My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Friday, November 06, 2009
Why are automotive web sites so ugly and disorganized?
My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Thursday, November 05, 2009
Eye Glasses and other iPhone health care related apps
Medical Apps for the iPhone - Pogue’s Posts
... Eye Glasses. As an over-40-year-old, I’ve become addicted to this app. It simply turns the iPhone 3GS into a magnifying glass. Hold it in front of some tiny type—on a menu, a receipt, a ticket, a medicine bottle—and Eyeglasses, after a moment of autofocusing, shows you a magnified version of it on the screen. Keeping your hand steady is tough, and the 6X and 8X images sort of fall apart—but the 2X and 4X views have saved me more than once. ($3)...
Wednesday, November 04, 2009
The magical bomb detecting wand saves Iraqi police
When you read this story, there are 3 things to keep in mind.
The first is that US money, directly or indirectly, pays for these “wands”.
The second is that policemen who discover explosives have a high risk of sudden death.
The third is that Iraqis don’t, by and large, like dogs.
Emphases mine.
Iraq Swears by Bomb Detector U.S. Sees as Useless – Rod Nordland - NYTimes.com
BAGHDAD — … Iraq’s security forces have been relying on a device to detect bombs and weapons that the United States military and technical experts say is useless.
The small hand-held wand, with a telescopic antenna on a swivel, is being used at hundreds of checkpoints in Iraq…
… the Iraqi government has purchased more than 1,500 of the devices, known as the ADE 651, at costs from $16,500 to $60,000 each. Nearly every police checkpoint, and many Iraqi military checkpoints, have one of the devices, which are now normally used in place of physical inspections of vehicles…
… The Iraqis, however, believe passionately in them. “Whether it’s magic or scientific, what I care about is it detects bombs,” said Maj. Gen. Jehad al-Jabiri, head of the Ministry of the Interior’s General Directorate for Combating Explosives…
… Aqeel al-Turaihi, the inspector general for the Ministry of the Interior, reported that the ministry bought 800 of the devices from a company called ATSC (UK) Ltd. for $32 million in 2008, and an unspecified larger quantity for $53 million. Mr. Turaihi said Iraqi officials paid up to $60,000 apiece, when the wands could be purchased for as little as $18,500. He said he had begun an investigation into the no-bid contracts with ATSC.
Jim McCormick, the head of ATSC, based in London, did not return calls for comment.
The Baghdad Operations Command announced Tuesday that it had purchased an additional 100 detection devices, but General Rowe said five to eight bomb-sniffing dogs could be purchased for $60,000, with provable results.
Checking cars with dogs, however, is a slow process, whereas the wands take only a few seconds per vehicle. “Can you imagine dogs at all 400 checkpoints in Baghdad?” General Jabiri said. “The city would be a zoo.”..
… ATSC’s promotional material claims that its device can find guns, ammunition, drugs, truffles, human bodies and even contraband ivory at distances up to a kilometer, underground, through walls, underwater or even from airplanes three miles high. The device works on “electrostatic magnetic ion attraction,” ATSC says.
To detect materials, the operator puts an array of plastic-coated cardboard cards with bar codes into a holder connected to the wand by a cable.
… the operator must walk in place a few moments to “charge” the device, since it has no battery or other power source, and walk with the wand at right angles to the body. If there are explosives or drugs to the operator’s left, the wand is supposed to swivel to the operator’s left and point at them.
If, as often happens, no explosives or weapons are found, the police may blame a false positive on other things found in the car, like perfume, air fresheners or gold fillings in the driver’s teeth…
Effective dog teams: $60,000. Plastic wands: $60,000,000. A thousand fold cost difference, and the wands, of course, do nothing.
It is very likely that good portion of that $60 million sits in the bank accounts of “Maj. Gen. Jehad al-Jabiri” and other Iraqi decision makers. Assuming the wands cost $100 each to make (probably much less) ASTC’s owners must also be rather wealthy now.
