- How would issues to be considered (subjects of discussion) could be submitted?
- How well does the Nunavut system work in practice?
- How do we ensure that all citizens have access to discussions and voting mechanism?
- How do we make the participation system safe and secure?
- What kind of social values would be necessary to be make this work?
Friday, July 9, 2010
Notes on re-imagining democracy
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Notes on America
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Notes on Modern Nomadic Life
- standing invitation to family and friends to serve as a forward base for tourism expeditions;
- renting fully furnished and equipped apartments (beyond even current standards) to provide an "home sweet home" without having to sacrifice comforts;
- participation in sports activities popular worldwide (association football aka soccer);
- self-expectation of continuous language and cultural acquisition;
- move often and aggressively outside the boundaries of the metropolis;
- acquire a good understanding of local history for at least the last 100 years;
- share your growing understanding of local culture online;
- add alerts or subscriptions to local news sites for the current and past cities you've lived in;
- keep notes of the opportunities as you discover them;
- open yourself to opportunities to socialize with all social stratas and castes;
- stay off the beaten path;
- get to know locally popular artists and culture (and hopefully learn to like some!);
- keep "bookmarks" on cultural artifacts that you like (movies, songs, books);
- stay more than a year in your host country (3 years?).
- What countries have the largest net inflow and outflow of migrants?
- What % of GDP is contributed by migrants (organized by length of stay)?
- What attracts migrants? Can being the "world's university" and center of business startups be the main economic driver for a country?
- Can migrants replace low birth rate in western societies?
- How do countries integrate new migrants well?
- What's the top inflow that a country can realistically support without creating inter-cultural tensions?
- What country grants the most work visa per capita?
- What further parallels can be made with past nomadic groups?
- Are nomadic groups cyclical? Are they only possible currently because of the American empire?
- What are the consequences of the differences between economic and political refugees and highly skilled / rich migrants?
- All other things equals, what are the compensation benefits or knowing 1, 2, 3 languages?
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Recommend Books to learn Mandarin
- Mandarin Chinese phrasebook & dictionary (pocket book from Berlitz)
- Reading & Writing Chinese, Simplified Character edition (William McNaughton, Tuttle Language Library
Recommend websites to learn Mandarin
I have seen highly literate Chinese people forget how to write certain characters in common words like "tin can", "knee", "screwdriver", "snap" (as in "to snap one's fingers"), "elbow", "ginger", "cushion", "firecracker", and so on.
Recommended PC software to learn Mandarin
Recommended Android Software to learn Mandarin
Sunday, March 14, 2010
List of English words I can't pronounce...
- threaten
- three/tree
- earth
- analytics
Monday, March 1, 2010
Intel VTune tools are broken on Windows 7 64-bit
For those like me having the same problems who are still looking for a free profiler that works and can't wait for Intel to fix VTune, check out AMD's CodeAnalyst.
And yes, the time-based profiling for this AMD product works for an Intel CPU (i5 in my case) on Windows 7 64-bit as I've just confirmed... and the download size is a fraction of VTune. You can also see this blog post if you don't believe me!
In CodeAnalyst, you can get functions level percentage by clicking your application process cpu usage bar in the system graph - it will then open a separate tab with function level samples.
Interesting that the trial software from a big company like Intel doesn't work as well as a free (as in beer) software from a company one tenth the size. The fact that Microsoft can't be bothered to provide such a basic development functionality except in their very costly Visual C++ premium edition is unforgivable... Doesn't Microsoft want to show off the fastest apps on their platform?
Note also how much of a pain and expenses are involved in profiling on win32 compared to apt-get'ing gprof and running that on any Linux box!
It's frustrating to have to go through registration screens, Internet Explorer specific sites and a few hundreds megabytes download to discover these facts...
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Need privacy? Use Enigmail!
- Do you want to send love letters that only your spouse should be able to read?
- Do you want to make sure that emails you received are indeed sent by the person it is supposed to come from (and not some impersonator)?
- Do you want to store confidential information at an untrusted location (on a network drive for example) without anyone else having access to that information?
- Do you want to exchange sensitive information such as passwords, personally identifying information or proprietary secrets?
- Do you want to limit the ability of hostile party to impersonate you electronically?
- GnuPG: a free software version of PGP
- Thunderbird: a well known email client that
- Enigmail: a plugin to Thunderbird
- be generous with your public key; you can and want to share it with everyone and distribute it through any public servers
- be very protective of your private key: although this is itself encrypted with a key phrase, losing or exposing it to untrusted software should be prevented
- don't lose it: your public/private key pair should become a way to enforce your identity
- one weak point in all this is the software you use to manage and use your keys; be sure you trust the source and where you got it from!
Monday, October 12, 2009
These Apartment Hunters Are the Happy Renters
When the LeCounts moved in this summer, they felt a huge weight lifted. If anything goes wrong, “we don’t have to shell out more money to have it repaired,” Mr. LeCount said. They no longer worry about parking, but drive right to their door. If they have many grocery bags, they wheel them up in a cart provided by the building.
Saturday, August 22, 2009
French: The Most Productive People In The World
The real message here is that the French are likely some of the most productive people in the entire world.
France has $36,500 GDP/Capita and works 1,453 hours per year. This equates to a GDP/Capita/Hour of $25.10. Americans, on the other hand, have $44,150 GDP/Capita but work 1,792 hours per year. Thus Americans only achieve $24.60 of GDP/Capita/Hour.
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Ugly
Everyone in the apartment complex I lived in knew who Ugly was. Ugly was the resident tomcat.Ugly loved three things in this world: fighting, eating garbage, and shall we say, love. The combination of these things combined with a life spent outside had their effect on Ugly.
