See here.
Of course, the correct way of seeing Leyonhjelm's complaint is that it's just another example of a Senator with too much time on his hands, playing games.
What's his "nanny State" and wind power enquiries achieved, by the way?
Monday, August 15, 2016
Monday stuff
* Well, that's weird. Trumpkin tragic Steve Kates from the clown rodeo at Catallaxy yesterday noted an article about the unclear size of the proton-muon combination, and how important this may turn out to be for physics, just after I had read the same day an updated article on arXiv suggesting that the discrepancy can be explained by extra dimensions, and suggesting further experiments that might help confirm it. I assume that this type of experiment does not require high energy and particle acceleration, so it would be ironic if a "table top" experiment turned out to be key to proving the existence new physics when the LHC has not.
* So Tony Abbott now thinks he probably shouldn't have played games with human lives by allowing the Gillard government to legislate for trying the "Malaysia solution"? This poses a bit of a quandary - should he be at least grudgingly admired for coming around to this view, or should we feel greater vindication about his appalling hypocrisy and willingness to advance his career at any cost? I'm leaning strongly to the latter - Abbott is like a bad advertisement for the type of Catholic who takes full advantage of its "get out of jail free" system - you can sin pretty much as much as you like provided you have enough time on your death bed to regret it and receive absolution. Nope, sorry Tony - it was clearly a mere political game you were playing at the time, and you don't deserve sympathy.
* The Olympics - I have my own guilty confession to make - I'm sort of finding Rio's reputation as the most dangerous and bumbling Olympics ever held to be refreshing. I mean, every Games there is panic about facilities not being ready on time, tickets not being sold, and whether visitors will face dangers from terrorism or whatever. But this time, it's all coming true (well, thankfully, with visitors only being robbed and avoiding bullets, but not being killed - I wouldn't be making this comment if that had happened.) It makes a change from the Games all going smoothly after all. Perhaps it will work as incentive to give the games back to poor old Greece permanently, which would seem to be about the only way that country might make a long term economic recovery.
And I would have thought most Australians would be happy enough with the performance of the swim team - I can't stand commentary about "choking" from armchair critics.
So, yeah, I am sort of perversely enjoying these games - and Rio still looks like a very pretty city.
* So Tony Abbott now thinks he probably shouldn't have played games with human lives by allowing the Gillard government to legislate for trying the "Malaysia solution"? This poses a bit of a quandary - should he be at least grudgingly admired for coming around to this view, or should we feel greater vindication about his appalling hypocrisy and willingness to advance his career at any cost? I'm leaning strongly to the latter - Abbott is like a bad advertisement for the type of Catholic who takes full advantage of its "get out of jail free" system - you can sin pretty much as much as you like provided you have enough time on your death bed to regret it and receive absolution. Nope, sorry Tony - it was clearly a mere political game you were playing at the time, and you don't deserve sympathy.
* The Olympics - I have my own guilty confession to make - I'm sort of finding Rio's reputation as the most dangerous and bumbling Olympics ever held to be refreshing. I mean, every Games there is panic about facilities not being ready on time, tickets not being sold, and whether visitors will face dangers from terrorism or whatever. But this time, it's all coming true (well, thankfully, with visitors only being robbed and avoiding bullets, but not being killed - I wouldn't be making this comment if that had happened.) It makes a change from the Games all going smoothly after all. Perhaps it will work as incentive to give the games back to poor old Greece permanently, which would seem to be about the only way that country might make a long term economic recovery.
And I would have thought most Australians would be happy enough with the performance of the swim team - I can't stand commentary about "choking" from armchair critics.
So, yeah, I am sort of perversely enjoying these games - and Rio still looks like a very pretty city.
Friday, August 12, 2016
Password problems
I am getting overwhelmed with passwords, and in particular, with the interaction between Yahoo, Google and YouTube. I think there's less problem if you're not trying to keep a level of net anonymity, but if you are....
The end of the line for super colliders?
Physicists need to make the case for high-energy experiments : Nature News & Comment
Bee paints a pessimistic picture, too.
And here's an article (a pretty clear one, too, given the topic) about it at The Atlantic.
Bee paints a pessimistic picture, too.
And here's an article (a pretty clear one, too, given the topic) about it at The Atlantic.
