Google Help : Cheat Sheet
This is very impressive. It's a single page summary that captures the key high value user interactions with a range of Google services. Memorize it and impress ... ummm ... ok, impress noone. But get more done faster.
Tuesday, February 22, 2005
Monday, February 21, 2005
The tedious response to having one's identity stolen
Has Your Identity Been Stolen? - What to do if it happens to you. By Daniel Engber
Next: a web business that outsources the response to identity theft. Fill out a form with the specifics, enter your credit card number, and sign stuff in the mail.
Since identity theft is becoming rather prevalent, we might as well automate the response to it.
Next: a web business that outsources the response to identity theft. Fill out a form with the specifics, enter your credit card number, and sign stuff in the mail.
Since identity theft is becoming rather prevalent, we might as well automate the response to it.
Ajax: thickening a web client
adaptive path » ajax: a new approach to web applications
It's not easy to make JavaScript do all this stuff, and Safari is missing some of the key pieces (shame on Apple), but it is astounding when it works.
There's a fair bit of history here. Years ago we used to speak of "thin clients" (Citrix) and "thick clients" (conventional apps). Thin clients were easy to deploy but put a lot of processing burden on servers and suffered from communications latency.
Web browsers were thicker than Citrix but still suffered the effects of latency and had a much more limited GUI than a Citrix thin client. Both Sun's Java and Netscape's Javascript/HTML extensions were supposed to address the GUI and latency issues, but Sun and Netscape stupidly fought tooth and claw; two dogs fighting while a tiger chuckled nearby. Once Sun and Netscape had just about done in each other in Microsoft waltzed off with the browser. IE's DHTML framework threatened to finish what Netscape had started, but then the Office/.NET vs IE wars started at Microsoft. Office won and it looked like .NET would be the only path forward. Nonone could trust Microsoft to keep IE/DHTML healthy; it was a platform without a future.
But the vestiges of the old wars survived , in the IE/W3C document object model and in Javascript that was slowly getting less buggy. Different people in different places and times figured out how to get this rickety architecture working. Then came the rise of Firefox. Now even if IE stopped supporting this .NET alternative, it could still work on Firefox.
Of course it might also work even better on gBrowser ...
And now we have Ajax vs .NET for the variable weight browser-client title.
And so it goes.
Update: a colleague mentions the alternative approach to reducing latency - unbelievable server and network performance:
It's not easy to make JavaScript do all this stuff, and Safari is missing some of the key pieces (shame on Apple), but it is astounding when it works.
There's a fair bit of history here. Years ago we used to speak of "thin clients" (Citrix) and "thick clients" (conventional apps). Thin clients were easy to deploy but put a lot of processing burden on servers and suffered from communications latency.
Web browsers were thicker than Citrix but still suffered the effects of latency and had a much more limited GUI than a Citrix thin client. Both Sun's Java and Netscape's Javascript/HTML extensions were supposed to address the GUI and latency issues, but Sun and Netscape stupidly fought tooth and claw; two dogs fighting while a tiger chuckled nearby. Once Sun and Netscape had just about done in each other in Microsoft waltzed off with the browser. IE's DHTML framework threatened to finish what Netscape had started, but then the Office/.NET vs IE wars started at Microsoft. Office won and it looked like .NET would be the only path forward. Nonone could trust Microsoft to keep IE/DHTML healthy; it was a platform without a future.
But the vestiges of the old wars survived , in the IE/W3C document object model and in Javascript that was slowly getting less buggy. Different people in different places and times figured out how to get this rickety architecture working. Then came the rise of Firefox. Now even if IE stopped supporting this .NET alternative, it could still work on Firefox.
Of course it might also work even better on gBrowser ...
And now we have Ajax vs .NET for the variable weight browser-client title.
And so it goes.
Update: a colleague mentions the alternative approach to reducing latency - unbelievable server and network performance:
I would point out that several of the techniques Google is using don't require anUpdate Again 2/23: Udell has much more on this topic, including more on how Google got its server latency to unprecedented levels.
elaborate client side DHTML approach. They are, instead, leveraging
their incredible load capacity and low latency server array. Google maps is
a perfect example of relatively low tech client, plus an incredible tech
server architecture. If you look carefully you can sometimes see upwards of
20 GET requests being spun off, each with a latency response that is way way
sub second.
