Archive for August, 2006

One of my photos chosen for BBC Photographer of the Year 2006!

Posted in Events, Photography on August 28th, 2006

At attention
I’m absolutely flabbergasted! The pictured above got selected from over 2,000 entries as one of the 12 finalists in Round 3 (whose theme was “Uniform”) of the BBC’s Photographer of the Year 2006 competition, and I only just found out! I submitted this (and some other photos) 2+ weeks ago, and then forgot all about it due to being swamped with semester prep. (Sadly, it took a Google alert to bring it to my attention, which says way too much about my abysmal mail spool management.)

The voting ended days ago (so I can’t beg for votes, or even vote myself), and it looks like it died pretty bad in the popular vote (almost certainly small single digit percentages). But, hey, being chosen as one of 12 out of over 2K is pretty darn cool! Amazing!

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Hello, Babylon!

Posted in Music on August 28th, 2006

Goodbye, Bablylon box
Last week I stumbled across the amazing little Dust-to-digital label courtesy of an intriguing track that wandered by on Pandora. I immediately fell completely in love and couldn’t get my credit card out fast enough. It was their Fonotone retrospective that initially brought me there from Pandora, but it was their amazing collection of early religious music, Goodbye, Babylon that stole my heart when I got there. The order was completed in but moments, and the last few days have been spent trying to focus on getting ready for classes (which started today) and not thinking too much about that (hopefully) wondrous thing that was headed my way.

Today it came.

Ohhhhhhhh, man.

These ancient voices are whispering and shouting out of my speakers, carrying their history and culture and lives out from those dusty grooves and into my dimly lit room. I may not be able to touch them, but they can sure touch me.

(Yeah, I realize that “ancient” here means my grandparents’ and, sometimes, my parents’ lifetimes, but in the world of pre-fab pop radio most of this music is as alien as Nepalese herding songs.)

I’m only part way through the second of the five CDs of songs (plus an entire sixth disc of recorded sermons!), and I can tell that this is an absolute winner, destined to have a pride of place with great collections like Harry Smith’s Anthology of American folk music and Alan Lomax’s Sounds of the south. There are some beloved old treasures (”Present joys”, Blind Willie Johnson’s devastating “Lord, I just can’t keep from crying”, and Carter Family gems) as well as tons of great stuff I’ve never heard before. One of the most impressive things about it is the sheer diversity and scope of the collection. Most collections tend to be fairly focussed, but here Mahalia rubs shoulders with the Louvins (literally - one her songs immediately follows one of theirs) and the Stonemans share space with the Holy Ghost Sanctified Singers (an African-American gospel jug band!). I become incoherent in the face of all this wonderful music…

The cotton cross logo from the set.
And the book is equally spifferific. Over 200 pages of essays and quality notes on every track on all six CDs, complete with the lyrics and the relevant biblical passages. “Present joys” has been a favorite of mine for nearly a decade since I first heard it on Harry Smith’s Anthology, but I’ve never really had a clue what they were singing; I just loved the sound of it. The booklet here not only provides the words, it reproduces the sheet music (for this song) with all four parts, so I can finally untangle the harmonies and actually follow along. Purrrrrrr…

If I had time I’d take some pictures of the set and post them, but I’ve got too much else on my plate, so I’ll content myself with the Amazon shot at the top. It comes in a true wood box, with raw cotton padding. The design and typography of the whole thing is just super cool, riffing on the idiosyncratic writing styles of the time of the recordings:

The best arranged music and hymns
yet published.

By authors of wide reputation.

In fairness it’s a lot more cool than practical. The CDs (which are in these cool card sleeves) tend to slide around in the box, and bits of the cotton end up all over the place. I’ll rip the whole set ASAP, and I’ll probably end up mostly listening to it on the computer, with the book close to hand at the beginning.

Truly wondrous stuff. Not cheap, but I think absolutely worth it. It’s sets like this that make clear the powerful distinction between music as culture and life, and music as disposable, consumable fluff. This is music you could live on. (Even if, like me, you’re not a religious person.)

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McTell: They got me killed for forging

Posted in Music, Politics, Writing on August 26th, 2006

The lady sings the (wood frog) blues
I was listening to my American Roots Music Radio on Pandora and this smoldering couplet drifted by:

They got me killed for forging
and I can’t even write my name
— “Death cell blues” by by Blind Willie McTell

Man, there’s an awful lot of history and commentary there in 13 words.

I had to rush right out and buy it, and used that as an excuse to try out emusic, which Chris Hamrin had been saying some nice things about.

