Jon

Last Updated:
Mar 1, 2008

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 37
Sign: Pisces

City: GLENDALE
State: California
Country: US

Signup Date: 12/18/05

Blog Archive
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Friday, July 04, 2008

Sitting at work on the 4th of July...

...after not getting much sleep last night. 

Tonight is going to be brutal because there'll be fireworks all night.  Hopefully I can get a nap in after work so I won't be dead tired when I go into work tomorrow.

I'm counting the days when I don't have to work holidays anymore.  I will cherish everyone of them...

11:03 AM - 1 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Baron Davis to the Clippers?

Why does that sound so odd?  Could the Clippers actually be decent next year?

I don't know.  I guess I have to see to believe.

Still waiting anxiously for a monster trade involving the Pistons...

6:56 PM - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

I just made my last tuition payment...

...wahooo!  Just in time too, as the cost of an MBA in the Cal State system is about to soar.  One more semester to go. 

In the future I'll just take classes of interest here and there and there won't be the constant pressure of getting through grad school. 

The cost of education is so low here in CA compared to other states that I can't understand why more people aren't taking advantage of it.  It seems to me that if something of such great value was sold for so little, almost everyone would want to take advantage of it.  But alas, that is not so.  Primal human nature gets in the way.

One more class and a brutal comp exam and I'm free...

2:13 PM - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

George Packer in the NYer

This is from an article in the current issue of The New Yorker.  The entire article can be read HERE.

Obama, whatever the idealistic yearnings of his admirers, has turned out to be a cold-eyed, shrewd politician. The same pragmatism that prompted him last month to forgo public financing of his campaign will surely lead him, if he becomes President, to recalibrate his stance on Iraq. He doubtless realizes that his original plan, if implemented now, could revive the badly wounded Al Qaeda in Iraq, reënergize the Sunni insurgency, embolden Moqtada al-Sadr to recoup his militia's recent losses to the Iraqi Army, and return the central government to a state of collapse. The question is whether Obama will publicly change course before November.

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Saturday, June 28, 2008

Brigadier General John Campbell...

...is on the news right now talking about Iraq.

He said the Iraqi forces have not only routed the insurgents and Al Sadr's militia in Basra, but they've also secured Mosal and almost all of Sadr City.  Economic activity is now rampant in these urban areas and reconstruction is actually pushing forward in Sadr City, once the most dangerous place in Iraq.

The report said in previous years about 35% of all news reports were on Iraq, but in 2008 only 2% of news stories were Iraq related.

Hmmmm.....

7:10 AM - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Yahoo! Games: PS3 has lost over $3B on PS3

Jun 26, 2008

Think you paid too much for your Playstation 3? Don't expect any sympathy from Sony.

In the company's fiscal 2008 annual report, Sony revealed that they've now lost roughly $3.3 billion (that's billion with a B) on the Playstation 3 since its launch. That breaks down to $2.16 billion in 2007, followed by a notably smaller but equally daunting $1.16 billion loss in 2008.

The reason? Pricing the console below its production cost. That's right - that hefty $599 you paid for the PS3 back when it first launched was significantly cheaper than the cost of producing it in the first place, and while the retail price has come down some, the losses keep piling up.

Investors have reason to sweat. In a statement, Sony claimed "the large-scale investment required during the development and introductory period of a new gaming platform may not be fully recovered." They went on to note that they've invested a great deal of money into R&D for the console, a sum they might not be able to recoup if the PS3 "fails to achieve such favorable market penetration."

Sony fanboys should take heart, however. Losing money on hardware is relatively common in the video game biz, as companies routinely lower prices to sell more units and thus stimulate software sales. Sony's game division saw a 26% sales spike last quarter, a trend they expect will continue on the strength of strong exclusives like the recently released Metal Gear Solid 4 and the upcoming sequel Resistance 2.

But will it be enough?

8:33 AM - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Friday, June 27, 2008

Hawking’s new theory - universe expansion like quantum probabilities?

Stephen Hawking's Explosive New Theory

By Roger Highfield, Science Editor

Last Updated: 12:01am BST 26/06/2008

Prof Stephen Hawking has come up with a new idea to explain why the Big Bang of creation led to the vast cosmos that we can see today.

Astronomers can deduce that the early universe expanded at a mind-boggling rate because regions separated by vast distances have similar background temperatures.

They have proposed a process of rapid expansion of neighbouring regions, with similar cosmic properties, to explain this growth spurt which they call inflation.

But that left a deeper mystery: why did inflation occur in the first place?

Now New Scientist reports that an answer has been proposed by Prof Stephen Hawking of Cambridge University, working with Prof Thomas Hertog of the Astroparticle and Cosmology Laboratory in Paris.

Prof Hawking is best known for his attempts to combine theories of the very small, quantum theory, and that of gravity and the very big, general relativity, into a new theory, called quantum gravity.

Quantum mechanics is awash with strange ideas and can shed new light on inflation, which came in the wake of when the universe itself was around the size of an atom.

By quantum lore, when a particle of light travels from A to B, it does not take one path but explores every one simultaneously, with the more direct routes being used more heavily.

This is called a sum over histories and Prof Hawking and Prof Hertog propose the same thing for the cosmos.

In this theory, the early universe can be described by a mathematical object called a wave function and, in a similar way to the light particle, the team proposed two years ago that this means that there was no unique origin to the cosmos: instead the wave function of the universe embraced a multitude of means to develop.

This is very counter intuitive: they argued the universe began in just about every way imaginable (and perhaps even some that are not). Out of this profusion of beginnings, like a blend of a God's eye view of every conceivable kind of creation, the vast majority of the baby universes withered away to leave the mature cosmos that we can see today.

