Want to know the latest on tropical cyclones? Sure, we all do! Visit the National Hurricane Center / Tropical Prediction Center for all kinds of useful info and graphics (including the lists of names—I hadn’t known there are only six lists).
Y'see, if there were a lot of posts about it, it would be a thread…
DirtyLibrarian recommended threadless, and already I’m thinking about getting some new shirts!
While we're on the subject of natural disasters
There’s apparently a 14-month cycle of increasing tension and slippage in the neighborhood, where the Juan de Fuca and North American plates are colliding. Some geologists think the next megathrust quake will occur during a slippage event, one of which is happening right now.
Moral development
What most caught my eye about this widely linked piece was its reference to Kohlberg ‘s work about the development of a moral sense. The author cites criticisms that Kohlberg’s structure is gender- and culture-biased, with some evidence to support those criticisms. I found the article to be very interesting, and especially enjoyed this bit:
Similarly, children growing up in deeply religious Mennonite communities distinguish between rules that apply because they are written in the Bible (e.g., that Sunday is the day of Sabbath, or that a man must uncover his head to pray) and rules that would still apply even if they weren’t actually written in the Bible (including rules against personal and material harm).
What I like best is that it clearly indicates that morality is unrelated to religious edict, and even children can detect the difference.
Name change
I think the fact that we kept coming up in searches for "forced" plus some other innocent word was causing a number of nefarious folk to include our content in their link-spam pages, which I suspect was causing Google to hate us. So while we continue to love the Forced Perspective, we’re now extra-trendy with mid-cap and all, to try to restore our sparkling reputation.
August Reading
Coming soon to a Costco near you
Or maybe not. At lunch today, some folks at a nearby table were going through a presentation packet whose cover sheet said "Magazine Program Launch". There were no visible "confidential" or "proprietary" markings, just the Costco and Ingram logos. I wasn’t able to see any details of the pitch (other than seeing that a US map was on one page), nor hear any of the discussion, but I can only infer from the evidence I did gather that your local Costco will be getting a newsstand.
Oranges and Peaches
Another misheard library book title: Mira Nair: Real Estate Agent. Actually Millionaire Real Estate Agent.
Tote that barge, lift that tiny polystyrene bead
Ushering in a whole new era of exploitation of living organisms, scientists working at Harvard have coerced algae cells to carry tiny polystyrene beads around. When will the enslavement end?
More with the nostalgia
I’m considering getting a Powerbook, in part because of its NeXT heritage, and for some reason that got me thinking about the old Sprint word processor, which is what Borland called Mark of the Unicorn’s Final Word product. I loved FW so much that I bought Sprint during the brief window when it was available. It never made the transition to Windows (as far as I know) — not that that makes me love it any less, but it did hasten the product’s demise.
Thanks, Bill Spitzak, for a fine word processor (and thanks especially for the Emacs mode in Sprint, and providing the means to hack it up to be even more Emacs-like)
Update: I ended up just getting another Dell Inspiron. It’s not as lovely as an Apple product would have been, but I have all this infrastructure in place, and I’m just too lazy to change.