random bits
Jul. 22nd, 2011 04:54 pmBuying subcutaneous fluids from the vet is expensive, except that they had a price-match policy so it wasn't. But they restricted that policy, so I asked for a prescription. I was going to fill it online but it'd be easier not to, so today I talked with someone at CVS who determined that yes in fact they could order these (by the case -- which is fine). So today I dropped off the prescription and met the full force of the paperwork engine. After supplying the cat's birth date, drug allergies, insurance information, primary care physician, and a few other things, we were ready to go. I wonder if Giant Eagle, where I had the Prednizone filled (but they don't do fluids), just punted on this info, filled in N/A, or what.
I got a postcard notice of a class-action suit this week. They know their typical audience: "how much can I get?" and "how do I get my money?" were in bold; "what is the suit about?" took rather more digging. I've gotten money from a few class-action suits over the years (and I'll send this one in too), but I always do so with some degree of ambivalence, not knowing which ones are real (and people should be compensated) and which are "it's easier to settle than prove plaintiffs are on crack" -- and in the latter case, how I feel about benefiting from ill-gotten gains given that the defendants are going to pay the money out anyway. But I also admit that thus far I haven't been motivated enough to actually research any of these cases... the moral high ground is way over there, not here where I'm standing, it would appear.
Links:
The comic on this Language Log post made me laugh. Three negatives in six words indeed!
In the spirit of the song, kinda: Weird Al, Stop forwarding that crap to me (video).
Google+ circles you can use. Social networking: new media, same old problems.
short takes
May. 1st, 2011 09:35 pmDear Netflix: I appreciate the convenience of your recent change to treat an entire TV series as one unit in the streaming queue, instead of one season at a time like before. However, in doing so you have taken away the ability to rate individual seasons of shows, which is valuable data. It also makes me wonder, when you recommend things to me based on my ratings, if you are giving all ratings the same weight -- 200 hours of a long-running TV show should maybe count differently than a two-hour movie. Just sayin'.
These
photos by Doug Welch are stunning. Link from
thnidu.
How Pixar fosters collective
creativity was an interesting read on fostering a good workplace.
Link from
nancylebov.
Speaking of the workplace, I enjoyed reading
how to run your career like a gentlewoman and several
other articles I found there by following links. Link from
_subdivisions_.
Rube Goldberg meets J.S. Bach, from several people. Probably fake, but it amused me anyway. (This is a three-minute Japanese commercial. Do commercials that long run on TV, or would this have been theatrical, or what?)
Speaking of ads, in advance of our SCA group's election for a new baron and baroness today, the current baron sent around a pointer to this video about an upcoming British referendum on voting systems. Well-done! (Of course, I agree with both the system and the species they advocate. :-) ) I wish we had preference ballots in the US.
A while back a coworker pointed me to how to make a hamentashen Sierpinski triangle. Ok ok, some of my browser tabs have established roots; Purim was a while ago. But it's still funny, and I may have to make that next year.
Speaking of geeky Jewish food, a fellow congregant pointed me to The Kosher Guide to Imaginary Animals. which looks like fun. I've certainly found myself in that kind of conversation at times (e.g. is unicorn kosher? well, is it a goat (medieval) or a horse (Disney)?). Some of you have too, I know. :-)
dr_zrfq passed on this article about
a dispute between a church and a bar. Nothing special about that, you
say? In this case the church members prayed to block it, the bar was
struck by lightning, the bar owner sued, and the church denied responsibility.
I love the judge's comment on the case: “I don't know how I’m going to decide
this, but as it appears from the paperwork, we have a bar owner who believes
in the power of prayer, and an entire church congregation that does not.”
47 seconds of cuteness:
elk calf playing in water, from
shalmestere.
I don't remember where I found the link to these t-shirts, but there are some cute ones there.
short takes
Mar. 8th, 2011 10:19 pm(My question, still not satisfyingly answered as this recipe didn't do it so well, was: how do you get the cheese to stay on the fish? I was speculating about egg, as you often do for breading, but this recipe called for olive oil. I ended up with fish and cheese in proximity to each other, which was tasty but not what I was going for.)
