Domain: ipfw.edu
Stories and comments across the archive that link to ipfw.edu.
Comments · 10
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Re:Going beyond vouchers
Automation, better design, voluntary social networks and limited demand mean that the value of most human labor is rapidly decreasing. Implicit in your comments is the assumption we need everyone to be working to produce all the goods and services we need (or want). But, that assumption is less and less true. Depending on who you believe and how you define unemployment, unemployment in the USA right now is somewhere between 10% and about 25%. Further, compared to a century or two ago, when children worked in factories and mines, and practically no one "retired", and practically no one went to college or graduate school, and people worked 70 hour work week (in factories or on farms), unemployment now could be thought of as 50% to 75% or higher compared to a century ago. The fact is, compared to then, essentially nobody in the USA is working, and those who work are not doing very much of it. It's true that if you go back to hunter/gatherer times (see Marshall Sahlins), you'll find a similar pattern (only some worked, and then it was not very hard).
For example, look at this video of a robot arm throwing a cell phone into the air and catching it, and tell me that most human labor will be needed in manufacturing in twenty years:
http://www.hizook.com/blog/2009/08/03/high-speed-robot-hand-demonstrates-dexterity-and-skillful-manipulation
Even China is starting to have issues with manufacturing unemployment. How long before many services go the same way as agriculture and manufacturing? Yet our entire schooling system is still oriented around turning out mostly factory workers and soldiers.
http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/underground/toc1.htmAnyway, so I think current trends show that work has long been going away (even as demand has increased greatly up to a point). Further, in the USA, most people have long gone past the point of diminishing returns for more stuff and bigger homes to the point of negative returns (due to the destruction of community and family) -- even as some 10% to 20% of the US population has been left out of that and is relatively impoverished and would benefit greatly from more stuff.
"The Culture of Affluence: Psychological Costs of Material Wealth"
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1950124/
"Children of the Affluent: Challenges to Well-Being"
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1948879/The happiest places in the world usually have both material abundance and strong social programs:
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/Economy/story?id=7585729&page=1
"According to a 2005 editorial, published in the British Medical Journal and authored by Dr. Tony Delamothe, research done in Mexico, Ghana, Sweden, the U.S. and the U.K. shows that individuals typically get richer during their lifetimes, but not happier. It is family, social and community networks that bring joy to one's life, according to Delamothe. "Some related links:
http://www.marshallbrain.com/manna1.htm
http://users.ipfw.edu/ruflethe/american.html
http://www.whywork.org/rethinking/whywork/abolition.html
http://educationanddemocracy.org/FSCfiles/C_CC2a_TripleRevolution.htm
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Hallmarks of FelinityNumber 26: Saturation Purring
I hope this was in the "Related work" section...
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Re:Pictures.
Beware! WebShots may hose your TCP/IP stack (if it doesn't make backups -- it replaces it) and allows remote code execution! It also may be uninstallable.
WebShots installs the NewDotNet program...
The new.net software downloads and silently executes arbitrary code from its controlling server, as an update feature.
Stay the hell away from anything that includes NewDotNet. It's a HORRID little piece of software and at my former job 50% of the service calls were related to WebShots downloads (against policy, but *you* try to make Win95 usable and locked tight without DeepFreeze or similar products) and malfunctioning network stacks (in that case it seemed to hose Novell Netware Client pretty good, which made no sense, but hey, this *is* Win95 here). NewDotNet was, of course, the real reason why. Not to mention that it hogs resources even worse than Internet Explorer.
In other words, use it at your own risk! -
Lego Mac
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Fort Wayne's too crowded for college radio
No. Someone at the local college tried and discovered that Fort Wayne, Indiana, has no frequencies available in the FM band for a general-interest campus radio station. There is one college-operated radio station in the area, but it's operated by Taylor University (a Bible college) and plays gospel music.
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Re:Mind if i ask...
Indiana University-Purdue Univesity Fort Wayne (IPFW)
Here are the requirements for the different degrees: BS in CS BA in CS (all though I think I have only heard of 3 people ever getting the Bachelor of Arts degree) BS in IS (They don't have a CIS degree...but I guess the IS degree is the same thing.) I don't think that they offer a MIS degree on this campus. You would need to go to the main IU campus in Bloomington for that. For what it's worth, all CS classes are apart of Purdue and my actual degree says Purdue, even though it is a joint campus between the two universities. -
Re:Mind if i ask...
Indiana University-Purdue Univesity Fort Wayne (IPFW)
Here are the requirements for the different degrees: BS in CS BA in CS (all though I think I have only heard of 3 people ever getting the Bachelor of Arts degree) BS in IS (They don't have a CIS degree...but I guess the IS degree is the same thing.) I don't think that they offer a MIS degree on this campus. You would need to go to the main IU campus in Bloomington for that. For what it's worth, all CS classes are apart of Purdue and my actual degree says Purdue, even though it is a joint campus between the two universities. -
Re:Mind if i ask...
Indiana University-Purdue Univesity Fort Wayne (IPFW)
Here are the requirements for the different degrees: BS in CS BA in CS (all though I think I have only heard of 3 people ever getting the Bachelor of Arts degree) BS in IS (They don't have a CIS degree...but I guess the IS degree is the same thing.) I don't think that they offer a MIS degree on this campus. You would need to go to the main IU campus in Bloomington for that. For what it's worth, all CS classes are apart of Purdue and my actual degree says Purdue, even though it is a joint campus between the two universities. -
Re:Mind if i ask...
Indiana University-Purdue Univesity Fort Wayne (IPFW)
Here are the requirements for the different degrees: BS in CS BA in CS (all though I think I have only heard of 3 people ever getting the Bachelor of Arts degree) BS in IS (They don't have a CIS degree...but I guess the IS degree is the same thing.) I don't think that they offer a MIS degree on this campus. You would need to go to the main IU campus in Bloomington for that. For what it's worth, all CS classes are apart of Purdue and my actual degree says Purdue, even though it is a joint campus between the two universities. -
Re:Freedom of Religion?
Because even if the club didn't exist, the fixed costs of operating the school would be the same. The room still needs heated/cooled. The janitors still need to clean. Someone from administration still needs to be in the building for other non-secular activities. Clubs like this are not usually paid positions for faculty to sponsor them.
The university I attend recently had a large fiasco about staging a play called Corpus Christi. The just of the arguing was that it was state sponsorship of an attact on Christianity since the main character was a gay male who drank and swore. (Read more about it here). It eventually went to court since the university was paying a trivial amount for the utilities. It was something like 25 dollars per show. Although it is still in appeal, the initial judge and 3-member appeals court ruled in favor of the school. One of the reasons being the costs were fixed no matter what type of production was being produced.
Besides, you have no direct evidence that the club would cost the school anything. The supreme court has ruled that a school CAN be a site for worship or activities, it just can not descriminate against any group that also wishes to use the facility. Gideons often are on campus handing out little copies of the New Testiment. They are using campus parking spaces, campus roads, campus sidewalks, maybe even campus restrooms, water, and electricity. The school has no problems with them.
I know around my neck of the wookds, some school cafeterias are used on Sunday mornings as a makeshift sanctuary. As long as the church pays the fees, it can use the church.