Message to monty (everyone else can ignore)
Can you please tell CL to stop his "I support Trump...but not really" act? He does the same with Gateway Pundit - calls Hoft a dimwit who is only right 1 out of 20 times, yet still continually and gullibly re-posts every Clinton conspiracy theory that Hoft posts, and only occasionally covers his endorsement with "well, if this is true..." His self created land of obfuscation is bothering me...
And - you might also note there that Snopes has looked at the wildly implausible RWDB meme that Clinton needs a doctor actually ready to inject her at any moment by her side. You're dealing with folk not playing with a full deck, you know?
And - you might also note there that Snopes has looked at the wildly implausible RWDB meme that Clinton needs a doctor actually ready to inject her at any moment by her side. You're dealing with folk not playing with a full deck, you know?
"Work with me here, Donald"..."No"
I find this hilarious - the pro-Trump Hewitt trying to help Trump de-doofus himself, and Trump refusing the invitation:
Update: at Hot Air, of all places, they have a serious take on the stupidity of this:
Update: at Hot Air, of all places, they have a serious take on the stupidity of this:
This is a recurring problem for Trump, seen most recently in what he said about “Second Amendment people”: He doesn’t seem capable of imagining how the things he says will be understood beyond his own fan base. Tom Joscelyn noted this morning that “Obama founded ISIS” is also an idea pushed by Iran’s supreme leader, Khamenei. He has a different meaning of “founded” than Trump does: He wants Shiites, who loathe ISIS, to believe that the organization was deliberately created and equipped by the U.S. to persecute them. That’s not what Trump means by it, but because he insists on using a word that implies intent in describing Obama’s role, Iran can use the clip of Trump in its English-language propaganda. Trump either doesn’t grasp that or doesn’t care enough to be more precise with his criticism.Update 2: and then comes the argument, from Slate, that Trump knows what he's doing. Personally, I think that's giving Trump too much credit. I think it's more likely that he wings it in front of supporters, because he likes the roar of the crowd and is actually insecure, and then comes the retro-justification:
Hewitt then countered one last time by suggesting that he personally would use “different language” to communicate the same criticism. Trump’s response was remarkable for its awareness. “But they wouldn’t talk about your language,” he told Hewitt, “and they do talk about my language, right?”
That remark is telling, and it illustrates something that should be obvious by now but is often lost in the noise of each new controversy that comes every time Trump says something outlandish and/or obviously untrue. This was not some ad-libbed comment that went awry, a bad joke that did not land, or the candidate going “off message,” as Beltway pundits call it. In fact, he’s completely on message, and this has been the message for years, dating back to Obama’s first term, during which Trump used the birther movement to lay the foundation for his current presidential run. More than anything, Trump has built his campaign on (white) America’s fears of the other, and what better way for him to harness those than by othering the sitting president of the United States, be it by questioning his citizenship, his faith, or his loyalty. It doesn’t matter to Trump whether his wild-eyed accusations are true; it doesn’t matter to him whether they’re offensive. All that matters to him is casting an illusion his supporters want to believe in.
Thursday, August 11, 2016
Ridiculous technology
While I take great pleasure in marvelling at what technological capacity there is in cheap mobile phones these days (my current phone was under $100 last Christmas), I would love to have the new Samsung Note 7, which, I see, comes with a pre-order offer of a micro SD card of 256 G capacity (at a price of $1348 at Harvey Norman.)
Carrying around 256G of storage in your smart phone (even more if you count part of the in built 64G)? And on such a tiny card?
This is just ridiculously awesome, and young folk who are growing up with this need to understand how incredible it is. (Hence I spend time doing this with my own kids, and encourage all adults over 40 to do the same.)
I suspect this phone is going to do well for Samsung, given the way some markets (such as India) go for the big "phablet" devices if they can only afford one computing device. Reviews seem positive.
And, back to my under $100 Samsung phone - I have recently tried a new launcher - Smart Launcher - and I like it a lot.
Carrying around 256G of storage in your smart phone (even more if you count part of the in built 64G)? And on such a tiny card?
This is just ridiculously awesome, and young folk who are growing up with this need to understand how incredible it is. (Hence I spend time doing this with my own kids, and encourage all adults over 40 to do the same.)
I suspect this phone is going to do well for Samsung, given the way some markets (such as India) go for the big "phablet" devices if they can only afford one computing device. Reviews seem positive.
And, back to my under $100 Samsung phone - I have recently tried a new launcher - Smart Launcher - and I like it a lot.
Trump's still running?
