I didn't find anything on Purina's site about this. Since this isn't in the news I don't know how I would hear about a response from them other than searching from time to time.
I didn't find anything on Purina's site about this. Since this isn't in the news I don't know how I would hear about a response from them other than searching from time to time.
national debt
Jul. 26th, 2011 09:34 pm( Read more... )
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.
Within the first couple days of the Japanese quake/tsunami, death tolls in the hundreds were being reported. (Of course, we're not done yet.)
The difference in ability to predict and effectively react between wealthy and poor nations is striking. Three orders of magnitude? Yikes. We in the better-off nations usually send aid after the fact, but it really makes me wonder what we could do before the fact to help less-developed nations build better defenses.
questions (Wisconsin)
Mar. 10th, 2011 09:05 pmFirst, what does the Wisconsin collective-bargaining bill say about timing? Does the legislation modify existing contracts in violation of the terms of those contracts, or is it saying that no further contracts will be allowed that stray outside of these new boundaries? The difference matters.
Second, what Google search would have allowed me to answer that on my own? Everything I tried led to lots of news stories and opinions, but even "full text of Wisconsin union bill" didn't get me that. (I'd rather not read the full text if I could find this answer more expediently and credibly, but I'd read it myself if I had to, if I could find it.)
Yes yes, I know that any good that this bill might have done has long since been superseded by the antics of the last three weeks. But I'd still like to know, and I haven't been able to find it on my own.
the power of the internet
Nov. 5th, 2010 05:47 pmThat was ancient history, of course, and I know that things unfold much more quickly now -- even mainstream media, to say nothing of user-driven trends, moves in hours now. Still, the speed at which the C[r]ooks Source maelstrom took form yesterday was nothing short of astonishing to me; you could have watched minute-by-minute developments all day if you'd wanted to. Who knew that a wrong done to one "everyman" would get such attention? Yes, Judith Griggs' profound cluelessness helped things along, but still... what makes some things take off like that, when they aren't the Big Stories of the day to the rest of the world? (I mean yeah, sure, we can watch minute-by-minute coverage of breaking (inter)national news, but that's different.)
I think
AZ, ur doing it rong
Jun. 15th, 2010 09:02 pm( Read more... )
From
gardenfey comes this fun video
about what motivates us. The presentation is engaging; I didn't mind
at all that it's ten minutes long.
shewhomust posted
this item about
spoilers and meta-spoilers. Heh.
Big numbers can be hard to understand without some localization. With that
in mind, try
this visualization
of the gulf oil spill, linked by
siderea.
And speaking of interesting visualizations,
dagonell posted
this depiction of Earth, from tallest
mountain to deepest ocean trench.
Also from
dagonell:
every country
is the best at something, though, as he points out, some fare
better than others.
This visualization isn't about the planet; it's about the changes in Facebook privacy over time.
Not a visualization:
How to keep someone
with you forever through the power of sick systems. Linked by lots
of people; I first saw it from
metahacker. I have not lived
that kind of abuse, for which I am very thankful, but this tracks with
what I've heard.
And on the lighter (err) side: a light saber strong enough to burn flesh
-- for sale for $200. Wow. And yikes. Link from
astroprisoner.
random bits
Mar. 2nd, 2010 11:23 pmI talked with the vet today. The test of Baldur's liver function came back normal. As we were discussing next steps (the ones that could produce answers are dangerous), she asked me just what he eats. There's dry food out all the time and its rate of consumption hasn't markedly changed in recent months, but of course I don't know who eats how much. Baldur has ready access, though. He gets tiny amounts of tuna and canned food; basically he gets to lick the spoon when I feed such to Erik. Baldur wolfed down half a can of food in about 15 minutes at the vet's on Thursday, so my vet suggested giving him real amounts of canned food. I've generally avoided that because it's unhealthy, but y'know, he's 17 years old now -- am I really worried about him picking up bad dietary habits at this point? So I'll give that a try; he enthusiastically ate most of a can of food today (between morning and evening), so we're off and running.
I see that the post office wants to cut a day of mail delivery to save costs. I don't mind the cut, but I think it would be much better for us customers/taxpayers if they chose a day in the middle of the week, say, Thursday, instead of choosing a schedule that sometimes means four days between mail deliveries. I assume that giving up all their Monday holidays isn't on the table. (There actually is a segue from the previous item to this one: this morning I refilled a mail-order prescription for Baldur.)
Dani recently ordered some Israeli CDs, and the MP3 tagging has been strange. Two or three different two-disc sets tagged one disc in English (transliteration) and one in Hebrew, for instance. Sometimes song titles will be one way and performers the other. In one case we got gibberish, presumably a unicode failure or something, and Dani typed stuff in by hand. Any one of those cases wouldn't have surprised me, but mixing it up on the same recording is bizarre.