But, like any new idea, there were problems. The professors found that they could not explain the rapid expansion - inflation - of the universe, evidence of which is left behind all around us in what is called the cosmic microwave background, in effect the echo of the big bang, a relic of creation that can be measured with experiments on balloons and on space probes.

Now, in a paper in Physical Review Letters with Prof James Hartle of the University of California, Santa Barbara, they realised that their earlier estimates of inflation were wrong because they had not fully thought through the connection between, on the one hand, their theoretical predictions and, on the other, our observations of the echo.

At first, they found that the most probable history of the cosmos had only undergone "a little bit of inflation at the beginning, contradicting the observations," said Prof Hertog. Now, after a correction to take account of how the data we have on inflation is based on only a view of a limited volume of the universe, they find that the wave function does indeed predict a long period of inflation.

"This proposal, with volume weighting, can explain why the universe inflated," Prof Hawking tells New Scientist. By taking into account that we have a parochial view of the cosmos, the team has come up with a radical new take on cosmology.

Most models of the universe are bottom-up, that is, you start from well-defined initial conditions of the Big Bang and work forward. However, Prof Hertog and Prof Hawking say that we do not and cannot know the initial conditions present at the beginning of the universe. Instead, we only know the final state - the one we are in now.

Their idea is therefore to start with the conditions we observe today - like the fact that at large scales one does not need to adopt quantum lore to explain how the universe (it behaves classically, as scientists say) - and work backwards in time to determine what the initial conditions might have looked like.

In this way, they argue the universe did not have just one unique beginning and history but a multitude of different ones and that it has experienced them all.

The new theory is also attractive because it fits in with string theory - the most popular candidate for a "theory of everything."

String theory allows the existence of an" unimaginable multitude of different types of universes in addition to our own," but it does not provide a selection criterion among these and hence no explanation for why our universe is, the way it is", says Prof Hertog.

"For this, one needs a theory of the wave function of the universe."

And now the world of cosmology has one. The next step is to find specific predictions that can be put to the test, to validate this new view of how the cosmos came into being.

2:04 PM - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Rumspringa

NGC is airing a documentary that was made a few years back called "Devil's Playground."  I highly recommend it.  It follows Amish teens as they enter Rumspringa.

The Amish can be a strict folk.  Many of them don't use electricity, are against using motorized vehicles, and don't believe in education past the 8th grade (because education leads to pride).

However when their children turn sixteen they enter a period called 'Rumspringa' where they're allowed to explore seedier aspects of the world including drinking, smoking, doing drugs and having sex.  A lot of the parties even happen in the Amish back fields, under the allowance of the parents.

Then when they're ready, the Amish kids get to make a choice.  They can go live like 'The English' (which they call everyone else) or they can come back and be baptized and live under the rules of the church.  If they choose to live outside of the church however, they are often shunned by the entire community, including their parents.

This doc follows a few teens entering Rumspringa.  It's pretty cool to watch...

 

1:03 PM - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Talk about dodging a bullet...(more on DC vs. Heller)

We came within inches of losing our right to bear arms yesterday.  If Bush had lost to Kerry, the Second Amendment would have essentially been revoked.

In a 5/4 decision, the Supreme Court agreed that Heller (and the American people) have a right to own a handgun.  In the dissenting opinion the liberal judges on the bench not only stated that Heller doesn't have a right to own a handgun, they stated that he doesn't have the constitutional right to own a gun period. 

Justice Stevens wrote:

"Specifically, there is no indication that the Framers of the Amendment intended to enshrine the common-law right of self-defense in the Constitution."

"Had the Framers wished to expand the meaning of the phrase "bear arms" to encompass civilian possession and use, they could have done so by the addition of phrases such as "for the defense of themselves," as was done in the Pennsylvania and Vermont Declarations of Rights. The unmodified use of "bear arms," by contrast, refers most naturally to a military purpose, as evidenced by its use in literally dozens of contemporary texts."

Justice Breyer wrote in his dissent:

"The majority's conclusion is wrong for two independent reasons. The first reason is that set forth by JUSTICE STEVENS—namely, that the Second Amendment protects militia-related, not self-defense-related, interests...The second independent reason is that the protection the Amendment provides is not absolute. The Amendment permits government to regulate the interests that it serves."

Thank the good Lord for Justices Roberts and Alito.  This was seriously one of the biggest cases ever.  Our highest court is one Justice away from taking away the American people's right to bear arms.

Our beloved Justice Scalia:

"The First Amendment contains the freedom-of-speech guarantee that the people ratified, which included exceptions for obscenity, libel, and disclosure of state secrets, but not for the expression of extremely unpopular and wrong-headed views. The Second Amendment is no different. Like the First, it is the very product of an interest-balancing by the people—which JUSTICE BREYER would now conduct for them anew. And whatever else it leaves to future evaluation, it surely elevates above all other interests the right of law-abiding, responsible citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and home."


9:40 AM - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Thursday, June 26, 2008

District of Columbia vs. Heller

One of the most important decisions of our time:

We are aware of the problem of handgun violence in this
country, and we take seriously the concerns raised by the
many amici who believe that prohibition of handgun
ownership is a solution. The Constitution leaves the
District of Columbia a variety of tools for combating that
problem, including some measures regulating handguns,
see supra, at 54–55, and n. 26. But the enshrinement of
constitutional rights necessarily takes certain policy
choices off the table. These include the absolute prohibition
of handguns held and used for self-defense in the
home. Undoubtedly some think that the Second Amendment
is outmoded in a society where our standing army is
the pride of our Nation, where well-trained police forces
provide personal security, and where gun violence is a
serious problem. That is perhaps debatable, but what is
not debatable is that it is not the role of this Court to
pronounce the Second Amendment extinct.
We affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
                                                It is so ordered.

1:39 PM - 0 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment


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