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Some of the coolest cycling jerseys ever!

Posted in Computing, Education, Events, Science on August 24th, 2006

One of the two MIT cycling team jerseys signed by Nobel laureates and Turing Award winners
The MIT cycling team is auctioning off two signed jerseys as a fund raiser. But instead of getting them signed by atheletes as one might expect, they’re signed by a pretty nifty collection of Nobel laureates and Turing Award winners who currently call MIT home. They’re auctioning off two jerseys via eBay (here and there), and the auctions end on 30 Aug. Both auctions are currently under $2, which is pretty darn amazing for a jersey signed by such luminaries. So go bid quick in support of both cycling and science!

The signatories are Wolfgang Ketterle (’01 Nobel Prize in Physics), Robert Horvitz (’02 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine), Ron Rivest (’02 Turning Award), Philip Sharp (’93 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine), and Jerome Friedman (’90 Nobel Prize in Physics).

Thanks to my wondrous sister (both a scientist and cyclist) for the pointer.

Now I’m off to hear the welcome speech for our new students, the first such speech (at least here) for our new Chancellor. Should be cool.

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Wikis to save the patent office?

Posted in Computing, Science on August 23rd, 2006

Spotting
In a rare moment of potential sense in the U.S. patent, people are seriously discussing the possibility of using wikis to support the public review of patent applications. This is particularly exciting given the particularly sorry state of software patents, where lots of common sense ideas are granted broad, sweeping (and wildly chilling) patents, often when there was clear prior art that the Patent Office didn’t find.

It’s interesting that IBM is a big player in this. On the one hand, they have a ton of patents (including some pretty silly software patents) that are worth an enormous amount. On the other hand, bad software patents have the potential to really stunt certain kinds of open source development, and IBM has seriously hitched their wagon onto the open source train.

Tip of the hat to David Loewi for the original pointer to this Chronical of Higher Ed piece, which was in turned based on this (slightly) longer Fortune piece.

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Thunderbird keeps dying on me

Posted in Computing on August 23rd, 2006

Thunderbird logo
All of a sudden Thunderbird (which I’ve used for years and am generally very happy with) keeps crapping out on me at weird times, often when I’m not even using it. I’ll be happily working away in some other program, or even away from the computer, and find that Thunderbird has died for no obvious reason. This is happening on a number of different machines (all Macs) running the latest Thunderbird (1.5.0.5). In fact I think the problem may have started when I moved up to 1.5.0.5.

Hmph.

A few hours later: OK, I think I’ve solved the problem. A little forum searching got me thinking that the problem was that my (very large) mailboxes hadn’t been compacted in about forever. So I turned on the “Clean up (’Expunge’) Inbox on exit” option in the account settings. Since doing that Thunderbird has worked beautifully again, both at the office and at home. Amazing what a simple little checkbox can do…

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Remember the day no one died

Posted in Events, General, Politics on August 19th, 2006

Earlier in the year, the folks at Arms and Influence made this fairly remarkable proposal:

Once upon a time, Americans went to the brink of nuclear war without losing their wits or sacrificing the Constitution. Help make the anniversary of the 13th and final day of the Cuban Missile Crisis, October 28th, a national day of remembrance.

What an amazing idea. Commemerate a time when we actually used courage and intelligent discussion to avoid blowing the crap out of somebody. A moment where military and political strength came from thoughtful wrestling with complex issues. A moment of enormous stress, but where the immediate response was not to eviscerate civil liberties. A moment we can actually be really proud of.

I definitely recommend reading the full piece; count me in!

Kennedy's cabinet meeting during the Cuban missle crisis

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Death by PowerPoint…literally…

Posted in Computing, Education, General, Politics, Science, Writing on August 19th, 2006

OK, I promise to stop with the PowerPoint bashing Real Soon Now, but the situation is just so terrible that it’s hard to walk away.

In reading this thread from Tufte’s Q&A thing (sort of like his blog), he points to this post from the Arms and Influence blog, which quotes Thomas Ricks’ book Fiasco. Apparently the geniuses in the Bush Misadministration have taken to replacing direct orders and clear plans with PowerPoint Phluff, leaving the well meaning folks at the Pentagon struggling to make sense of it all. Check out, for example, this truly wondrous bit of Phluff that purports to explain how something as complex as the occupation phase of the current Iraq war was going to work:
PowerPoint Phluff explaining how the occupation phase of the current Iraq war was going to work.
Ah, right. I know exactly what to do now…

It’s worth repeating the conclusion from the Arms and Influence piece:

The Iraq disaster did not happen because someone in the JTF-IV planning group or the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) couldn’t write a good PowerPoint presentation. The problem was that anyone used PowerPoint to plan a war. Ricks is absolutely right in saying that only the most careless individual, in love with information technology for its own sake, would misuse technology in such an obvious fashion. Unfortunately, these are the people who planned and executed the Iraq war, and many of them are still prosecuting America’s wars.

