I really don't understand this, perhaps because I don't use a cell phone/smart phone.
"Butt dials"
Peter Moskos links to a BBC piece on the problem of accidental 911 calls. Judging from the article, the UK has had the same problem, except their emergency number is "999".
I understand that making an emergency call is easier than a regular one, but what I don't understand is how the butt knows to dial 911 in one country and 999 in the other? Do people have smart butts, smart enough to know the different numbers? Never knew that.
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.
Monday, October 05, 2015
Saturday, October 03, 2015
CRISPR and Pets--Micro-pigs
Chinese scientists have used gene editing techniques to modify a small breed of pigs into "micro-pigs" according to this report. The intent was to make the pigs smaller, therefore cheaper to raise as models for human disease. They didn't foresee that a nice small pig would have potential as a pet.
IMHO genetic modification is like a horror movie, or Fantasia, where you see the water or other liquid coming under the door, the hero tries to keep it out, or clean it up, succeeding momentarily but ultimately failing. (Not that I think genetic modification is a threat, per se, but it is change and some changes are mostly irresistable.)
IMHO genetic modification is like a horror movie, or Fantasia, where you see the water or other liquid coming under the door, the hero tries to keep it out, or clean it up, succeeding momentarily but ultimately failing. (Not that I think genetic modification is a threat, per se, but it is change and some changes are mostly irresistable.)
Are Children More Civilized Than Adults?
The question of how social norms change has always fascinated me. I've previously mentioned a book by Prof. Appiah on the subject: how duels in the West or foot-binding in China became unapproved. He doesn't discuss, nor had I thought of this factor: children.
Children can point out hypocrisy, and lots of our norms are hypocritical.
This is triggered by a brief post on Kottke.org, where Jason writes, in partial explanation of a decrease in soda consumption in the US:
Children can point out hypocrisy, and lots of our norms are hypocritical.
This is triggered by a brief post on Kottke.org, where Jason writes, in partial explanation of a decrease in soda consumption in the US:
I've been a dedicated soda drinker1 since at least high school. But this summer, I started cutting back. The big reason is that my kids are getting old enough to read labels and wonder why I'm consuming so much sugar, the little blighters. "All that sugar is not good for you, right Daddy?" they would say. And they're completely right of course and I couldn't argue with them on that point, so I've been drinking a lot less of the stuff. I haven't cut it completely out of my diet but I treat it more or less like every other food or beverage I consume: everything in moderation.
Friday, October 02, 2015
Shed Tears for Managers
From a Government Executive piece on a new book on transitions
"“We were not considering management, such as procurement reform, which are not sexy or talked about on the campaign trail, just policy and politics,” Lu said. “At the White House we’re not good managers—we’re good at messaging and issuing edicts.” Future transitions should make management a higher priority, he said.
Rolling in His Grave: Mao Tse-tung
That's the only conclusion I can draw from this New Yorker piece, on a butler training school in Red China, of all places.
An excerpt:
Who knew they liked Downton Abbey?
An excerpt:
Among China’s burgeoning population of new millionaires (their ranks have tripled since 2012, to more than 3.6 million) there is a peculiar appetite for the fusty trappings of European nobility. Chinese real-estate developments with names like Majesty Manor and Top Aristocrat package themselves as enclaves of Old World opulence, their properties complete with moats, replicas of Buckingham Palace gates, and mansions modelled after Versailles. Rolls Royce has begun offering Chinese customers chauffeur training with purchases from its seven-figure Phantom line, and Christie’s has opened a specialized agency to help Chinese buyers purchase wine estates abroad. For Chinese élites who are eager to adopt lifestyles commensurate with their massive wealth, such status symbols lend a recognizable veneer of Western-style aristocracy. (Many in the industry attribute the trend to the immense popularity of “Downton Abbey,” which has given millions of Chinese viewers a window into Edwardian upstairs-downstairs living.)
Who knew they liked Downton Abbey?
Thursday, October 01, 2015
Education and Fatalities in Car Accidents
I might as well double down on my comments on this post on the differences in fatality rates based on education level, reporting on an academic study (from which I've stolen the graph).
