Monday, March 31, 2008

Regarding the medical profession

I recently ran across an aphorism describing the other great profession thus:

Internists know everything but they don't do anything.
Surgeons aren't supposed to know anything, but they do it all.
Pathologists know everything and do everything, but it's all too late.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Poll results

I am a big fan of David Morgan-Mar's generally Lego-based Irregular Webcomic.  One feature of Mr. Morgan-Mar's comic is a poll, the topic of which changes periodically.  I find it an amusing commentary on the generally geeky makeup of the comic's audience that in one recent poll, his readership voted, with a margin of nearly 25% more votes, to save semi-obscure mathematician Evariste Galois from an untimely death over doing the same for Princess Diana.

Monday, March 10, 2008

The Waldo Ultimatum

For one who grew up on these books (not the Ludlum books!), here's some quality entertainment.


http://view.break.com/465843

Do YOU trust your water?

Ever wondered what prescription and nonprescription drugs you drink and brush your teeth with every day? Some answers here: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/10/AR2008031000621.html?sid=ST2008030901877

Mood stabilizers in Fairfax County Virginia; Estrogen in New Orleans; heart medications in New York, etc.

The amounts are trace and we are told not to panic...

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Global warming followup

I posted recently on global warming guessing here.

Since then, another stellar article has come out indicating that there is a significant new tool for climate change modeling.  Try to follow the trail of made-up information and guesswork: the scientists here have guessed backwards about sea level changes to create hypothetical data.  They then indicate that this data is useful for modeling future climate change.  In other words, by drawing a line from a guess in the past through what we think we know about the present, we will be able to definitively state what the future will be like.  Given the certainty with which we can state the outlook and causes of this future, we should make state-mandated policies to control the effects we state this future will hold.

Sure, that much guesswork inspires confidence.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Technology to watch

A byproduct of Scotch distillation appears to have significant environmental cleanup uses.  Although the nature of the product is (understandably) a closely held secret at this time, I don't mind saying, "Save the earth.  Have another shot of the good stuff."

Article Here.

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Bizzare but fun link of the day

Telephone Touch Tone Tunes

Now you too can play "Joy to the World" on your phone.  Just be careful of any tunes that start with '1'...

With two-tone dialing, you get (roughly) the notes F, G, A, and B-flat on the rows (starting with 1, 4, 7, and *, respectively) and the notes D, E, and F-sharp on the columns (1, 2, and 3 respectively).  Chords are created by combinations thereof:

1 = D over F
2 = E/F
3 = F#/F
4 = D/G
5 = E/G
6 = F#/G
7 = D/A
8 = E/A
9 = F#/A
* = D/Bb
0 = E/Bb
# = F#/Bb

Because the notes are not exact, there is a bit of leeway regarding sharps and flats and so forth.

Reference:
Tone Dialing
Frequencies

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

A Night on the Town, Riyadh style

Blogger "Saudi Jeans" describes the difficulty of finding a jazz concert in Saudi Arabia.

I know intellectually that there are significant restraints on personal life in much of the Arabian Peninsula, and always sort of felt a sense that "Wahabiism is a rough way to live" (see here), but somehow the idea of having to go to the U.S. Embassy to hear any live music at all in the Kingdom puts a visceral realism to it for me. Or maybe I am just messed up enough that it takes something like this to get to me on a personal level.