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philosophy :: psychology :: theology :: technology

30 November 2004

True SNES Tunes!

23:34:34 :: [technology &c.] :: 129 words

A guy just made a way to cleanly rip the sound chip (APU) out of the SNES. Want chiptunes for which no SPC plugin is necessary? Check this out. From a post on Slashdot, the article on Raphael Assenat’s site [FR], we have a schematic and a few pictures. If I could get my SNES back from my freshman-year room mate, that might be something to try.

Who am I kidding? If I got that beast back I’d never take it apart. (But I might grab one off of eBay.)

29 November 2004

To Pause & Reflect

17:27:33 :: [theology] :: 194 words

For a year or two now I’ve received RBC Ministries’ “Our Daily Bread,” a free devotional pamphlet that outlines simple Biblical truths in plain-English bites of a small page each. On the front of every issue is a picture of something out of nature along with a Bible verse.

The January 2005 edition of ODB features Psalm 143:5, which says,

I meditate on all Your works;
I muse on the works of Your hands.

Usually I just overlook these little pithy verses as being a part of the formatting of the devotional guide, but this time I took a moment to consider: do I really meditate on everything God has done for me? Do I meditate on my salvation, on the works of His hands, the celestial bodies and nature? No, to be frank, I haven’t in a long while. Well, here’s to a renewed committment. Cure for depression and anxiety: think of what God’s done for me (I’m breathing, I’m alive, I’m saved, for three; go from there!) and thank Him. Just a thought.

“DVD Jon” Cracks WMV9

16:24:43 :: [technology &c., Linux] :: 170 words

Jon Johansen, the guy that brought you DeCSS, now turns to Microsoft’s Windows Media version 9. Check out the post in his blog, “So sue me,” entitled simply “WMV9 under Linux” for proof-screenshots[1][2] in a Linux box running VLC. Another article goes more in-depth, citing problems that the VC-1 format has caused Microsoft lately.

Johansen’s blog also links to iOpener, which will change Protected AAC files to simply, AAC files. Exciting times for hackers everywhere. What about the backlash? What’s MS going to do with the VC-1 now that it’s unlocked?

28 November 2004

some headlines for your pleasure

21:34:59 :: [technology &c., art & music] :: 255 words

Some headlines that have recently caught my eye are as follows.

NASA Plans To Slam ‘Hammer’ into Comet - NASA to shatter comet Tempel 1 using a slab of copper. Unsurprisingly named “Deep Impact.” Farkers and Slashdotters alike are raising questions about whether the comet could be knocked off-course. However unlikely that is, I do actually wonder if it were possible, if we really tried. I don’t wonder much, mind you, but I do wonder.

Shortwave Crypto - Some shortwave radio bands have been in use for years to transmit various messages that are encoded so tight you can’t ever crack it. (Read Simon Singh’s Code and get with it!)

Nap Pods - William Gibson wrote about these in various stories novel-length and short, but they weren’t science fiction in Japan when he was writing about them. Now they’re not sci-fi here, either! Climb into a nap chair for 20 minutes and cough up $14. They’d make a killing off me.

You Knew IRC Wouldn’t Be Safe Forever - Unfortunately, the Feds are looking into silent background monitoring of IRC chat rooms. Yikes. Makes me think that anonymizers, homemade proxies and otherwise, are going to come in vogue here shortly. What’s next, SSH IRC?

That’s it for tonight!

27 November 2004

ThinkBlog Updates: Links & Happenings

21:34:29 :: [technology &c., general] :: 478 words

After a work-week hiatus, the thinkblog is back in action. I hope everyone in the US had a good Thanksgiving, and that the effects of the tryptophan are wearing off.

At the University of South Carolina, things are cranking up to full swing, or getting ready to. In that light, you’ll probably see a burst of posts here on ThinkBlog, because procrastination is among my strong suits (almost up there with pacing the floor and cleaning up obsessively when faced with large papers with near deadlines).

Some Worthy Endorsements

You’re not going to find ads on this site; it’s for fun, for edification spiritual and intellectual, and not least because Information Wants to Be Free (oh yes, it does). Nevertheless, you will find linked graphics to several sites and/or causes I support on the newly-touched up left-hand pane of the site. Here is a bit of explanation.
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21 November 2004

Fight for the Web: Google v. MS

21:15:53 :: [technology &c.] :: 125 words

Google now has competition from everyone’s favorite bully, Microsoft. A new search engine, MSN Search, will be–of course–integrated with Internet Explorer. Well, they may have control of most users’ desktops, but they can’t control the web: this move is designed so that the latter proposition will eventually erode.

