Pride and Prejudice was also a good LibriVox one, I was somewhat surprised to find that I enjoyed both the writing and the story (and the reading for that matter).
See, that's the problem (see my post below) - these things sound crazy up front, and so are easy to dismiss. Very few people in the church are privy to this material, though it is spread all over the nets in various forms. All of the introductory material consists of things like "how to overcome ups and downs in life," how to get what you want from personal and business relations, etc. The next step past this is to purchase professional counseling, aka auditing, which will have you do some monotonous drills but they mainly ask you about problems in your everyday life. Really, no more than lightly guided psychotherapy, which Even Hubbard admitted was usually effective. You have to be around for a while or be overly ambitious for the topic of past lives to come up for the first time. So you see, this is exactly my point, it is very easy to show someone that the crazy stuff is not what Scientology is about at all, and their salesman are coached on how to do exactly that, and when you're put in a room with a competent salesperson it doesn't take much to convince most people that the vague murmurings of "crazy" that they've heard about the church are only that.
Truly, for the parent to claim to be a Scientologist and assert this claim in the same posting is ludicrous. One of the principle tenets of Scientology is that not all opinions, or even information, are equal and valid, which flies in the face of post-modernist doctrine but is really just common sense. Honestly, a lot of Hubbard's writing consists of very spot-on observations of human interactions, and a lot of common-sense and decent prescriptions, at battle with the tendencies of a machiavellian sociopath.
I'm a Scientologist. NOT in the cult known as the "Church of Scientology"
Funny that, the cult would consider you to be a "squirrel," a dangerous renegade who seeks to destroy LRH's perfect life-saving and soul-redeeming "technology", so I think that by both the general "wog" public and the church's standards, you would be considered crazy;)
It is unfortunate that no serious journalism has thoroughly investigated the tech itself. Not the OT stuff, but the tens of millions of words of non-OT tech that Hubbard wrote/spoke during his lifetime. I guess it is not a very compelling story, but it is what draws people in, and what presumably keeps you self-identifying as a Scientologist. It's certainly what drew me in years ago, and is mentioned casually in the review: the promise of a better life, neatly packaged in a repeatable, formulated, "scientific" manner. It tends to draw a person of a spiritual but non-religious bent, and of above average intelligence -- to read through all of Hubbard's writing is no mean feat, to be on staff requires a high IQ (determined by a non-standard test), and to progress far requires a fair amount of money, which most people in the Western world get by some level of professional acumen. This draw will grow only more popular with the general secularization of society and increase in disposable income, and the church has largely edged out competition for this lucrative niche through very shady practices over the last 50+ years.
I know that journalists are regularly screened for, and have been ejected from, the church for trying to report on it, so the general public is destined to stay ignorant of the techniques used to draw in, retain, and ultimately bleed dry its target market. Celebrity is only one of those techniques, and it clouds public perspective on the issue, as Hubbard undoubtedly knew would happen. Everyone knows celebrities have eccentricities, but everyone secretly admires them and fancies themselves capable of celebrity in some sphere of life, so this type of reporting will doubtfully chase away many potential recruits.
Nobody is likely to become a competitor based on a slashdot post. Any number of people are likely to purchase something from his site based on a slashdot post (he is, in fact, selling things, despite your claim to the contrary). Nothing wrong with people buying his stuff or him advertising, but it feels pretty sleazy in this context.
Lexical scoping, fast interpreted language, automatic memory management, same language client and server-side, dynamic typing, are all good reasons to use it, if you actually want all these things; otherwise there are almost certainly better choices. JavaScript is a really nice language if you ignore the parts of it that are terrible. The language is largely mis-understood and has a long history of abuse at the hands of those who mis-understand it. This is a real problem if you want to build a maintainable system and all the developers don't have a clear view of how to program well in JavaScript. The language is more like Lisp (specifically Scheme) than it is like Java, but not that many people know or even understand the idea behind Lisp nowadays. I would think that the resurgent interest in functional programming would ameliorate this to some extent but most of the JS I've worked on is crap and I would strongly recommend against using it unless you have a clear picture of why you would want to do so.
They did exactly this with Spirit and Opportunity, although I have no idea if there were any cost savings. Clearly, it is possible, and those were both successful far beyond the original mandates of the mission.
Whenever I hear these types of arguments I always think there must be some psychological term for this. That is, whenever someone has been deprived of some benefit, it is all too easy to get him to rally behind depriving others of the same.
Why should every business endeavor be a race to the bottom for everyone but the shareholders?
