Survey taken, as always. It sure was well prepared. It’s worth starting it for the first option (ruining everything), and continuation is always just one click away...
eurg
“What else is there to explain?”
After about 0.5 seconds of thought, I might become interested whether suicide after status-loss has a different frequency in different cultures, and if yes, whether this difference can be explained in the respective way of handling the death of the person. The simple emotional question behind that is whether in all cultures suicides after a status-hit are more strongly motivated by the pain of the status-loss itself, or also by the expected development after death. I might even be interested in whether this question makes sense at all. Still, it remains something to be explained.
Also, “What else is there to explain?” sounds suspiciously like “Are you so stupid to not see that?”.
Ask me almost anything. I’m very boring, but I have recovered from depression with the help of CBT + pills, am a lurker since back from the OB days and know the orthodoxy here quite well, started to enjoy running (real barefoot if >7 degrees Celsius) after 29 years of no physical activity, am chairman of the local hackerspace (software dev myself, soon looking for a job again), and somehow established the acceptance of a vegan lifestyle in my conservative familiy (farmers).
I am a software developer, and have glimpsed over many similar questions. To summarize: There are enormous individual differences in how one can become a better programmer, and even more so on the opinions on it. It is not even easy to agree on what basic skills should be there at the “end” (i.e., the beginning, after your first two years real experience), much less on how to get those skills.
That said, most commonplace advice is valid here:
there is with high probability no really significant innate aptitude for programming (intelligence has a carry-over into many domains, however) (edit: seems I am wrong about that: See “Has “Not everyone can be a programmer” been studied?” at Programmers.StackExchange
don’t expect too much skill carry-over: mathematical thinking and programming are related, but different activities
being able to concentrate for some time is good (a.k.a.: conscientiousness helps)
as a kid, liking the task probably also helps
playing the trumpet—not that much (though it can be fun)
On skill-set:
The practical coding skills are always important. (Except if you want to earn more than a dev.)
Algorithmic knowledge is rarely helpful, but you will stumble at least once if you don’t have it (but nobody will notice).
Mathematics is necessary only in very small areas.
What should I have done? Training self-discipline would have helped (if something like that is possible). Knowing/Having somebody who is actually significantly better than me, and pushing me, would have helped (fuckarounditis on “learning” is too easy to do).
My Opinion: In professional software development there is very little time to broaden your knowledge—it goes into obscure platform and domain knowledge quite quickly, and Jobs where you do what is actually interesting are in very short supply. However, exactly this broader knowledge is what can keep you afloat even if you happen to be neurotic, unreliable, slow worker*. So: Let him do what is most interesting, but gently guide him to do it just a bit better, and a little bit more diverse than he would otherwise. About interest: Many people say kids usually like somewhat quick results, and things that crawl. Maybe?
Preparatory learning exercises: Sorry, no opinion and idea here. I always liked to take things apart, and sometimes also to put them together (as in Lego Technik models, or—almost always unsuccessful—attempts to construct my own). Actually, I think constructing Lego models (or of course anything that is “more real”) is great. But then there is the initial caveat of individual differences.
*: I might exaggerate a bit, but not too much.
Too optimistic.
In many social groups touching initiated from women is often received just as bad as from men, and fairly so. I am sure there are lots of groups with this specific double standard, but it is not universal, not by a large margin.
Also, “only explanation”: Really?
This was surprisingly simple: I got myself to want to run, started running, and patted myself on the back everytime I did it.
The want part was a bit of luck: I always thought I “should” do some sports, for physical and more importantly mental health reasons, and think that being able to do stuff is better than not being able, ceteris paribus. So I was thinking what kind of activity I might prefer.
I like my alone time (so team- or pair-sports are out), I dislike spending money when I expect it to be wasted (like Gym memberships, bikes, et al.). And I feel easily embarassed and ashamed, and like to get myself at least somewhat up to speed on my own.
Running fits those side requirements. Out of chance I got hold of “Born to Run”, and even after the first quarter of the book I thought that it would be great if I could just go out on a bad day and spend an hour free of shit, or how it would be great that I could just reach some location a few kilometers away without any prep or machines or services.
I then decided that I will start running, and that my primary goal shall be that I like it and be able to do it even in old age if such would happen. With the ‘*’ that I give myself an easy way out in case of physical pain or unexpected hatred against the activity, but not for any weasel reasons.
I didn’t start running for another one and a half years, because Schweinehund, subtype Innerer. When my mood was getting slightly better (I was again able to do productive work), I started, with the “habit formation” mind-set. Also didn’t tell anyone in the beginning. I think it helped that I already had some knowledge on how to train and run correctly, which especially in the beginning meant that I always felt like I could run further than I was “allowed” to.
And for good feedback: However it went, when I finished my training, I “said” to myself: I did good. I feel good. I feel better than before I started. I wrote every single run down on RunKeeper and Fitocracy, and always smiled at the “I’m awesome!” button of the latter one. I’m also quite sure that having at least one new personal best once a week helped. (Also, when you run barefoot, you get the “crazy badass” card for free, however slow you run. I like this.)
Once started, such a feedback loop is quite powerful. When I once barely trained for month, I was also surprised that getting back into regular running after that down-phase was so much easier. Now, after only seven months of training, I went from doing walk/run for 15 minutes to running 75 minutes, and having no problem with a cold-start 6% incline for the first two kilometers. I’m proud. Feels good (is quite new to me).
