminals about to attack them, that provides a useful signal of when to be on their guard. Making things unpleasant for people who demand a badge number (I once got arrested for assisting someone else to do so), point a cell phone camera at them, or in other ways fail to acknowledge their status and authority, is one way of getting that deference.

There are also obvious reasons why people in general want other people to be deferential towards them, making a profession which legitimizes the demand for deference and makes it possible to enforce it with the threat of death, injury, or prison, attractive to those with that taste. Which I think helps to explain the increasingly common pattern of unnecessary SWAT style raids, kicking in doors, pointing guns at innocent people and ordering them to lie on the floor, shooting dogs. 

I do not think it would be hard to come up with other examples in both categories. People like pushing other people around. Doing so is generally safer and more effective when you have the power of the law on your side. One way to do so is to make rules or pass laws that make life harder for people you disapprove of, whether smokers, gays, or college students who get drunk and have sex. Another is to get a position one of whose perks is the right to order other people around—and, in some contexts, threaten, assault, beat, even kill anyone who objects, with minimal risk of suffering any criminal penalties for doing so. That includes TSA agents whose opportunities are limited to vandalizing checked luggage and ordering people to stand still while being patted down, and police officers with a wider range.
 

5/19/13 10:11 am - darthsndroids - Episode 885: The Pilot Episode

http://www.darthsanddroids.net/episodes/0885.html

Episode 885: The Pilot Episode

Give everyone a role in the big end-of-adventure battle. Especially if they're not combat-oriented characters.

This goes in the other direction too. Give the combat monsters something to do in the kindergarten class supervision scenes.

And yes, Wedge is played by a different actor here (Denis Lawson) than in his earlier scene (Colin Higgins). The story is that Higgins didn't learn his lines and fumbled through the scene in the briefing room, resulting in him being fired and Lawson being given the part for the remainder of the film as well as the two sequels. And they simply didn't bother refilming the briefing scene with Lawson.

 

5/19/13 07:50 am - twentysidedtale - Coming Soon: Tomb Raider

http://www.shamusyoung.com/twentysidedtale/?p=19757

ShamusIt’s been a long-ish break between seasons of Spoiler Warning, but we’re finally ready to get back on the dead horse and begin beating it again. Or whatever it is we do on the show.

Tomb Raider is a little recent for us, but once again it was a good compromise game where we’re all willing to play it and we all have stuff to say about it. If all goes to plan, the series will begin this coming week. If you want to play along at home, then you’d best get to it.

If you missed it, below is the Errant Signal episode on the game, which might tip Chris’ hand with regards to his thoughts on it. Then again, I’m sure he’s got plenty left to say.



Link (YouTube)

Chris points out all the elements the Tomb Raider borrowed from The Descent. I just watched the movie to look for the shout-outs and borrowed elements. What I didn’t expect was a moment early in the movie – just before the main characters enter the cave where Bad Things will eventually happen – where one of the characters says something like, “I’m a school teacher, not Tomb Raider.” So this is some kind of mutual ouroboros shout-out.

Having seen it, I kind of think The Descent would make for an amazing platforming-based survival horror. Light management, claustrophobic tunnels, drops into darkness, limited or non-existent ability to defend against horrifying creatures, the time pressure of needing to escape before resources run out… it’s got all the right ingredients for something really outlandish and different. I have no idea if it would work, but it’s an interesting idea. Sadly, there’d be no way to fund the game because the concept is a dead-end. Unless you’re going to make an ongoing series of games about a character who keeps getting trapped in caves, then this is a one-game idea.

Pshaw. Nobody wants those anymore.

 

5/19/13 12:00 am - unshelved_comic - Unshelved on Sunday, May 19, 2013

http://www.unshelved.com/2013-5-19

http://www.unshelved.com/2013-5-19/

Guys Listen
Unshelved strip for 5/19/2013
link to this strip | tweet this | share on facebook | email us | signed print

This classic Unshelved strip originally appeared on 5/22/2003 .

