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2009.11.30
Great Lines
Excellent use of slow shutter speed.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 11:19 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.29
The Condition of Man
I'm thankful for such a boring, safe life after reading this.
The comments there also detail gruesome news.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 10:32 PM in Politics, World War IV | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.28
Gender Gap
WSJ via Instapundit:
The unemployment rate for men, 11.4%, based on seasonally adjusted data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, outpaces the rate for women, 8.8%. We now have the largest jobless gender gap since tracking became possible in 1948. The gap reached its previous peak, 2.5 points, in 1967 and 1978. Today's gap has exceeded that for three months. It's endured at two points or above for an unprecedented length, eight months and counting.
As of the end of October, the U.S. had lost 7.3 million jobs in this Great Recession. Men account for 5.3 million of that loss. The shift is so dramatic that women now constitute 49.9% of the work force and will soon outnumber men.
I blame The PatriarchyTM.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 11:11 PM in Economics, USA | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.27
The Burning of Innocence
We typically think of terrorism as a political act.
But sometimes it’s very personal. It wasn’t a government or a guerrilla insurgency that threw acid on this woman’s face in Pakistan. It was a young man whom she had rejected for marriage. As the United States ponders what to do in Afghanistan — and for that matter, in Pakistan — it is wise to understand both the political and the personal, that the very ignorance and illiteracy and misogyny that create the climate for these acid attacks can and does bleed over into the political realm. Nicholas Kristof, the New York Times op-ed columnist who traveled to Pakistan last year to write about acid attacks, put it this way in an essay at the time: “I’ve been investigating such acid attacks, which are commonly used to terrorize and subjugate women and girls in a swath of Asia from Afghanistan through Cambodia (men are almost never attacked with acid). Because women usually don’t matter in this part of the world, their attackers are rarely prosecuted and acid sales are usually not controlled. It’s a kind of terrorism that becomes accepted as part of the background noise in the region. ...
Click here to read further and view the horrifying results of terror.
Link via David Thompson.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 09:29 PM in World War IV | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.26
No Fat For You!
Metro via Instapundit:
When a small church comes to the Bowery Mission bearing fried chicken with trans fat, unwittingly breaking the law, they’re told “thank you.” Then workers quietly chuck the food, mission director Tom Bastile said.
“It’s always hard for us to do,” Basile said. “We know we have to do it.”
Reminds me of a grand policy started during the Great Depression: pay farmers to not grow food. You know, so that they can keep food price stable and high and keep on voting Democrat.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 07:03 PM in Politics, USA | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
2009.11.25
Hot Stuff
James Delingpole writes an excellent article on Climategate. It's amazing to read so much concentrated deception from top-level scientists -- considering that their dishonesty would eventually be shown as such since not all scientists are fabricators.
Of course, they figured out a way to get back at honest researchers. Go there to see a sample of:
a long series of communications discussing how best to squeeze dissenting scientists out of the peer review process. How, in other words, to create a scientific climate in which anyone who disagrees with AGW can be written off as a crank, whose views do not have a scrap of authority.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 10:04 PM in Politics | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.24
GDP Not So Hot
You may recall my warning that the 3.5 percent figure in the Advance report would be revised downward on the day it was published. Now, according to the BEA's newly revised estimate, only 1.3 percent of GDP growth was NOT provided by Cash for Clunkers. So, if you consider the even larger stimulus provided by the $8k housing credit, which is not separately accounted for, it is quite obvious that economic activity is still contracting even if the GDP statistic is not.
It's like watching someone inflate a dead horse and then viewing the horse deflate in jittery slow motion. Soon, others come to the painful conclusion that the horse has been dead for some time.
Okay, that was a weird analogy.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 11:39 PM in Economics, USA | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.23
Great Scott!
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 06:51 PM in Pop Culture, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
2009.11.22
Perky Pomegranates
Such naughty produce blogging, I bet it would get banned in Saudi Arabia.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 11:57 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.21
Fashion Sense
This chick is rocking it.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 10:50 AM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.20
CG or Real?
The HDR makes the image look like something out of a Final Fantasy movie.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 11:52 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.19
The Future is Fusion
Check out these photos of a 24-foot screen.
That's right, not 24-inch but 24-foot!
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 09:27 PM in Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
2009.11.18
Clarity and Precision
An excellent article about sound quality at Trusted Reviews.
a few people in the last six months or so - people who take their audio gear seriously and have spent thousands of pounds on Hi-Fi equipment - have admitted privately to us that 256kbps MP3 is easily good enough for serious listening, and that they struggle to hear much difference over 192kbps MP3 in many situations. This got us thinking: when we claim that we can tell the difference between a 320kbps MP3 and a FLAC encode, are we really hearing some substantial difference, or are we merely telling ourselves that one is better than another?