Why $21 billion? It's the modern equivalent of the 90 million francs Haiti agreed to pay France in 1825, in return for official recognition of Haiti's sovereignty. For two decades following Haitian independence in 1804, the former mother country, with the support of the United States, Britain and Spain, enforced a crippling embargo, accompanied by a threat to re-colonize and re-enslave Haiti if indemnity wasn't paid for lost property -- i.e., slaves. Haiti, once France's richest colony, agreed to pay the price -- more than twice the value of the entire nation at the time -- but could only afford to do so using high-interest loans from French banks.
Haitians had to buy freedom with their lives and then again with cash, and the US helped make that necessary. I sure didn't learn that in history classes...
In other news, there have been some interesting reactions to Pat Robertson's drivel about why the earthquake happened. There's Pat's conversation with God, and the devil's response, and, more recently, the Pat Robertson voodoo doll being offered on eBay (all proceeds to to earthquake relief). The creator of this last item later added a Rush Limbaugh doll, which is also doing well.
a Nobel? really?
Oct. 9th, 2009 05:24 pmI'm mystified by his receipt of the Nobel Peace Prize. It's possible that he could earn that someday, but now? He'd been in office for ten days when nominations closed, and since then he really hasn't done anything on the peace front yet. I don't understand what's going on in the heads of the folks on the Nobel committee.
Al Gore's prize doesn't seem to have anything to do with peace either, so this isn't the first time they've done something to prompt "WTF?"s. Have they changed the charter of the Peace Prize? It would be sad if it became meaningless.
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.)
err, what?
Aug. 20th, 2009 11:26 pmThe back-story is that the woman (age 18) beat her previous record by a noticeable margin and has a masculine build. So just to make sure, somebody wants to check. There's a rather straightforward way to do that, but that's not what they're doing so they must not believe it would answer the question. So what's going on -- do they suspect that a teenage athlete might have had major surgery in order to win a race?
This got me thinking about gender and sports more broadly. It's common to have men's and women's divisions, presumably out of a belief that men and women are sufficiently different that it's not fair to make them compete. Does this mean that the division is intended to be by birth status, that a transsexual person would compete in the "wrong" (by appearance) category? In which category does a hermaphrodite compete? When these kinds of sporting events were being invented these would have been deemed frivolous questions, but I imagine that some people have had to wrestle with these issues by now.
Is gender segregation the best way to achieve balance among entrants? I would think that, all other factors being equal, in a race a woman who's a foot taller than me would have much more of an advantage over me than a man of my height does (longer stride). Isn't it time for the short-person division? (Ok, now I'm being frivolous...)
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).
Follow the developments in Iran like a CIA analyst.
Andrew Sullivan's blog is a good aggregate.
Twitter groks their role.
Suggestion from
how can a murderer be pro-life?
Jun. 2nd, 2009 09:07 pmIt's not about pro-choice versus pro-life; the people I know who oppose abortion are not cold-blooded murderers, and we can disagree thoughtfully and respectfully. And most of the people I know who oppose abortion still grant that under some circumstances it might be the least-bad path, if the life of the mother is at stake (and with it the life of the fetus anyway, in some cases). I don't like abortion, but I feel it can be necessary sometimes. People like Randall Terry call Dr. Tiller a butcher; what do you call a doctor who stands idly by while a woman dies from a pregnancy gone horribly wrong?
But as I said, this isn't just about abortion. The person who murdered Dr. Tiller committed the same kind of terroristic act as the unabomber or the Oklahoma City bombers or any number of other people trying to advance a position by inciting fear and committing violence. No matter what the issue is, the method is unacceptable. As with treason, terrorism is about more than the specific acts committed by the wrongdoers. It doesn't seem like our legal system has a good way to deal with that, and indeed it would be hard to write the relevant laws, but I sure hope this factor is taken into account when Dr. Tiller's murderer is convicted and sentenced. The murder of any individual is sad; this was not just the murder of one individual. It needs to be discussed and, if possible, prosecuted as the larger crime.
This is based on the end of parshat Emor, Lev 24:10-23.