Right wing fruitcake's "most unwanted" page
A guide to the political left
I loved the photo of Ted Kennedy. It has to be among the least flattering of the 250,000 pictures taken of him in the past 50 years. Among his many crimes: "Described the 2003 war in Iraq as “a fraud”".
This site hosts a right-wing fruitcake's "most unwanted" list. It has links to the Zawahiri and Betty Friedan. A Java applet is supposed to allow one to browse the network of connections (degrees of separation) but it didn't work on Safari.
I realize I'm just encouraging these folks by linking to this type of page, but it's a good reminder of how many reasonably intelligent people are really quite nuts.
Sheesh.
I loved the photo of Ted Kennedy. It has to be among the least flattering of the 250,000 pictures taken of him in the past 50 years. Among his many crimes: "Described the 2003 war in Iraq as “a fraud”".
This site hosts a right-wing fruitcake's "most unwanted" list. It has links to the Zawahiri and Betty Friedan. A Java applet is supposed to allow one to browse the network of connections (degrees of separation) but it didn't work on Safari.
I realize I'm just encouraging these folks by linking to this type of page, but it's a good reminder of how many reasonably intelligent people are really quite nuts.
Sheesh.
Dedication: Free Mojtaba and Arash Day
BBC NEWS | Technology | Global blogger action day called
Free Mojtaba and Arash Day.
From the BBC (with link):
Free Mojtaba and Arash Day.
From the BBC (with link):
The global web blog community is being called into action to lend support to two imprisoned Iranian bloggers.
The month-old Committee to Protect Bloggers is asking those with blogs to dedicate their sites on 22 February to the 'Free Mojtaba and Arash Day'.
Arash Sigarchi and Mojtaba Saminejad are both in prison in Iran.
... The group has a list of actions which it says bloggers can take, including writing to local Iranian embassies...
Taller babies and confusing correlation with causation
BBC NEWS | Health | Taller babies earn more later on
A study shows 1 yo height correlates with income. Interesting, but then the study's author is quoted saying something startling:
When we have studies showing that interventions in wealthy nations in the first year of life affect later income, or even 1 year height, then let's talk along these lines ....
A study shows 1 yo height correlates with income. Interesting, but then the study's author is quoted saying something startling:
Report author Professor David Barker said he hoped the findings would make people realise the first year was critical in a child's development.I can't imagine how this study, as reported, could possibly support this conclusion. He's making all kinds of logical leaps to get from a relationship to causality to therapeutic intervention.
When we have studies showing that interventions in wealthy nations in the first year of life affect later income, or even 1 year height, then let's talk along these lines ....
Sunday, February 20, 2005
Grand Old Payola Party
The New York Times > Arts > Frank Rich: The White House Stages Its 'Daily Show'
Frank Rick looks at at how much money the Bush administration paid for PR/propaganda. Based on the numbers, the fake journalism scandal may be quite large. A quarter of a billion dollars would pay for a several thousand mouthpieces. Lawyers are doubtles looking for ways to open up the Ketchum budget, and tell us what portion of that fortune was paying for illegal propaganda.
Frank Rick looks at at how much money the Bush administration paid for PR/propaganda. Based on the numbers, the fake journalism scandal may be quite large. A quarter of a billion dollars would pay for a several thousand mouthpieces. Lawyers are doubtles looking for ways to open up the Ketchum budget, and tell us what portion of that fortune was paying for illegal propaganda.
... The money that paid for both the Ryan-Garcia news packages and the Armstrong Williams contract was siphoned through the same huge public relations firm, Ketchum Communications, which itself filtered the funds through subcontractors. A new report by Congressional Democrats finds that Ketchum has received $97 million of the administration's total $250 million P.R. kitty, of which the Williams and Ryan-Garcia scams would account for only a fraction. We have yet to learn precisely where the rest of it ended up.The Bush policy wouldn't work if we had an aggressive and active free press left. I don't see any evidence of that -- outside of a few old pros like Frank Rich and the under financed and unread blogosphere. We, the American people, just aren't interested any more. We'll get the nation we deserve.
