Latest Posts
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Heart Bookmark
Since I started reading books again, I needed a bookmark. A scrap of paper works fine, but an origami heart bookmark just blows that out of the water. [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gml2j4bvT88] Thank you Jo Nakashima.
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Book of the Week: Flatland
In some of the States there is an additional Law forbidding Females, under penalty of death, from walking or standing in a public place without moving their backs constantly from right to left so as to indicate their presence to those behind them;
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Book of the Week: Tao Te Ching
Tao Te Ching by Lao Tzu I’ll file this under a failure. I should have known a bargain bin pickup for an ancient Chinese classic that has lots of photographs wouldn’t be necessarily the best way to read the Tao Te Ching. First off, the Tao Te Ching in Chinese itself is hard for Chinese people to read without being well read and scholarly. The translation given in this book differs a lot from the other translations I have read online. I believe it was probably the intention to provide the essence of the Tao Te Ching for the general public to consume as a coffee table book. It is effective in that sense, but I want to read the Tao Te Ching. I read a similar well illustrated version of the Art of War and it was very readable and comparable to other translations. The meaning is more direct in matters of war, so there is less ambiguity in the translation and less knowledge required. I haven’t been able to find a translation of 東周列國志 by 馮夢龍. Time to learn Chinese.
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Book of the Week: Dead Aid
I decided to read Dead Aid after watching this TED video. [ted id=1617 width=560 height=315] My favorite part of the video is the hippos. The book is divided into two parts. The first part talks about the history of aid and why aid isn’t working. The second part describes a way to get away from aid. Dambisa Moyo argues that aid has hurt Africa instead of help Africa. Aid gives rise to corruption and the stagnation of growth. Growth is needed to lift a country out of poverty. Aid kills entrepreneurship and the middle class, reinforcing the corrupt government. When you’re dependent on aid, there’s no reason for the government to be accountable to the people. You can think of it a bit like giving someone a fish instead of
teaching someone to fishloaning someone money to go fishing. Maybe also a little bit like a crack dealer. The first hit’s free to keep you coming back for more. I think it is pretty easy to agree that aid doesn’t work in Africa. The second part covered various financial avenues (bonds, foreign direct investment, microloans, trade, etc.) to fund Africa’s growth. An important part of the solution is China’s involvement in Africa. Read the book if you want the details. It doesn’t sound nice to say publicly to stop aid to Africa, but that may be the best thing we can do to see Africa grow. Also, it might not even matter what the West does as China increases its involvement in Africa. To summarize as a 6 word story: Cut aid, watch China grow Africa.
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Book of the Week: The Hobbit
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Books
Update: It’s buggy on Snow Leopard, which is probably why they are making codex. I guess there is motivation to roll my own. After I learned java as an undergraduate, I wanted to make an application that read in ISBN numbers through a webcam (before the days where cameras were everywhere) to catalog all my books. Every time I think of a good idea, I ask one of my friends and they show me a website where that has been done before. I got introduced to Delicious Library. I didn’t have a mac at the time, so it would be nice to make a cross platform java version of it. I got as far as looking up how the barcodes get translated into numbers and writing a few lines of MATLAB to read in barcodes from images, but I was stumped by the low resolution and lack of compatibility of the webcams with Java. I couldn’t access the full resolution of the webcam I had or it wasn’t compatible. So I promptly abandoned the project and managed to have a few duplicate books in my library as time went on. Fast forward to today, where cameras are everywhere. I expected there to be a cloud website where I could use my mobile device and keep track of my books. QR codes are hot. I was curious to see why they didn’t put Delicious Library into the cloud, but there seems to be an issue with using Amazon’s API for looking up ISBNs and Amazon’s terms of service for mobile. The quality of other APIs are lacking. Now that I use a mac, I’m reluctant to pay money for something I could probably code up myself easily since I’m only looking for basic functionality. Thankfully I found Books from Audacious Software. They even opened up the source code since they are working on a successor called Codex. It even allows exporting the data, so if I ever need to migrate the data, I can.