Larry Osterman passed along this video showing upgrades from Windows 1.0 through to Windows 7 with all intermediate steps (except Windows ME, which doesn't play the upgrade game well, it appears). It was amusing to see what did and didn't survive upgrade (Doom almost hit 100%!), and amazing that it actually worked.
Bohemian Rhapsody on
ukelele (video), from
siderea. I didn't think I could
imagine it, and I was right. Nifty!
Cool bedroom, and not just for kids! Link from
talvinamarich.
The internet is for cats. Cats in sinks. Be careful; this is like TV Tropes on four legs. Don't say I didn't warn you.
And finishing up with another one from
siderea:
this funny ad for milk (involves cats).
link round-up
Feb. 3rd, 2011 10:21 pmI thought this picture from APotD of the moon and Venus over Switzerland was a painting rather than a photo when I first saw it. Pretty!
I've often wondered what "X% chance of rain" really means -- anywhere in the geographic area during that time period, or something more specific? I found this answer informative.
The comic in a recent Language Log post made me laugh out loud.
Speaking of language, so did this 101-word story (link from
This elaborate prank on a phone company with terrible customer service is making the rounds. As
Who knew Facebook was so complicated? -- a flow chart for one "what comment to post" decision tree.
Reminder: the Jewish Life and Learning project over at Area 51 is still looking for people interested in participating in a beta.
some reading material
Dec. 20th, 2010 10:54 pm
What
Level 3 v. Comcast says about the FCC's obsolescence is a
good explanation of what is going on with throttling internet traffic
(link, as with many on this topic, from
osewalrus).
goldsquare writes about why
you should care.
Law and the Multiverse
(now syndicated at
law_multiverse) does fun legal analysis
of superhero law. From their "about" page:
"If there's one thing comic book nerds like doing it's over-thinking the
smallest details. Here we turn our attention to the hypothetical legal
ramifications of comic book tropes, characters, and powers. Just a few
examples: Are mutants a protected class? Who foots the bill when a hero
damages property while fighting a villain? What happens legally when a
character comes back from the dead?" Thanks to
anastasiav
for pointing it out.
The first truly honest
privacy policy sounds about right to me. Link from
cahwyguy.
The semicolon wars
discusses differences in programming languages and some of the religious
wars that have been fought over them. Thanks to
nancylebov
for the link.
Thanks to
brokengoose for pointing me to
Kindle Feeder, which supports
RSS feeds to the Kindle. Now, do any of you know how to get an RSS
feed to cough up the entire article instead of just the first paragraph?
If the publisher didn't set it up that way is there anything I can do about
it?
short takes (link round-up, mostly)
Apr. 4th, 2010 02:12 pmTangentially-related: a short discussion of overly-pediatric seders.
Same season, different religion: researchers have found that portion sizes in depictions of the last supper have been rising for a millennium, though I note the absence of an art historian on the research team.
Same season, no religion: I won't repeat most of the links that were circulating on April 1, but I haven't seen these new Java annotations around much. Probably only amusing to programmers, but very amusing to this one.
Not an April-fool's prank:
xiphias is planning a response to
the Tea Party rally on Boston Common on April 14: he's holding a tea party.
You know, with fine china and actual tea and people wearing their Sunday
(well, Wednesday) best. It sounds like fun.
Edit (almost forgot!): things I learned from British folk songs.
From
nancylebov:
Harry Potter and the
Methods of Rationality looks like it'll be a good read. Or, as
siderea put it, Richard Feynman goes to Hogwarts.
Real Live Preacher's account of a Quaker meeting.
Thanks to
jducoeur for a pointer to
this meta community over
on Dreamwidth.
I remember reading a blog post somewhere about someone who rigged up a camera to find out what his cat did all day. Now someone is selling that. Tempting!
In case you're being too productive, let me help with this cute flash game (link from Dani).
yes we talk like this (Hebrew edition)
Feb. 7th, 2010 10:09 pmMe: Does "Haman" mean something other than the villain in the book of Ester?
Dani: Desert food.
Me: Oh good. "Ta'am Haman" had the potential to be highly disturbing...
Dani: Nothing good could come from the direction you were going.
Me: I know. Maybe next time you could help me out with capitalization or punctuation or something?
That said, I'm not sure there is a consistent way to transliterate definite articles that get pasted onto the front of the noun. Sometimes you see something like "ha-man" or (in a title) "HaMan", but not always.