Like Netscape, Google poses no serious platform threat to Windows. The real threat is the Web and its informational utility that does not require Windows.

Joe Wilcox at Jupiter Research, as quoted in Dailytimes.com.pk article, Microsoft opens war for Internet dominance.

On the other hand, this could make Google a tougher search engine–good news for end users.

20 November 2004

Barbers: Good for the Soul

20:40:44 :: [psychology, general] :: 309 words

I went downtown the other day to get a haircut. Finding a place on a side street in the southeast side of town, I walked in to find three gentlemen standing behind some old chairs. Two of the three were smoking a cigarette, and none of them could have been younger than fifty-five.

The man that cut my hair had grandfatherly hands, strong and gentle, and he took his time. (Even though he used clippers and scissors, it took him over an hour!) This Delaware native liked the weather in South Carolina because the former state’s night air “was like getting slapped in the face with a cold, wet dish rag when you walked outside.” The conversation was never terribly lively, nor too deep. But I learned something important, listening to him and the others talk.

For a few weeks, I’ve been feeling anxious, nervous, torn down. I missed my honey and my old friends from home, having not made any down here, and I haven’t been exactly acing the classes I signed up for this semester. No time, no motivation: the cold November rain had begun to sink deep down and dampen my heart.

But sitting there in that chair, just sitting and hearing, and talking sometimes about whatever I was asked, was relaxing. Amidst the fine tobacco smoke hanging about when one of the gents would exhale, the incandescents overhead casting a warm glow contrasted with the street outside, there was a kind of quietness about these men. They weren’t worried or torn up, they were just hanging out, doing their jobs. Talking, chuckling, smoking, being well.

So next time I need to chill out and the bite of the afternoon air begins to creep up the street, I might just have to have a touch-up.

19 November 2004

Illogical but Understandable

19:25:45 :: [cognition] :: 152 words

Reading my Cognition (Ashcraft, 2002) textbook, I came across an interesting passage in Chapter 11 dealing with Decisions, Judgments, and Reasoning–specifically, a coin toss:

In our coin toss example, we all know that getting heads or tails is a chance or random process. Given that tossing coins is random, we judge the sequence HHTHTT as much more likely or probably than HHHTTT because the alternating sequence HHTHTT resembles the outcome of a random process more than HHHTTT. The thinking here, illogical but nonetheless understandable, is that a random process ought to look random; it ought to generate a random-looking outcome.

Now there’s an interesting phenomenon. Illogical but understandable. So is it logical in a different sense than the way we typically understand logic? What is the neurological mechanism by which we can understand this selection if it’s not logical? Does this mean that it IS logical on some level?

18 November 2004

html2csv Parse Your Stocks

22:03:16 :: [Linux] :: 186 words

A little less than a month ago, a gentleman messaged me asking if I could help figure out a way to get the HTML table out of this page, which is Stock Scan’s New 52-week Highs. A bit of Googling, and I was able to provide him with a link to a Perl script. Here it is, for your pleasure, a hypertext-to-comma-separated text converter:

Thanks, Fabian Bastin!

The guy I was talking with said he did the following to remove the unnecessary lines:

$ wget -O temp.txt 'http://tinyurl.com/3rpno'
$ ./html2csv temp.txt > temp.dat
$ grep "^; " temp.dat

If you’re looking for an easy way to convert from HTML tables out to CSV text, you can use that Perl script or another script that’s actually online in CGI:

Thanks to Ron Coscorrosa.

Hope that helps!

17 November 2004

new things in the works

05:53:53 :: [general] :: 152 words

I’m in the midst of writing some different articles for the site, all of which are presently still lingering in draft mode due to the fact that I’ve been overloaded with tests and homework lately. Not to mention that now my circadian rhythm is now completely ridiculous. Nevertheless, I’m glad that I was able to take advantage of it somehow; I got to see my dear love yesterday!

While I’m working, hey, if you get bored, check out the Web Gallery of Art at its new location! Very well done site, an excellent resource.

You’ll also notice that the calendar has been corrected to the American standard (Sunday up front, thanks!), and the Archives section has been shaven down just a bit.

