“Engineering student cracks major riddle of the universe”

Big news in the science of astrophysics. I hadn’t heard that anyone was even remotely near figuring out where the universe’s missing mass might be.

Immensely hot, immensely long shoe-strings of matter… who’da thunk? 😉 Might make an interesting component of a hard science fiction story. A space station, slowly moving along one of these and gobbling it for power, maybe?

(Then again, there’s a reason I’m a software developer and not an SF author. 😉 )

“Incent”

Although this is an interesting article to me, it would probably bore just about everyone else to tears. The only thing that might mildly interest some people is the coining of a new (to me) word in the last sentence:

[…] With the pressure off, Siemens is incented to deal with the PR problem and ignore the underlying security problem.

Incented. The meaning is obvious: to provide incentive to do (or avoid doing) something. The concept is old — most of our laws (especially tax law) are designed to “incent” people to do certain things and not do others, by rewarding the desired behaviors and punishing the undesirable ones — but I’d never run across a word dedicated to it before. (Nor, apparently, has my spell checker.)

It’s interesting to me because for Project X, I’m exploring a new kind of programming. The technical details were tricky to work out, but I believe that part is all but done. The next part involves “incenting” the resulting program to do what you want it to, and it has turned out to be much, much more involved that I imagined when I started. Not necessarily difficult, just very complex. Fortunately, I believe I can make something useful with it long before I’ve worked out all of the details.

This has led me to notice a lot of the “incenting” systems in nature too. Some of them are obvious and required, like making sex really desirable to the majority of a species to ensure that the species continues. Others seem to be sometimes-unpleasant side effects of a system that mostly works.

As an example of the latter, I’ve always wondered exactly how schoolyard bullies come about. Previously I had to dismiss it as likely being the result of genetics and upbringing, which doesn’t really explain anything (and certainly doesn’t offer any guidance on discouraging the behavior), but I recently ran across an article that, all unintended, gave me new insight into it.

Children are “incented” by their instincts to do certain things — as babies, for example, they have the urge to put everything in their mouths, probably due to the urge to explore everything and that the tongue is more sensitive than fingers at that age. Adults have to dissuade them from doing some of those things, which results in frustration because they can’t fulfill their urges — Bobby quickly learns that adults will punish him if he hits his sister because she won’t give up a toy that interests him, for instance. But when interacting with other children (especially once they reach school age), if they give into such urges even once, they find that they not only (I hope) get punished, they also get the admiration of their peers who want to do it themselves but don’t dare. Statistically, some such children will find that admiration more compelling than the punishment, and a bully is born.

Do you see the subtle forces involved there? The initial urge to do something socially unacceptable, the urge for parental approval, the desire to avoid the withdrawal of that approval (and possibly the physical pain of a spanking), the social need for the approval of his peers, and likely a dozen other urges that are even more subtle. And that’s a simple example.

I pursue things like that because I find them fascinating, but there are other reasons for it too. If you don’t understand the forces that drive a person or a group, you tend to fear them, the root of hatred and racism; understanding eliminates the fear of the unknown and different, which eliminates the hatred and fosters cooperation for mutual benefit.

In the case of the justice system, there are further reasons. Aside from the obvious one (that better understanding allows for better prevention), the more a judge and jury understand a criminal, even if they don’t sympathize with him, the more likely that if he’s found to be guilty, his sentence will be proportional to the crime. The less they understand him, the more likely his sentence will be punitive and vengeful, because people fear the unknown and uncontrolled fear leads to anger and hatred. Once you understand why someone does something, you can still despise his actions, but you don’t fear or hate him nearly as much as when his motivations were unknown.

I wholeheartedly recommend that people study what drives — or “incents” — others. The more we do, the better we’ll understand them, and the healthier our society will be.

“Social Media: Preparedness 101: Zombie Apocalypse”

Apparently today is supposed to be the Beginning of the End: the Rapture. At least according to Harold Camping, the latest of many to take up the job. If you believe, and think that your heart is truly pure, I’d suggest watching this for advice. And if you have pets, better call these guys too. For that matter, I’d suggest checking out those links regardless of the state of your soul, you can never be too careful.

Apparently Mr. Camping already has a backup date: when he and his believers don’t vanish today, then he says it’ll be October 21st instead. Now that’s faith. I predict that he’ll just keep extending it until he’s dead, at which point no one will care how many times he was wrong anymore, including him. Or, like several before him, he’ll declare that due to the pleas of he and his flock, God has decided to put it off ’til later. In case you hadn’t thought of that already, Mr. Camping, you’re welcome.

But just in case he’s right, and the end of the world happens to include zombies, the Center for Disease Control has issued an emergency preparedness statement. Better get out there and start packing, non-believers.

But while it’s a good idea, there’s no real need to rush. Mr. Camping’s calculations are wrong. Everyone who really knows what’s going on knows that the End Times won’t start until Sarah Palin is elected President, and that won’t be until December 17th of 2012 when the electoral college officially votes her in. The Mayans were only off by a few days. 😉

Odd Blog Problem

For some reason, when Geek Drivel’s hosting company upgraded PHP this morning, the server stopped handling PHP files at all. Any time I tried to go to a page on the blog, the server tried to send it to me as a download instead. Removing the “user defined MIME type” change that the company added solved the problem; I suspect a minor misconfiguration on their part.

I don’t expect any trouble from this, but if you notice anything on Geek Drivel that’s not operating as it should, please let me know ASAP.

EDIT: I’ve tested the comments (below), and everything seems to be working, so use that method to report any trouble.

“UK start-up pitches touch-to-sync tech for watches”

I’ve been using the Casio Data Bank watches since they first came out when I was a teenager, but I have to admit that since I got my first Palm PDA, the only thing I really use it for is to see the time, and occasionally for the countdown timer. Data-watches, never overly popular in the first place, have pretty much gone the way of the dodo… comparing their tiny, hard-to-use calculator keypads, extremely limited display capabilities, and tiny amounts of storage to what you get on even the cheapest modern PDAs and cell phones is like comparing a five-inch black-and-white tube TV to a 42-inch LCD flat-panel — they can both do certain things, but one is ridiculously limited and painful to use. I don’t even use the alarm capability of my watch anymore.

I tried replacing it with a watch that had a built-in voice recorder for a while, and it was useful because the voice recorders on my iPod Touch and cell phone require several touches to get to, and the watch didn’t — I could safely use the watch’s recorder while driving. But that one eventually died, and I haven’t been able to find another like it. I don’t need a voice recorder often enough to worry about it anyway.

I’ve even considered going completely watch-free. I have two other devices, always on me, that tell the time. But the wristwatch format makes it more easily available, especially when the weather requires a heavy winter coat, for example.

On the other hand (or wrist, as the case may be), a watch that I could use to pay for things would still be very useful. Such devices have appeared in several science fiction stories, though I can’t think which ones at the moment. I’ll keep an eye out for something like that, though I doubt it’ll appear any time real soon.

“How Reading Fiction Can Improve Your Social Skills”

As I mentioned a few days ago, in my younger years I had problems understanding what was going on in other people’s heads — apparently a problem common to people like me. It seems that it’s a good thing that I’ve always read a lot of fiction, that trait is probably responsible for the majority of my ability to empathize with others. Looking back on it, it’s pretty obvious that one of the appeals was the glimpses into how other people thought.

For others with similar difficulties and an enjoyment of fantasy, I highly recommend anything and everything by Mercedes Lackey. Be warned, she’ll stretch your mind, and it won’t always be comfortable, but keep reading anyway. You’ll be glad you did.