(If you've read this far and don't know what I'm talking about, "man" is the manna that the Israelites ate in the desert for 40 years, and "ta'am" means "taste" or "flavor".)
conversation snippet
Dec. 31st, 2009 12:07 amMe: Just out of curiosity, this place in the boilerplate where you cite [a particular act], don't you have the name wrong? It doesn't really matter, I don't think, because this is in a section heading and you have it right down in the legally-binding paragraphs below, but just checking...?
Lawyer: I never noticed that bug in our template before.
Me: My work here is done. :-)
My professional training follows me everywhere, I tell you!
(Medical power-of-attorney, and it's HIPAA, not HIPPA.)
a few links to share
Dec. 25th, 2009 03:58 pmFrom
Toleration versus diversity (David Friedman) was an interesting read for me.
Chat-based ask-the-rabbi service, for when email is too slow and asynchronous. Apparently they also do SMS. (It's Chabad, though they don't make it particularly easy to discover that.)
very wrong
Nov. 16th, 2009 11:07 pmThe world's largest gummy bear (video), via
If you're on the run, maybe you shouldn't update Facebook with where you are... and it gets worse. Via
The reviews of this product are entertaining (via
18-button mouse (really), via
link round-up
Oct. 27th, 2009 10:48 pm
Pumpkins in
prison, a photo by
ticklethepear. (Though it looks
like they might be able to break out if they really had to.)
dagonell wrote that we show our humanity most in how we
treat the weak, such as this
aid for an ailing penguin. Neat!
From a locked post (I'll happily credit you if you like): Shopping while Black: a social experiment.
From a coworker: this wedding gift won't open until it's in the right location. Only 50 tries. Fun!
What cats would say to you if they could talk (GraphJam).
I enjoy Bill Walsh's writings on language and copy-editing, such as common punctuation problems. And sometimes he makes me laugh, as in this work of a punctuation vigilante.
(Aside: RSS feeds to LJ seem to be broken again.)
random bits
Oct. 5th, 2009 11:08 pmLast week Rabbi Symons and I completed our study of midrash on the Akeidah. (I still owe a couple write-ups.) Saying kaddish d'rabbanan at that point was quite satisfying. He asked me what's next, I said I picked last time, and he proposed something that sounds good to me. (I'll reveal it after he confirms that there is a sufficient body of interesting material.)
A new Dunkin' Donuts opened in Squirrel Hill last week. I knew they were getting kosher certification for the doughnuts; I hadn't realized that they were getting it for everything. So they sell breakfast sandwiches but that's not really bacon or sausage. (I haven't heard if it's turkey or soy.)
Two interesting links from
From
From a coworker: unfortunate domain names.
short takes
Sep. 20th, 2009 11:02 pmThe husband of a member of the Debatable Choir posted video from our Pennsic performance.
I didn't know enough chemistry to fully parse this
geeky comic
by
ohiblather, but I still laughed out loud when I saw it.
xiphias reports
research that seems
to be begging for an IgNobel award. As he points out, it's worthy
because first it makes you laugh and then it makes you think. I mean,
what publishable conclusion would you expect from researchers
doing an MRI on a dead salmon?
I feel fortunate that "talk like a pirate day" fell on Rosh Hashana, meaning
I was shielded from most of the antics. But I enjoyed
top ten
halachic problems for a Jewish pirate, forwarded by
dglenn.
Should I be worried that I have defensible answers for several of them?
Fun website mash-ups
from
metahacker and others. From one of the comments:
"OKAmazon: People who had sex with this person also liked..."
Signal boost:
kyleri makes hand creams, lip balms, soaps, and
similar items, and she is currently
having a sale.
I bought some of her creams at Pennsic and am happy with the results.
I haven't turned off the spelling checker in Firefox on this machine yet because I do sometimes make typos that it catches, but this post almost made me do so. :-)
link round-up
Sep. 7th, 2009 03:30 pm
Wrong tomorrow tracks testable
predictions made by public figures to see how they turned out.
(Link from
nancylebov.)
The next weird financial gimmick -- life-insurance futures. I can see
all sorts of ways this could go wrong; do they? (Link from
sethg.)
