slacktivist: The Immortals "I’m something of an expert on the demographic implications of the baby boom. I’ve developed this expertise from copy editing hundreds, probably thousands, of articles* on the effect of the baby boomers’ impending retirement on Social Security. Based on what I’ve learned from those articles, and from closely watching the ongoing political… Continue reading links for 2009-03-20
Thursday Baby Blogging 031909
While the DVR piles up enough basketball to allow me to fast-forward through CBS’s nine-minute commercial breaks, here’s this week’s Baby Blogging picture: SteelyKid has been in an amazingly good mood this evening, and here you see her obligingly stretching out to her full length so you can see how much she’s grown.
Academic Poll: Amusing Anti-Cheating Strategies
The final exam for my modern physics class is this morning, which means I’ll have a bunch of time to kill while I proctor the test. This will likely involve a lot of brainless time-wasting, but I need to be on hand both as a formal guard against cheating, but more importantly to answer questions… Continue reading Academic Poll: Amusing Anti-Cheating Strategies
March (Meeting) Madness
I’m giving an exam this morning, then taking the afternoon off for my annual hoops overdose, so there won’t be much physics commentary here for the next few days. If you want hot physics news, though, there are a bunch of bloggers at the March Meeting, providing summaries on the Internet: Doug Natelson has two… Continue reading March (Meeting) Madness
So This Is What Ohio Feels Like
Mike Dunford has a post up titled You Almost Have to Feel Sorry for Jim Tedisco, about the special election that’s being held to fill Kirsten Gillibrand’s House seat. The title alone is enough to tell you that Mike doesn’t live in this area any more. Nobody who has to listen to the multi-media saturation… Continue reading So This Is What Ohio Feels Like
links for 2009-03-19
Idle Question of the Day "Exactly what bad consequences would follow if laws were passed by the relevant countries rendering credit default swap contracts void henceforth? (That is, canceling all the outstanding wagers because the bookies went bust.) " (tags: blogs politics economics social-science business) Basketball news: No, I don’t think that it’s better to… Continue reading links for 2009-03-19
Teams Who Are Ahead Win More Frequently
Over at the New York Times’ Freakonomics blog, Justin Wolfers gets into the March Madness spirit by reporting on a study of basketball games that yields the counter-intuitive result that being slightly behind at halftime makes a team more likely to win. It comes complete with a spiffy graph: Explained by Wolfers thusly: The first… Continue reading Teams Who Are Ahead Win More Frequently
Contest: Stupidest Word Template?
I needed to generate an electronic recommendation letter for a former student yesterday, and printing the letter on paper and scanning the paper copy seemed a little too… 1998 to be worth doing. As a result, I spent an inordinate amount of time fiddling around with Microsoft Word to come up with a template that… Continue reading Contest: Stupidest Word Template?
Why Does Excel Suck So Much?
Yesterday’s bad graphic post spurred me to finally get around to doing the “Why Does Excel Suck So Much?” post I’ve been meaning to do for a while. I gripe about Excel a lot, as we’re more or less forced to use it for data analysis in the intro labs (students who have taken the… Continue reading Why Does Excel Suck So Much?
(Wis)Con or Bust
In an effort to wrest something positive from the smoking ruins of the fannish precincts of LiveJournal, a number of people (Kate included) have put together a community to raise money to provide financial assistance to fans of color who want to attend Wiscon or some other convention. They’re auctioning off a lot of interesting… Continue reading (Wis)Con or Bust