Explore our comprehensive, convenient and compact book bundles, starting at just $30

 

5/19/13 05:15 am - outofambit - Recent tweets…

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OutOfAmbit/~3/-Dcr-XRk1Dk/

http://dianeduane.com/outofambit/2013/05/19/recent-tweets-6/

The post Recent tweets… appeared first on Out of Ambit.

 

5/19/13 12:00 pm - narbonic_dircut - Narbonic: Director's Cut: Page 1

http://www.webcomicsnation.com/shaenongarrity/narbonic_plus/series.php?view=archive&chapter=52823#212492



 

5/19/13 09:15 pm - userfriendlyrss - Cartoon For May 19, 2013

http://ars.userfriendly.org/cartoons/?id=20130519

Cartoon for Today, May 19, 2013
 

5/18/13 12:00 am - misfilecomic - News Article: Sat, 18 May 2013

http://www.misfile.com/#news

http://www.misfile.com/news.php?date=2013-05-18#25644

Good news: I'm done with 96 pages of the first Six Gun Mage book. Bad news: I'm totally running out of paper, and if my new order doesn't arrive soon it may take some of the zip out of the schedule I've been grinding through. Either way, I'm hoping the actual drawing part will be done early in June. Then it's just a matter of getting everything printed.
 

5/18/13 09:08 pm - daviddfriedman - A Question for Bleeding Heart Libertarians

http://daviddfriedman.blogspot.com/2013/05/a-question-for-bleeding-heart.html

In a recent post, I took issue with Jason Brennan's claim that "You might be a cartoon libertarian if: 1. You think the term “social justice” has no definite meaning in philosophy today." One point that came up in the discussion thread was the suggestion that the BHL folks, who are (I think) all or mostly academic philosophers, are unfairly prejudiced against other people who are not.

Apropos of which, I have two simple questions for Jason or any of the others associated with the BHL blog:

1. Do you believe that the derivation of the rule that, as one of you put it, "lies at the heart of John Rawls’s theory of social justice," is more intellectually defensible than any of the items on Jason's list of criteria for recognizing a cartoon libertarian? Is his derivation of the minimax rule more defensible than the claim that "Ayn Rand’s critiques of Kant or Plato (or any philosopher, for that matter) are insightful." Than the claim that  “'social justice' has no definite meaning in philosophy today." Than the claim that "there are no involuntary positive duties to others."

If the answer is that you think Rawls' argument is more defensible than any of those, I would be happy to argue the matter with you. When I raised the question with Zwolinski and Tomasi in a recent exchange, I got a response which I interpreted as implying that they were unwilling to defend Rawls.

Supposing you are not willing to defend Rawls, at least to that limited extent, the obvious next question is:

2. Would you be willing to describe Rawls as a "cartoon liberal?"

Preferably online or in print.

If the answer to both questions is "no," I do not see how you can defend yourself against the charge that you have a double standard, treat arguments made by academic philosophers, at least famous ones, with more respect than arguments made by other people—even when both are equally bad.

Which is not, I think, consistent with justice in the ordinary sense of the term.

P.S. Thinking about this in response to comments, I concluded that I had overstated my argument. Jason did not say that Rand was a cartoon libertarian, although for all I know he thinks she is, he said that you might be a cartoon libertarian if you think certain of her writings are insightful. Applying the same standard to him, the question I should have asked is whether he would be willing to say that:
You may be a cartoon liberal if you think Rawls' argument for the minimax principle deserves respect.
 

5/19/13 04:00 am - skinhorsecomic - Volume 4!

http://skin-horse.com/2013/05192013-3/

Shaenon: The moment has arrived!  The Kickstarter drive for Skin Horse Volume 4 has begun! Head over to Kickstarter for a sneak peek at Volume 4 and all the rewards available to pledgees.  This volume will feature all the comics from “If I Ran the Zoo” through “A Wrinkle in Time,” plus an intro by io9.com writer Lauren Davis, a bonus story by Hugo-winning author Seanan McGuire, full-color bonus art, and basically it’s going to be an awesome book.  So check it out!