Unskilled and
Unaware of It: How Difficulties in Recognizing One's Own Incompetence Lead
to Inflated Self-Assessments (PDF), aka the incompetence study. It's
76 pages long so I haven't read it yet, but I don't want to lose it.
(Link from
siderea.)
We've just finished mid-year performance reviews at my company, so No Surprises from Rands in Repose caught my eye. "The surprise has nothing to do with money. We’re not talking about compensation here. Yes, you did a splendid job this year and I think they should be throwing raises, bonuses, and stock your way. But it’s even better if it’s clear why you think you did a splendid job. Can you articulate it? And you might know, but does your boss? Can he explain to you, in detail, how well you kicked ass? I didn’t think so."
"Dear Old People. We don't want to kill you.
You're our parents and grandparents and we love you. But if you throw a cranky
fit and keep us from getting decent, affordable health care, you can figure
out how to work your own [damn] PCs and cable boxes and remote controls from
now on." (From Reddit via
brokengoose.)
The
history of time travel as a pretty visualization. It's missing a lot of
important data; maybe someday they'll fill it out while keeping the format.
(Link from
dagonell.)
A different kind of visualization:
This is why you are fat.
I find the KFC Quadruple Down
Sandwich particularly shudder-worthy. (Link from
ralphmelton, who found it on the way to looking up
something else.)
And a whole site full of light-hearted
graphs (most recent reminder from
cayeux). For example, difficulty
of task as perceived by the average person speaks to one of my
peeves.
John Scalzi's guide to epic design failures in Star Wars (link from a coworker).
Rabbi's shofar demo turns into a duet. I don't think
that's what he had in mind when he decided to teach people about Rosh Hashana
in a public setting... (Link from
thnidu.)
random bits
Aug. 19th, 2009 11:20 pmI'm used to size variation in women's clothing. (Why oh why can't women's jeans use waist and inseam like men's?) And I'm used to minor variations in shoes in US sizes (I seem to wear a size 7.75, which doesn't exist). I had not realized that there is significant variation in sizes on the (tighter) European scale. The size-38 Naot sandals I just tried are nearly half an inch shorter than the size-38 Birkies that fit (and that I bought). They're both the same style, your basic two-strap slip-in sandal.
Dani's company watched searching for evil recently. It's an overview of Internet security issues -- probably nothing new, but he spoke well of it so I want to bookmark it for when I've got a spare hour.
IANA considerations for TLAs was making the rounds at my company this week.
Via
goldsquare comes this bizarre story: a man lost parental rights
to his younger child, appealed, and was then killed in a car accident.
Now state child-welfare agents want to support the appeal, so the child
can share in his estate. The court says this is uncharted territory.
Specialized seasonal question: can anyone tell me, in the next 8 hours, if I use high-holy-day melodies in Hallel for Rosh Chodesh tomorrow morning? It's the last day of Av, not the first day of Elul (so we don't blow shofar yet).
random bits
May. 25th, 2009 06:05 pmThanks to those who gave me DTV advice. I had the wrong mental model for the converter box: I was thinking of it as a passive device, like an antenna, when it is more like a cable box. I don't think I'd realized before today that I will have to always set the channel on the box and not the VCR. That makes recording shows more of a hassle, but I watch little-enough TV that it probably won't be a big hassle. Still, one of the reasons I've never been interested in higher levels of cable service (except for B5's TNT year) is that the box displaces the tuner in my VCR, making recording more error-prone. Of course, VCRs themselves are on the way out at this point, so perhaps I should be looking for a DVR that does not involve a subscription service. (Again, don't watch enough TV to justify paying for a service.) I want to be able to program something and mostly forget about it until I'm ready to watch accumulated shows.
We saw Star Trek this weekend. If you don't think about the plot or the science too hard it's a good movie -- which is pretty much the calibration I expect from Trek. I wonder if the reset will lead to more TV shows or if it's just a movie franchise at this point.
Speaking of movies, thanks to
A seasonal note: a different kind of Omer calendar. Y'see, Jews are supposed to count the 50 days from Pesach to Shavuot, each night. Sometimes it's hard to remember, so people have come up with various reminder schemes. This one builds on the near-universal motivational properties of chocolate. :-) (Some commenters compare it to a chocolate Advent calendar. Advent calendars are completely outside my experience; sounds like I missed out on something tasty as a kid.)