And good god do you really want the people who will do the job just because it's a job? Desperation breeds loyalty by necessity but it is not a very healthy state of mind. I guarantee the civil service job is anything but sexy and probably pays nothing more than a reasonable wage. These are the tradeoffs that, generally speaking, have emerged from the free market system.
Yup, perfect example of a greedy algorithm - this will cost me less today, so it must be the best action! Businesses fail at an alarmingly high rate; just because a few people are taking the greedy choice does not mean it is optimal.
You are wrong, broadly speaking. This is the whole point of machine learning: given a very complicated task that it would take a human a tremendous amount of effort to program correctly, you can instead get the machine to figure out how to perform the task itself, rather than explicitly programming it to do one thing. Some types of learning are supervised, particularly classifiers: I tell the computer which items belong to which class, and given a new, previously unseen item, the computer attempts to determine its class based on the training. Others are unsupervised: set the robot free in the environment with some goal function and let it learn through trial-and-error how to optimize its behavior toward the goal. Watson is a combination of first-order logic (prolog and a huge kb) and a variety of such learning algorithms. Some of this is stuff that was considered an industry failure in the 80s but, paired with modern machine learning techniques, is quite powerful. Indeed we may be seeing the first instances of computers that have some form of this "intelligence" of which you speak, though I think we are still a long way from "strong AI".
Isn't he proposing a hyped-up relay station (I have not RTFA)? Even a relay station with just the relay capabilities is going to need a decent amount of processing power. "Supercomputer" is hopelessly vague, but it will have to operate autonomously to relay a large amount of traffic, and be radiation-hardened and able to operate in near-0K temperatures. Probably more ambitious than any other computer we have launched out of our gravity well, but then again probably only by an order of magnitude or so.
I hate reviewing LaTeX documents, as the software doesn't come with any revisioning/collaboration tools to speak of. Word, on the other hand, PITA though it may be, comes with very good tools via track changes and comments. Not revisioning in the sense of version control, but in the sense of what most people actually need for document editing. For an open textbook a VCS would work great, but it's overkill for smaller, article-length papers.
Your account is just an MS schill account, judging by your comment history. Vista was a steaming pile of crap when it was released. After four years of work on it, MS scrapped anything innovative and rushed for a year just to get *something* out the door. SP1 fixed a lot of the issues but I still have problems with my one remaining Vista box that have nothing to do with driver support. It is just...buggy. Win7 was great, but it sounds like they are once again rushing a Win8 release to get something out the door. I predict a moderate disaster, followed in about 12-18 months by a really solid new release for the desktop.
Truth is, it is hard to know. Cannabis research is underfunded and publication of completed research is suppressed by the relevant journals. As hazah mentioned, there remains much to be concluded. For years, all we had was propaganda, so it's really hard to tell when something is valid or not. This goes for arguments both for and against the drug. What has been discovered over the last 20 years or so is that it's not nearly as bad as the propaganda made it out to be on most fronts, and that there are real medical benefits to its use.
I'm all for second amendment rights but I really don't think they are going to help with any of these things. If we can't live together as a society without the threat of violence, there is not much hope of maintaining a stable, long-lasting state. It is violence spurred by political unrest and divisiveness that the OP is predicting, go figure.
Yeah...I've started wondering, am I not a trekkie any more? I didn't really watch the last TV series, I can't even tell you what it was called. I went to see the movie this past weekend and was underwhelmed. Spock was great but on the whole, there was nothing particularly interesting about it. A lot of kids running the Enterprise? Yawn. Time travel? So overdone, and not particularly well done this time. There were none of the interesting, weird, thought-provoking ideas that I'm used to seeing from the first two series. Maybe I'm just old and grumpy, but I felt the movie was deliberately dumbed down to try and get greater mass appeal.
Thanks for writing this, I've enjoyed Rogue Touch quite a bit. It's remained true to the original - it's a tough game and the adaptation to the iPhone was pretty smooth, without making it feel too flashy on the gfx.
My wife missed the end of Idol the other night, and she wanted to know what happened. I told her to just search twitter to find out, and sure enough, there were like 1700 results that came through in 30 seconds. First thing I've found it to be useful for, and it was a pretty lame use. Lots of people seem to enjoy it for some reason, I wish I knew why...
That lag is not intentional? Back in the day, you had a choice to 'preview' or just 'submit' directly, the first time through. Preview always took much longer than submit, and it used to ding you if you replied too quickly.
Let us not forget the five requirements for deadlock: mutual exclusion, hold and wait, non-preemption, circular wait, and organized labor movements.