Channing: It should be mentioned that this volume contains the entirety of “Once and Future”, a.k.a. probably the single best storyline in the history of the strip.  If you disagree, please let me mention that it contains (a) a clockwork owl named Joe Lovebody and (b) Unity and Doctor Lee simultaneously smooching Tigerlily Jones.  I think this should satisfy any challengers to my claim.  It should also convince you to give us money to print the book.

Shaenon: I disagree, because this volume also contains “Choose.”

 

5/18/13 10:00 pm - schlock_feed - Schlock Mercenary: May 19, 2013

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SchlockRSS/~3/1eUpWZhIy8A/2013-05-19

Schlock MercenaryFirstPreviousArchiveShop



 

5/18/13 07:00 pm - lizard_rss - Kickstarter semi-started!

http://lizard-sf.xanga.com/773319332/kickstarter-semi-started/

Well, after more anger, frustration, and pain than should remotely be required to do something this trivial, I've (mostly) completed my Kickstarter setup. I am waiting for Amazon and KS to finish verifying my tax information, address, bank account, Kenyan birth certificate, genetic code, and favorite videos at Pornhub. In the meanwhile, here's my preview link: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/830842814/538743086/ . I am unable to figure out how to enter stretch goals, however -- is this something that can be done only after the project goes live?

 

5/18/13 12:00 am - unshelved_comic - Unshelved on Saturday, May 18, 2013

http://www.unshelved.com/2013-5-18

http://www.unshelved.com/2013-5-18/

Guys Listen
Unshelved strip for 5/18/2013
link to this strip | tweet this | share on facebook | email us | signed print

This classic Unshelved strip originally appeared on 5/17/2003 .

Explore our comprehensive, convenient and compact book bundles, starting at just $30

 

5/18/13 02:17 pm - erfworldfeed - Book 2 – Text Updates 059

http://www.erfworld.com/2013/05/book-2-%e2%80%93-text-updates-059/

http://www.erfworld.com/?p=4426

It wasn’t like he’d imagined. The heat baked him from every direction. Burning embers and sparks occasionally spun through the room. But the smoke wasn’t that bad. There must have been a draft coming up from the lower dungeon levels. For now, he could breathe.

Parson knew about as much about fire as he remembered from fire safety month in elementary school, and the occasional Weather Channel show about firefighters. He knew that fire burned upwards, and you should stay low. It needed oxygen and could, like, flashover or something. Whatever that was, it was bad. That was about it.

And who knew if any of that was even true in Erfworld, which had its own fire physics? Units caught in an inferno took damage randomly and could take a few specific actions like fleeing, fighting, and casting. There were damage penalties when moving, fighting was done at a penalty, etc. Some of it didn’t make a lot of sense with the actual physics of combustion.

So he sat on the floor, planting his ass in the empty portal, and touched his bracer. The Warlord Antium and the last four Decrypted troops were beating the flames with cloaks and rugs at the other end of the room. That had seemed pointless at first, but then he remembered something about how units taking action to fight the fire could effectively transfer their actions to a unit they were protecting.

So...he’d better do something.

For the last few minutes, he’d kinda been raging out and panicking, he realized. But Charlie’s request for a calculation had the weird effect of numbing him up and focusing his mind on this one trivial thing. It wasn’t quite the same as getting an order, but he was contractually obligated to carry out Charlie’s calculation unless it would hurt his side, and he couldn’t make a good enough case to refuse it.

Plus, whatever Charlie’s game was—trying to railroad him into using this spell—Parson needed to know this, too. Could he cast this spell? (Or any spell?) A way out was a way out, and going home beat dying. Maybe there was even a way back to Erfworld if he did...

The bracer hummed, and inside the little glass window he saw his own name in blue light:

[Parson Gotti, Warlord (Chief) (Level 3)]

Huh. Really? Three? He hadn’t felt anything at all. For a moment, he felt weirdly proud of himself for leveling. Then he blinked at the thing and subvocalized, “Hypothetical: me as a caster.”

