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'''09:56, 5 Sep 2005 (EDT)''': Memo to myself: do the dumb things I gotta do. Touch the puppet head. Write something for [[issuepedia:Main Page|Issuepedia]] about the "concept of self as global leader-in-exile", and apologize to Islam for the Crusades (see [http://www.futurist.com/911/enlightenment.htm]). Put psychoanalyst on danger money... oh, wait, haven't got a psychoanalyst. (That's ok; haven't got money either.) | '''09:56, 5 Sep 2005 (EDT)''': Memo to myself: do the dumb things I gotta do. Touch the puppet head. Write something for [[issuepedia:Main Page|Issuepedia]] about the "concept of self as global leader-in-exile", and apologize to Islam for the Crusades (see [http://www.futurist.com/911/enlightenment.htm]). Put psychoanalyst on danger money... oh, wait, haven't got a psychoanalyst. (That's ok; haven't got money either.) | ||
'''17:18, 5 Sep 2005 (EDT)''': Okay, so I've been spending way too much time today reading articles on [[wikipedia:David Brin|David Brin]]'s [http://davidbrin.com web site] (and things they link to, and the sites which host those things...), and now I must make another comment which probably won't quite make sense until I write it out at greater length: Brin says that we far too easily assume that everyone else is a mindless sheep, and we alone see clearly. This naturally sparked the question of why it often ''seems'' that way (why, for instance, here in the South -- both [[Durham, NC|Durham]] and [[Athens, GA|Athens]], my two data points of parental experience with public schools -- does it seem like black parents in the public school system overwhelmingly tend to want their kids to be drilled mercilessly, while the white parents want more room for individual differences in the way kids learn, teaching practical skills rather than to-the-test, etc. This may not be the best example, but it's the one which came to mind.) -- and then what suggested itself to me was that we are all relative "experts" in certain areas and relatively ignorant in others, and in any area of decision-making where you rea relatively ignorant, your actions might seem sheeplike to someone who ''has'' been paying attention to the various issues in that area. | |||
After a little more thinking, I refined this to "maybe there are different sets of knowledge ''on the same issue'' which come into play for different groups of people, and for a group which is steeped in one set of knowledge, the other group's reactions may seem sheeplike. Lacking the knowledge behind the other group's choices, their behavior seems both irrational and strangely cohesive, which is a pretty good definition of sheeplike." Which kind of seems obvious, when put that way. So maybe I just took the long way around to get back to familiar territory. | |||
=What Woozle Was Doing Earlier= | =What Woozle Was Doing Earlier= |
Revision as of 21:18, 5 September 2005
What Woozle Is Doing Right Now
Entries are most recent first; to read in order, start at the end.
Overview
- HyperMail so I can manage my emails
- Images for existing VBZ items
Today
08:09, 5 Sep 2005 (EDT): Another Benjy story
09:56, 5 Sep 2005 (EDT): Memo to myself: do the dumb things I gotta do. Touch the puppet head. Write something for Issuepedia about the "concept of self as global leader-in-exile", and apologize to Islam for the Crusades (see [1]). Put psychoanalyst on danger money... oh, wait, haven't got a psychoanalyst. (That's ok; haven't got money either.)
17:18, 5 Sep 2005 (EDT): Okay, so I've been spending way too much time today reading articles on David Brin's web site (and things they link to, and the sites which host those things...), and now I must make another comment which probably won't quite make sense until I write it out at greater length: Brin says that we far too easily assume that everyone else is a mindless sheep, and we alone see clearly. This naturally sparked the question of why it often seems that way (why, for instance, here in the South -- both Durham and Athens, my two data points of parental experience with public schools -- does it seem like black parents in the public school system overwhelmingly tend to want their kids to be drilled mercilessly, while the white parents want more room for individual differences in the way kids learn, teaching practical skills rather than to-the-test, etc. This may not be the best example, but it's the one which came to mind.) -- and then what suggested itself to me was that we are all relative "experts" in certain areas and relatively ignorant in others, and in any area of decision-making where you rea relatively ignorant, your actions might seem sheeplike to someone who has been paying attention to the various issues in that area.
