Tags related to tag improvement
Monday, October 9. 2006
Debugging your brain. Hacking the bad decisions and judgements of your brain.
I've been reading Mind Hacks, and Mind Performance Hacks lately. Awesome books. They have given me the chance to look, and change my brainstate—becoming my own metaprogrammer as it were. Just recently, I ran across a great blog entry titled: 10 Reasons people make bad decisions. I'll post the basics here, but you should really head over there for the full skinny.
If you have some understanding in the ways in which your brain makes flawed decisions, you can stop to think about your decisions, and potentially avoid making them in the future. The first step is to know what these flaws are.
If you have some understanding in the ways in which your brain makes flawed decisions, you can stop to think about your decisions, and potentially avoid making them in the future. The first step is to know what these flaws are.
- Sunk cost bias
This one is simple. People tend to put in more value into thing that they put a lot of time, energy and resources into. Think of that project where thousands upon thousands of dollars were invested upon something that ended up not working anyway. If someone would have killed the project at the $10,000 dollar mark, then $90,000 would have been spared, but how many of us can really be the ones to say "We're throwing in good money after bad here!" - Egocentricism
Egocentricism is something that everyone else has except you, right? The thing about egocentricism is that it is in our nature. There is really only one ego in our brains (usually) and ultimately, according to our brain, it is the only ego that counts. This can cause problems however, because we tend to see things happening to us as being more severe then they actually are. This is exemplified by an experiment described in the linked-to article:In a study conducted by Sukhwinder Shergill and colleagues at University College London, pairs of volunteers were connected to a device that allowed each of them to exert pressure on the other volunteer’s fingers. The researcher began by exerting a fixed amount of pressure on the first volunteer’s finger. The first volunteer was then asked to exert the same amount of pressure on the second volunteer’s finger. The second volunteer was then asked to exert the same amount of pressure on the first volunteer’s finger, and so on. Although volunteers tried to respond with equal force, they typically responded with about 40 percent more force than they had just experienced. Each time a volunteer was touched, he touched back harder, which led the other volunteer to touch back even harder.
- Confirmation Bias
This happens when our rational brains are short-circuted and we take an event and show it to be linked to our already established notions and opinions. This may be related to memes, and the tendency for memes to self-reinforce. - Overconfidence
Even if you are suffering from the deepest of self-esteem problems, chances are you are overconfident about some aspect of your life. For a good example, talk to any given driver out there "All the over drivers are idiots, but I know how to drive!" Programmers are similar in this regard. - Dysfunctional Competition
This is essentially the fact that our happiness tends to be measured relative to the other peoples happiness around us. We like to think that this is not true, but as this experiment shows:Max Bazerman from Harvard [who performed the experiment, said:] "When I ask people whether they would prefer a) $7 for themselves and for another person or b) $8 for themselves and $10 for the other person, people choose 'b.' However, when people are simply given 'a' or 'b,' 'a' makes them happier."
- The Endowment Effect
This is related to egocentricism. We tend to put more value on objects we already own, rather then their absolute value. In another experiment with mugs performed by Kahneman, Knetsch and Thaler, a random set of people were given mugs, and another random set of people asked to buy those mugs. The people who had mugs were only willing to part with them for $7, while the buyers were only willing to purchase them for $3. Now that's a seven dollar mug! - Availability Bias
This is the effect where we tend to see probability in terms of memorable events, rather then in terms of their absolute probability. Look at the amount of fear around, and energy spent on the War on Terrorism. It is more likely that you will die from a car crash, or even an STD then a terrorist attack. This also has an effect on the micro-scale of your personal relationships. Sometimes the most negative aspects of a relationship are the ones you remember the most. When this gets combined with confirmation bias, it can make for an insidious combination. - Conformity
This is an obvious one. Now I know that a lot of my frequent readers pride themselves as being non-conformist, but the kind of conformity being referred to here goes a little deeper. Buskers have known for years that if you seed your hat/guitar-case with some money, especially bills and higher denominational coins, people will generally give you more money. This is also called the "Restaurant effect", if you have 2 restaurants with one across the street from another, and one of them is seeded with people on its patio, and the other is not; the seeded restaurant will get more patrons. The effect of conformity is so subtle because most of us believe that we are somehow different, and immune from it, when we truly aren't. That means you Mr. or Miss non-conformist. - Illusion of Control
This is the effect that causes gamblers to bet more on crap shots that they role verus shots that other players role, even though the probabilities are exactly the same. We seem to think that we have more control over a situation then we actually do. - Attribution Error
We tend to think that people act and do things exclusively for our benefit, despite evidence to the contrary. That guy who cut you off in traffic quite likely didn't do it because he was an asshole, he was probably confused, a new driver, or even just distracted. In fact, maybe he is generally an asshole, but we tend to take his actions personally, as if he was cutting you off to be a prick at you, rather then because he is generally a thoughtless prick. The main effect here is that people tend to favor personality based explanations. It is similar to the old saw "Never attribute to malice what can be explained by stupidity." except, again it focuses on a character trait of the individual (stupidity) rather then what might be a more realistic explanation, such as a mistake, circumstances out of their control, or even other motivations.
