Category Archives: Geek

The Best Thought Experiments

From Wired.com:

2. Schrödinger’s cat

A cat is trapped in a box with radioactive material, a Geiger counter, and a mechanism rigged to release poison if particle decay is detected. According to Erwin Schrödinger, the cat exists in two probable states. But that doesn’t track with reality (cats are not both alive and dead). Proposed in 1935, the postulate illustrates that some quantum concepts just don’t work at nonquantum scales. Also that Schrödinger was a dog person.

8. Parfit’s teleporter

Philosopher Derek Parfit is famous for basing thought experiments on sci-fi. In 1984, he envisioned a teleporter malfunction, like the one that made two James T. Kirks in an episode of Star Trek. Teleporters annihilate every particle in you, then rebuild them from scratch. What happens if the original isn’t destroyed? Which is the real you? Parfit says both. Evil Kirk would disagree.

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Yum! Chocolate Covered SQL…

From WTF:

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Scheerer's phenomenon

Wow! This is so cool…from Wikipedia:

Blue field entoptic phenomenon

The blue field entoptic phenomenon or Scheerer’s phenomenon is the appearance of tiny bright dots moving quickly along squiggly lines in the visual field, especially when looking into blue light (such as the sky). This is a normal effect that can be perceived by almost everybody. The dots are due to the white blood cells that move in the capillaries in front of the retina of the eye, near the macula.

Blue light (optimal wavelength: 430 nm) is well absorbed by the red blood cells that fill the capillaries. The brain “edits out” the dark lines that would result from this absorption. The white blood cells, which are much rarer than the red ones and do not absorb the blue light well, create gaps in the blood column, and these gaps appear as bright dots.

In a technique known as blue field entoptoscopy, the effect is used to measure the blood flow in the retinal capillaries. The patient is alternatingly shown blue light and a computer generated picture of moving dots; by adjusting the speed and density of these dots, the patient tries to match the computer generated picture as best as possible to the perceived entoptic dots. This then allows calculation of the blood flow in the capillaries. This test is important in diseases such as diabetes which can cause retinopathy.

Scheerer’s phenomenon should not be confused with “floaters” or muscae volitantes. Scheerer’s phenomenon is distinguished by the appearance of multiple, identical-looking bright dots that follow each other rapidly along the same path. Floaters are variable in appearance; although they sometimes are dots, they often have the appearance of threads or shreds of crumpled cellophane. Floaters remain almost stationary or drift slowly and do not follow well-defined paths. They are due to debris floating in the vitreous humor of the eye.

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Math Sight Gag of the Day

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Is Firefox maxing out your Mac's CPU? Try this!

I love Firefox. Really, I do. I can’t live without AdBlock Plus or del.icio.us bookmark support, so Safari is a non-starter. But both Firefox 1.5 and 2.0 use up 50-100% of my Mac’s CPU while idle. This kills the battery on my poor little Powerbook G4 laptop, and also makes it run very hot (ouch).

Today, I discovered an optimized version of Firefox 2.0.0.3 that is specifically compiled for the G4 processor (the site also has versions for G5 and Intel Macs). So far CPU utilization is sticking closer to 1-10%! One hell of an improvement.

Check out http://www.beatnikpad.com/archives/2007/03/29/firefox-2002/

Update 20070603 – here’s a better place to find optimized builds.

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Coolest Wedding Cake Ever

As seen on Flickr:

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R2-D2 Trashcan

Must…have…this

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The World’s Geekiest Crossword Puzzle

From Mental Floss magazine:

In order to solve this crossword puzzle, you’ll need to know a bit of Klingon, Elvish, Furbish, Esperanto and a handful of other constructed languages. In fact, all of the solutions are in constructed languages. Thanks to Kevin Kosbab for becoming fluent in each language just to put the puzzle together. And for those of you who for some reason haven’t mastered these tongues, we’ve got a handy little word bank to help you. I don’t think I’ve said “word bank” since 3rd grade. Here’s the downloadable pdf, so you can print this sucker out. I’ll be back with the answers tomorrow. Good luck!

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32 Reasons Why Geeks are Severely Underpaid

From Tech Salary Negotiations – IT jobs

You’re good at what you do, maybe you’re an ace. So are you being paid what you’re worth? See how many of the 32 Salary Negotiation Rules you’re using.

Why are sales professionals still rewarded with the biggest pay packets? Are sales professionals better qualified or smarter than IT professionals? No, there’s no such thing as a sales degree. Do they work longer or harder? Of course not. So why then is IT not the best paid profession?

Two main reasons:

1. Sales brings home the bacon. So measuring their success is easy, and their impact on profit is immediate. Technology’s profit impact is neither immediate nor easy to measure. Geeks can’t do much about this – sorry.

2. Salespeople negotiate every day. So they either negotiate well, or they have skinny kids, and change career paths. Every year 1 in 3 leave the sales professional – a much higher churn than the IT industry. Geeks can’t afford not to play catchup here. The good news is that learning to negotiate well is not nearly as difficult as mastering a programming language.
We’ve watched salespeople out manoeuvre and out negotiate geeks in the opening hours of our training courses. In response we’ve put together this comprehensive IT salary negotiation article to help geeks close the gap.

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Suspicious packages part of Turner Broadcasting marketing campaign

Oh lordy, Turner’s marketing team is stoopid:

Turner Broadcasting acknowledged late this afternoon that the suspicious packages that ignited fears of bombs across Boston today were magnetic lights that were part of an outdoor marketing campaign for an adult cartoon.

Turner was promoting Adult Swim’s animated television show “Aqua Teen Hunger Force” in Boston and nine other cities, according to a statement e-mailed by Shirley Powell, a company spokeswoman.

“Parent company Turner Broadcasting is in contact with local and federal law enforcement on the exact locations of the billboards,” the state an e-mail statement said. “We regret that they were mistakenly thought to pose any danger.”

Additional mages are available here.

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