Things around here are going Nuts, but it’s that time of year, after all. If they weren’t, wouldn’t you be disappointed?

16 November 2004

new domain names!

22:03:08 :: [technology &c., general] :: 110 words

Seeing as I now have income, I just purchased three new domain names on a year’s contract each, two from EV1 Servers and one from Network Solutions. Very pleased with the price on those former two (thanks Jeff!). Excited about what this means for the blog in terms of exposure and information dissemination.

The new ways to get to ] :: [ think ] :: [ are as follows:

Tell your friends about the new, easier-to-remember domains!

14 November 2004

Gothic style: Notes

23:56:55 :: [psychology] :: 1406 words

In studying for a recent art history test, I was reading up on the history of Gothic art and it occurred to me that there were some striking similarities in the manifestation of the old Gothic mindset as seen in the art and architecture of the period and the manifestation of the neo-Gothic mindset, as exemplified initially by Ozzy Osbourne and more recently by the likes of Evanescence and Seether, to name a couple. Think about this for a moment.
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13 November 2004

Laughs, auf Deutsch

19:28:51 :: [technology &c.] :: 312 words

In honor of the visitors I’ve been getting from funverteiler.de (Willkommen, meine deutschen Freunde!), here are some of the best ones I’ve seen:

Hope you enjoyed those. Bis bald; kommen Sie häufig zurück und erklären Sie Ihren Freunden über think.stufftoread.comthinkblog.org!

12 November 2004

Everything is Under [Our] Control

01:09:21 :: [technology &c.] :: 86 words

Microsoft claims that shortly after the official 1.0 release of the incredibly easy-to-use and efficient web browser Mozilla Firefox it’s simply “not a threat.” This from someone who admits to never having used it.

Remarkably similar to how aides of Arafat claimed he was in impeccable health up to the last moment when he died.

Find out for yourself. Check out Firefox. Incredible.

11 November 2004

Overview: Eimas’ (1985) Research

02:43:16 :: [cognition] :: 404 words

Eimas, P. D. (1985). The perception of speech in early infancy. Scientific American 252(1), January 1985. 45-52, 120.

There were four distinct tasks described by this study by Eimas. [Babies were used in these experiments because presumably they had not yet learned to adapt /been conditioned to all the specific linguistic perceptions of their adult native speakers.] The first is one in which he and his colleagues measured with a specialized apparatus the changes in sucking frequency in infants due to perception of distinct phonemic differences in spoken language. Ultimately, when infants were able to perceive a difference in the phonemes being presented them (viz. BAH & PAH), the sucking rates increased momentarily. The second experiment Eimas describes used three different kinds of phonemic differences involving native English, Thai, and Spanish phonemes. Though the babies were born in Guatemala, they were unable to discern the specific distinction between voiced/voicelessness that adult Spanish speakers are able to. (This was measured similarly to the first experiment, using delta in heart rate instead of sucking times.) The third experiment was one in which babies were presented a set of phonemes that were variations on a theme (/a/ and /i/, specifically). Infants were, in short, able to recognize differences between /a/ and /i/ but did not regard as phonetically significant the differences among the same phonemes. Finally, an experiment with 6-8 mo. old infants of English-speaking parents was conducted, testing their sensitivity to Hindi and Salish phonetics; and then after six more months giving a re test. The results point to the fact that infants will lose the parts of their linguistic perceptions that are not being used over time. These results are all largely related to the phenomenon of discreteness in human language, as well as to the idea of cultural transmission of languages.

This research provides strong support for the idea that humans are born with the natural capacity for languages. We can, as infants, recognize subtle differences in phonemic expression, can *not* recognize certain distinctions as well but are able to be trained to do so, can discriminate between different phonemes when presented as different sets and are able to adapt to differences within phonemic expression, and can lose and regain the ability to recognize certain phonemes over time. This body of evidence relating to the adaptibility in language learning from early infancy points strongly to the hypothesis that Chomsky put forth–that we are born with language.

10 November 2004

some Latin abbrevs.

21:59:37 :: [art & music] :: 327 words

Some people have trouble with commonly used abbreviations that have Latin roots. E.g., for example. Seriously though, here are some of the most commonly used abbreviations found in research papers and even general speech, and how to use them.

There are a couple of good sites that have large lists of abbreviations and phrases; these are only a few of the most common you’re likely to run across in psychological journals.


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