May
1
6:23pm

Things I Don't Like About My MacBook Pro

1. The button to unlatch the closed computer is too skinny

2. When closed, the pulsating light on the front is incredibly annoying, especially when I sleep three feet from the light

3. The entire machine gets much, much too hot

4. The battery’s life has suddenly decreased notably; getting 1.5 hours is a chore

5. If, by chance, static electricity build-up discharges when I touch the MBP, the keyboard and trackpad stop working and I need to find an external mouse to restart the computer


Apr
30
5:15pm

Unintended Consquences II

Eating dinner last night with a food policy lobbyist I learned that food banks have been the victim of increased information flow. In the past, grocery stores donated excess food to food banks which in turn donated to the homeless.

Now, with better models of consumption and purchasing behavior, supermarkets have less food they cannot sell. The result? Less food for charity.


Apr
30
5:12pm

Unintended Consquences

I used to often have some coins in my pocket which I would give to the homeless on the street. Now, as I pay with plastic, that event happens less. I wonder if this is a broader experience.


Apr
30
5:05pm
“Part of the issue with laptops being perceived as anti-social is that it is a black box - you could be engaged in a task that takes 5 minutes or 5 hours, an uncertainty that creates tension. What is it that makes using a mobile phone or reading a newspaper acceptable, but using a laptop not?”

Apr
29
9:22am

Apr
28
12:32am

Music [from YouTube] Which Will Get Me Through Finals

Wagon Wheel by Old Crow Medicine Show

Redemption Song by Bob Marley

Love is My Religion by Ziggy Marley

Love Song by Sara Barielles

Obsession by The Orion Experience

(By the way, I’m very excited to be through finals for summer in lovely Chicago-land.)


Apr
24
10:38am
“One year ago, the Inspector General’s Office — the independent audit arm of the DOJ — issued a lengthy report (.pdf) detailing that the FBI, for the years 2003-2005, had used “National Security Letters” (NSLs) to gather information on thousands of Americans in violation of the law. Pursuant to the Patriot Act, “NSLs” permit the FBI and other federal agencies to obtain all sorts of invasive information from telecoms, Internet and email providers, even health care providers and the like without any judicial warrants or any other oversight of any kind.”

Apr
23
10:23pm
“From: Nicholas Kristof Subject: the power of art in september i traveled with bill gates to africa to look at his work fighting aids there. while setting the trip up, it emerged that his initial interest in giving pots of money to fight disease had arisen after he and melinda read a two-part series of articles i did on third world disease in January 1997. until then, their plan had been to give money mainly to get countries wired and full of computers. bill and melinda recently reread those pieces, and said that it was the second piece in the series, about bad water and diarrhea killing millions of kids a year, that really got them thinking of public health. Great! I was really proud of this impact that my worldwide reporting and 3,500-word article had had. But then bill confessed that actually it wasn’t the article itself that had grabbed him so much — it was the graphic. It was just a two column, inside graphic, very simple, listing third world health problems and how many people they kill. but he remembered it after all those years and said that it was the single thing that got him redirected toward public health. No graphic in human history has saved so many lives in africa and asia. I’m sending you a copy of the story and graphic by interoffice mail. whoever did the graphic should take a bow. nick kristof”

Apr
22
2:39pm

A Tale of Two Mergers

In the media/Internet sector, the past year has seen two important mergers: News Corp. + Dow Jones and Microsoft + Yahoo. Though I am no expert in M&A, it has been interesting to watch the two play out.

When the Wall Street Journal was about to be purchased, the typical concerns over Murdoch’s editorial style were rampant. The WSJ is a stalwart of good, honest content without bias. News Corp. publishes the NY Post and other tabloid style papers. Are they compatible? Regardless, the offer was too sweet for a public company to turn down and Dow Jones was bought. It turns out not all of the WSJ is compatible and the Managing Editor is stepping down (or being forced out, perhaps).

Now, with Yahoo and Microsoft we have seen a media-laden dance as Yahoo desperately tries to avoid being purchased by a company which in many ways comes from a different era and different approach to business. They’ve gone so far as to run Google ads on their search results in an attempt to boost revenue before tomorrow’s release of Q4 data. 

Although some, including Arrington,  think the deal will and must happen, I wonder why Dow Jones did not make the same valiant effort to avoid their take-over.


Apr
22
2:02pm

“It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried.”

Churchill’s quote rings even more true after speaking with a professor today with a specialty in ethnic conflict. After his lecture in my comparative political systems course today, I went up and asked him a question about identity and democracy that stemmed from a conversation I had with a taxi driver.

The driver was a Pashtun Afghani who had left his country in the early 1990s. As we spoke about culture and ethnicities, he told me that when he was growing up, the ethnic groups, which today drive the politics in Afghanistan, were non-existent in his life. He had no idea his wife was a different tribal group. 

This was shocking to me. How could something so powerful today be nearly nonexistent 2 decades ago. And this change wasn’t technological, it was identity, something seemingly steeped in tradition and history. 

However, I was reminded of a scene in Hotel Rwanda where a Rwandan tells the UN chief that, prior to British rule, Hutus and Tutsis were not labels used. This changed. As you know, these groups would be involved in a genocidal nightmare in 1994.

So, with these two puzzles, I asked the professor, what gives?

The answer relates to democracy and its tendency to shape identity. When people are voting for a popular government, they tend to focus on “getting what’s theirs.” When the government loses legitimacy (e.g. minority in power), ethnic groups tend to mobilize and strengthen the perceived differences. 

This explains the change in governance in colonial Rwanda and the change away from the monarchy in Afghanistan. 

Democracy is not a panacea and this realizaton really makes me wonder if it is worth spreading.