Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Will Spouses of Presidential Candidates Compete in Gardening?
That's the question raised in my mind by this piece on the different gardens of the wives of the candidates for Prime Minister in Britain. It seems it's the "in" thing to garden there. Now in the US Michelle may have given more prominence to gardening with her White House garden. But I don't remember in past elections there was any direct competition among the candidates wives. There's always speculations about what they'll do in the White House, and comparisons of their lives and careers before the election, but no further.
Friday, April 23, 2010
Why Judge Garland Shouldn't Be the Nominee
The prediction is the Dems will lose about 5 Senate seats this fall, maybe more. So what happens in 2011 and 2012 if one of the current Supreme Court Justices retires? Obama needs a strategy, and the Reps are giving him one. The commentary on his list of possible nominees to fill the seat of Justice Stevens says Judge Garland would have no problem getting confirmed. That means, to me, that Obama should hold the Judge in reserve for a possible future vacancy. The Reps would have trouble opposing a nominee in 2011 or 2012 if they had no problems with him in 2010.
Congress and E-Government
The Golden Mouse awards were announced, recognizing excellent Congressional websites. Unfortunately neither agriculture committee nor either of my Senators was recognized. My representative, Joe Moran, did get a silver award. I'd hope some people will do as I just did: write their Congresspeople commenting on how well or poorly they did. The more feedback they get, the more likely they are to improve. However, don't do as I did--read about the methodology used before writing.. I assumed, and was wrong, that the rankings were on the usability of the sites. Turns out there's lots more involved. So my comments were fine, but they could have been better.
Typo of the Day
Only expose your baby to true and FDA-approved heroines.
From the Freakonomics RSS feed (not in the actual post): " Infants exposed to this heroine substitute in utero experience vision problems.
"
From the Freakonomics RSS feed (not in the actual post): " Infants exposed to this heroine substitute in utero experience vision problems.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
An IPAD Plant ID App?
Back in the days of Infoshare (i.e., 1991), one application NRCS (then Soil conservation Service) was eager to share was their Plants database. Frankly, I was dubious then, although out of respect, or cowardice, I tried not to show it. We were in a situation where each agency was pushing its own ideas, so it was the classic logrolling situation: the end project included the top priorities of each agency, not necessarily what the farmers would find most valuable.
Anyway, over the years I've occasionally looked at it on the NRCS web site. Even tried to use it once when I was trying to identify some weeds in the lawn.That experience convinced me the database wasn't particularly intended for such uses. But I may be wrong.
Today in the NY Times there's an article on the new IPhone and IPad apps for birders. My aunt and uncle were avid birders, and they had their manuals to look up birds with which they weren't familiar. Me, I wasn't familiar with much more than robin, sparrow, crow, blue jay, blackbird, wren. To become interested in birding I needed something easier than the Roger whats-his-face books [ed. Tory Peterson], something more like these apps. Apparently they build upon the existing databases of Audubon and Cornell, adding all sorts of bells and whistles. They sound great, even if they aren't quite ready to identify a bird from the sound of its song.
I wonder why NRCS, or more likely some private person, couldn't create similar apps for plants? I would think much of the logic and the user interface for birds could carry over to plants: species, location, looks, etc. Of course, when you google: "plant identification" you get lots of results from different enterprises with different takes on the subject.
Anyway, over the years I've occasionally looked at it on the NRCS web site. Even tried to use it once when I was trying to identify some weeds in the lawn.That experience convinced me the database wasn't particularly intended for such uses. But I may be wrong.
Today in the NY Times there's an article on the new IPhone and IPad apps for birders. My aunt and uncle were avid birders, and they had their manuals to look up birds with which they weren't familiar. Me, I wasn't familiar with much more than robin, sparrow, crow, blue jay, blackbird, wren. To become interested in birding I needed something easier than the Roger whats-his-face books [ed. Tory Peterson], something more like these apps. Apparently they build upon the existing databases of Audubon and Cornell, adding all sorts of bells and whistles. They sound great, even if they aren't quite ready to identify a bird from the sound of its song.
I wonder why NRCS, or more likely some private person, couldn't create similar apps for plants? I would think much of the logic and the user interface for birds could carry over to plants: species, location, looks, etc. Of course, when you google: "plant identification" you get lots of results from different enterprises with different takes on the subject.
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Kevin Drum Misses the Best Info
Kevin links to a study of SAT scores. Which major had the highest math score? Which major had the highest reading score? But he didn't highlight this from the conclusions:
2. Overachievers exist in most majors, with low SAT scores but very high GPAs. TheseI'm sure we're all surprised by these results, but maybe it explains why women are in a majority on college campuses these days.
overachievers are disproportionately female.
3. Underachievers exist in all majors, with high SAT scores but very low GPAs. These
underachievers are disproportionately male.
The Tragedy of the Common Coffee Pot
Technically, it's an espresso maker, but Tom Hanks observed: ""You know you are supposed to clean this after every use." He gave the maker to the White House press corps 6 years ago and thereby demonstrated his unrealistic liberal faith in people, only to be disillusioned when he visited this week. Bottom line: if it's everyone's job to clean, it never will be cleaned. Or as someone said: no one ever washed a rental car.
Jamie Oliver Costs Money
The Post has an article on Jamie Oliver, a Brit who had a short ABC TV series on his attempts to transform school lunch food in Huntington, WV. I admit I haven't watched, but it seems he had some impact:
"Oliver has made notable progress. But the hard work, compromises and setbacks continue after the cameras have disappeared."One of the problems for the future is that good food costs money, money to buy the raw ingredients and money to pay the people to prepare them. So the forces of evil, as foodies see them, always have an opening argument: "we can save you money." Tie that to the reports in both the Times and the Post about impending teacher layoffs this fall and a cynic has to believe Mr. Oliver's impact will not last long.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Fact of the Day: Indonesians on Facebook
The third leading nation in use of Facebook is Indonesia, with 22.7 million account. From NYTimes article
Why I Love the Democratic Party
As Will Rogers said, I'm not a member of any organized party, I'm a Democrat.
At a time when respected political observers predict the Dems will lose the House this fall, and possibly, a number of Dems are running against the Blue Dogs from the left (in North Carolina they're even organizing a new party). Too many Dems are lost in the euphoria of 2008, not the realities of 2010.
At a time when respected political observers predict the Dems will lose the House this fall, and possibly, a number of Dems are running against the Blue Dogs from the left (in North Carolina they're even organizing a new party). Too many Dems are lost in the euphoria of 2008, not the realities of 2010.
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