Depends on how the bulb is build. The important factors are
light temperature: color tone; the temperature at which we would perceive a black body radiator to be of the same color
color rendition index: how good its light spectrum is compared to a black body, meaning if it doesn’t miss any frequencies which we would perceive; incandescent bulbs have 100, good LEDs about 90, and currently average at 80 for living room LED bulbs
lumen/watt: efficiency as in perceived brightness per watt; not efficiency as in electric energy → photons conversion
Most old-style incandescent bulbs have a simple build, and higher watt bulbs usually have a higher color temperature, and somewhat better efficiency. So, 4 60W would be severly different from 1 240W (such bulbs have been sold in the past, though not anymore; people prefer halogen for that now, because higher temperature incandescent bulbs usually have a much shorter life).
Halogen bulbs (I am always talking “quarz halogen” here; without Wikipedia I wouldn’t have known others exist) are usually build for a specific temperature, and then you buy the wattage/brightness in lumen you want (where I live practically all halogen bulbs come in 2900 +/- 200 K); so you buy spot with 2900K, and have available everything from 10W to 40W, or a 300W “stick”, again with 2900 K. Higher color temperature are available, but usually not at your first supermarket. BTW, you get around 4900 lumen for a 240W halogen stick.
With LEDs and CFLs everything gets fucking crazy. Whatever color temperature you prefer, don’t get below a CRI of 85. It makes pictures look crazy, and after a while you want to rip out your eyes. 90 is really good, for professional photo work only 100 is 100.
Another guide for room lighting (personal experience): 2 klm at 20m² is just a bit more than cozy, 5 klm per 20m² are good enough (you can read, learn, work), but not office style. If the OP means “small room” at about 15 m², he should have the equivalent of 12 klm at 20m², which sounds about right for “feels brighter than winter outside”, but it would not be (at 47 degrees north, that is).
Although having real bright light matters, to feel brighter you might want to make contrast. Your eyes/brain tell you “less bright” if everything has the same luminosity (that is the reason why on a cloudy day it feels darker on the outside than in your apartment, but as soon as you take a photograph you recognize it isn’t). So: Get a dark spot somewhere.
Through use of the “seq_epistemology” tag this is possible via the “Article Navigation”. Maybe this tag was only added after the comment? However, it works quite well!
What’s your motivation for veganism?
Moral reasons. All else equal, I think that inflicting pain or death is bad, and that the ability to feel pain and the desire to not die is very widespread. I also think that the intensity of pain in simpler animals is still very strong (I think humans did not evolve large brains because otherwise the pain was not strong enough). I also think that our ability to manage pain slighly reduces the impact of our having the ability to suffer more strongly and with more variety. But I give, for sanity check reasons, priority to the desires of “more complex” animals, like humans.
Due to our technical ability we can now produce supplements for micronutrient which are missing or insufficently available in plants[1], and so I see health concerns resolved. So all the pain and death that I would inflict would only be there for greated enjoyment of food. Although I love the taste of meat and animal products, the comparative enjoyment is not big enough that I would kill for it. That I can enjoy plant-based foods is partly based upon my not being afraid of using my kitchen, and having a good vegan/vegetarian self-service restaurant 100m from my apartment.
And than there are the environmental reasons, and the antibiotic use, etc. etc. They count, and might be even sufficent on their own, but I’ll only investigate those in case my other concerns/reasons were invalidated.
[1] There is vegan vit B12, vit D3, EPA/DHA (omega3), and creatin powder.
If “anything like that” includes reciting prayers, practically all catholic private schools in Europe will count.
Similar experience, and not much of real advice. I mostly solve it by setting up obligations by myself. However, I revert to this only for stuff that is important. Examples:
I’ve announced and discussed doing some boring accounting and controlling for the hackerspace, and people now expect some specific results.
On anothor note, instead of procrastinating about finding a better workplace, I gave my notice. Once I was out of the job, I simply had to start looking.
Finally, I do not need to be perfect. More people than I expected have the odd day or two during the workweek, and knowing this I have reset my expectations regarding my own performance to something more humane.
I was doing this in the past to heavy-weight books for very pragmatic reasons: Gödel, Escher, Bach is worthless to me if the book would just sit around in a corner, but to take it with me and read it while commuting, I had to get the weight down.
Since learning this amazing trick, any book I read and that’s inconvenient to hold has to fear the knife.
The asking for forgiveness may indicate that people somehow thought of the act as killing, but that did not change their actions. Humans have had a distinctive influence on the local megafauna wherever they showed up. A cynic might write that “humans did not really care about the well-being of …”. We for instance also have taboos of eating dogs and cats, but the last time I checked it was not because of value their lives, but because they are cute. It’s mostly organized lying to feel OK.
My comparison would be someone screaming at Dmitri Ivanovsky in 1892 “do not research viruses until you know that this research is safe!”.
I want to second that. Also, when reading through this (and feeling the—probably imagined—tension of both parties to stay polite) the viral point was the first one that triggered the “this is clearly an attack!” emotion in my head. I was feeling sad about that, and had hoped that luke would find another ingenious example.
As others pointed out, “memory wipe” is a broad category, but assuming that this is about episodic memory:
How about sending yourself a letter via delivery service on a specific date in handwriting + audio-recording? This of course completely ignores any other faked messages that would need to be discarded, but even with only episodic memory loss, I assume I’d be so confused as to be easy game for even the most incompetent scammer.
If this is about formal guarantees, we need to have some more precise ideas about the “memory wipe” and the adversary in question. In the most general case, likely game over.
Depending on personal specifics, such stuff is also used in psychotherapy; overburdening oneself is not an uncommon problem. For me this helped even though such substitutions were all but universal, I don’t know about how important it is in general, though.
Thanks!
Value of information is zero. Do it if you are curious, or take the money and watch some movies with friends.
Did it, as every year. Thanks for your work.