BTW, Ricks give an excellent interview on The Daily Show recently. I suspect that Fiasco would be a very worthwhile (if quite depressing) read. After a little skimming I also was surprisingly impressed by the Arms and Influence blog (the title didn’t seem like my cup of tea). His description of flying on the day when the “liquids plot” broke in Britain is thoughtful and retains an impressive sense of perspective under difficult circumstances.

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More fun PowerPoint thwacking

Posted in Computing, Education, General, Science, Writing on August 19th, 2006

I just finished my re-read of Tufte’s excellent thumping of PowerPoint and there were two more quotes I couldn’t resist sharing:

At a minimum, we should choose presentation tools that do no harm to content. Yet PowerPoint promotes a cognitive style that disrupts and trivializes evidence. PP presentations too often resemble a school play: very loud, very slow, and very simple. Since 1010 to 1011 PP slides are produced yearly, that is a lot of harm to communication with colleagues.

and

Rather than providing information, PowerPoint allows speakers to pretend they are giving a real talk, and audiences to pretend that they are listening. This prankish conspiracy against evidence and thought should provoke this question, Why are we having this meeting?

Amen, brother!

So pull together $7 and go buy the damn pamphlet already. You really don’t want to give another presentation without it.

Cover of Cognitive Style of PowerPoint by Edward R. Tufte

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A wonderfully damning indictment of PowerPoint

Posted in Computing, General, Science, Writing on August 19th, 2006

In prepration for coordinating our CSci senior seminar course here at UMM, I’m reading the second edition of Edward R. Tufte’s excellent pamphlet The cognitive style of PowerPoint: Pitching out currupts within. I’d used the first edition a few years ago and really liked it, and the second is just has brilliant.

Tufte’s work is massively quotable, so it’s hard to choose, but I think this bit pretty much sums up the deal:

Both the Columbia Accident Investigation Board and the Return to Flight Task Group were filled with smart experienced people with spectacular credentials. These review boards examined what is probably the best evidence available on PP [PowerPoint] for technical work: hundreds of PP decks from a high-IQ government agency thoroughly practiced in PP. Both review boards concluded that (1) PowerPoint is an inappropriate tool for engineering reports, presentations, documentation and (2) the technical report is superior to PP. Matched up against alternative tools, PowerPoint lost.

The short version is that PowerPoint frankly sucks as a medium for conveying complex and information rich material. For example,

Compared with the worldwide publications shown here, the PP [PowerPoint] statistical graphics are the thinnest of all, except for those in Pravda in 1982, back when that newspaper operated as the major propaganda instrument of the Soviet communist party and a totalitarian government. Doing a bit better than Pravda is not good enough…

It’s a brilliant pamphlet and only costs $7, so there’s really no excuse for rushing out and getting one if you haven’t done so yet.

I’m particularly struck by this because a few days ago we had two classic mis-uses of PowerPoint at our opening faculty/staff convocation of the school year. One used a retina destroying color scheme motivated (I think) by a desire to work with our school colors, which almost certainly weren’t chosen for their typographic suitability, and another presenter suffered from the all too familiar problem of constantly jumping to the wrong slide and struggling to navigate to the desired location. These were bright, skilled people who regularly (and rightly) represent our institution out in the world, and their choice and use of PowerPoint made them look, well, silly.

Sigh.

Much like Peter Norvig’s excellent re-casting of the Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address as a PowerPoint presentation:

Good morning. Just a second while I get this connection to work. Do I press this button here? Function-F7? No, that’s not right. Hmmm. Maybe I’ll have to reboot. Hold on a minute. Um, my name is Abe Lincoln and I’m your president. While we’re waiting, I want to thank Judge David Wills, chairman of the committee supervising the dedication of the Gettysburg cemetery. It’s great to be here, Dave, and you and the committee are doing a great job. Gee, sometimes this new technology does have glitches, but we couldn’t live without it, could we? Oh - is it ready? OK, here we go

If you’ve never read it, drop everything and go there now!

Braided river

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