The pre-fab "Ask President Bush" town hall-style meetings held during last year's campaign (typical question: "Mr. President, as a child, how can I help you get votes?") were carefully designed for television so that, as Kenneth R. Bazinet wrote last summer in New York's Daily News, "unsuspecting viewers" tuning in their local news might get the false impression they were "watching a completely open forum." A Pentagon Office of Strategic Influence, intended to provide propagandistic news items, some of them possibly false, to foreign news media was shut down in 2002 when it became an embarrassing political liability. But much more quietly, another Pentagon propaganda arm, the Pentagon Channel, has recently been added as a free channel for American viewers of the Dish Network. Can a Social Security Channel be far behind?
... The inability of real journalists to penetrate this White House is not all the White House's fault. The errors of real news organizations have played perfectly into the administration's insidious efforts to blur the boundaries between the fake and the real and thereby demolish the whole notion that there could possibly be an objective and accurate free press...
Saturday, February 19, 2005
The top 100 gadgets of all time
Mobile PC - Features - The Top 100 Gadgets of All Time
Find out where your favorite gadget is. This is a terrific site and will be insanely popular.
Find out where your favorite gadget is. This is a terrific site and will be insanely popular.
Friday, February 18, 2005
Planet sorrow
A Devastating Decision for Ill Ethiopian Mothers (washingtonpost.com)
A world of sorrow.
A world of sorrow.
...Six-year-old Radeat Behonegn used to spend hours at the window of the Hope for Children orphanage, waiting for her parents to return. They left her here two years ago, and soon afterward died of AIDS related illnesses...The fathers in these stories are often despicable. CARE is open for business.
...Children dropped off at the orphanage can grow hysterical, sending others into a panic. Recently, Tamrat had to start a new policy, telling parents they should bring their children in to play a few times and then, on the last day, just leave quietly. Later, the children are told that their parents are dying.
Bush the deity
Salon.com News | Among the believers:
Indeed, Goebbels is topical:
Indeed, Goebbels is topical:
In January, Paul Craig Roberts, assistant secretary of the treasury during the Reagan administration and associate editor of the Wall Street Journal's far-right editorial page, published a damning column in the progressive Z Magazine about fascist tendencies in the conservative movement. 'In the ranks of the new conservatives, however, I see and experience much hate. It comes to me in violently worded, ignorant and irrational emails from self-professed conservatives who literally worship George Bush,' he wrote. 'Even Christians have fallen into idolatry. There appears to be a large number of Americans who are prepared to kill anyone for George Bush … Like Brownshirts, the new conservatives take personally any criticism of their leader and his policies. To be a critic is to be an enemy.'
Privacy? Surely you jest. A web site for those who would resist.
No Place to Hide - The Center for Investigative Reporting
I came across this site via Gillmor. It's a foundation funded site about privacy loss:
I came across this site via Gillmor. It's a foundation funded site about privacy loss:
When you go to work, stop at the store, fly in a plane, or surf the web, you are being watched. They know where you live, the value of your home, the names of your friends and family, in some cases even what you read. Where the data revolution meets the needs of national security, there is no place to hide.I think this is a futile effort, but I admire the sentiment.
How to steal identies: method #5
MercuryNews.com | 02/16/2005 | 145,000 Americans' identity data stolen
It's much more effective to subvert the legal trade in identity information than it is to go out and steal the information oneself. The companies selling this information have to held liable for its misuse. That will, of course, increase the cost of the information for legitimate users. One wonders, however, how many legitimate uses of this information are truly essential.
A company that sells personal data on consumers said Wednesday that it's alerting 145,000 Americans -- including 35,000 Californians -- that they might be vulnerable to identity theft after a crime ring paid for their credit reports, Social Security numbers and other sensitive information.About seven years ago a group of scammers set up a California bank so they could purchase credit card account information. This is a variant on this technique.
ChoicePoint, a Georgia company that boasts it has compiled the deepest database in the nation, said Tuesday that it had alerted 35,000 Californians that they were vulnerable, as required by state law. But it balked at first at notifying a far larger number of potential victims outside California.
It's much more effective to subvert the legal trade in identity information than it is to go out and steal the information oneself. The companies selling this information have to held liable for its misuse. That will, of course, increase the cost of the information for legitimate users. One wonders, however, how many legitimate uses of this information are truly essential.