To start with, he had only one eye, and where the other should have been was a gaping hole. He was also missing his ear on the same side, his left foot has appeared to have been badly broken at one time, and had healed at an unnatural angle, making him look like he was always turning the corner. His tail has long since been lost, leaving only the smallest stub, which he would constantly jerk and twitch. Ugly would have been a dark gray tabby striped-type, except for the sores covering his head, neck, even his shoulders with thick, yellowing scabs.
Every time someone saw Ugly there was the same reaction. "That's one UGLY cat!!"
All the children were warned not to touch him, the adults threw rocks at him, hosed him down, squirted him when he tried to come in their homes, or shut his paws in the door when he would not leave.
Ugly always had the same reaction. If you turned the hose on him, he would stand there, getting soaked until you gave up and quit. If you threw things at him, he would curl his lanky body around feet in forgiveness. Whenever he spied children, he would come running meowing frantically and bump his head against their hands, begging for their love. If you ever picked him up he would immediately begin suckling on your shirt, earrings, whatever he could find.
One day Ugly shared his love with the neighbors huskies. They did not respond kindly, and Ugly was badly mauled. From my apartment I could hear his screams, and I tried to rush to his aid. By the time I got to where he was laying, it was apparent Ugly's sad life was almost at an end.
Ugly lay in a wet circle, his back legs and lower back twisted grossly out of shape, a gaping tear in the white strip of fur that ran down his front. As I picked him up and tried to carry him home I could hear him wheezing and gasping, and could feel him struggling. I must be hurting him terribly I thought.
Then I felt a familiar tugging, sucking sensation on my ear - Ugly, in so much pain, suffering and obviously dying was trying to suckle my ear. I pulled him closer to me, and he bumped the palm of my hand with his head, then he turned his one golden eye towards me, and I could hear the distinct sound of purring. Even in the greatest pain, that ugly battled-scarred cat was asking only for a little affection, perhaps some compassion.
At that moment I thought Ugly was the most beautiful, loving creature I had ever seen. Never once did he try to bite or scratch me, or even try to get away from me, or struggle in any way. Ugly just looked up at me completely trusting in me to relieve his pain.
Ugly died in my arms before I could get inside, but I sat and held him for a long time afterwards, thinking about how one scarred, deformed little stray could so alter my opinion about what it means to have true pureness of spirit, to love so totally and truly. Ugly taught me more about giving and compassion than a thousand books, lectures, or talk show specials ever could, and for that I will always be thankful. He had been scarred on the outside, but I was scarred on the inside, and it was time for me to move on and learn to love truly and deeply. To give my total to those I cared for.
Many people want to be richer, more successful, well liked, beautiful, but for me, I will always try to be Ugly.
I wish I knew who wrote this awesomely moving piece, a piece that will probably become a classic fable in due time.
Sunday, August 9, 2009
Three Good Reasons To Liquidate Our Empire
According to the 2008 official Pentagon inventory of our military bases around the world, our empire consists of 865 facilities in more than 40 countries and overseas U.S. territories. We deploy over 190,000 troops in 46 countries and territories. In just one such country, Japan, at the end of March 2008, we still had 99,295 people connected to U.S. military forces living and working there -- 49,364 members of our armed services, 45,753 dependent family members, and 4,178 civilian employees. Some 13,975 of these were crowded into the small island of Okinawa, the largest concentration of foreign troops anywhere in Japan
Sunday, August 2, 2009
MV: the start of Silicon Valley
Sign on San Antonio road next to the shopping mall.
Site of first silicon device and research manufacturing company in Silicon Valley. The research conducted here led to the development of the Silicon Valley. 1956The old building now houses a mexican grocery.
SFO airport taxis are a ripoff
Friday, July 24, 2009
Social network "viruses"
Beware Netlog !!
I strongly suggest that you NOT click on anyone's Netlog sight should one come across your computer screen!! Through some highly deceptive ploy on their part, it will sign you up to join (even though you have not officially done so), and the result will be that your e-mail address book has been opened up and quite literally tapped into. Everyone in your e-mail address list will receive an "invitation" to look at your sight, thus setting off a chain reaction that taps into YOUR address book!!
Monday, July 13, 2009
Home: documentaire disponible jusqu'au 15 juillet
An inspiring women: Mary Lou Jepsen
Jepsen is a veteran of the MIT Media Lab, where she co-created the world's first holographic video system in 1989—back when computer imaging meant straight lines on a cathode screen. In 2005 Jepsen and Media Lab founder Nicholas Negroponte launched the nonprofit, open-source One Laptop Per Child program, which, as the name suggests, was an attempt to get a computer to every child in the world who needs one. The machines would have to work in extreme climate, amid spotty power and Internet connectivity, and be readable in direct sunlight.
[...]
Within two years they succeeded, creating a computer that can run on solar power, with five times the screen resolution of other laptops and a wireless system that creates its own network. The $100 price point has not been met, but $188 has. Jepsen did all that 12 years after receiving a diagnosis of a brain tumor in 1995 that had gone undetected for five years. She beat the disease but must take a dozen pills every day to keep her hormone output stable. Something of a self-taught expert on hormones, she now offers her insights to others who are diagnosed with the same illness. Jepsen is known among her friends as the "light lady" for her work with computer imaging. But the kind of light she's shedding goes far beyond the screen.
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Soy Story
So what's the bottom line? If you're a woman who has been diagnosed with or has a family history of breast cancer, it's probably safest to avoid soy. Men hoping to father children should probably limit the amount of soy they eat, and parents would be advised to follow the Israeli guidelines in serving soy foods to their kids, especially infants and toddlers.[...]When it comes to soy and health, there isn't much consensus. But there is one thing that both the anti- and pro-soy camps seem to agree on: Fermented soy is good for you.