Pride and Prejudice was also a good LibriVox one, I was somewhat surprised to find that I enjoyed both the writing and the story (and the reading for that matter).
See, that's the problem (see my post below) - these things sound crazy up front, and so are easy to dismiss. Very few people in the church are privy to this material, though it is spread all over the nets in various forms. All of the introductory material consists of things like "how to overcome ups and downs in life," how to get what you want from personal and business relations, etc. The next step past this is to purchase professional counseling, aka auditing, which will have you do some monotonous drills but they mainly ask you about problems in your everyday life. Really, no more than lightly guided psychotherapy, which Even Hubbard admitted was usually effective. You have to be around for a while or be overly ambitious for the topic of past lives to come up for the first time. So you see, this is exactly my point, it is very easy to show someone that the crazy stuff is not what Scientology is about at all, and their salesman are coached on how to do exactly that, and when you're put in a room with a competent salesperson it doesn't take much to convince most people that the vague murmurings of "crazy" that they've heard about the church are only that.
Truly, for the parent to claim to be a Scientologist and assert this claim in the same posting is ludicrous. One of the principle tenets of Scientology is that not all opinions, or even information, are equal and valid, which flies in the face of post-modernist doctrine but is really just common sense. Honestly, a lot of Hubbard's writing consists of very spot-on observations of human interactions, and a lot of common-sense and decent prescriptions, at battle with the tendencies of a machiavellian sociopath.
Funny that, the cult would consider you to be a "squirrel," a dangerous renegade who seeks to destroy LRH's perfect life-saving and soul-redeeming "technology", so I think that by both the general "wog" public and the church's standards, you would be considered crazy;)
It is unfortunate that no serious journalism has thoroughly investigated the tech itself. Not the OT stuff, but the tens of millions of words of non-OT tech that Hubbard wrote/spoke during his lifetime. I guess it is not a very compelling story, but it is what draws people in, and what presumably keeps you self-identifying as a Scientologist. It's certainly what drew me in years ago, and is mentioned casually in the review: the promise of a better life, neatly packaged in a repeatable, formulated, "scientific" manner. It tends to draw a person of a spiritual but non-religious bent, and of above average intelligence -- to read through all of Hubbard's writing is no mean feat, to be on staff requires a high IQ (determined by a non-standard test), and to progress far requires a fair amount of money, which most people in the Western world get by some level of professional acumen. This draw will grow only more popular with the general secularization of society and increase in disposable income, and the church has largely edged out competition for this lucrative niche through very shady practices over the last 50+ years.
I know that journalists are regularly screened for, and have been ejected from, the church for trying to report on it, so the general public is destined to stay ignorant of the techniques used to draw in, retain, and ultimately bleed dry its target market. Celebrity is only one of those techniques, and it clouds public perspective on the issue, as Hubbard undoubtedly knew would happen. Everyone knows celebrities have eccentricities, but everyone secretly admires them and fancies themselves capable of celebrity in some sphere of life, so this type of reporting will doubtfully chase away many potential recruits.
Nobody is likely to become a competitor based on a slashdot post. Any number of people are likely to purchase something from his site based on a slashdot post (he is, in fact, selling things, despite your claim to the contrary). Nothing wrong with people buying his stuff or him advertising, but it feels pretty sleazy in this context.
Lexical scoping, fast interpreted language, automatic memory management, same language client and server-side, dynamic typing, are all good reasons to use it, if you actually want all these things; otherwise there are almost certainly better choices. JavaScript is a really nice language if you ignore the parts of it that are terrible. The language is largely mis-understood and has a long history of abuse at the hands of those who mis-understand it. This is a real problem if you want to build a maintainable system and all the developers don't have a clear view of how to program well in JavaScript. The language is more like Lisp (specifically Scheme) than it is like Java, but not that many people know or even understand the idea behind Lisp nowadays. I would think that the resurgent interest in functional programming would ameliorate this to some extent but most of the JS I've worked on is crap and I would strongly recommend against using it unless you have a clear picture of why you would want to do so.
Development on the ASCII standard started in 1960 FWIW :D
They did exactly this with Spirit and Opportunity, although I have no idea if there were any cost savings. Clearly, it is possible, and those were both successful far beyond the original mandates of the mission.
Whenever I hear these types of arguments I always think there must be some psychological term for this. That is, whenever someone has been deprived of some benefit, it is all too easy to get him to rally behind depriving others of the same.
Why should every business endeavor be a race to the bottom for everyone but the shareholders?
