Monthly Archive for July, 2009

A Dumpster Diving Tally

We went dumpster diving by bicycle again and came home with $200 worth of Trader Joe’s fare.

Trash transformed

I’ve itemized the food we got, with actual or estimated costs below.

Continue reading ‘A Dumpster Diving Tally’

Tweets for the week of 2009-07-27

  • Knowing humanity is capable of greatness makes our stubborn bickering mediocrity so much more tragic. Apollo trapped in a monkey's mind. #
  • From the moon, it's a full earth. #
  • Paper draft finally handed off for first direct outside input in quite a while. Mmm, beer at dawn. It's thesis time… #
  • Figures lie and liars figure. I think I'll start with the captions. #
  • Like it or not, there are values embedded in the way we convey facts: http://is.gd/1JnkV #
  • Working on Saturday. EIther that, or I wrote a cron job to update my status… #
  • RT @AlexSteffen: More Americans are killed by cars when walking or biking than die b/c of drug overdoses & violence. #
  • When the revolution comes, we will be ready, with our metric units intuition… #
  • Heading to the dumpsters. #

Links for the week of Jul 23rd

If you want to follow my shared links in real time instead of as a weekly digest, head over to Delicious. You can search them there easily too.
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Framing Embeds Values in Scientific Facts

At the Sustainability Symposium last night (which was nominally about water footprints (PDF) and this paper on the international trade in virtual water) we ended up “off topic” and talking about science communication, public outreach, and how policy gets made.  Inevitably it seems like these conversations end up coming back to the issues from Chris Mooney and Matt Nisbet’s Speaking Science workshop that SASS sponsored last summer.

There is huge discomfort for scientists in the fact that the way in which information is conveyed impacts how it is interpreted.  The idea is at odds with the scientific ideal of objective facts and communication, but nevertheless it is true.  A one liter glass plus 500 ml of water equals what?  The glass is half empty.  The glass is half full.  The glass is twice as big as necessary to hold that much water.  The same objective facts, different connotations.  Different implications.  Different frames.  And sometimes, the frame ends up being a more important determinant of the listener’s reaction than the information the speaker intended to convey.

Continue reading ‘Framing Embeds Values in Scientific Facts’

Tweets for the week of 2009-07-20

  • The mildly depressed make more accurate assessments. #
  • Sadly, my camera seems to have either been lost or stolen. #
  • I had no idea I was supposed to talk to Caltrans about http://bikewise.org this morning! Gah! #
  • Good day+night of paper/thesis writing. It's like a story (well… kinda). Now time for a sleep inducing beer, blindfold, and earplugs. #
  • If I don't find my lost/stolen camera in the next couple of weeks… suggestions? Thinking a Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX3: http://is.gd/1zBEP #
  • That wasn't quite enough sleep. Or quite enough tea. How to tell which? #
  • Europa TPW/NSR paper at 55 pages double spaced, including figs. Time for the sustainability symposium. This week's topic is @wattzon #
  • Will remember 2009 as the first year we actually got the tomatoes to work. So many we have to give some away. #
  • Do you know where your Pareto frontier is in Salary-Vacation space? http://is.gd/1Bjmy #
  • How did I spend all day writing, but only go from 55 to 57 pages? I guess that's what editing does. #
  • Publisher got Amazon to forcibly delete their legally purchased e-books from all Kindles. What book? 1984. Double plus ungood irony. #
  • I ordered a new camera, and the lost camera mysteriously reappeared within minutes. Weird B&H Photo conspiracy? Except it's the sabbath. #
  • Writing conclusions. Who could have guessed there were so many ways to generate the same observations? #
  • 83 days until I have to submit my thesis. Ugh. #

Links for the week of Jul 16th

You can also search or subscribe to my linkstream over at Delicious.

  • Wal-Mart To Become Green Umpire – Wal-Mart arguably has more control over and insight into its supply chain than any other company on earth. The information they need in order to be able to force their suppliers to produce the goods as cheaply as humanly possible overlaps substantially with the information required to provide transparent information about the environmental impacts of those same products. Wal-Mart says they want to use this power for good… for telling, in condensed form, the sustainability back-story for their products. But will they tell the truth? Will it be transparent? Will it be verifiable? And even if it is… will their customers care? Might it change their customer base?
  • Howtoons – A series of comics which both tell stories, and inspire kids to build their own toys and tools. Wonderful hacker propaganda.
  • Where's the Real Bottleneck in Scientific Computing? – A story about a computer scientist talking to physicists who have hundreds of thousands of lines of code, and don't know what version control or unit testing is. Hmm. I guess I don't really know what unit testing is either.
  • Software Carpentry – A Python based tutorial for scientists and engineers who need to learn how to (actually) program. How could it have taken this long to appear?