The words changed:

{[Parson Gotti, Caster (unspecified) (unspecified)]}

There was a shout and a rumble from the other side of the room. A significant section of wall and floor began sliding down and away, churning up a shower of sparks. Parson gripped the edge of the portal until the collapse settled. He squinted. Antium had two soldiers over there now, not four.

Numbly, he looked back down and subvocalized, “Odds of: successfully casting the Carnymancy spell I’m touching.” He reached over and held Jojo’s scroll, which he had set upon the floor next to him after pulling it out of his belt.

The window showed a long decimal number, then blinked and showed a short one instead. Then it ran through a series of digits that changed every split second. Then it went blank. Then it read:

specify conditions

“What? Here and now,” said Parson.

specify target

“Me!”

Another number flashed by, too quickly to read. Then the display read 0.0

Parson looked into the display. “Izzat my odds, or are you just surprised at the question?” he said out loud.

But he knew that the bracer had just given zero probability of successfully casting the spell. Either Charlie was wrong, or he’d been toying with his prey. Although...neither thing seemed very Charlie-ish. He looked down at the lonely zero-point-zero.

Okay what now? Maybe he had phrased it wrong.

“Odds of: me as a warlord, as I am, casting this Carnymancy spell, right here and now.”

Again, a number flashed quickly, but changed to: 0.0

“Odds of: me casting any spell at all.”

multiple parameters unspecified

Parson breathed heavily through his nose, and could feel the burn of smoke in it. The partial collapse had changed the air currents. It was now getting worse by the second in here.

“True/false: a non-zero chance of me successfully casting any spell exists.”

T

“So I am a caster of some kind. Or something,” he muttered. He had explored the possibility of casting spells before, and always failed. But he’d never thought to put the question to the bracer this way. “True/false: conditions exist that would give me a non-zero chance of successfully casting the Carnymancy spell.”

T

Way out restored, then. But no clue how. “True/false: I could create conditions here and now that would give me non-zero odds of casting the Carnymancy spell.”

T, read the display.

Then, suddenly: F

“What the hell?” Parson shouted to the air. “Charlie, are you screwing with this thing, too?”

When he looked up, he saw that Antium was walking up to him. The man’s face was sooty, and both his hands looked burned. Behind him, one of the last two soldiers was on the floor with his hair on fire, yelling. The other was beating him with a cloak.

“Chief, I think we have done all that we can,” said Antium.

Parson looked up at him. There were flames right there in the ceiling now, in bits where the plaster had fallen. The crackling sound was surreal, all around his head, like the sound you hear when you roll in a pile of dead leaves. That ceiling was going to come down on them any second. God, if Sizemore could just get here somehow, he could shore that up. And fix everything else.

“I don’t think I have, yet,” he said.

With a grunt, he rose to his feet. He spoke aloud to the bracer now. “Odds of: me successfully casting a Dirtamancy spell to put out the fire.”

The window showed a number. It had a decimal and six or seven zeroes after it, but it was a number.

Parson clapped his hands and made a hocus-pocus gesture. How the hell would you cast a spell, anyway? He had certainly tried before, but never with any indication of success.

“Put out the fire!” he shouted. He stomped his foot for emphasis. Nothing.

Nah, he needed some word or phrase from his world that was associated with putting out fires. That seemed to be how it worked.

“Alka-Seltzer! Pepto-Bismol! Gaviscon!” He felt nothing. “We Didn’t Start The Fire!”

He looked around, starting to realize he was a little dizzy from smoke and whatever else he was breathing. Somewhere on another floor high above, there was a rumbling crash.

“No, I guess we did,” he said.

“It’s been an honor to fight beside you, Chief Parson,” said Antium.

“Don’t start that shit,” said Parson. “I’m not done here. I’m not.” He looked around, spotting the scroll on the floor. He bent over and snatched it up.

“Odds of me casting this spell!” he shouted at the bracer.

The same number as before flashed, then changed to: 0.0 He almost saw what it was this time.

“Again!”

Number, then 0.0. It was a long one. Hard to see the first digits. He looked at Antium, who was standing close. The other two soldiers were a few feet behind him, stepping on embers as they fell to the floor. The one whose hair had caught fire was black and burnt from the shoulders up, but he kept stomping.