( Read more... )
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.
random bits
Feb. 7th, 2009 08:30 pmA few days ago I read about a skydiver who was doing his first dive, with his instructor stapped to his back. The instructor had a heart attack on the way down. That's sad, but I must admit that my first question was: was the student's technique that scary? :-)
Real Live Preacher is taking an unusual approach to publishing a (paper book), essentially soliciting enough pre-orders to pay for the initial print run. That's probably not unusual for publishing houses, but I'm not used to seeing it from individuals. He's only looking for a bit over 400, so I figured that given his popularity he'd have that in days, but so far no. It's kind of sobering that even that low-sounding goal is a challenge. (It does suggest that the likes of unknowns like me wouldn't muster enough interest to publish on dead trees. Maybe most people don't read dead trees any more, but I still prefer them for many things.)
CNN might be using your bandwidth to publish (link from
For the locals: Temple Sinai has some interesting presentations open to the public coming up; the first (on February 18) is Christiane Amanpour, CNN's chief international correspondent. I'll post more about this in a few days, but if you want to go, drop me a note. This sounds like a neat series that I want to support, so unless I get flooded, I'm inclined to buy one ticket (for any of the presentations) for anyone I actually know who expresses interest.
gas prices
Apr. 13th, 2008 08:39 pm(It now occurs to me that, in the 21st century, one of the first avenues of inquiry should perhaps be Google.)
I wonder how the guy who made the error is going to answer the question "why did you leave your previoud job?". Dani suggested "my boss didn't like my typing skills". :-)
random bits from the news
Mar. 9th, 2008 02:09 pmVia Slashdot: daylight "saving" time actually increases energy usage. ("Saving" is a misnomer; we should call it "daylight shifting time", which is all it accomplishes. There are not, after all, storehouses in which we collect excess sunlight for use during lean times; nothing is saved.) The researchers were handed a great data-collection opportunity: they did their work in Indiana, where until recently some counties did DST and others did not. So they not only had before-and-after data, but also a control group nearby to factor out weather and the like.
A few days ago a house in Plum (near Pittsburgh) exploded, apparently from a gas leak. (I actually saw this on national news before I saw the local news.) This made me wonder whether it's possible to build a detector (other than the human nose) for household use. We have smoke detectors and carbon-monoxide detectors; why have I never heard of a gas-buildup detector? Granted that such incidents are extremely rare, but they are potentially much more devastating than fires and CO buildup, so if an inexpensive household gadget could provide some potential warning, that'd be great.
In lighter news:
You know that "who do you want to answer the phone at 3AM?" ad the Clinton
campaign is running? The little girl in the ad was stock footage; she's now an adult and working on the Obama campaign (via
insomnia).
Headline of the day, from
thnidu: Skywalkers in Korea Cross Han Solo.
random bits
Oct. 14th, 2007 10:02 pmI missed the first episode of the new TV show "Pushing Daisies" but caught the second. Wacky! Surreal! Fun! The narration as commentary is a nice touch. Yeah, that it's written by the person who did "Wonderfalls" shows; I hope "Pushing Daisies" fares better. ("Wonderfalls" was great for about 8 or 9 episodes, then sucked for a couple more, and was then pulled after 13.) I'm also watching "Journeyman", about which I'm undecided.
We drove through the rockslide zone of Route 28 on the way to visit my parents today. No rockslides were in progress at the time, and it looked like last week's had been completely cleared. The news had said inbound lanes would be completely closed for the weekend, but we saw continuous traffic while we were driving outbound so we didn't look for an alternate path home. It turned out that one lane was open. That was fine for a Sunday, but I'll bet it sucks for commuters right now. That said, rockslides suck more.
Two Shabbatot ago a first-time (in our minyan) Israeli torah reader asked me to be his checker. I expressed concern that I wouldn't be able to keep up; he said he reads holy texts slowly. His "slow" was too fast for me. Then this past Shabbat a different reader asked me to check for him and I figured this wouldn't be a problem; I had just a bit of trouble keeping up. Both times I was checking from the new Plaut (oodles better than the old Plaut), and using a magnifying glass to be safe. I conclude that my problem is Plaut + magnifier, not necessarily me, and I should only check when I can do it from larger Hebrew text such as what Trope Trainer produces. (I'm not the only torah reader in our group who uses that software, and in fact I have been handed TT output to check from at times.)
Without saying anything about the merits of Al Gore's work, I do admit to being puzzled by how this is a peace issue. Of course, in political processes all bets of rationality are off, but still... isn't there a more appropriate category in which to consider his work?
I heard a cute story recently: One night at dinner the seven-year-old girl asks her parents "where did I come from?" Oh crap, the parents each think; we thought we had a few more years before we'd have to deal with this. They exchange glances and then fumble through a discussion of birds, bees, and what happens "when mommies and daddies love each other very much". The girl says "oh" and everyone sits in silence for a few minutes. Then she continues, "my friend Becky comes from Cleveland".
to say nothing of Socks and Fifi
Jul. 30th, 2007 07:32 pmWe can take as given the riff on parental responsibility, right? It's not Toyota's fault if your kid gets left in the car, but that's clearly where the suits will be directed when one of these systems fails. That's not what this post is about.