On the other hand, use of these wands must have reduced the death rate of Iraqi police over the past year or two. The police may not be as gullible as one might think.
The worst is that this is probably not the worst.
Tuesday, November 03, 2009
The Abyss. Averted?
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My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Monday, November 02, 2009
Marcia Angell on the corruption of physician expertise
Drug Companies & Doctors: A Story of Corruption - The New York Review of Books - Marcia AngellI've been long away from the world of practice, but my recollection is that there were very good thinkers on groups like the US Preventive Services Task Force. On the other hand, confident experts ruled the big panels, and they were as predicted, often confidently wrong. (The American Cancer Society was infamous for this, but lately they've surprised.)
... The problems I've discussed are not limited to psychiatry, although they reach their most florid form there. Similar conflicts of interest and biases exist in virtually every field of medicine, particularly those that rely heavily on drugs or devices. It is simply no longer possible to believe much of the clinical research that is published, or to rely on the judgment of trusted physicians or authoritative medical guidelines. I take no pleasure in this conclusion, which I reached slowly and reluctantly over my two decades as an editor of The New England Journal of Medicine.
One result of the pervasive bias is that physicians learn to practice a very drug-intensive style of medicine. Even when changes in lifestyle would be more effective, doctors and their patients often believe that for every ailment and discontent there is a drug. Physicians are also led to believe that the newest, most expensive brand-name drugs are superior to older drugs or generics, even though there is seldom any evidence to that effect because sponsors do not usually compare their drugs with older drugs at equivalent doses. In addition, physicians, swayed by prestigious medical school faculty, learn to prescribe drugs for off-label uses without good evidence of effectiveness...
The hero of the marketarians ...
Two biographies of Ayn Rand. - By Johann Hari - Slate MagazineI can see why.... In her 70s Rand found herself dying of lung cancer, after insisting that her followers smoke because it symbolized "man's victory over fire" and the studies showing it caused lung cancer were Communist propaganda. By then she had driven almost everyone away. In 1982, she died alone in her apartment with only a hired nurse at her side...
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My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
My son destroys 2010 Outback sales
My Google Reader Shared items (feed)
Curious world and Google Wave
Sunday, November 01, 2009
Reading my writing translated
Wanted: email redirect to google reader note shares
- What my blogs are for: memory management and the Google-Gordon geek-mind fusion
- Fewer posts, more shared items – Google Reader changes my memory management
- Strange loops: Google custom and customized search - and a memory blog
- Google's confusing social graph strategy: Google reader friends via Google Chat
- Google reader micro-blogging and changes to Gordon Notes
- Loving Google Reader - Shared post feed
- Share anything in your Google Reader Share feed
- Ping.FM: a router for status updates ... with just one small problem.
Facebook has the eBay disease - the Farmville story
Slashdot Games Story | Scams and Social Gaming
... The article asserts that Facebook and MySpace themselves are complicit in this, failing to crack down on the abuses they see because they make so much money from advertising for the most popular games...
- Scamville: The Social Gaming Ecosystem Of Hell (play on Farmville)
- How To Spam Facebook Like A Pro: An Insider’s Confession
- Offerpal Tries Out A New CEO. Shukla, Queen Of Scams, Is Out.
- Zynga CEO Mark Pincus: “I Did Every Horrible Thing In The Book Just To Get Revenues” - such as getting users to download spyware
- “Horrible Things” Slink Back Into ZyngaScamville: Zynga Says 1/3 Of Revenue Comes From Lead Gen And Other Offers - "lead gen scams" explained. These trick users into paying for worthless recurring expenses like "learning CDs" and shady mobile phone subscriptions.
- Zynga’s FishVille Sleeps With The Fishes For Ad Violations: Farmville and other Zynga apps running scams make up 10-20% of Facebook's total revenue. Talk about a conflict of interest.
Bad genes, bad people and a crisis of punishment?