“I think this thing is lying to me,” said Parson to the perplexed-looking warlord.

“Again,” he commanded the bracer. And again, a long number showed, then 0.0. There was another collapsing sound, very close this time, maybe from the next room over. That first number after the decimal was not a 0. It might have been an 8...

“Run this same calculation ten times in a row. Go.”

The blue numbers in the bracer began blinking. The 0.0 was a dimmer blue as it blinked on and off, but the other number was superimposed over it: .980104773

A 98% chance of casting success.

He looked up at Antium. There was a lot more smoke in the room now, and Parson’s eyes were stinging. The bracer was lying. It was telling him he didn’t have a chance. Why? So he wouldn’t try to cast Charlie’s spell...

“Jojo said it’s free will versus Fate,” he said. “But I’m really just getting railroaded by two different GMs here. I dunno wha— Huhg!” He broke into a coughing fit that left him bent over. Tears from his watering eyes ran down both cheeks. God damn, it was hot in here. Felt like the smoke was literally burning his lungs.

“Ah...fuggit!” he gasped, barely regaining control of his breathing.

He unbound and unrolled the scroll, holding it up in front of him. It shimmered brightly. His fingertips tingled. There were words on the parchment, a poetic stanza. But he couldn’t read them at first. He was seeing something else.

No, not seeing. More like...detecting, or knowing. There wasn’t a word for this sense, but some little compartment in his mind opened up, and what was in there was as rich in information as vision or hearing. He understood some of the things behind the things he could see.

Of course this was a spell. Of course it was. And it was built like...a key that would unlock the spell that had brought him here. He could see what it was. It was a spell to break a spell and snap it back. It would...fling him home. And he knew how to cast it.

The floor creaked, and listed slightly. He could read the poem on it now. Funny...

Yeah, it was time now. Time to go home.

He spoke, with a new understanding of how to intone the words of a spell. It was as different from plain speech as singing, but in a magical way.

“Roses are—”

The burning plaster hit his arms, just soon enough to warn him, just the barest moment before the flaming wooden beam came down on his helmet and flattened him to the floor. The magic sense—and every other sense—left Parson Gotti’s mind.


Rob's Other Comic Project: Duel In The Somme--Read it from the beginning!

 

5/18/13 05:15 am - outofambit - Recent tweets…

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/OutOfAmbit/~3/TRyu65K5UWc/

http://dianeduane.com/outofambit/2013/05/18/recent-tweets-5/

The post Recent tweets… appeared first on Out of Ambit.

 

5/18/13 08:15 pm - userfriendlyrss - Cartoon For May 18, 2013

http://ars.userfriendly.org/cartoons/?id=20130518

Cartoon for Today, May 18, 2013
 

5/18/13 04:00 am - skinhorsecomic - Today’s Comic

http://skin-horse.com/2013/the-anasigma/

Today’s Comic

 

5/18/13 12:46 pm - narbonic_dircut - Narbonic: Director's Cut: 2006-12-16

http://www.webcomicsnation.com/shaenongarrity/narbonic_plus/series.php?view=archive&chapter=52800#212485



 

5/18/13 05:33 am - otherdeb_feed - 21-Day Simplify Challenge: Day 7

http://otherdeb.wordpress.com/2013/05/18/21-day-simplify-challenge-day-7/

http://otherdeb.wordpress.com/?p=650

I’m posting a little late because I slept most of the day – when I wasn’t running to the loo, that is.

Stress Triggers:

  • Running late
  • no caffeine
  • poor planning

To Simplify My Mornings:

  • Write to-do list the night before
  • Make sure kettle is full of water
  • Spend a few minutes meditating before diving into today’s stuff
My Toodledo To-Do List © 2013, Deborah J. Wunder

My Toodledo To-Do List ©2013, Deborah J. Wunder

The attached pic represents my to-do list, which I keep online in a program called Toodledo.  It’s a great program, and it does have a free version (although I use the Pro version). Ver versatile and useful. One of the best things about it is how easily I can customize it, and it does sync with the Toodledo app on my iPhone, so I have the list with me t all times.