After a little more thinking, I refined this to "maybe there are different sets of knowledge on the same issue which come into play for different groups of people, and for a group which is steeped in one set of knowledge, the other group's reactions may seem sheeplike. Lacking the knowledge behind the other group's choices, their behavior seems both irrational and strangely cohesive, which is a pretty good definition of sheeplike." Which kind of seems obvious, when put that way. So maybe I just took the long way around to get back to familiar territory.
What Woozle Was Doing Earlier
2005-09-04
07:28, 4 Sep 2005 (EDT): Laboriously checking through about a hundred possibly-recovered directories checking to see if they contain anything useful. I may end up attempting to write my own drive-recovery app.
2005-09-03
16:38, 3 Sep 2005 (EDT): Chopping onions, attempting to recover files from a messed-up hard drive, interceding between a battling 6yo and 8yo... :-P
2005-09-02
07:50, 2 Sep 2005 (EDT): Requiem for New Orleans:
- "In the Heart of the Night", by Poco
- "Shattered Visions", by Brides of Jesus (transplanted New Orleans funk band) (MP3 for a limited time)
- "New Orleans Ladies", by LeRoux (MP3 of live acoustic performance on the late lamented WQDR Rock)
11:57, 2 Sep 2005 (EDT): Ok, so two days ago (the day Katrina hit), we begin to hear about rising gas prices, so I take the Nissan out to Costco to fill up, in case there are shortages by the time the minivan needs a tank. However, I can't get my check card to work (Costo doesn't do credit cards except Amex, but they do take check cards -- which means you need the PIN). So I give up and go home.
Next day, we happen to be in the bank, so I have them reset the PIN to the same number as the other card, which is easier to remember. On the way out of the bank, I suddenly figure it out -- I had the PINs reversed; I was trying to use my personal card's PIN on my business card. So I have just now accomplished exactly nothing, except to have the bank send me an extra card I don't need about 2 months before they would have sent me a new card anyway. (Oops.)
Then today, in the face of continuing news of gas shortages and spiking prices, I decide I really had better get that tank filled, just in case (thus putting myself at the end of a long string of fellow gas-hoarders, I'm sure), so we drive the Nissan over to Costco -- to find that they have no gas of any kind. (Oops)
So we stop off at a Citgo station on the way, the only place we'd seen all morning that had gas under $3.29 (which seemed to be pretty universal, even at places that usually charge more; this one Citgo was charging $3.19). Being a bit out of practice at tanking up at non-Costco pumps, I pull in on the wrong side. (Oops.)
The sign says they're requiring pre-payment due to a large number of drive-offs, so I go in and give them my Citgo card, and then come back out to the pump. I stick the pump in the gas tank and squeeze the trigger -- nothing happens. Then I suddenly remember you generally have to turn the pump on at these non-pay-at-pump places, so I go around to turn on the pump; on the way there, I stumble and knock the hose over a bit, and the nozzle springs out of the gas tank filler hole, spraying a few teaspoons of (increasingly precious) gasoline on the pavement as it does so. (Oops.)
I stick the nozzle back in more firmly, switch the pump on, and it starts pumping. And then I notice that the gas I'm paying for is $3.39/gallon, not $3.19... and then I notice that the pump says "PREMIUM" on it. (Oops.)
I point this out to Harena, who so *very* wittily chimes in "well, guess there's no sense in crying over spilled gas!". About 3 seconds later, gas begins pouring out of the gas tank. (Insert rimshot here.) Apparently the cutoff-sensors at Costco deal with the pump nozzle being at a funny angle a lot better than these ones do -- and this one was, indeed, at a funny angle, because was stretching over from the other side of the car, because I had parked with the tank on the wrong side. (Oops.)
On the bright side, I just now looked at the sales slip, and for some unknown reason they actually only charged me $3.19/gallon. Maybe it wasn't really premium? (I could imagine that they might have decided to fill all their tanks with Regular, anticipating a shortage. That would seem like the kind of public-spirited thing which the lowest-priced gas station in town just might do; $deity knows they probably could have stocked up with premium, overcharged for it, and made out like bandits. But the pump clearly thought it was charging me $3.39/gallon.)
(P.S. "$deity" was copied from today's Schlock Mercenary musings and is a variable used to represent the deity of your choice.)
2005-09-01
07:22, 1 Sep 2005 (EDT): I'm being told a story.