Seen in passing, a useful-looking URL to have on hand: http://downforeveryoneorjustme.com/.
Finally (below the cut due to image size) a cartoon that made me laugh out loud. I didn't particularly expect to find it on Language Log, but I'm glad they posted it so I could see it.
( Read more... )
random bits
May. 17th, 2009 11:49 pmA few weeks ago BitDefender, my antivirus software, stopped working -- attempting to run a scan emitted a very unhelpful error message. Some time with Google showed me that lots of people were having that problem, and after some work I found and installed a patch. Today it shut down again, and after I tried all the new remedies suggested on a BD forum (lots more people are having this problem) I, in a moment of "it can't hurt" desperation, reinstalled the patch. (It should already be there, right?) And it started working again. I wonder what is going on. Customer support has been responsive but of mediocre quality so far. Ah well, one more reason to move to the new machine sooner rather than later. Once I have the Mac, I won't need the PC to be on the internet. And if I were staying with Windows, I'd surely replace BitDefender with something else when the annual subscription expires. (I have not, by the way, seen any evidence that the machine has actually been infected with anything.)
Signal boost:
530nm330hz has been developing his own
siddur for personal use, and
wants to know if
enough people to justify a small production run are interested.
The
sample
pages are quite lovely (a nice siddur can be more than just the
words on the page); he's using color to effectively indicate
variations for weekday, Shabbat, and festivals, and is laying it out
in a way that sounds useful. Andrew's Orthodox, so it'll be a complete
siddur.
This afternoon we saw a flurry of bicyclists cruising down our street. (There appears to have been some sort of organized activity, but I'm not sure what.) And, among them, I saw one guy on a huge unicycle. The wheeel was at least three feet across, possibly four. I wondered how one mounts a unicycle with a wheel diameter bigger than one's inseam. I don't yet have the internet in my pocket, so I had to wait until we got home to find out. Err, now that I know I'm even more impressed. I'm still not sure what you do about temporary stops, like red lights, though. It sounds like you need a hand-hold to get going; what do you do if none are available?
Quote of the day #2: "Always double-check your math if there are explosives
involved", via
kyleri.
Why aren't people commenting on my post? I've had this in a browser tab for a while waiting for a "misc" post to add it to, and I no longer remember where I got it.
a few links
Apr. 27th, 2009 08:42 am
The customer is not always right.
Some of these are really funny! Some might not be work-safe. Thanks
to
talvinamarich for the link.
A coworker shared this collection of funny or bizarre comments in source code.
Can you serve humanity on your kosher china? That's "serve" in the sense of "to serve man".
Via another coworker comes this story about a cyber-attack on a US city. Why haven't I heard about this through mainstream channels? By the way, I had not previously known that ham-radio operators are plugged into emergency-response systems. Kudos.
Pittsburghers: You probably already know that Giant Eagle is test-marketing "food perks", the inverse of "fuel perks". (That is, buy gas from their affiliate to get grocery discounts.) I learned over the weekend that you can get a one-time 5% discount on a single grocery trip by sitting through this video and then entering your advantage-card ID. (And some email address; I've seen no evidence of validation.) You don't actually need to watch the video; you just need to get to the end of it.
light bits
Mar. 8th, 2009 06:03 pm
(Click through for the mouse-over text.) Nice.
Tomorrow night is Purim, which at my synagogue is usually on the, err, juvenile side. (It must be possible to be accessible to kids while not talking down to adults, but we haven't mastered it yet.) However, I learned last week that, probably at the instigation of our newest rabbi, we are also going to have an adults-only gathering after the megillah reading and spiel -- text study with food and "adult beverages". I offered to contribute a little home-brew mead and he said to bring it along. Should be fun. (But not good old "HS 98", which recently got a surprisingly-good review from a friend who found some in her basement. I only have a few bottles left and I'm saving them for special occasions. :-) )
I'm considering going somewhere else for the megillah reading and then going to my congregation for the adult study/festivities. This is hindered by the Chronicle, for the first time I've ever noticed, omitting the calendar of congregational services this week. Gee, thanks. So I'll have to look them up individually.