Aging drivers: a vast growth industry
DeKalb Medical Center - Providing Healthcare Services in Decatur, GA and DeKalb County
DeKalb medical center (Atlanta) offers driving skills assessments through their rehab center:
As we boomers age, we're going to turn the roads into a slaughterhouse. For a time no-one will dare take the wheel from our voting hands. Bicyclists will become extinct (I suspect rising bicycle fatalities is a leading indicator of aged drivers), until finally the survivors will rise up. We'll then have to go through regular (q1-2y) examinations. Ultimately there will be enough of us near-suicidal 75+ yo non-drivers that we'll actually get a decent transit alternative going.
Or maybe cars will get "smart" enough that they can be "driven" by a fairly impaired person...
DeKalb medical center (Atlanta) offers driving skills assessments through their rehab center:
Driving Solutions Program (Inpatient and Outpatient)When I was in practice the aging driver was one of my tougher management challenges. It's not only that driving ability decreases with advanced age, it's also that judgment often deteriorates in parallel with visual, sensory and motility loss.
This specialty program provides driver assessment, training and adaptive equipment recommendations for vehicle operation. The assessment process includes tests of vision, visual perception and reaction time, as well as assessment of cognitive and physician functioning. Driver training is available to new and experienced drivers to promote safety and competency behind the wheel. Training in the use of adaptive equipment is available.
As we boomers age, we're going to turn the roads into a slaughterhouse. For a time no-one will dare take the wheel from our voting hands. Bicyclists will become extinct (I suspect rising bicycle fatalities is a leading indicator of aged drivers), until finally the survivors will rise up. We'll then have to go through regular (q1-2y) examinations. Ultimately there will be enough of us near-suicidal 75+ yo non-drivers that we'll actually get a decent transit alternative going.
Or maybe cars will get "smart" enough that they can be "driven" by a fairly impaired person...
Goebbels is topical
A gentleman sitting by me at the Beanery referred me to a reference that's quite topical: Goebbels on Propaganda in 1931. In a world in which the Republican payola scandal (don't like the news? change it) and Rupert Murdoch's empire continue to grow, it pays to reread the master of mass movement fear-based propaganda: Goebbels.
Here Goebels is introducing a new magazine (Will and Way) that is to be a communication forum and messaging source for party activists. Will and Way was a key part of Goebbel's overall propaganda (messaging) strategy. The "Will" is the program, the "Way" is the propaganda channel.
I think of Will and Way as a cross between a community forum, a blog, and a newsletter. Here are excerpts from his introduction with my emphases (I deleted the irritating drivel that is typical of Nazi writing):
Here Goebels is introducing a new magazine (Will and Way) that is to be a communication forum and messaging source for party activists. Will and Way was a key part of Goebbel's overall propaganda (messaging) strategy. The "Will" is the program, the "Way" is the propaganda channel.
I think of Will and Way as a cross between a community forum, a blog, and a newsletter. Here are excerpts from his introduction with my emphases (I deleted the irritating drivel that is typical of Nazi writing):
It is the task of National Socialist theory to construct a program that can hold its own in the daily political struggle. We have worked on this program since the start of the movement. Its basics are laid out in the 25 points [the party's official program, adopted in 1920]. The 25 points provide the foundation of all of National Socialist practice.
... It will not be the goal of this magazine to spread and deepen National Socialist theory and practice... Rather, our goal is to show practitioners the methods they can use to gradually gain power by winning the souls of the people.
... each of these methods requires a political group to win the sympathies of the broad masses, if it wishes over the long run to maintain is power. But the sympathy of the people does not come of itself; it must be won.
The means of gaining that support is propaganda. The task of propaganda is not to discover a theory or to develop a program, but rather to translate that theory and program into the language of the people, to make them comprehensible to the broad masses of the people. The goal of propaganda is to make what the theorists have discovered clear to the broad masses.
... No other political movement as understood the art of propaganda as well as the National Socialists. From its beginnings, it has put heart and soul into propaganda. What distinguishes it from all other political parties is the ability to see into the soul of the people and to speak the language of the man in the street. It uses all the means of modern technology. Leaflets, handbills, posters, mass demonstrations, the press, stage, film and radio — these are all tools of our propaganda. Whether or not they serve or harm the people depends on the use to which they are put.