Monday, March 27. 2006
Waking up. Mourning the Night Person.
As part of my new job (!) I'll be going to work at 8:00 AM. Which means waking up. Early. Really early. So I am going to try out a new sleeping habit that is so simple, it has to work.
Thanks to Jen, who found this blog entry about it, and also read some (maybe even all of) the comments and did a great summary for me.
All in all, it is a good move for me. Less caffeine intake, improvement on my self discipline, and sexy new jorb.
- No more caffeine after 12:00. Period.
- Wake up at 6:00AM. Every day.
- There is no snooze.
- Go to bed when I am tired.
- Meditate for 10 mins.
Thanks to Jen, who found this blog entry about it, and also read some (maybe even all of) the comments and did a great summary for me.
All in all, it is a good move for me. Less caffeine intake, improvement on my self discipline, and sexy new jorb.
Monday, October 17. 2005
Weblog Usability and Sacrifical Rabbit
10 Sins of Blog Usability
- No Author Biographies
- No Author Photo
- Nondescript Posting Titles
- Links Don't Say Where They Go
- Classic Hits are Buried
- The Calendar is the Only Navigation
- Irregular Publishing Frequency
- Mixing Topics
- Forgetting That You Write for Your Future Boss
- Having a Domain Name Owned by a Weblog Service
He has trained his attention to the world of blogs recently. This is a quick 10 point list of blog do's and don'ts. Very useful. Here are his 10 points and how I stack up:
1. No Author Biographies
Check. I have something of a "What is sacrificial rabbit" section buried in my navigation that one day soon I am going to do something about (honest). But I don't have a personal biography. Need to fix that.2. No Author Photo
Check. No excuse either with an awesome photographer for a wife.3. Nondescript Posting Titles
This is something in common with a lot of blogs. A catchy, but nondescript headline, and I am way guilty. I am already trying to fix that however. At the same time, blogs—especially the personal kind—are a perfect format for weird and catchy headlines. I probably won't follow this rule religiously.4. Links Don't Say Where They Go
This is bad. Again, this is the way things are done in the blogsphere. I am going to stop doing this. It is dumb, bad, and clunky.5. Classic Hits are Buried
I don't really do this one. All of my entries are tagged, and tagged pretty well, so it makes it easy to find posts about bdsm, scheme or my meta mumblings. I need to work on the tag interface to make it even easier still however.6. The Calendar is the Only Navigation
Does no calendar count? For diary/journal like blogs, the calendar navigation system works and makes sense. But for a topical blog like mine, it is basically pointless.7. Irregular Publishing Frequency
Guilty. My frequency has gotten better though. I am going to try to pre-load articles though, so I have at least a post every day.8. Mixing Topics
Jakobs thought is that a blog should be a single topic and a single topic only. I don't buy that. Not in the least. I would own at least 8 or 9 blogs at that point. Posting daily to 9 blogs gives me the willies (posting daily to a perversion blog would give me a different kind of willy). I am not really sure how to approach this. I guess dialog is the key. So for you code fanatics, do you enjoy the smattering of music and perversion posts? Likewise for you perverts. Do my ramblings on electronics and programming languages bore you, or are they at least entertaining. Would it make sense to split up Sacrificial Rabbit? My belief is a resounding "NO". But what do you think? Leave a comment or two.9. Forgetting That You Write for Your Future Boss
So guilty I need a spanking. It is not so much that I forgot, but rather that I didn't care, and the action is no-longer reverseable. Really, its not that I spend a lot of time talking shit about people on my blog. I may write about what people say, but I don't spend time on who people are. The biggest issue might be everything under the "perversion" tag.10. Having a Domain Name Owned by a Weblog Service
Nope. I have the eminently cool blog subdomain, that is sure to become passe at any moment. I'll still own it then too.Tuesday, October 11. 2005
A new bed for the little one.
I don't blog about Harmony enough. So I am going to break the silence.