Purim seems a fine time for the roll-out of this contest in Peeps art. I must give this some thought. Check out the prizes -- $100 gift card, blah blah, dental hygeine products. Um, yeah. And should I enter and win, I think it highly unlikely that I would use the Peeps lip balm, though I would look with curiosity through "Peeps: Recipes and Crafts". (Understand that I can't actually eat Peeps because they're not kosher, but there's no rule against using them in art projects.) Can any of my readers suggest a punny title around the exodus from Egypt? I figure a seasonal tie-in would help, but it sounds like a pun is especially important and I'm terrible at that. ("Let my peeps go?" Needs work, I think.) If I use your suggestion, you can have dibs on the lip balm. :-)
Speaking of contests, from Snopes: in 1984 a newspaper announced a Daylight Saving Time contest to see who could save the most daylight. Fun stuff. (I think this would be better designated Daylight Shifting Time, as there is no saving involved.)
random bits (and browser-tab-cleanup day)
Feb. 15th, 2009 03:44 pmFollowup on UJF: I spoke with the campaign manager on Friday and she was very apologetic. She promised to take appropriate action. (I've updated the original entry to reflect this.)
This week my employer's landlord started giving preferred parking spots to people driving green vehicles (definition not provided). Not that I'm going to turn down the convenience (my Honda Fit qualifies), but as one of my coworkers pointed out, are those the cars for which they want to minimize driving? (Should we try to get the gas guzzlers to stop on the first floor instead?) I used to always park on the top indoor floor, mostly so I could park in the same place every day and not have to worry about remembering at the end of the day. Now that I think about it, that decision represented about 2-3% of my commuting distance.
You know that "25 things about me" meme that's been going around? Maybe it's older than you thought. Or maybe not. :-)
The local SCA got some decent TV coverage recently.
Via
Birkat ha Chamah is a once-every-28-years observance, and it's coming up this April. I wonder if anyone local is doing anything for this. It sounds kind of peculiar, but it'll be a while before I could next satisfy my curiosity. (The timing is inconvenient with respect to Pesach, however.)
Glow-in-the-dark body cream, pointed out by
Thanks to
random bits
Jan. 20th, 2009 09:57 pmWas Joe Biden president of the US for about 5 minutes today? (We were watching in a conference room at work, and it was several minutes past noon before they got to Obama's swearing-in. So I'm curious.)
In English we say "it's all Greek to me". What do speakers of other languages say? Whom do they implicate? Wonder no more; Language Log has a nice graph of some of these. I admit to being surprised by China's designee.
What if the stop sign were designed by corporations? (link from
As
This story of a mailing list gone wrong (from Microsoft) made me laugh. And sigh, because while I haven't had to deal with quite that level of mess, even 20ish years after mailing lists started to become broadly accessible, there are still an awful lot of people out there who don't behave appropriately.
There's an interesting discussion of filtering and politeness on social networks over on CommYou.
Note to self: if Shalom Hartman Institute is too expensive this summer, the Aleph kallah might be an alternative. It could be good or it could be too esoteric for me; I can't tell from the available information. When they post class descriptions I'll have a better idea. I had a similar concern about NHC but it turned out to be good, so I'm keeping an open mind. Has anyone reading this gone to one of these?
random bits
Dec. 3rd, 2008 10:26 pmIn the "interesting if true, and interesting anyway" department: earlier this week I learned that the folks who handle disposal of sensitive documents for my company are blind. (Well, not the truck driver.) If I understand correctly, the local blind association arranges this, as sort of an extra guarantee or something. Who'd'a thought?
Signal boost: it looks like someone's testing stolen credit-card numbers on a large scale. Check your statement for microtransactions; they're testing the cards with ~20-cent transactions to verify that they're good before hammering them. Link from
A few days ago my copy of I Remember the Future by
Oldest LOLcat? Link from
My doctor confirmed that I should be taking calcium supplements now to (with luck) fend off problems later. Where can I find calcium tablets that are sized for, y'know, normal people and not horses? Most bottles in stores don't even include pictures on the label, so it's hit or miss. The oblong ones I have are scored for cutting widthwise, but I need them to be narrower, not necessarily shorter, and my attempts to do that have all ended badly. What do other women of a certain age do?