I suspect that most of those 61% don't care about the difference between worst-case cost and expected cost. While leaving a kid in a hot car for an hour is much much worse than leaving your headlights on for an hour, I submit that the probability is much much lower, or there'd be a lot more news stories about it and a lot fewer calls to AAA. The expected cost of the headlights is higher and carbuyers care, and that's why that alarm is standard equipment. No one but the market requires that makers put it there.
Speaking personally, the expected cost over, say, the next decade of my leaving a kid in my unattended hot car is 0. The expected cost of my leaving my headlights on is some positive fraction of $100 for a new battery and several hours of my time, at least one of which comes at a time when I, demonstrably, wanted to be somewhere else. 61% of poll responders would say "tough noogies" to me and wouldn't care if adding this device costs me hundreds of dollars. (I don't know what it costs.)
If that's what those voters truly believe, then they do not go far enough. If the goal is to prevent the deaths of those who can't see the danger or get out of the car themselves, then clearly it's not just about kids. Some adult passengers are unable to care for themselves and could die in hot cars too. I think it's actually more likely that an adult suffering from dementia would be ignored by passersby than that a kid would be. We don't think it's unusual for adults to sit in parked cars. Isn't gramps at least as important as an infant?
I predict that I'll get few takers from among the 61%; they would rightly say "you can't prevent everything". Yes, exactly. And given that, you have to cost-justify, and not just emotionally justify, the burden you would place on everyone else. Here's an idea: if you want a requirement, require that the device be built into the car seat, not the car. It'll be more expensive to do right (and be amortized over fewer buyers), but, well, it's the price we pay for safety, right?
Am I missing a sound argument in favor of requiring unattended-child alarms in all cars, or do all arguments boil down to "a possibility of one child's death is worth the certainty of $X in increased cost for everyone"?
random bits
Jun. 7th, 2007 11:10 pmA school refused to give diplomas to students for whom people cheered at graduation. They have since rescinded this decision. The whole thing has me asking WTF? How does it make sense to punish the students, who were not the ones violating the decorum of the event? Heck, given the rivalries that high schools tend to, did anyone consider that the cheering might have been a hostile move (to get the diplomas held back)?
This made me laugh out loud: "Ubuntu" is an ancient african word. It means "I can't configure debian." --zeylisse on slashdot.org, repeated by
What does your cat do all day while you're away? Try a cat cam. I want one. No, three. Ok, two; I only need so many pictures taken by a sleeping Baldur.
Speaking of cats, I got Embla's test results last night. We've done too good a job on treating the hyperthyroidism. Her T4 this week was 0.5 (down from 5.6 two months ago and 70 (!) three months ago). I understood the goal to be "under 4", but the vet really meant "between 1 and 4". So we're backing off the medicine just slightly.
A day late for the anniversary, but
caching the browser tabs
May. 6th, 2007 10:16 pmI've got a lot of stuff accumulating in browser tabs on a wide variety of topics, so...
The (spam)bot
wars heat up, by
jducoeur.
I'm a little behind in my tech news.
siderea posted a
helpful summary
of the news about cracking the DRM code on DVDs and the subsequent
firestorm on Digg.
merle_ on
the true
reasons behind the bee population problem.
Why
programmers should never become ministers, link from
aliza250. Satan is a MIS director who takes credit
for more powers than he actually possesses, so people who aren't
programmers are scared of him. God thinks of him as irritating but
irrelevant.
insomnia on the
new military
rules that significantly limit participation in blogs, mailing lists,
and so on. I saw an article that quoted an anonymous military
source saying "we didn't mean that; use common sense". I don't know
enough yet to have a handle on what's really going on, but it bears
watching.
South Park
Mac vs. PC, link from
bkdelong.
Unconventional greeting cards,
like "your painful breakup has made me feel less alone" and
"your cell phone ringtone is damaging your career". Link from
thatcrazycajun.
In light of my recent post about kippot in synagogues and elsewhere, I found
this post on
hair-covering by
katanah interesting.
Cached for later reading: Clay Shirky: A group is its own worst enemy. (He's talking about online fora.) Link from Geek Etiquette.
And, for those in the SCA, what looks like a thoughtful and fascinating
conversation about staying in-period at events versus talking about
your computer, and why people go to events anyway, and what changes
we might want to make.
This post
by
msmemory has an overview and links to several other
posts I would have mentioned here but now don't have to.