Writings

Technology, open source, personal essays, and everything that isn't climate.

How risky are recalled Toyotas?

Robert Wright provides a nice analysis on the current Toyota recall:

Let’s do the math.

My back-of-the-envelope calculations (explained in a footnote below) suggest that if you drive one of the Toyotas recalled for acceleration problems and don’t bother to comply with the recall, your chances of being involved in a fatal accident over the next two years because of the unfixed problem are a bit worse than one in a million — 2.8 in a million, to be more exact. Meanwhile, your chances of being killed in a car accident during the next two years just by virtue of being an American are one in 5,244.

So driving one of these suspect Toyotas raises your chances of dying in a car crash over the next two years from .01907 percent (that’s 19 one-thousandths of 1 percent, when rounded off) to .01935 percent (also 19 one-thousandths of one percent).

The rest of the op ed fills out some more of the details, and talks about the dangers of fearing something that is such low risk.  It echos back to Tom Engelhardt's thoughts from last week.

Related: We're fearing fear quite a bit now · NYTimes: The New Sputnik · End of an Era

Kindness is contagious

In findings sure to gladden the heart of anyone who’s ever wondered whether tiny acts of kindness have larger consequences, researchers have shown that generosity is contagious.

Goodness spurs goodness, they found: A single act can influence dozens more.

This is the same team that's been studying how many things, loneliness, obesity, happiness, spread through social networks.  Wired has a good write up on the research.

Related: Saving the Cougar Ace · Experience vs. Record · Never known an open web

The new Poughkeepsie Farm Project site is live!

The New Poughkeepsie Farm Project Site Is Live

About 14 months ago I raised my hand to help with a more interactive web presence for the Poughkeepsie Farm Project.  This kicked off a large discussion over the course of the year, a web committee, and a great pro bono new graphic design.  Many many people were involved to get this project to completion, I just consider myself a catalyst.

Today, after a year of work, we launched the new farmproject.org:

Go check it out.  Now that we're on a drupal platform, we'll be rolling in smaller features over time.  I've got a few ideas queued up that I'll try to get out there for the first member pickup at the end of May.

Related: Poughkeepsie Farm Project · IBM's Day of Service at the Poughkeepsie Farm Project · Harvest time

A not so brief history of scurvy

It turns out that we found, then lost, the cure for scurvy well before we eventually identified it as Vitamin C.  There is an incredible write up of that story.

Now, I had been taught in school that scurvy had been conquered in 1747, when the Scottish physician James Lind proved in one of the first controlled medical experiments that citrus fruits were an effective cure for the disease. From that point on, we were told, the Royal Navy had required a daily dose of lime juice to be mixed in with sailors’ grog, and scurvy ceased to be a problem on long ocean voyages.

But here was a Royal Navy surgeon in 1911 apparently ignorant of what caused the disease, or how to cure it. Somehow a highly-trained group of scientists at the start of the 20th century knew less about scurvy than the average sea captain in Napoleonic times. Scott left a base abundantly stocked with fresh meat, fruits, apples, and lime juice, and headed out on the ice for five months with no protection against scurvy, all the while confident he was not at risk. What happened?

It's really fascinating, definitely worth your time.

Related: Do Demographics impact Leadership? · Unifying Bash History · A Short History of Nearly Everything

7 Years of MHVLUG

7 Years Of Mhvlug

Last night was our monthly MHVLUG meeting, and it also marked 7 years since our first meeting.

7 years... it's kind of hard to imagine.  I was also really touched, multiple times last night, by the waves of appreciation I got from folks in the room.

Last night was a perfect night, even though it started as anything but.  At 4:30, Thor's hard drive decided it was no longer a drive, and without a backup of the presentation, we were scrambling in the office to try to recover the drive, and come up with a backup plan, which meant finding another good base presentation online he could work from.  I still hadn't gotten an ack back from the library, so had to call to ensure someone would actually open the door, and we didn't get locked out of our space.  Pat called during setup, and reported that they were having a mail server meltdown at work, so he would try to get there by the end with the cake, but there were no promises.  This was exceptionally more chaos than we typically have to deal with for a meeting, but it definitely meant the night was starting off off balance, and we were just working to try to get it back on track.

As the meeting was about to start, Bruce Locke interrupted and got up and said a few words about how much he and others appreciated the efforts I've put into the group.  He then presented me with a set of gift certificates to our local beer mecca, that a number of members had gotten together and pitched in on.  I was really really touched by that.  While this is a labor of love, it's very energizing to have such a tangible gesture of how much it means to others.

The talk was great.  Thor worked well off the borrowed slides, and we had a lot of great questions from the audience.  Sahana is a great project, and really demonstrates how much of an impact we can have on people's lives as members of the open source community.  Sahana is actively being used right now in Haiti and Chile to handle the aftermath of their recent earthquakes.  We had at least one new face in the room, who had first attended our meeting last month virtually (over the live stream), and had come out for the face to face meeting.  As that was exactly what I was trying to get out of the streaming, I'm really glad it seems to be working.