The Trump campaign has been a disaster for the Trump brand - The Washington Post
Some spectacularly bad PR for Trump yesterday/today, hey? Even being generous to the idiot that he didn't mean gun nuts could shoot her, I reckon the least you could plausibly interpret it as would be speculating about armed intimidation of a Clinton presidency over her choice of presidents (of the "open carry" type of demonstration that makes the country look like a hick third world nation.)
The article linked deals with something I had been wondering about - wouldn't all of this woeful publicity be hurting anything branded "Trump"? I mean, if you were a Democrat who previously might have holidayed at a Trump resort, and just joked with your friends about the apparent support for an eccentric TV character that this entailed, wouldn't you now take it more seriously and definitely avoid having anything to do with his name?
Some spectacularly bad PR for Trump yesterday/today, hey? Even being generous to the idiot that he didn't mean gun nuts could shoot her, I reckon the least you could plausibly interpret it as would be speculating about armed intimidation of a Clinton presidency over her choice of presidents (of the "open carry" type of demonstration that makes the country look like a hick third world nation.)
The article linked deals with something I had been wondering about - wouldn't all of this woeful publicity be hurting anything branded "Trump"? I mean, if you were a Democrat who previously might have holidayed at a Trump resort, and just joked with your friends about the apparent support for an eccentric TV character that this entailed, wouldn't you now take it more seriously and definitely avoid having anything to do with his name?
Tuesday, August 09, 2016
Census 2016
I find it hard to understand the privacy freakout by certain folk with respect to the 2016 census. I strongly suspect it is age related - I reckon you have to be over 45 to worry about it at all, even though I well and truly belong to that category, and don't. I'm guessing that 95% of people under 30, most of whom have so little regard for privacy that they post about their strings of partners (temporary or longer) on Facebook, and have probably at least once sent or received pics of their naked bits through the aether, have no concerns at all.
Bernard Keane has been particularly overwrought about this - and didn't he write a novel about surveillance which featured many sex scenes? He has some other odd obsessions, including donkeys and greyhounds. (None of which, I trust, are involved in the novel.) I wish he would just stick to politics.
Anyway, no I couldn't complete it on line tonight either, and I'm sure I'll get sick of hearing about this government tech failure over the next week.
I don't know why they just didn't call it "Census Week" to make it clearer people could do it on line over (say) 7 to 14 days. Seems an obvious way to avoid the rush of "census night", no?
Bernard Keane has been particularly overwrought about this - and didn't he write a novel about surveillance which featured many sex scenes? He has some other odd obsessions, including donkeys and greyhounds. (None of which, I trust, are involved in the novel.) I wish he would just stick to politics.
Anyway, no I couldn't complete it on line tonight either, and I'm sure I'll get sick of hearing about this government tech failure over the next week.
I don't know why they just didn't call it "Census Week" to make it clearer people could do it on line over (say) 7 to 14 days. Seems an obvious way to avoid the rush of "census night", no?
Laffered out of a job
Conservative Lawmakers Ousted in Kansas Primary Election - WSJ
Even the Wall Street Journal notes the failure of the Laffer inspired Kansas experiment in large tax cuts.
Good to see some politicians paying for it.
Even the Wall Street Journal notes the failure of the Laffer inspired Kansas experiment in large tax cuts.
Good to see some politicians paying for it.
Steel story
The (largely false) globalization narrative - The Washington Post
I was surprised by this explanation of what happened to the American steel manufacturing industry.
I was surprised by this explanation of what happened to the American steel manufacturing industry.
Monday, August 08, 2016
Lol indeed
I was just on Youtube looking at the video of the old Safety Dance song (for no particular reason other than it's catchy - I've embedded it before.) Thought I would look at the recent comments, and found this:
This song attracts the funniest comments...
This song attracts the funniest comments...
Olympics
For what it's worth: I quite liked the Rio opening ceremony. It was, apparently, a much cheaper production than recent Olympic openings, but was actually better for it - it reminded me of the scale of the Sydney opening, which was also great but with less mechanical contraptions than seem to have turned up at later openings. It again showed how much can be done with the clever projectors they use at all these events now. (I particularly liked how the early airplane I had never heard of before seemed to be designed backwards.)
And yes, it was appropriately sexy in a Brazilian way.
And yes, it was appropriately sexy in a Brazilian way.