On the Pareto frontier in salary-vacation space

Dear (Prospective Employer),

Thank you for your monetarily very generous offer of employment!  Honestly, it’s not obvious to me how I could spend $X a year, as I am currently living quite comfortably on about one Nth of that amount.  Actually, that’s not entirely true; I’m sure I could spend it all if I got a mortgage on a big house out in the suburbs, bought a fancy car with which to commute to work, ate out frequently, and had a few kids I planned to put through college.  However, I prefer to live simply in a small home, cook my own meals, bus or bike to work, and I may very well choose not to reproduce.  I also prefer, in my all too limited time on Earth, to experience the wilderness that still remains in the world, and the myriad human cultures, cuisines, and languages that have emerged in the last 50,000 years.  Those experiences will not come easily sitting in front of a computer in an office park, and they often cannot be had on weekends or whirlwind tours.  Thus, I am concerned about the following potential scenario with your offer of employment as it currently stands.

Continue reading ‘On the Pareto frontier in salary-vacation space’

Spinning Europa 1: Introduction

Aaron suggested that my paper would would be much better if it read more like one of my blog posts, and less like a litany of torture lab notebook.  So here it is in parts, written as if I intended for you, dear reader, to read it.  (But don’t worry Bob, I’m actually working on the real paper).  It’ll probably be cathartic, as one of the things I hate about writing papers is the formalistic language.  It makes the content less readable, less enjoyable, less human.  I just don’t see the point.  If the content is up here, then anyone who feels the same way can get an idea of what’s going on without wading through all the passive voice crap.  It’ll also help me enjoy writing it, and let me feel like I got it out of my system.  Plus, on the internet, color figures are free (not $350 for the first page, $175 for each additional page… I mean jeez, that’s like a year’s worth of hosting fees just for one paper), you can insert links, and nobody has to pay $3975 per year for a subscription.  Oh, and sweet, I also get to retain the copyright.  Honestly, paper journals are so sad.  Of course there’s that pesky peer review, but you’ll find a comment form at the bottom of the page, and if you actually make it that far, by all means let me know what you think.  In a production environment, the publication would be hosted on a neutral third party site, precluding me from editing or deleting comments, verifying everybody’s identities, and ensuring that the content was archived effectively.  Alas, we’re not there yet.  Maybe this will seem ridiculous at this point in the grad school experience, but I actually maybe for the first time understand why someone would want to give a talk.  I have results, they’re interesting (if you’re into this kind of thing), but I don’t really know what they mean.

Continue reading ‘Spinning Europa 1: Introduction’

Tweets for the week of 2009-07-13

  • Whoa, LA Metro considering lifting rush-hour bike ban on light rail. Voice your support! http://is.gd/1p2vy #
  • Going to Trader Joe's… this time for stuff they haven't thrown away yet. #
  • Riots, hundreds dead, burning buses and looted businesses. This is Xinjiang, not Iran: http://is.gd/1qfrX #
  • Emerged from my improvised home sensory deprivation chamber. True Roman bread for true Romans! #
  • I love the irony of having the wallpaper on my laptop be a piece of weathered parchment or papyrus. #
  • Has humanity really learned anything new about government in the last 2000 years? Sometimes I doubt it. #
  • Writing something you wouldn't want to read is frustrating. #
  • Maybe this is cheesy, but I feel kind of inspired by Artichoke's songs about 26 scientists: http://is.gd/1v3cy and http://is.gd/1v3db #
  • Soon to be burning the midnight oil. It's been a while. Thank goodness for thumping trance beats. #
  • Holy crap, I am older than more than half the human beings on earth. #
  • I've been sitting here for more than 12 hours. Time to sleep. #
  • Even the internet is quiet on weekends. #
  • Are you a scientist frustrated by programming? Check out Software Carpentry: http://software-carpentry.org/ #

Shared Links for Jun 26th – Jul 7th

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