Most of the commenters and the study itself focus on the differences in deaths among the different levels. But what struck me is the deviation in the relationships: simply put, the rate goes down between 1995 and 2010 for all groups, all except those who didn't graduate high school. I didn't see any explanation offered for why that group might have an increase in fatality rate. I could guess maybe a change in drug usage--meth and oxy usage is, I believe, up particularly in rural areas, but that seems unlikely to move the trend that much.
Chalk it down to a mystery.
Most of the commenters and the study itself focus on the differences in deaths among the different levels. But what struck me is the deviation in the relationships: simply put, the rate goes down between 1995 and 2010 for all groups, all except those who didn't graduate high school. I didn't see any explanation offered for why that group might have an increase in fatality rate. I could guess maybe a change in drug usage--meth and oxy usage is, I believe, up particularly in rural areas, but that seems unlikely to move the trend that much.
Chalk it down to a mystery.
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
Dairy and Robots
According to a piece in IowaFarmerToday (via The Rural Blog), more small and medium dairies are going to robots.
I understand the "consistency" bit, but not how robots could increase milk production. Maybe, just maybe, the Lambert's definition of consistency is looser than mine: every day, 365 days a year, 4:30 am, 4 pm, with a variance of plus or minus 10 minutes?? That's why no one wants to milk cows.
"But the price can be a high obstacle to clear. Jennifer and Jesse Lambert took out seven-year loans for about $380,000 last year to install two robots and retrofit a barn at their organic dairy farm in Graniteville. They were looking for a more consistent way to milk their cows, more time to spend with their newborn son and more money in their pockets. They’re saving $60,000 a year that used to go to paying one full-time and one part-time employee and their cows are producing 20 percent more milk.An extension guy says:
“No one wants to milk cows,” Jennifer Lambert said. Cows thrive on consistency, she added, something farmworkers can’t always provide but robots do." [emphasis added]
"“It’s a technology that it’s kind of scale-neutral in a sense because every robot can handle about 60 cows,” he said, “and when you start going larger than that people figure out pretty quick that it’s probably cheaper to hire the labor and put in a big parlor.”Back in the day 60 cows was a big herd, about what my uncle ran on the farm my mother grew up on. We had a fifth of that, along with the hens.
I understand the "consistency" bit, but not how robots could increase milk production. Maybe, just maybe, the Lambert's definition of consistency is looser than mine: every day, 365 days a year, 4:30 am, 4 pm, with a variance of plus or minus 10 minutes?? That's why no one wants to milk cows.
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
A Bit of Dairy
My mother would have liked this BBC piece on the Dutch and dairy (might it explain why they're the tallest in the world)? Via AnnAlthouse
To her, eggs were the perfect food, milk was second. Not incidentally, she had the hens, dad had the cows.
The NY Times science section has a piece on mold and cheese--seems that cheese molds have evolved rapidly since cheesemakers were able to identify them.
To her, eggs were the perfect food, milk was second. Not incidentally, she had the hens, dad had the cows.
The NY Times science section has a piece on mold and cheese--seems that cheese molds have evolved rapidly since cheesemakers were able to identify them.
A Bit of Politics
From Bernstein's blog at Bloomberg:
Let's be fair to the Republicans. Could be they're just terribly inefficient.
[Updated-- Kevin Drum offers a third position. ]
"4. We’ve known this was coming, but worth marking it anyway: The Benghazi committee is now the longest-lasting special investigative panel in congressional history. Julian Hattem reports for The Hill. Might as well just admit it and rename the thing the Permanent Hillary Clinton Opposition Research Committee."
Let's be fair to the Republicans. Could be they're just terribly inefficient.
[Updated-- Kevin Drum offers a third position. ]
Monday, September 28, 2015
ARRA and MIDAS
This piece on the ending of the Recovery Act database reminded me--MIDAS got $50 million if I remember correctly. Maybe not, maybe the $50 mill was partly to upgrade the creaky technology at the time.
I do wish they'd included some usage figures on the website--how much did the media and others actually use the site? I know while I checked it a few times early on, I never did go back to see what if any updates for MIDAS had been added. It may well be the best contribution of the effort was to establish a precedent, to teach people what was involved so the next try can be more useful.
I do wish they'd included some usage figures on the website--how much did the media and others actually use the site? I know while I checked it a few times early on, I never did go back to see what if any updates for MIDAS had been added. It may well be the best contribution of the effort was to establish a precedent, to teach people what was involved so the next try can be more useful.
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