Are you a compulsive debtor? Check the warning signs. And get help.
July 11, 2007
The Black Swan
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I’m in the midst of reading The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable by Nassim Nicholas Taleb. So far I’m finding it a fun read, it touches on the same themes he introduced in Fooled By Randomness, (including the reappearance of Taleb dopperganger Nero Tulip) but explores in particular the rare event and more importantly, how we humans aren’t really wired to plan for or to even consider it. I guess Taleb hasn’t met too many pessimists.
Taleb is one of those writers who is able to sustain an intimate and conversational tone even while explaining complex philosophical matters. It often feels like a hushed conversation between you and the author, the only ones in the room who aren’t foolish enough to believe they know anything. In a lot of ways, the style reminds me of Richard Feymann’s memoirs.
Taleb does spend quite a bit of time ranting about ‘the Gaussian’, which he deems an intellectual fraud. I was surprised about how he singles out this foundational statistical concept, especially his concerns about its misuse, given that I was under the impression that most ‘quants’ don’t rely too heavily on classical statistical inference in their work. Although I understand his qualms about all statistical technique, the casual and sarcastic tone of the book leads one to believe that this is more a Taleb hobbyhorse than a real argument against ‘the Gaussian.’
Nevertheless, the book ultimately has a positive message, namely that although we cannot be certain of much of anything, we can at least bask in the good fortune that has enabled us to live another day. On a lighter note, Taleb recommends that his audience ‘go to cocktail parties’ (you never know who you might meet) and cultivate serendipity in our lives.
July 9, 2007
The Family Guy
I understand I’m about eight years too late on this, but I happened to catch a few episodes of “The Family Guy” on Adult Swim recently. I’m not terribly surprised to learn that I wasn’t missing much. I found the show tedious to get through Although the show is chock full of pop references, it never manages to be funny. The longevity of the show is puzzling given that it operates on such a lean mixture, much like that of the show “Full House.” I hate to tell you this, but “The Family Guy” is a terrible show.
July 3, 2007
July 2, 2007
Let them eat cake…
A very low-budget video with a simple concept from Low, but I can’t stop watching.
June 30, 2007
Song Meanings
The name might throw you off a little, but SongMeanings is actually a lyrics database. It has a lot going for it. A huge database of song lyrics, no pop-ups or spyware, and a discussion feature where users post their interpretations of the songs.
June 29, 2007
There is a light that never goes out
YouTube strikes again. The (sole?) musician behind a project called Primrose League has posted several videos of himself playing songs by The Smiths. His recreations of Johnny Marr’s playing is obsessively close to the originals. Here’s an instrumental of There Is A Light That Never Goes Out, a beautiful song, with or without vocals.
June 28, 2007
Cold brewing coffee
I Need Coffee, your source for “Monthly Caffeination Information” has an article about cold-brewing iced coffee. I’ve never tried it before, but I plan to and will report back on the results.
June 26, 2007
Sanchez, spanked
Matt Sanchez gets very funny, well put, major spanking on the Gay Left Borg blog. Serves him right for trying to insult, degrade, and bait people based on their sexuality.
June 25, 2007
Fairtest
FairTest wants to get rid of standardized testing, but what will they replace it with?