Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Understand Racism in the '60s

I find that, having not lived it, it's hard to truly understand the Civil Rights Movement and just how awful things were. For a taste of that, view these photos uncovered recently by The Birmingham News. It's time, as a nation, that we face our past and have a national dialog about how far we have left to go.

Boingboing.net has a brief summary of the photos' origins.

Two Scientific Ideas Dramatically Shift Thinking

These two discoveries blew me away. The first argues that the Black Death plague in Europe contributed to a 300 mini ice age. The theory argues that after such a huge number of people died so quickly, trees sprang up on unused farmland, lowering carbon dioxide levels.

This gives some awful sense of balance to the way global warming, cited as a possible cause of the destructiveness of recent natural disasters, has taken so many lives — some kind of tragic buffering capacity.

The second discovery also requires an adjustment in thinking. Viruses may have been part of the evolutionary origin of life. Woah. I can't describe it as well as the Discover article can. Stuff in there made me feel like we're still in the Dark Ages. But I can quote this stunning statistic:
Scientists estimate that they have discovered and documented less than 1 percent of all the living things on the planet. But for every organism in that unidentified 99 percent, at least 10 times as many unknown viruses are thought to exist—the vast majority of which are harmless to life and yet integral to it.

Friday, February 24, 2006

I'm Seeing Red! (And hearing techno.)

Based on research that humans are able to associate music with color, a student at the University of Birmingham in England has created a music player where you create playlists based solely on the color (or as he would say colour) that you've assigned to the song. Once you've assigned enough songs, a color palette up top tells you where you're collection falls in the color scheme. Eventually, he's hoping to match people's musical palettes and allow you to download color associations from other people who categorize songs the way you do. I sense a match.com / iTunes cross-sell in the future...

This is very very very beta, but it's kinda fun to download, explore and create playlists with similar songs. I think it works because colors have moods, as do songs.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Hello? What's That? Oh, just a New Yorker

Even if you're not living in the continuous loony bin that is New York, you can get a kick out of Overheard in New York. People basically report on this website the conversations they overhear. Hysterical and a tad dumb. Yay USA!

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Me Talk Pretty One Day?

I just discovered this site (Engrish) that basically mocks the number of products out there with bad English (many of them Asian). Enjoy!

Keep Track of Mud Puddles' Changes

So I'll be the first to admit I'm an irregular post-ee on here. But I still love shooting out little messages of stuff I just find so ridiculous, brilliant, or novel that they must be shared. (Even if no one ever sees them, I feel TONS better).

But I'll bet it's a pain to come check here all the time, only to discover I've gone into hibernation again. I've finally got a solution for that, and it's brilliant! It's called RSS and it uses XML.

Woah, you say. What the #@*$ is RSS and XML. You're in luck, because I've recently gotten hooked and I'd love to tell you. Put simply, it's a new technology that allows you to keep track of new content on a website. Most major websites now offer this, although only 6% of web users are utilizing it.

Luckily, becoming one of the early adopters of this technology is not that hard. First you need a reader. I recommend either Bloglines or MyYahoo (you have to have a Yahoo e-mail first, I believe). Here's the best part of all: the reader you choose can tell you when all your favorite sites are updated, not just mine. That could include all the blogs you read or the news sites you keep track off. So in the instance of my site, you'll only have one place to check whether I've added anything. And that place will also tell you whether your Aunt Bertha and your cousin Ronny have updated their blogs, too. Plus get updates to the NY Times home page without having to scan their current page to see if anything is new.

These readers usually show a headline and then a summary so you can decide if you want to click to go to the site the feed is from.

Here are the steps to be the coolest kid on the block:
1. Get a reader (recommendations above). This requires signing up — not a download for the two I'm recommending here — and should take less than 5 minutes.
2. Then tell your reader you want access to this feed by copy-pasting this link in: http://wallowmuddy.blogspot.com/atom.xml

Please note that if you follow this link, you'll get a bunch of gibberish, something you'll notice on other sites offering RSS feeds. If that happens when you're trying to add other feeds, just copy- paste the address from your browser into your reader. Your reader can read what your browser thinks is an error.

Did I confuse anyone? Just holler if you want more details. Then rock this RSS Thang.

Thursday, February 09, 2006

I Hate This Idea: Standardized Tests in College

Urgh! Bush is trying to put standardized testing in colleges.

I've tried three times to write this post. This idea is just so dumb that I can't seem to be clever in talking about it. I just don't see it's value, what's driving this movement for change and why why why why anyone in higher education would support it.

Are we just looking for another method that we're behind Europe in the value of our education? Are state schools' financials going to change depending on their test results? Oh no oh no oh no! Now we're just controling the professors and forcing them to create a standardized (boring) curriculum. Please no!

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Coretta Scott King Wiretapped

This ABC News article offers an excellent understanding of the history of wiretapping in this country and its detrimental effects on just one person: the recently buried Coretta Scott King.

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Doctor Plays God

Doctors have long been accused of playing God, which is one of the reasons why some religions don't allow its members to go to the doctor or receive certain treatments. I'd have to think those same religions would be against this: a Massachusetts doctor who suspends life then revives — at least for pigs.

Seems like pretty amazing treatment, and I'm all for it if it saves lives and doesn't revive brain damaged people. Think all people will "see the light"?

Bribing for School Attendance

I can’t decide what I think of this trend: elementary, middle and high schools across the country are now offering rewards for perfect attendance. And by rewards, I mean cash, video games, laptops, trips to Disneyworld and even cars. This NY Times article implies it’s driven by the No Child Left Behind program, which rewards schools with more funding for greater attendance.

Advocates say it works: more students attend, grades and standardized test scores go up, everyone benefits. Others say this sends the wrong message, making kids think they should get something for something they are legally required to do.

Does it encourage kids to go to school when they’re sick, thereby spreading more illness? (Adults do the same at work, a trend dubbed presenteeism.) Or are we just teaching them an important life lesson earlier: go to work, get paid; go to school, get a car?

Monday, February 06, 2006

Thursday, February 02, 2006

One More Reason Not to Puff

In the NY Times today: “a woman who smokes has a risk of dying from heart disease equal to the risk she would have if she weighed 90 pounds more than the nonsmoker.” Damn! Slightly ironic considering people who quit tend to have weight gain afterward (partly due to the need to replace one addicition with another, I think.) Time to do anything to stop, people!