It's tough to tell apart music encoded at 320kbps with MP3 when compared to a FLAC encode. However, a 192kbps encoded MP3 has lost a few important qualities.
- The bass is not as deep. If your CD music is loaded with booms, then each punch of it will sound like an anvil being dropped. A high compressed MP3 will reduce that sound to a dropping of an empty cereal box.
- The instruments get muddled. Classical music with FLAC sounds incredible. The instruments sound crisp and clear. When one compresses the music, the instruments seem to overlap; their sounds fade. The beauty and skill of the musicians sadly gets jumbled up.
- Certain sounds are almost impossible to hear. Often, very faint cues that add a nice layer to the music are hard to hear on an MP3. Though, it's possible that the fault lies with the audio equipment one uses to listen to the MP3 rather than the compressed file itself. If you're not familiar with Grado, Logitech or Creative, then it's likely that you're not getting the optimal audio experience.
Link via Instapundit.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 10:29 PM in Life, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.17
Not My Theory
Still, I'm kinda vexed.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 12:04 AM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.16
Curious Supply and Demand
Greg Mankiw:
Let's review some basic principles of supply and demand: If a government policy increases the demand for a service, the price of that service tends to rise. If the government prevents prices from rising, shortages develop. The quantity provided is then determined by supply and not demand.
What happens then? Click here to find out.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 06:17 PM in Economics, Politics | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.15
Not At Ease
Look at those trees!
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 03:30 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.14
Shards of Glass
Ouch! I would never buy one made of glass. What I have is solid oak.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 11:42 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.13
The Rise of the Cyborgs
A stunning photo in this post at Instapundit.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 07:55 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.12
Allah What?
Someone left this eloquent comment here recently:
fuck u alllll ,,, allah first ,,, fuck america and fuck israel and fuck you all ,,,
allah first
allah first
allah first
allah first
allah first
allah first
allah first
Allah deleted.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 09:33 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
2009.11.11
Those Capitalist Chinese!
Check out the Samizdata quote of the day.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 10:24 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.10
50mm for Wall-E?
I had thought a wider angle would be more to his liking.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 10:17 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.09
Fair and Blind
TOO MUCH TIME INDOORS causes myopia?
I've wondered about that since I have myopia. There weren't any sports or activities at my school in Saudi Arabia. With the weekly exception of a cricket game with friends, I spent practically all my time indoors reading novels and magazines. It was the same in Pakistan; though, the cricket frequency was a bit higher.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 10:14 PM in Life | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack
2009.11.08
The Moon of Fire
The title of this post makes some sense when you see this.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 11:17 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.07
In Lothlorien
A beautiful, blue / purplish capture by a photographer.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 11:02 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.06
Clever Canine
It's something about the breed, perhaps their eyes; they just look smart.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 10:54 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
2009.11.05
A Jubilant Zombie
One doesn't see many like him.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 10:54 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.04
A Topsy-turvy World
Classical Liberal provides this link in a previous post:
The trailer for 2012 plays like a highlight reel of civilization falling apart all over the world, but it's religion that gets the brunt of Emmerich's digital pounding: A Buddhist temple gets hit by a tidal wave. The Sistine Chapel crumbles to pieces as a split tears right down the middle of Michelangeo's painting of God touching Adam's finger. St. Peter's Basilica rolls over onto a crowd of devoted worshipers. Rio de Janeiro's iconic Christ the Reedemer statue falls to earth as its wracked by shockwaves. The White House is even crushed by, of all things, an aircraft carrier. But eagle eyed fans of watching organized religion get its disaster porn comeuppance will have noticed that there are no Islamic landmarks on the CGI chopping block.
Westerners won't even show a CGI Kaaba going down in flames -- which alone would be worth the price of the ticket -- and yet vast majorities of Muslims in Arabia and Pakistan celebrated when iconic buildings were annihilated and thousands of souls extinguished on that day in 2001. One side doesn't even want to offend the other while the other seeks joy in the slaughter of its opponent.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 10:35 PM in Pop Culture, USA | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
2009.11.03
American Coolness
A LEATHERMAN IS always in good taste.
Indeed. I've bought only one pocket knife in this decade and it was a Leatherman. (Hmm, that could be a nice slogan / advertisement for Leatherman...)
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 09:14 PM in Life | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
2009.11.02
American Leftists
Right-Of-Center Bloggers Select Their Least Favorite People On The Left at Right Wing News.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 05:38 PM in Politics, USA | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
2009.11.01
A Bit Odd
Instead of admiring the subject, I like the cool color of the sky.
Posted by Isaac Schrödinger at 10:50 PM in General | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack



