dkimball | 15 years ago | on: Henry Ford: Why I Favor Five Days' Work With Six Days' Pay
dkimball's comments
dkimball | 15 years ago | on: Think You're Operating on Free Will? Think Again
Also note that "merit" and "enjoyment" are different things.
dkimball | 15 years ago | on: Think You're Operating on Free Will? Think Again
None of this is controversial, unless you're thinking in terms of Descartes -- the body and mind as purely separate and the mind as purely master of the body. There's a Catholic saying that "body and soul are one" -- what the soul (or mind, if you prefer) does, affects the body, and what the body does, affects the soul.
Another thing I'd mention: like evolutionary psychology, this article's research is highly culture-bound. They don't seem to be interested in determining whether pictures of libraries mean the same thing to Indonesian hill tribes, or whether the scent of Febreeze means the same thing to Moroccans (or red mages).
Also, as the article points out, this kind of unconscious encouragement can be overcome; you have only to be aware of it.
dkimball | 15 years ago | on: Think You're Operating on Free Will? Think Again
dkimball | 15 years ago | on: Think You're Operating on Free Will? Think Again
Also, I find it hard to believe that free will "lives" in one or another part of the brain; neither determinism nor randomness is freedom, and a physical "organ of free will" would have to be either deterministic (from macro-scale physics) or random (from quantum-scale activity).
I agree that living without free will is probably psychologically insupportable; even Muslims and Calvinists, who believe in double predestination (and Marxists, who believe in historical determinism), live as if free will was true. (Read _The Pilgrim's Progress_ and tell me that Bunyan really believed Puritan doctrines...)
dkimball | 15 years ago | on: When Papers Quit Calling Waterboarding 'Torture'
As for whether waterboarding is torture under US law: the US executed a few Kempaitai (Japanese secret police) agents for torturing US prisoners in WWII; they had waterboarded them. Waterboarding is also covered under UNCAT.
(Note to anyone assuming a partisan motivation: I am a serious Catholic, thus not by any stretch of the imagination a US liberal.)
dkimball | 15 years ago | on: University of Reddit
dkimball | 15 years ago | on: Homeopathy for politicians
I'm not defending homeopathy, which I'm pretty deeply suspicious of; it _might_ merit further investigation, but homeopathic medicines certainly shouldn't be sold as medicines until they start performing a whole lot better than they have so far. I just want to point out that the medical field, and most scientific fields, are resistant to adopting new ideas even when those ideas do work.
Another example of that slowness: post-traumatic stress disorder, which was only accepted by the APA in DSM-IV (1980) after a long struggle.
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: Get to No as fast as possible
Good luck in your search. I've never heard of an ad-hoc implementation of assembly language before, but while we're talking about wanting to head for the hills... :)
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: Get to No as fast as possible
I don't have much experience with rules engines, and I don't know what your budget is like; so I can't really make recommendations. That doesn't stop me from trying, though...
You might be interested in Intersystems' Ensemble. If you're anything like Alex, you'll run screaming for the hills at this point, since it's built on MUMPS (it's an extension of Caché, "postmodern MUMPS," which comes with everything from a web server to a blindingly fast SQL frontend). If you're not -- if you realize that it all compiles down to object code anyways, and what's important is programmer skill and code maintainability, not the presence of curly braces and variable declarations -- you'll keep reading. (Actually, Caché's version of MUMPS has both curly braces and variable declarations, although both are optional.)
Ensemble was designed to translate messages between incompatible healthcare databases, applying business rules in the process. It can be used for more than that; part of the training I had in the product (see below for my full disclosure) was using it to implement a simple loan acceptance protocol.
I think that its "flowchart mode" of execution might be very well suited to frequently-changing business rules. There's a video at http://www.maddash.net/videos/intersystems/ensemble/vehr/ which demonstrates this -- look at 7:15 for the flowchart (each element in it is programmable as necessary), and at 2:15 for the related flow through processing modules when something comes in.
You may be able to get a proof-of-concept demonstration -- see http://www.intersystems.com/ensemble/pilot/index.html for details. Even if not, if this looks interesting, it wouldn't hurt to get in touch with Intersystems Sales.
Full disclosure: I work at Intersystems, but I'm not associated with Sales, and I really should be getting back to work. :)
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: Get to No as fast as possible
http://thedailywtf.com/Articles/Programming-Sucks!-Or-At-Lea...
