My new blog is here

Ed Brayton has uncovered some superb, grade-A hypocrisy from WorldNutDaily. Funny how separation of mosque and state is fine, but not separation of church and state. Permanent link to this item in the archive.

I've been enjoying the classic rock trip over the last two episodes of the Daily Source Code. Gary Moore and Deep Purple. Cool! All we need now are Jimi Hendrix and the Beatles available in Creative Commons or PMN form and podcasting can start competing with Radio 2. Permanent link to this item in the archive.

I didn't want to say it, but whoops.  Permanent link to this item in the archive.

Ooh, new HTML tags that you've never heard of! optgroup looks useful. Permanent link to this item in the archive.

Ophelia Benson: "'No reason to doubt it' often means just no inclination to doubt it, no motivation to doubt it, no desire to doubt it, no intention of doubting it. In short, it doesn't mean anything epistemic, it refers to desire and will and motivation, which is another matter. Faith-based people tend to think that desire and motivation trump epistemic issues, so that what one believes really has nothing to do with evidence; evidence is beside the point; evidence is supremely and thoroughly irrelevant; what is relevant is what one has believed for a long time and wants to go on believing" Permanent link to this item in the archive.

I joined Facebook today, partly because I want to test the new APIs, and also because I finally found that my university and my school are now listed. I must say, I actually quite like it - even though there are lots of little things missing. It's certainly a lot better than MySpace, and has the added advantage of an open API. That said, I will be playing around with ways to get data out of MySpace too - although they will probably be screen scrapes. Permanent link to this item in the archive.

I've just been listening to the Glenn and Helen Show on debunking 9/11 mythsPermanent link to this item in the archive.

Out-of-office reply Permanent link to this item in the archive.

I popped out for about four hours today to do about an hour's worth of things. That's because the only practical bus is one which goes once a day in each direction. I curse the beast that is not having passed my driving test yet (and not having enough cash for the extravagant insurance rates nor the equally extravagant cost for driving lessons). Public transport can work. But it doesn't work here!

That said, this morning I've saved about £150 on travel costs. I've found the most badass price for a flight.

|

The ultimate oldie phone Permanent link to this item in the archive.

I saw this story today about mobile phones for the elderly. Cool idea, especially the way it works with hearing aids. Here are some other thoughts about phones for the elderly, and especially about "alarm buttons".

Make the ringer loud. And make it so that if it's a fixed phone, the noise is directional. My gran used to not hear the phone ring, despite the fact that she had an extra bell attached. Direct that sound. Make it so that if you've got a fixed phone, you can have a radio ringer that plugs in to an ordinary plug socket. That way, you can have the phone in one room, and have a ringer right next to the person's chair in another room.

The "red emergency button" is also a great idea. Here's what you need - a preset logic to it. One of the main frustrations was that we wanted to get one of these for gran, but they cost a lot to run. The phone company charged a monthly fee for the service, and you had to have one person who was there in case of emergency.

Here's how you could route around the problem. Have it so that it uses three networks - the mobile network (rather, all mobile networks), the standard phone network (have a little adaptor that plugs in to the socket and have a spare) and have it work over VoIP - with wi-fi. And prioritise that crap!

It's all well and good using the mobile network, but it needs to be failsafe. You only need to slip and fall somewhere without mobile service and you're screwed. Ideally, mobile and VoIP networks would make these emergency calls totally free.

Build some logic in to the process so that it can try numerous people. Part of the problem with current "alert" buttons is that they dial only one number, putting the responsibility clearly on that person. Make it location aware, so that if there's a panic at home, it calls the neighbours. Also, make it so that if it can't get a connection, it lets off a really loud noise to attract the attention of others. Make sure that if the neighbour is on holiday, it calls a different neighbour. Build a complex system that's easy to set up.

I'm imagining how cool it will be when we can have this setup to auto-trigger. A sensor built in to our body that can transmit the data to the phone upon major health failures (eg. heart attack, stroke) and automatically call the relevant people - ambulance, doctor, next of kin, building manager and so on.

The population is living longer. We need this stuff far more than we need more Java games on our phones. There's little competition in this market but lots of potential. If you're thinking of building something, build this as it has the potential to save hundreds or thousands of lives.

|

Statistical tail chasing Permanent link to this item in the archive.

I haven't yet had a chance to buy or read The Long Tail, but has either Anderson or someone else done any work looking at the Long Tail in comparison to temporal distribution? I've just looked at my del.icio.us account and the tags seem to be distributed in a long tail form (though I haven't done the graph yet).

It would be interesting to see how one could add a second Y-axis which would be some time variable (what the variable would be could vary - for weblogs, it could be "average amount of time between updates", "number of updates per time x"). Other possible metrics that one could use could be things like number of words, average sentence length, average word length, average paragraph length, amount of words to amount of pictures (in square pixels) ratio, number of links per post (or footnotes for offline), reading grade and readability metrics and - how about this, eh? - number of HTML/CSS (etc.) errors.

When I'm less busy, I'll put some of these charts together.

|

HomeTom MorrisOpiumfield

Last modified: Saturday, November 01, 2008 at 2:25 AM.

August 2006
Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
 
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
 
Jul   Sep

This is my old blog. Please visit the new one.

Send me a voice message via Odea PayPal
 Subscribe

My podcast (RSS)