Can’t tell me nothin…
July 31, 2007 on 7:31 pm | In General | 3 CommentsIf you aren’t already a Kanye West fan, you’re missing out. He’s started hosting flash versions of his newest videos on his site, and my favorite is the Can’t Tell Me Nothin. Quality video, but then he took it a step further and hosted the alt version by Zack Galafianakis (one of the four Comedians of Comedy). Check both of them out, they’re pretty funny.
WebWork 2.2.6 released (Security Fix)
July 24, 2007 on 9:22 am | In Security | 2 CommentsIf you are a Webwork/XWork user, you may have heard of the critical security issue found in XWork. Well, no fear the WebWork team has a backwards compatible with WebWork 2.2.5 release. Pick it up.
Getting ‘er done?
July 23, 2007 on 3:05 pm | In General | 1 CommentIn the past months, I’ve dropped the amount of side-projects I do apart from my 40hr. This weekend however, I decided to put some real effort into a project I’ve been waving off for about 6+ months. So, Saturday morning I get an iced mocha from the Starbucks, and at home made a few cups of an Asian/African blend. While hopped up on some quality Java, I ‘plowed’ through some yard work — those 3 hours went by fast.
Afterwards, I sat down and set my sites on getting some real dev work done. For the next 2 days, I moved with purpose. With the Pareto principle (you may know it as the 80/20 rule) in mind, I aimed for real progress; something my biz partner could see and demo. No excuses. It was a very different feeling. In the past I’ve allowed myself to be distracted by ancillary things like line heights, table cell alignment; basically rubbish. This time around, when a minor thing would come up, I tried to fix it for a consciously set amount of time: 5 minutes. If I could not solve it, I’d put it aside, and come back to it later.
This has never been my M.O. If I see a problem, I want… No, I need to know the answer. It’s been a burden. It takes away from the main issue, which is completion of the overall task. This self-imposed time limit really helped. Also, aiming to at least reach 80% completion had a positive affect. I was able to take the project from its existing 25%, to a nice 85%. It’s a great feeling, but now I need to keep that fire going. Once I actually get the version 1.0 complete, I’ll know I’ve done something. It’s in sight and now I have to rely on my biz partner’s responsiveness. Well, so far, so good.
Wikipedia, you’re the greatest…
July 12, 2007 on 12:42 pm | In General | 2 CommentsSo I was bored at the workplace, and decided to lookup the definition of boredom on wikipedia.org. It was pretty insightful. Then I thought to myself, Wikipedia is arguably the greatest Web 2.0 application ever invented. I’m sure some would mention YouTube, Flickr or FaceBook. Possibly, I did say arguably. Yes, Google is using YouTube’s technology to spread knowledge — but for the most part, people make funny, silly or (insert adjective here) videos, and share ‘em. Being vetted by the knowledge consumers themselves, Wikipedia, for the most part, allows you to learn things that – well, you wouldn’t otherwise.
People are simply people…
July 11, 2007 on 1:33 pm | In General | 1 CommentSo I finally watched the film, Blood Diamond. Outstanding performances by Djimon Hounsou and Leo Decaprio. While watching this film, I heard a variation on an idea that I’ve debated and struggled with for years. It came during a brief dialogue between Decaprio’s character and a doctor. Decaprio plays a retired mercenary turned diamond smuggler. The doctor is the leader of a hidden camp, where he is attempting to salvage and possibly reprogram (for the lack of a better word) children displaced by the conflict.
The doctor asks Decaprio if people are generally good or bad. Decaprio replies neither, instead people are simply people. Their actions actually define who they are. I’ve never heard this, at least not exactly in those terms. I believe psychology avoids the concept of good and bad. Rather, psychology sees people as beings capable of various actions, that we may deem good or bad. However, in reality hearing the words ‘holocaust’ or ‘genocide’ should evoke negative emotions.
In my discussions, there’s been the school of “people are generally flawed”. I see this as the pessimistic and moralist view. Usually, Christians who accept the concept of original sin normally subscribe to this. I’ve met atheists that hold this view. I have also met a few evangelicals that hold to original sin, and that people are generally good. I’ve never fully understood that.
The counter-view has been that “people are generally good”. I see this as the optimistic and relativist view. 90% of the people I’ve had this discussion with subscribe to this. The Buddhists I’ve spoken to agree with this. Following Freud’s structural theory, some individuals have stronger ‘ids’, while others have stronger ‘super-egos’. This should be obvious in your daily life — look at yourself and those around you.
Mother Teresa and M. Gandhi, by all accounts were righteous and selfless people, even till death. A. Hitler, a mass murder. However, in all three cases, these were simply people, who through a mixture of nature and nurture became what they became. In the end, I’ve abandoned my previous view that “people are generally rubbish”. I accept that people simply temporal beings, capable of both good and bad. Generally speaking, they themselves are neither good nor bad.
By the way, remember the doctor saving kids. Well, later on while driving Decaprio and his two others to an airfield, they are stopped by a boy soldier. The doctor tries to reason with the boy, and convince him to let them pass. The boy shoots the doctor in the chest. Mmm, taste the irony.
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