Joel on software basics

I love the description of some software routines as “Schmiel the Painter” processes.

I think that some of the biggest mistakes people make even at the highest architectural levels come from having a weak or broken understanding of a few simple things at the very lowest levels. You’ve built a marvelous palace but the foundation is a mess. Instead of a nice cement slab, you’ve got rubble down there. So the palace looks nice but occasionally the bathtub slides across the bathroom floor and you have no idea what’s going on.

Everything you ever wanted to know about H. floresiensis

Well, maybe not.

Still, the British newspaper The Guardian, which has much better science pages than most North American newspapers, has put together a kind of Web portal of their articles on H. floresiensis. Enjoy.

Monty Python does Intelligent Design

From Say What winners hosted at Chez Watt

16JAN06:

Customer: Hello. I wish to complain about this so-called ’scientific theory’ what I purchased not half an hour ago from this very establishment.

Salesman: Oh yes, ‘Intelligent Design’. What, uh… what’s wrong with it?

Customer: I’ll tell you what’s wrong with it, my lad. Its vacuous, that’s what’s wrong with it!

Salesman: No, no, uh… what we need now is to ‘teach the controversy’…

Customer: Look matey, I know an empty ‘argument from incredulity’ when I see one, and I’m looking at one right now.

Salesman: No, no, it’s not empty: it’s just being elaborated. Remarkable theory, ‘Intelligent Design’, innit, eh? I mean, just look at all these books and articles: millions and millions of words…!

Customer: The verbiage don’t enter into it, my lad. It’s stone dead. It’s a non-starter. Empirically untestable, it belongs in metaphysics. This ‘theory’ makes no predictions; has no contribution to make beyond extended polemics; and can’t even be honest about who it thinks the ‘Designer’ was. Bereft of all logical and epistemological credibility, it has no scientific status! If certain right-wing and fundamentalist pressure-groups hadn’t hit upon it as a way of opposing decades of uncomfortable scientific and social progress, it’d be pushing up daisies! It’s off the table. It’s kicked the waste-paper bucket. THIS IS A NON-THEORY!

Salesman: Well, I’d better replace it then. [takes a quick peek around] Sorry, squire: looks like that’s all we’ve got…

Customer: I see, I see. I get the picture.

Salesman: I’ve got a piece of coal that looks quite a bit like a human tibia, if you squint at it…

Customer: Pray, is it part of a theory that unifies the paleontological and biological sciences and leads to a powerful understanding of observed homologies and the nested hierarchy of life?

Salesman: Not really.

Customer: WELL IT’S HARDLY A BLOODY REPLACEMENT FOR DARWINISM THEN, IS IT?

Tony Campolo on CBC’s The Hour

Tony Campolo, the spiritual advisor to U.S. President Clinton during his crisis of being found out as an adulterer, was interviewed by George Stroumboulopoulos on Canada’s national TV network for the current events show, The Hour. Is that enough facts in one sentence. Mr. Campolo remarked that he was condemned by conservative religious figures for helping Mr. Clinton in his time of trouble. He said that Christians should reach out to people in pain, no matter where they sit in the social stratum or political spectrum.

Climate change shifts garden hardiness zones

But what’s with the wave pattern in the differences?
What causes that?