Shell and I got a toddler bed for Harmony the other day (Actually, we traded up, our wonderful friends Chris and Karen hooked us up with the bed, by trading them Harmonys crib). So she took the step of moving from a crib to a bed. This has been a completely painless step. She took to it like a fish to water. We made sure that she was around when we took down the crib, and put the bed together, and involved her in the whole thing. However, when she tried to play with the half-disassembled crib and the tools, it was a little too involved!
So when it is time to go to bed, we stick to the same bedtime routine, but the only difference is in the height of the bed. She loves it. After storytime, she trundles over to the closet to put the book away and/or grab her favorite book, and then crawled into bed by her own volition, and pulls the covers up by herself.
She makes her daddy proud.
Shell and I got a toddler bed for Harmony the other day (Actually, we traded up, our wonderful friends Chris and Karen hooked us up with the bed, by trading them Harmonys crib). So she took the step of moving from a crib to a bed. This has been a completely painless step. She took to it like a fish to water. We made sure that she was around when we took down the crib, and put the bed together, and involved her in the whole thing. However, when she tried to play with the half-disassembled crib and the tools, it was a little too involved!
So when it is time to go to bed, we stick to the same bedtime routine, but the only difference is in the height of the bed. She loves it. After storytime, she trundles over to the closet to put the book away and/or grab her favorite book, and then crawled into bed by her own volition, and pulls the covers up by herself.
She makes her daddy proud.
Daft Punk as a Refactoring Tutorial
Greg made an interesting interpretation of Daft Punks "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger", one of the coolest songs, and animated sequences of Discovery and Interstella 5555 (respectively).
Right on greg. Good call.
- Work it harder
- spend your time making it work, and work according to spec. Work hard at this.
- Make it better
- refactor, refactor, refactor. Keep the code clean, improve your algorithms, add unit tests.
- Do it faster
- ok, now you can optimize, but make sure you’ve got a profiler there to tell you what’s slow in the first place.
- Makes us stronger
- this leads to better software, more robust, and that keeps your company strong.
- More than ever hour after (h)our work is never over
- wash, rinse, repeat. Iteration, my friends, iteration.
Right on greg. Good call.
Wednesday, September 21. 2005
Coping Mechanism, Healing Machine.
It's not often that I do this. I reserve my blog for interesting things that I am doing, thinking about, and experiencing. I like to think that it makes my blog a little different from most. The kind of blog that people would want to visit because I have interesting things to say. If nothing else for answers to their CVS questions, or for looking for help on their next DIY music or fetish item.
So I try to "check my emotions at the door" as it were. Generally, the only two emotions that I let out on my blog are anger and my love for shell. The last thing I want is for this blog to degenerate to a LiveJournal of bad angst poetry, goofy little quizzes and personal politics.
However, this being said, I have been going through a particularly rough patch of emotions. It all started around Aug 27th. You might note that my posts since around that time have been rather sparse. Again, this is due to my emotional state. It's hard to write good entries when your mind is otherwise occupied.
So this entry is going to be long, and it's going to talk about my emotional state, but hopefully it will be a little different. I'll be talking about how I coped with my emotions, how they affected me, and what I did, and what I am doing to overcome them.
So the details of what happened, how it happened and why it happened are not forthcoming. Either you know the details, and you know the state I am in, or you don't. Feel free to ask about them, I'll let you in on as many details as I feel comfortable.
But to give you some context as to what's happened, Shell and I almost lost some close friends. This certainly hasn't been the first time its happened, but we seem to be getting better at it. There is less drama, less anger and less bitterness. My thought is that friendships just ebb and flow, and sometimes the ebb gets so low that things fall away.
Maybe one day I'll play around with Traktor or with Wavelab, and turn it into a full blown mix, a-la Underworlds "Back to Mine". Really, this should be viewed as a mix tape.
Here are the tracks:Throughout this whole experience I've been listening to a set of 9 tracks, mostly trip-hop and Drum & Bass, with a bad 80's tune thrown in to boot. A name for this mix popped into my head one day, titled "Coping Mechanism".
Music has always been an excellent method to shift and change my mood. I've always been deeply affected by it. When I am going through an emotional period, I find it is important to choose music that adequately expresses what I am feeling, and at the same time also leaves room open for interpretation to my particular situation, and also leaves the door open for growth, change and 'the light at the end of the tunnel'. When I was younger, I would wallow in the mud of my own depression. Therein lies the road to bad angst poetry.