I do need to get back to meditating in the morning. I find that when I remember to do that, I am more focused the rest of the day, so it’s 15 minutes well-spent.

Anyway, my stomach is still acting up, so I’m gonna end this post here.  More later, when I’ve looked at Day 8!


 

5/17/13 10:00 pm - schlock_feed - Schlock Mercenary: May 18, 2013

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/SchlockRSS/~3/nl7zTq1Lcdo/2013-05-18

Schlock MercenaryFirstPreviousArchiveShop

 

5/17/13 09:00 pm - makinglight - Crowdsourcing doesn't inoculate against corruption

http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/015099.html

I really don't want to get back into the business of being a big critic of Wikipedia, a site I use every day. But if, like me, you use it and care about it, you really should read the article Andrew Leonard has on Salon today: ""Revenge, Ego, and the Corruption of Wikipedia."

As Andrew asks: if this has been going on, with (up until today) no consequences to its perpetrator, what else don't we know about?

 

5/17/13 08:50 pm - twentysidedtale - Please Stand by: Theme Change

http://www.shamusyoung.com/twentysidedtale/?p=19751

ShamusI went to make a minor change to my theme, then realized I’d broken something, then realized I’d have to fix something else to fix that, and then realized this entire idea needed more testing.

So yes, the theme is a little wonky. I’m posting this message here so this entry can be a lightning rod for all the “OMG WHAT DID YOU DO!?!?” messages that show up when I break something. I appreciate knowing when things go wrong, but it does make things strange for people perusing the archives years later. Also, it makes it hard for me to find the little bits of advice people give me, since they’re filed under some unrelated post.

This was a classic programmer blunder. At 41 years old, I totally knew better. You think “It’s such a small change. I shouldn’t need to do a full round of testing for something so minor.” Then once it’s in place you see the unintended consequences, and you’re faced with the choice of rolling back changes (a pain) or making panic-mode hotfixes that will probably make things worse.

Anyway, yes – I am aware that things are a little wonky. The site should still work, post headers will just be out of alignment. Readability should be just fine. Provided you’re not trying to read the post header.

Remain calm and browse on.

 

5/17/13 08:17 pm - twentysidedtale - Bioshock EP2: This Episode is Too Symmetrical

http://www.shamusyoung.com/twentysidedtale/?p=19746


Link (YouTube)

ShamusReading the show notes in the original entry has reminded me that this game used the C key for crouch and Ctrl for sprint, which is just silly bananas. However, maybe they’re just trying to capture the true spirit of System Shock, which has always used goofy and unconventional controls.

In the original System Shock (drink!) there was no concept of mouselook. All looking, turning, and movement was done with the keyboard. The advantage of this system was that you could shoot at things that were anywhere in view just by clicking on them. The downside of this system was that it was completely horrible.

System Shock 2 had basically normal controls by modern standards, except the default key mappings were really goofy. The A and D keys were used for turning. If you wanted to step to the side, you used Z and C. Mouselook was a few years old by this point, so this was a break from convention. I do wonder how many people used the controls with these defaults? I hope not many, since the resulting muscle-memory would ruin you for all other first-person PC games until you could learn to walk all over again.

 

5/17/13 12:59 pm - itsallonething - if Abrams hired me to do a pass on Star Trek Into Darkness

http://shetterly.blogspot.com/2013/05/if-abrams-hired-me-to-do-pass-on-star.html

If you just want the quick advice about whether to see the movie: if you liked the first, you'll like the second, but don't think too much about the plot.

Here be spoilers.

If I was revising the script, but had to keep to the basic outline:

1. I would've made Pike the bad Federation officer so Kirk would've had to defeat his father-surrogate.

2. I would've made the new woman a Security officer because she was too blatantly redundant, especially for a character who may be returning.

3. I would've ended the movie with Spock outsmarting Khan rather than beating him up. Emma suggested moving the bit with the torpedoes to the end, because it did a nice job of showing how Spock can be honest and tricky.
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