cellio: (mandelbrot-2)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2017-04-02 08:42 pm

link round-up

I have some things collecting in tabs, so here's a hodge-podge:

siderea: (Default)

[personal profile] siderea 2017-04-03 02:34 am (UTC)(link)
David Director Friedman has an interesting idea about applying economics to teaching -- specifically, grading exams.

Er, that is precisely how the SAT is graded, or was back when I took it in the 1980s. Or rather almost precisely. ET gives 25%. You have to beat one in four odds, as test prep tutors teach everyone minimaxing multiple choice questions.
siderea: (Default)

[personal profile] siderea 2017-04-03 02:42 am (UTC)(link)
A lot of the Rands article The New Manager Death-Spiral sounds very familiar.

There's so much about Scadian culture that makes me want to throw up my hands in disgust and never think about it again, and then I read something like this and am reminded of why there's so much to love about it. I still have no idea how Carolingia, if not the entire Knowne World, got the "leadership means delegation" thing so very deeply and even militantly; I wish I did so I could spread it around.
kyleri: (Default)

[personal profile] kyleri 2017-04-03 05:40 am (UTC)(link)
How do we know Humpty Dumpty is an egg? The rhyme doesn't say so.

Brain. Broken. *wanders off, shaking head*
madfilkentist: (Default)

[personal profile] madfilkentist 2017-04-03 10:27 am (UTC)(link)
Worse yet, "the border" is defined as any location within 100 miles of an international border or seacoast. Most of the US population lives in the "border zone." In the Southwest, people routinely have to submit to the Border Patrol in the course of their normal travels. It's a police state.
metahacker: A picture of white-socked feet, as of a person with their legs crossed. (Default)

[personal profile] metahacker 2017-04-03 03:43 pm (UTC)(link)
I read that fantasy/western thing, and I kind of disagree.

Westerns are traditionally about the loner, or sometimes the posse, righting injustice and then riding off into the sunset. Fantasy novels, at least the murder-hobo ones inspired by D&D games, are more about a persistent party of people righting small wrongs and making a profit along the way, while getting more and more powerful. Or they're about a quest to find and push the Boss Lever, probably after a coming-of-age subplot that is never found in Westerns. (There is no "this is your father's sword" trope, or "you come from mysterious parents"--the Lone Ranger shows up in mid adulthood, not at adolescence.)

Put another way, fantasy is about gathering more and more personal power, possibly so you can then fight the Big Bad and restore the world to how it was. But the emblem of the Western is the Colt revolver for a reason--it was marketed as "the equalizer", and it made it possible for each person to mete out justice as they individually saw fit. But it was bounded--there was no leveling up from there (aside from the "hottest gun in the west" dueling culture).

Anyway. Maybe I'll write a rebuttal. ;)