Politics
* Wasn't Insiders interesting yesterday, with new Senator Malcolm Roberts sealing the deal as having outpaced Leyonhjelm as the biggest nutjob in the Senate, by far. Apparently, only 5 years ago he let some "very strong researcher" from Queensland convince him that the "sovereign citizen" movement was the way to go to try to argue against a carbon tax. (I hadn't even heard of this bunch of nutters until Malcolm came along.) He seems to have changed on this in more ways than one - originally trying to claim he had no knowledge of the movement, now saying it was "a mistake".
The guys looks nutty; he definitely sounds nutty; and he committed his nuttiness to paper - I think based on his "empirical evidence" insistence, I can declare the evidence is in: he was and is a nut; and a slippery dishonest (even by normal political standards) one at that.
* Also on Insiders, Gerard Henderson* was claiming that One Nation was a long term problem for the Coalition, as having 4 Senators and staff meant they could consolidate their credibility before the next election.
Yeah, sure, Gerard. The track record of parties based around one personality is obviously dire - especially when they are run by self interested populists like Palmer or Hanson. (Hanson does well out of elections whether she wins or not.). At least people like Xenophon or Don Chipp - smart guys running for a neglected centre of politics - might establish parties that run some distance, but even then the Democrats show they won't be around forever.
Gerard's gone downhill as a political commentator; time to retire, I suggest.
* Is Trump still the GOP candidate? The longer this campaign runs, the more it shows that the power of positive thinking may take a BS artist who starts with a family fortune quite a long way, but it does absolutlelynothing to encourage insight.
The thing is, the more he derides Hillary's mental state, the more the electorate will see it as projection. But he obviously doesn't see that risk.
Update: * even after just having watched the nut filled interview performance of Roberts. But Henderson has always given undue credence to climate change denialism - he gave Salby a venue at which to claim he had discovered the end of AGW. Where's Salby now? Completely discredited, where ever he is.
The guys looks nutty; he definitely sounds nutty; and he committed his nuttiness to paper - I think based on his "empirical evidence" insistence, I can declare the evidence is in: he was and is a nut; and a slippery dishonest (even by normal political standards) one at that.
* Also on Insiders, Gerard Henderson* was claiming that One Nation was a long term problem for the Coalition, as having 4 Senators and staff meant they could consolidate their credibility before the next election.
Yeah, sure, Gerard. The track record of parties based around one personality is obviously dire - especially when they are run by self interested populists like Palmer or Hanson. (Hanson does well out of elections whether she wins or not.). At least people like Xenophon or Don Chipp - smart guys running for a neglected centre of politics - might establish parties that run some distance, but even then the Democrats show they won't be around forever.
Gerard's gone downhill as a political commentator; time to retire, I suggest.
* Is Trump still the GOP candidate? The longer this campaign runs, the more it shows that the power of positive thinking may take a BS artist who starts with a family fortune quite a long way, but it does absolutlelynothing to encourage insight.
The thing is, the more he derides Hillary's mental state, the more the electorate will see it as projection. But he obviously doesn't see that risk.
Update: * even after just having watched the nut filled interview performance of Roberts. But Henderson has always given undue credence to climate change denialism - he gave Salby a venue at which to claim he had discovered the end of AGW. Where's Salby now? Completely discredited, where ever he is.
Saturday, August 06, 2016
Friday, August 05, 2016
Quantum papers
Yay, two papers of interest have turned up on arXiv in the quantum section.
First, one talking about the transactional interpretation of quantum physics, which I've mentioned here before, and been wondering whether it's going anywhere. I haven't done much other than scan the paper (it's a heavy read, and I'll be skipping the maths), but it's worth looking at more carefully, I think.
Secondly, here's one talking about the enduring puzzle of the double slit experiment with the enticing title Can a Single Photon Modify Two Remote Realities Simultaneously? Here's the abstract:
First, one talking about the transactional interpretation of quantum physics, which I've mentioned here before, and been wondering whether it's going anywhere. I haven't done much other than scan the paper (it's a heavy read, and I'll be skipping the maths), but it's worth looking at more carefully, I think.