I was given another comment of appreciation from the floor when I let folks know about the upcoming meetings we had locked and loaded for the year.  It is hard to get that far out ahead on the schedule, and it was great that everyone seemed to really be excited about our upcoming meetings.

The cake... was not a lie. Pat showed up about 7:40 with the cake, just a few minutes after the lecture had ended.  We had people hanging out and chatting until 8, then 15 folks came out of the palace afterwards.  We had great conversation that went until 11.

As I was driving home, I thought to myself how perfect that all had really been.  Good people, a great talk, and lots of good conversation.  Really... just perfect.

Related: 10 Years of MHVLUG · 100 MHVLUG Meetings · The great mhvlug streaming experiment

We're fearing fear quite a bit now

This theme can be found all over the web, especially among security folks.  Anyone that can do basic math can work out for themselves their chance of death from terrorists vs. their morning commute, for instance.  And yet, the underwear pants on fire guy, who caused no casualties, got weeks of media coverage.  Tom Engelhardt provides a good current summary:

Under the circumstances, you would never know that Americans living in the United States were in vanishingly little danger from terrorism, but in significant danger driving to the mall; or that alcohol, tobacco, E. colibacteria, fire, domestic abuse, murder, and the weather present the sort of potentially fatal problems that might be worth worrying about, or even changing your behavior over, or perhaps investing some money in.  Terrorism, not so much.

Related: You can't fight fear with fear · How risky are recalled Toyotas? · My own thoughts Google Chrome OS

What a wonderful Olympics

For all the gripe people gave to NBC on their coverage, I have to say I was pretty happy with it overall.  When you look at the coverage across NBC, USA, CNBC, and MS-NBC it really seemed like they air more hours of unique coverage than during the Beijing Summer games, and a large portion (at least on the cable networks) was live.  We had our DVR with 2 tuners almost constantly running and gathering the games.

My love of curling was rekindled, and I got to watch a lot of it during these games.  While it was a bummer that the Americans didn't do very well, the medal rounds were just incredible. The spontaneous outbreak of "Oh Canada" before the 8th rock of the final end in the men's gold medal match was amazing.  I didn't watch much hockey, except for the gold medal match, which was definitely the best game I've ever seen.

To me, the most surprising thing of the Olympics was how much x-country skiing was aired, and how much I enjoyed watching it.  The men's 30 km pursuit was an incredible race.  When I saw they were showing it live, I never thought they'd stick around for the whole thing, but they did.  With the snow arriving this past week, it helped inspire us to get out to Fahnestock for some skiing of our own.

No Olympics will ever be the same to me as the Sydney games, which I got to experience both in person, and with Australian TV coverage that was live 8am - 11pm every day.  However, I really think that with NBC's use of their cable networks so extensively, we got much closer to that this time around.  I'm hoping that isn't a one off, and that we see that again in the future.

Related: Why NBC Olympics Coverage is Bad · Olympic Fever · For love of cross country skiing

Catching bad links with jquery

We're 1 step closer to the launch of the new Poughkeepsie Farm Project website, so it's down to some final edits before it gets flipped live.  While I was looking over the test site the other day, I realized we still had some links, and images that referred to the existing site, which would break once we did the final domain switcheroo.

I came up with the following snippet of jquery to highlight bad links and images client side so that editors would realize they needed to do something about them:

function highlight_bad() {
    $("div[id='content'] img[src^='http://farmproject.org']").css("border","9px solid red");
    $("div[id='content'] img[src^='http://www.farmproject.org']").css("border","9px solid red");
    $("div[id='content'] img[src^='http://test.farmproject.org']").css("border","9px solid red");
    $("div[id='content'] img[src^='http://pfp.dague.org']").css("border","9px solid red");
    $("div[id='content'] img[src^='http://farm.dague.org']").css("border","9px solid red");
    $("div[id='content'] a[href^='http://farmproject.org']").css("border","9px solid red");
    $("div[id='content'] a[href^='http://www.farmproject.org']").css("border","9px solid red");
    $("div[id='content'] a[href^='http://test.farmproject.org']").css("border","9px solid red");
    $("div[id='content'] a[href^='http://pfp.dague.org']").css("border","9px solid red");
    $("div[id='content'] a[href^='http://farm.dague.org']").css("border","9px solid red");
}

So every time we find a link or image that starts with an absolute url to one of the addresses the site has had inside the content block, we highlight it. This has been incredibly effective so far in catching some things I didn't even realize was an issue.  This with the combo of drupal's broken link detector internally is helping us ensure the content is consistent prior to launch.

Related: New MHAA Website · Tip of the Day: Google Maps styling · Fixing Github with Greasemonkey