Another saving grace so far has been art. I've been filling my sketchbook full of art that expresses how I am feeling, either abstractly, or symbolically. I feel that by exteriorizing these emotions in such a way allows me to get a firmer, more honest look at what I am feeling, and more importantly, allows me to act on these emotions. Whether it be talking about how I am feeling to the people relevant to the situation, or by simply deciding that I don't need those emotions anymore, and releasing them. Maybe in the future, I will scan them in, and post them to flickr.
Tracklist:There is a tired old saw that goes like this: "When life hands you lemons, make lemonade!". It is probably one of the hardest things to hear, and certainly one of the hardest things to do when you are in the middle of an emotional funk. Who really wants to hear that you can turn the situation around when you are in the middle of grief? But really it is the only reasonable thing to do.
Making lemonade out of this whole situation has been hard. In order to do this, it required extreme honesty, self reflection, and communication. Common wisdom says that honesty and communication is what is required in any relationship, and it sounds so easy, but it isn't. First you have to be honest with yourself, and what you are really feeling. Next you have to be honest with your mate. Sometimes being honest with your mate means telling them things that they do not what to hear, and things you do not want to say. It also means that they have to be open enough to actually listen to what is going on, and you just have to accept their reaction as it is, for what it is. Finally, it means being able to appropriately communicate with enough tact and politeness that they can actually listen to what you have to say. That is not to say that you need to crouch everything in analogies or diplomat-speak, but instead to squirrel the other person away in a bomb shelter, before setting up the bomb.
And that is how Shell and I got through one of the roughest spots of our marriage. We were both honest and open with each other. Sometimes brutally so. Sometimes we had to say things that the other did not want to hear. Sometimes we had to say things that we did not want to say to each other. But we did so, and in doing so, we each listened to the other and came out stronger and closer then ever before. But it was not easy. It was not fun, but as a result our relationship grew stronger.
And that is what it is all about.
So I try to "check my emotions at the door" as it were. Generally, the only two emotions that I let out on my blog are anger and my love for shell. The last thing I want is for this blog to degenerate to a LiveJournal of bad angst poetry, goofy little quizzes and personal politics.
However, this being said, I have been going through a particularly rough patch of emotions. It all started around Aug 27th. You might note that my posts since around that time have been rather sparse. Again, this is due to my emotional state. It's hard to write good entries when your mind is otherwise occupied.
So this entry is going to be long, and it's going to talk about my emotional state, but hopefully it will be a little different. I'll be talking about how I coped with my emotions, how they affected me, and what I did, and what I am doing to overcome them.
Some non back story
One of the biggest beefs I have about blogs (community and otherwise) is that they are frequently used as a clothesline for airing out dirty laundry. Nothing says lame like airing out ones grievances to the world in a starkly public forum. It's even less classy then airing out ones twisted sexual perversions ;-).So the details of what happened, how it happened and why it happened are not forthcoming. Either you know the details, and you know the state I am in, or you don't. Feel free to ask about them, I'll let you in on as many details as I feel comfortable.
But to give you some context as to what's happened, Shell and I almost lost some close friends. This certainly hasn't been the first time its happened, but we seem to be getting better at it. There is less drama, less anger and less bitterness. My thought is that friendships just ebb and flow, and sometimes the ebb gets so low that things fall away.
Coping Mechanisms
Mix: Coping mechanism
This is not a DJ mix.Maybe one day I'll play around with Traktor or with Wavelab, and turn it into a full blown mix, a-la Underworlds "Back to Mine". Really, this should be viewed as a mix tape.
Here are the tracks:
- Police State (Native Bass edit) - T-Power
- Reaching Out For Hands... - Nate Tarrant
- uneasy - Laika
- Policy Of Truth - Depeche Mode
- 6 underground (nelee hooper edit) - Sneaker Pimps
- Do What You Gotta Do - Pablo
- Octagon - T-Power
- So Long - Seba & Lotek
- The Inti Raymi Remix - T-Power
Music has always been an excellent method to shift and change my mood. I've always been deeply affected by it. When I am going through an emotional period, I find it is important to choose music that adequately expresses what I am feeling, and at the same time also leaves room open for interpretation to my particular situation, and also leaves the door open for growth, change and 'the light at the end of the tunnel'. When I was younger, I would wallow in the mud of my own depression. Therein lies the road to bad angst poetry.
Another saving grace so far has been art. I've been filling my sketchbook full of art that expresses how I am feeling, either abstractly, or symbolically. I feel that by exteriorizing these emotions in such a way allows me to get a firmer, more honest look at what I am feeling, and more importantly, allows me to act on these emotions. Whether it be talking about how I am feeling to the people relevant to the situation, or by simply deciding that I don't need those emotions anymore, and releasing them. Maybe in the future, I will scan them in, and post them to flickr.