And good god do you really want the people who will do the job just because it's a job? Desperation breeds loyalty by necessity but it is not a very healthy state of mind. I guarantee the civil service job is anything but sexy and probably pays nothing more than a reasonable wage. These are the tradeoffs that, generally speaking, have emerged from the free market system.
Yup, perfect example of a greedy algorithm - this will cost me less today, so it must be the best action! Businesses fail at an alarmingly high rate; just because a few people are taking the greedy choice does not mean it is optimal.
Oops wasn't logged in but that was me, in case. You were wondering.
You are wrong, broadly speaking. This is the whole point of machine learning: given a very complicated task that it would take a human a tremendous amount of effort to program correctly, you can instead get the machine to figure out how to perform the task itself, rather than explicitly programming it to do one thing. Some types of learning are supervised, particularly classifiers: I tell the computer which items belong to which class, and given a new, previously unseen item, the computer attempts to determine its class based on the training. Others are unsupervised: set the robot free in the environment with some goal function and let it learn through trial-and-error how to optimize its behavior toward the goal. Watson is a combination of first-order logic (prolog and a huge kb) and a variety of such learning algorithms. Some of this is stuff that was considered an industry failure in the 80s but, paired with modern machine learning techniques, is quite powerful. Indeed we may be seeing the first instances of computers that have some form of this "intelligence" of which you speak, though I think we are still a long way from "strong AI".
Isn't he proposing a hyped-up relay station (I have not RTFA)? Even a relay station with just the relay capabilities is going to need a decent amount of processing power. "Supercomputer" is hopelessly vague, but it will have to operate autonomously to relay a large amount of traffic, and be radiation-hardened and able to operate in near-0K temperatures. Probably more ambitious than any other computer we have launched out of our gravity well, but then again probably only by an order of magnitude or so.
I hate reviewing LaTeX documents, as the software doesn't come with any revisioning/collaboration tools to speak of. Word, on the other hand, PITA though it may be, comes with very good tools via track changes and comments. Not revisioning in the sense of version control, but in the sense of what most people actually need for document editing. For an open textbook a VCS would work great, but it's overkill for smaller, article-length papers.
Your account is just an MS schill account, judging by your comment history. Vista was a steaming pile of crap when it was released. After four years of work on it, MS scrapped anything innovative and rushed for a year just to get *something* out the door. SP1 fixed a lot of the issues but I still have problems with my one remaining Vista box that have nothing to do with driver support. It is just...buggy. Win7 was great, but it sounds like they are once again rushing a Win8 release to get something out the door. I predict a moderate disaster, followed in about 12-18 months by a really solid new release for the desktop.
Truth is, it is hard to know. Cannabis research is underfunded and publication of completed research is suppressed by the relevant journals. As hazah mentioned, there remains much to be concluded. For years, all we had was propaganda, so it's really hard to tell when something is valid or not. This goes for arguments both for and against the drug. What has been discovered over the last 20 years or so is that it's not nearly as bad as the propaganda made it out to be on most fronts, and that there are real medical benefits to its use.
I'm all for second amendment rights but I really don't think they are going to help with any of these things. If we can't live together as a society without the threat of violence, there is not much hope of maintaining a stable, long-lasting state. It is violence spurred by political unrest and divisiveness that the OP is predicting, go figure.
Please post your name here, and we'll all do our best to help...
The DC metro area is the second most congested in the country next to LA, so, it's probably worse than you may imagine.
Yeah...I've started wondering, am I not a trekkie any more? I didn't really watch the last TV series, I can't even tell you what it was called. I went to see the movie this past weekend and was underwhelmed. Spock was great but on the whole, there was nothing particularly interesting about it. A lot of kids running the Enterprise? Yawn. Time travel? So overdone, and not particularly well done this time. There were none of the interesting, weird, thought-provoking ideas that I'm used to seeing from the first two series. Maybe I'm just old and grumpy, but I felt the movie was deliberately dumbed down to try and get greater mass appeal.
Thanks for writing this, I've enjoyed Rogue Touch quite a bit. It's remained true to the original - it's a tough game and the adaptation to the iPhone was pretty smooth, without making it feel too flashy on the gfx.
My wife missed the end of Idol the other night, and she wanted to know what happened. I told her to just search twitter to find out, and sure enough, there were like 1700 results that came through in 30 seconds. First thing I've found it to be useful for, and it was a pretty lame use. Lots of people seem to enjoy it for some reason, I wish I knew why...
My name is Robert Paulson...
That lag is not intentional? Back in the day, you had a choice to 'preview' or just 'submit' directly, the first time through. Preview always took much longer than submit, and it used to ding you if you replied too quickly.