- Diminished responsibility: the next cultural battleground
- Changing attitudes about mind and responsibility: Patricia Hearst
- Addiction and disease: My comments on the TIME Science blog
- Free Will RIP - The Economist on preemptive punishment
- How common are false convictions?
- Special needs criminals
- Using electric shocks to manage the behavior of special needs children and adults
Goodbye to Discworld - Unseen Academicals
Amazon.com: Unseen Academicals (Discworld) (9780061161704): Terry Pratchett: BooksIf by some miracle there is a future book, perhaps written from Terry's notes or with his help, I'd nominate Neil Gaiman. We haven't yet said goodbye to the Witches, and Pastor Oats came of their world.
There are two things to know before you buy this book. If you've read Pratchett you must of course by this book. Beyond the pleasure it brings, you owe it to the author.
The first thing to know is that the author is fading. Terry Pratchett has early onset Alzheimer's disease and is not expected to write another book.
The second is that this is not the Discworld book to begin with. There's no need to start at the beginning of the series, because you can enter at about any point and choose your own path. Still, don't begin here. Choose one from the early to mid-range and roam about a bit. Then, when the time comes, and perhaps with a glass of your potent beverage of choice, read this one.
Whatever your history, do buy this book now. Keep it on the bookcase, knowing it will be there when the time comes.
If you know the Discworld, you probably pre-ordered this book and have read it by now. For my part it was all the sweeter for being an ending. Standing alone it is not Pratchett's best work -- though is his best work is among the best of anything written. This work is fine enough.
The characters are more simply drawn than in his earlier books, the narrative more linear, the allegory less subtle. He has a lot of ground to cover, a lot of people to say goodbye to, and he's racing the clock. In the end I think he felt like Vetinari, who abhors slavery and carries the world on his shoulders. He has set his people free, and left their world as ordered as it might be. Glenda and Nutt shall have to take it from here ...
... On the up side, the progress on I Shall Wear Midnight is rapid, thanks to Dragon Dictate and rather more to the guys at TalkingPoint - the front end that makes it much easier to use - who made contact with me through this very page. I'm so impressed by it, that if my typing ability came back overnight, I would continue to use it...
- Vernor Vinge likes Pratchett: (it was only 2 years ago that I started reading Pratchett!)
- Terry Pratchett and Google Book Library with local library link
- Sir Terry Pratchett
Saturday, October 31, 2009
Contribute your Google Data Liberation suggestions
My latest take on Twitter
Twitter is a publisher and subscriber. As a publisher it broadcasts short SMS -compliant strings to any interested subscriber. It is a uniquely good fit to pre-2008 mobile phones technology.
I think of Twitter as a curious pub/sub (feed) technology that emerged because of the limitations of early 21st century mobile phones, the bizarre pricing of American SMS and MMS messaging, email spam, and the asymmetry of early PubSub technology (strong sub as in Google Reader, weak pub as in amazingly feeble blog authoring tools with one now ailing exception).
Most of those curious technological limitations are going away. Between technology change and Facebook, Twitter is very vulnerable to displacement (if Google ever got their status pub/chat/reader/Latitude/Chat strategies aligned the squeeze would double).
I can imagine Twitter changing to be more like an open version of Facebook (esp. if Google bought them), but I can't see it staying relevant in its current form.
Between Google Reader (esp. with the "Note in Reader" feature) and Facebook I've no personal use case for Twitter. There are few times I consider it, but either Reader or Facebook could seize that ground (esp. wrt Location Services, though that's bound up for me with Apple's voracious greed)...
- Gordon's Notes: What can I do with Twitter, and is it CB Radio redux?
- Gordon's Tech: FreeMyFeed - Getting Twitter feed to Google Reader
- Gordon's Notes: Why Twitter?
- Gordon's Notes: The best about Twitter essay
- Gordon's Tech: Facebook, Twitter, iPhone, Google Reader: Update with FB feed information
- Gordon's Notes: Twitter and Facebook - because feed readers didn't make it
- Gordon's Notes: Explaining twitter, facebook and myspace to gomer geeks