gooserock's comments

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: We Just Breached the 410 PPM Threshold for CO2

> Does anyone have ideas on how a mid-career software developer can switch gears into the clean energy/climate change industry, to do something to help

It's easy.

- Stop flying.

- Eat less meat.

- Buy less stuff.

- Use less energy.

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Photos Reveal More Than 200 Arctic Lakes Have Started Bubbling with Methane Gas

Rising sea levels are a concern in the long-term, but what I'm most worried about in my lifetime is the collapse of the industrial food system due to rapid warming.

Basically if the Earth warms faster than plants and science can adapt, it's a real possibility that a very large chunk of the arable land that currently feeds eight billion people worldwide will become useless. The fear is that we won't be able to grow wheat or rice where we used to, due to heat and drought (Great Plains) or floods (Southeast Asia) or whatever else.

Sure, we could just start farming Siberia and Northern Canada, but it would take decades to establish all the infrastructure necessary to do that, and in the meantime we'd have to deal with truly massive famines, political destabilization, and the collapse of many states. Not to mention the fact that crop yields will inevitably be lower in arctic latitudes due to shorter growing seasons.

Our entire civilization is built on a global, industrial food network, and it's more precarious than you think. Most countries don't have reserves of food at all, and the ones that do only have scant reserves. If methane releases cause the Earth's climate to lurch warmer in a short enough period of time, a couple real good crop failures will cause the network to collapse, and our civilization (or at least a few entire regions) will collapse in short order.

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: More high-income housing doesn’t make housing less affordable

The idea that building high-income housing makes rents rise is pretty obviously bunk, but the idea that building high-income housing "helps affordability" is not as clear cut. Is it good to increase supply? Yes, of course. But on the other hand, this article fails to mention three phenomena plaguing cities like London, San Francisco, and Vancouver:

1. Speculators. There's been a huge uptick in people from other locales - even internationally - buying or building housing units as investments and literally leaving them empty, expecting them to appreciate in value. These units are effectively not part of the housing stock and don't help with the supply problem.

2. Vacation Homes. As wealth inequality has become more dramatic, the wealthy have more income to spend on vacation homes. In cities like Portland, Maine, Manhattan and San Francisco, many high-end condo buyers are buying these units as vacation destinations that they'll only occupy for a tiny part of the year. These too are not being truly added to the housing supply.

3. Airbnb/Short Term Rentals. I don't want to single out Airbnb here, but it's known to real estate agents and investors that you can make way more money with an Airbnb rental than a long-term rental. (Where I live it's about 5x difference in annual income.) Many new housing units are being eaten by people who use them to operate short-term rentals, which they have an enormous economic incentive to do. These units too are not being added to the long-term housing supply.

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Consciousness Isn’t a Mystery, It’s Matter

But why are we talking about this in terms of "mysteries"? We'll always be able to reduce things down to a level where we don't know how it works. Right now, sure, we don't know what makes matter matterial, but for the purposes of the consciousness conversation, is that relevant? Just because we don't understand why electrons are electrons, does that prevent us from understanding how electricity works? "Consciousness" is an emergent property of our incredibly complex neurological infrastructure; just because we don't understand why the atomic components of that infrastructure doesn't mean that the emergent property has some "mysterious" aspect any more than anything else does.

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Consciousness Isn’t a Mystery, It’s Matter

Perhaps I'm just not smart enough to understand what the hell this article is driving at. But I'm pretty confident in my personal understanding of "consciousness": it's a word that we use to describe our "experiencing" of the physical world, which is an emergent property of our incredibly complex neurological infrastructure.

Is this article agreeing with me, or disagreeing with me? I can't honestly tell.

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Consciousness Isn’t a Mystery, It’s Matter

It's not that consciousness "isn't real" in the sense that flying unicorns aren't real - it's that "consciousness" is just a word that humans made to describe a phenomenon, just like "turbulence."

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Consciousness Isn’t a Mystery, It’s Matter

> If consciousness is just matter, why isn't yours accessible to me.

Because my matter and your matter aren't in close enough physical proximity or the appropriate configuration to have any communication with one another. Same way that you and I both live in houses, but my front door doesn't open into your living room.

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Airbnb Files to Raise $850M at $30B Valuation

> What does a website platform need $850 million more for?

Like others have commented, at least some of this money will be used to pay off initial investors with a nice profit. It's a kind of pyramid scheme, really, that ends with an IPO.

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Facebook Tax Bill Over Ireland Move Could Cost $5B

But this whole game is inherently one where some governments will lose. If countries are free to set their own corporate tax rates, you'll get some with high rates and some with lower, and corporations - which can relocate in a way that a state cannot - will just gravitate from the high end to the low end, screwing over those at the high end.

That is the problem: we live in a world where business can be global, but our states are regional. It's asymmetric warfare: because of the structure of the game, the corporations always have the upper hand.

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Second Gravitational Wave Detected at LIGO

But it's important to point out that

1) That $1.1 billion was for two facilities

2) LIGO underwent a huge upgrade over the last decade, making the instruments tremendously more sensitive, and the cost of this upgrade is included in there as well.

So I suspect that building a third facility with the sensitivity of the two existing facilities would be a much more affordable endeavor. The first time around is always the most expensive.

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Cloud.gov

I think there might be state-based chapters? My friends here are actually part of "Code for Maine."

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Cloud.gov

The funny thing was, in interview #2 I did mention that that they were asking me all the same questions, once it became clear that that was happening. The interviewer was like, "Oh? Really? Well this is our interview process," and then kept going. And these were 30-45 minute phone interviews, too. It was really strange.

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Cloud.gov

Thanks for your thoughts, I think you have a decent point there.

My experience does include running front-end at the startup I worked at, and even being part of the three-person group that decided on the direction of the product (with the two founders). My communication skills are battle-tested from years of contracting (and a liberal arts university background), but I do lack experience dealing with huge bureaucracies and I lack experience with business development. So maybe that was it.

That said, if your theory is right that they were slotting me in as a GS-14, they could have communicated with me about that difficulty. I would have been totally fine with whatever role they wanted to give me - which I made clear in the "groundhog day" interviews - because I just wanted to help. :-D

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Cloud.gov

I've actually started working with some Code for America folks here in my community - independently of CfA - on some city open data projects. They're awesome. :-)

gooserock | 9 years ago | on: Cloud.gov

My experience has all been with teams and companies < 15 people, and he seemed unhappy about that.

The startup I worked on had 12 people at its height (before it was bought by a large tech company), and I was the first employee hire so I was in a position of some leadership.

He kept asking me strange questions that presupposed I knew how to negotiate with large entities like government agencies... as a developer.

That interview - plus the other two "groundhog day" interviews - were the strangest interview process I've ever experienced.

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