However, commercial business rule engines might work out better, provided they stick to XML or known formats of I/O in general.
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: 1's and 0's
It also contains support for everything else from AJAX to the kitchen sink, since it originates with several independent (and competing) OS/programming-language/database systems, originating in the late '60s before worse-is-better ate everyone's lunch. It even works as a RAD environment (plus a webserver, an SQL database, an OO programming language, and a go-between for other systems' incompatible message formats): very unusual (I expect the kitchen-sink module, or perhaps the mail reader, in the next version), but not primitive.
Its reputation is sullied by some WTF-worthy users, and by old coding conventions (now less completely abandoned than they should be) that were like Perl but hard to understand.
Full disclosure: I work for Intersystems, but not in Sales, and this post is purely on my own initiative. (One does not pay people to make unflattering comparisons with Perl.)
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: Intrinsic motivation doesn't exist
On Cheney: I think it's possible to say when someone's having a sybaritic lifestyle and when they're not; certainly someone who's as eagerly discussed by the media as Cheney now is (while Clinton's allowed to live his rather un-Presidential post-Presidential years in media silence).
This isn't a defense of Cheney, though. I would call him less nightmarish if he had the excuse of wanting money as a means to an end, rather than an end in itself. It seems to be a common vice, this thinking of life as Donkey Kong, and if you die with a high enough score you get to leave your initials on the machine at the end...
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: Intrinsic motivation doesn't exist
MMORPGs have everything to do with being in the zone, nothing to do with sexuality; these two motivations are both exceptionally powerful. I remember an experiment with rats, where an electrode was hooked up directly to the center in the brain that generates the "in the zone" feeling; the rats pushed the lever to fire that electrode continually, until they died of starvation. MMORPGs, computer games in general, Wikipedia, checking e-mail, Hacker News... all operate based on the desire to zone in.
Now, the popularity of well-paid parasitic professions in the contemporary US (law, most prominently, where the marginal value of a new lawyer is negative) reveals that the desire for money is very strong as well; but is the desire for money always the same as the desire for sexual relations? I don't see Dick Cheney living it up like Bill Clinton...
Of course, multiple motivations can be present at once; but I think that good work, at least in computer areas, requires the desire to zone in as one of these motivations.
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: 13 Stripes and 51 Stars
I like the arrangement, too, but I can see why its provenance might taint it in some eyes. That's unfortunate; it's a much more pleasant arrangement than the one we currently have.
I could also see people objecting to changing the US's hundred-odd-year tradition of having ugly and grating arrangements of stars. :) And the circular star arrangement _is_ something one tends to see flown by sinister US successor states like those in _Fallout_ and _Jericho_...
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: My 2 Bucks on Pricing
Gaming isn't really the same field as commercial software; a product is released once, and that's the end of it, as opposed to needing long-term support like a commercial product does. Put another way: after people buy Halo 3, they aren't likely to upgrade to Halo 3.11 for Workgroups.
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: Copyright: The Elephant in the Middle of the Glee Club
We have a folk culture at the present day, too; the problem is that all songs used by the folk are copyrighted. Read _Sound Targets_, on music in the Iraq War, for another illustration of this; if every occasion of piracy mentioned in that book produced a $150,000 fine, the RIAA could field its own armed forces with the proceeds. (I hope I didn't just give them an idea.)
I'm not sure where we go from here. This situation can't continue, but "the laborer is worthy of his hire," to use the medieval form of the expression. If only the music industry weren't a gang of thugs (for a list of RIAA members: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RIAA_member_labels), we might already have a solution for this...
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: Example: Why your Title to URL algorithm shouldn't chop off partial words...
URLs seem to require their own grammatical rules to avoid outrageous results, and this is just considering English; incorporating other languages likely to be in one's target audience would be important, too. One saving grace is that most languages don't sound much like each other... most of the time. (Which makes when they do all the more painful.)
Beware foreign borrowings, too...
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: Indonesian census discovers 157-year-old woman
dkimball | 16 years ago | on: Today the Dow dropped 1000 points in about ten minutes.
"[The well-managed business'] workmen have the leisure to enjoy life and the wherewithal with which to finance that enjoyment."
Ford theorizes that greater amounts of leisure time and better pay for workers are good for both the workers, for their enjoyment, and the employers, for having larger markets; I don't see this as evil.