Secondly, here's one talking about the enduring puzzle of the double slit experiment with the enticing title Can a Single Photon Modify Two Remote Realities Simultaneously? Here's the abstract:
The concept of wave-particle duality, which is a key element of quantum theory, has been remarkably found to manifest itself in several experimental realizations as in the famous double-slit experiment. In this speci?c case, a single particle seems to travel through two separated slits simultaneously. Nevertheless, it is never possible to measure it in both slits, which naturally appears as a manifestation of the collapse postulate. In this respect, one could as well ask if it is possible to "perceive" the presence of the particle at the two slits simultaneously, once its collapse could be avoided. In this article, we use the recently proposed entanglement mediation protocol to provide a positive answer to this question. It is shown that a photon which behaves like a wave, i.e., which seems to be present in two distant locations at the same time, can modify two existing physical realities in these locations. Calculations of the \weak trace" left by such photon also enforce the validity of the present argumentation.
Death by (lack of) fashion
Neanderthals' failure to make parkas may have sealed their demise: A quartet of researchers at Simon Fraser University in Canada has found evidence that suggests that the reason early humans were able to survive the ice age while the Neanderthal perished is because humans figured out how to make parka-like clothing to keep warm and Neanderthals did not....I can imagine some Neanderthal bloke pointing at some newly kitted out non-Neanderthal guy and saying "ha! look at the girly man in his new 'parka.' Clothes are for wusses."
The researchers also note that other evidence of humans crafting warm
clothes has been found as well, such as bone needles for sewing and
other tools that could be used to scrape pelts. Also, a set of figurines
wearing parka-like coats and dating back approximately 24,000 years was
found in Siberia. No such evidence of Neanderthals wearing crafted clothes has ever been found.
As to why the Neanderthals would not have crafted clothes to survive
the cold, the researchers suggest they may have lacked the intelligence
or simply because their cultural traditions were standing in the way.
Thursday, August 04, 2016
Derangement noted
From the Economist, a report on a campaign stop on 1 August:
The presidential race: Donald Trump’s disastrous fortnight | The Economist:
The speech that followed was even more rambling than usual, and peppered with personal gripes; the boasts were fewer, his haranguing of the media (“some of the most dishonest people”) went on for longer.
At times, Mr Trump sounded deranged. Some of the negotiators he says he will commission to improve America’s trade terms “are horrible, horrible human beings”, he said. “Some of them don’t sleep at night, some of them turn and toss and sweat, they’re turning and tossing and sweating and it’s disgusting, and these are the people we want to negotiate for us, right?” Whose experience, actually, was he describing? With three months to the election, it is early days, and the contest looks close; yet Mr Trump’s campaign is a mess. In Mechanicsburg it was tempting to think he really had seen the writing on the wall.
Out-nutted
Well, what a pain that Senator Blofeld Leyonhjelm got re-elected. I see his total vote in New South Wales was 3%, but his position on the ballot paper was pretty good again, and I also thought the big fault under the new system is the tiny size of the party logos at the top of their columns. I strongly suspect that this factor, and the parties use of the word "liberal," again benefited him, and I expect if he was way to the right of Liberal column, you could shave off at least a third of his votes.
But as a big a nut he is on guns and other matters, he will certainly be out-nutted in the Senate by the Queensland no.2 Senator for Pauline Hanson, Malcolm Roberts. An ageing engineer (a professional which produces some of the most obnoxious examples of Dunning-Kruger), he's the climate change denier whose mutterings about international banking family conspiracies made even Andrew Bolt distance himself from his group. I see from the link that he's also (naturally) an Agenda 21 conspiracist completely opposed to any support of renewables (even though, as Abbott found out, quite a lot of people who might be dumb enough to vote for Hanson actually quite like their solar panels on the roof). I bet he's a goldbug, too. And, I wouldn't be surprised if he loves his guns as much as Leyonhjelm.
So, it's going to be interesting, and worrying, to watch what crap he will come out during Senate speeches.
But as a big a nut he is on guns and other matters, he will certainly be out-nutted in the Senate by the Queensland no.2 Senator for Pauline Hanson, Malcolm Roberts. An ageing engineer (a professional which produces some of the most obnoxious examples of Dunning-Kruger), he's the climate change denier whose mutterings about international banking family conspiracies made even Andrew Bolt distance himself from his group. I see from the link that he's also (naturally) an Agenda 21 conspiracist completely opposed to any support of renewables (even though, as Abbott found out, quite a lot of people who might be dumb enough to vote for Hanson actually quite like their solar panels on the roof). I bet he's a goldbug, too. And, I wouldn't be surprised if he loves his guns as much as Leyonhjelm.
So, it's going to be interesting, and worrying, to watch what crap he will come out during Senate speeches.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)