Healing Machine
Mix: Healing Machine
This is the yang to "Coping Mechanism"'s yin. A much happier and more uplifting selection of tracks. I feel that it gets to the happiness honestly. The first few tracks are still moody and somber, but the mood grows up from there.Tracklist:
- Les Nuits (Radio Edit) - Nightmares On Wax
- Nothing Lasts - Cypher 7
- Protection (The Eno Mix) - Massive Attack
- Make You Feel That Way - Blackalicious
- One & Only - PFM
- My Soul (John B Remix) - Makoto
- Better Day - Carlito & DJ Addiction
- harder better stronger faster - Daft Punk
- Cowgirl - Underworld
- Too long - Daft Punk
- Voyager - Daft Punk
- Symphony - Hybrid
Making lemonade out of this whole situation has been hard. In order to do this, it required extreme honesty, self reflection, and communication. Common wisdom says that honesty and communication is what is required in any relationship, and it sounds so easy, but it isn't. First you have to be honest with yourself, and what you are really feeling. Next you have to be honest with your mate. Sometimes being honest with your mate means telling them things that they do not what to hear, and things you do not want to say. It also means that they have to be open enough to actually listen to what is going on, and you just have to accept their reaction as it is, for what it is. Finally, it means being able to appropriately communicate with enough tact and politeness that they can actually listen to what you have to say. That is not to say that you need to crouch everything in analogies or diplomat-speak, but instead to squirrel the other person away in a bomb shelter, before setting up the bomb.
And that is how Shell and I got through one of the roughest spots of our marriage. We were both honest and open with each other. Sometimes brutally so. Sometimes we had to say things that the other did not want to hear. Sometimes we had to say things that we did not want to say to each other. But we did so, and in doing so, we each listened to the other and came out stronger and closer then ever before. But it was not easy. It was not fun, but as a result our relationship grew stronger.
And that is what it is all about.
Sunday, June 19. 2005
Choose DIY and wondering who the fuck you are on a Sunday morning.
Note: This was actually posted on Monday morning at 1:14 AM, not Sunday morning at 1:14 AM, but I couldn't resist the pun.
So after making Hella Cute Hats, A business out of them, and of course, my own TB303 and even some twisted BDSM gear... (some of it public, some of it not.) I have come to the following conclusion.
It is fun, and cool. It is generally cheaper to make your own stuff, rather then buy your own stuff. This is especially true in the realms of BDSM sexXx0r toys and TB-303s (where the original will net you at least a grand on E-Bay, versus a $300 almost-perfect-clone kit). It is also a hellava lot more rewarding making your own stuff, rather than going down to the 'local' Wal-Mart, to further their construction of a evil-empire-like-pave-the-planet-fully-operational-battle-sales-station.
I also find that I spend more time learning about the world, and learning about my relationship to the world. Now, design, programming, and music creation are also DIY-styled-pursuits, but there is a difference between hacking code, (or designing a site, or building a song) and soldering a synth or making a hat. The latter has a certain physicalness to it. A sense of real-world tangibility to it that is very appealing. When you're done, you have something physical, and hopefully useful.
My next project is going to be learning how to sew PVC, and will probably involve some caulking as well. I have mad plans... MAD PLANS!
So after making Hella Cute Hats, A business out of them, and of course, my own TB303 and even some twisted BDSM gear... (some of it public, some of it not.) I have come to the following conclusion.
It is fun, and cool. It is generally cheaper to make your own stuff, rather then buy your own stuff. This is especially true in the realms of BDSM sexXx0r toys and TB-303s (where the original will net you at least a grand on E-Bay, versus a $300 almost-perfect-clone kit). It is also a hellava lot more rewarding making your own stuff, rather than going down to the 'local' Wal-Mart, to further their construction of a evil-empire-like-pave-the-planet-fully-operational-battle-sales-station.
I also find that I spend more time learning about the world, and learning about my relationship to the world. Now, design, programming, and music creation are also DIY-styled-pursuits, but there is a difference between hacking code, (or designing a site, or building a song) and soldering a synth or making a hat. The latter has a certain physicalness to it. A sense of real-world tangibility to it that is very appealing. When you're done, you have something physical, and hopefully useful.
My next project is going to be learning how to sew PVC, and will probably involve some caulking as well. I have mad plans... MAD PLANS!
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