In the long run, propaganda will reach the broad masses of the people only if at every stage it is uniform. Nothing confuses the people more than lack of clarity or aimlessness. The goal is not to present the common man with as many varied and contradictory theories as possible. The essence of propaganda is not in variety, but rather the forcefulness and persistence with which one selects ideas from the larger pool and hammers them into the masses using the most varied methods.
Therefore, we named this magazine "Will and Way." The will of the National Socialist movement is laid out in its program. The way changes every day...
... Today, we have a tight network of National Socialist propaganda throughout the country...National Socialist propaganda serves to educate the people. Its task is not only to win them for the tasks of today, but to assist in the transformation of the character of the broad masses. We are convinced that a new politics in Germany is possible only after a complete transformation of our national character, after an entirely new national way of thinking.
... Our goal in these pages is to bring will and way together in an unified synthesis of practical techniques. We are not writing for the general public, but rather for those active in daily politics throughout the country. It is a forum for discussion firmly tied to the party. Each who has something to say has the right and duty to speak. We will here exchange experiences, make proposals, criticize mistakes and suggest improvements.
These pages should over the course of time become a resource that political fighters will need for their daily battles. They should receive teaching, education and strength. They will receive the power to bring our ideas to Germany, and learn the ways and means to put a good theory into effective practice...
So what do we know about depression anyway?
Drugs Raise Risk of Suicide (washingtonpost.com)
A meta-analysis is reported to claim that the SSRIs increase suicide risk. This WaPo article didn't mention the effect size, but suicide is, in technical terms, a "hard end point". It can be measured fairly clearly. If the suicide-outcomes are unclear then that's important. The study suggests the SSRIs are not dramatically lowering suicide risks compared to placebo. I doubt this study really answers questions; but it may tell us we know even less than we thought we did.
This doesn't mean, but the way, that non-SSRI anti-depressants are safer. Maybe they increase suicide rates too compared to placebo. I remember 20 years ago that my teachers warned of "activation" during early treatment being associated with suicide. (As soon as the depressed patient gets more energy, they get around to actually getting something done -- but that something is suicide.)
At the end of the day the main lesson is that we (meaning the quite corrupt government that we electand reelect) let the pharmas get away with selective publication of efficacy and safety data. As a result we lack important answers. That has to change.
Another lesson concerns all the beatings primary care physicians get about "undertreating depression". I've long been skeptical of those studies because:
1. Even when primary care docs treat depression payor rules and patient preferences often mean euphemistic ICD-9 codes are used.
2. I've not felt comfortable about the data we had on the disorder. I don't feel we understand the disorder(s) or the therapies very well -- especially outside of referral clinics treating depression with psychotic features.
This doesn't mean I or my primary care colleagues did a great job with depression. Instead I'd say more humility is needed from every quarter.
By the way, we also need to do something about corruption in government.
A meta-analysis is reported to claim that the SSRIs increase suicide risk. This WaPo article didn't mention the effect size, but suicide is, in technical terms, a "hard end point". It can be measured fairly clearly. If the suicide-outcomes are unclear then that's important. The study suggests the SSRIs are not dramatically lowering suicide risks compared to placebo. I doubt this study really answers questions; but it may tell us we know even less than we thought we did.
This doesn't mean, but the way, that non-SSRI anti-depressants are safer. Maybe they increase suicide rates too compared to placebo. I remember 20 years ago that my teachers warned of "activation" during early treatment being associated with suicide. (As soon as the depressed patient gets more energy, they get around to actually getting something done -- but that something is suicide.)
At the end of the day the main lesson is that we (meaning the quite corrupt government that we electand reelect) let the pharmas get away with selective publication of efficacy and safety data. As a result we lack important answers. That has to change.
Another lesson concerns all the beatings primary care physicians get about "undertreating depression". I've long been skeptical of those studies because:
1. Even when primary care docs treat depression payor rules and patient preferences often mean euphemistic ICD-9 codes are used.
2. I've not felt comfortable about the data we had on the disorder. I don't feel we understand the disorder(s) or the therapies very well -- especially outside of referral clinics treating depression with psychotic features.
This doesn't mean I or my primary care colleagues did a great job with depression. Instead I'd say more humility is needed from every quarter.
By the way, we also need to do something about corruption in government.
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