Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Satellites are Expensive
What do you think about your "communications satellite" being replaced by a hundred or so "communications weather balloons.".
(Oct'15) (Google's Parent company) Alphabet is calling these "loon balloons" and plans to deploy them over Indonesia next year.
Sunday, September 21, 2014
Our 60 Year Experiment in Moral Education
Thinking about the two cardinal innovations in teaching morality that began in the 60's,
No one speaks more authoritatively about the Socratic method than Plato, and Plato maintained that it was to be reserved for mature men over the age of thirty. "One great precaution," said Plato, "is not to let them [students] taste of arguments while they are young" — the danger being that they would develop a taste for arguments rather than a taste for truth. Young minds, like young puppies, said Plato, would only "pull and tear at arguments."
Saturday, September 20, 2014
Kvass: Old World Pop
I was exploring Toronto's St. Lawrence
market this summer. Ambling past a Ukrainian deli, I came upon a
bottle marked “KBAC”. Suspicious, I called over a Slavic friend
who happened to be there and asked her to read it to me. “Kvass”,
she said.
I've heard of that! in a book I once
read about Mennonite foods. It was some fermented drink involving
bread. It sounded weird (even weirder since I was confusing it with
kefir, fermented milk.) Of course I bought it.
I've heard kvass described as low
alcohol beer. I think it is more like pop. It has a
distinctive flavor and yet reminds me of something familiar. I
haven't yet put my finger on it, maybe plum.
Researching, I find that it comes in
bread and beet varieties. It has been brewed for over a thousand
years (though I wonder if the traditional recipes had sugar for the
yeast.) Kvass is enjoying a resurgence in Russia and Ukraine lately.
Coca-cola has developed a brand and a monastery near Moscow has
started bottling its traditional recipe. Modern enthusiasts rave
about its probiotics, which would have been important in the days
before clean water.
You can make it yourself. It is
basically rye toast tea. I have been trying a few batches at home
based on Angelina's recipe. She flavors it with raisins. Others
suggest lemon or mint. (Both inhibit bacteria growth.) I tried a batch with raisins, then with
raisins and lemon (crushing the lemon and careful to capture the oils
from the zest.) My current batch has raisin, mint and lemon.
Compared to Angelina, I make batches a
quarter the size, only 2.5 liters. Remember, it is alive and will
only last 2-5 days. Where Angelina emphasizes the need to burn your
toast, I discovered that there is such a thing as too burnt. You want
to see some blackening, but no charcoal. Mine has 2/3 the sugar. You can recover 20% of the liquid if you put the bread in a colander after scooping it from the pot.
(Dec'14) I just tried Schweppes dark ginger ale. I wonder if it isn't kvass.
(Dec'14) I just tried Schweppes dark ginger ale. I wonder if it isn't kvass.
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Mining Opportunities in the New Frontier

Last week, the US congress decided that any material recovered from an asteroid belongs to the people that recovered it. In other words, asteroid mining is legal. Now, by all appearances, asteroid mining is real. (Sept'14)
Update (Oct'14): How mining might work
(Nov'15): The senate passes a bill.
Saturday, September 13, 2014
If 20% of Your Students Drop Out...
...whose fault is that? the student's? the university's? the public's? some combination?
If the public invested $50,000 and the student (and parents) invested $50,000 in two wasted years, does anyone deserve a refund?
(In the US, the actual rate is ~40%, in Canada it is harder to find.)
If the public invested $50,000 and the student (and parents) invested $50,000 in two wasted years, does anyone deserve a refund?
Friday, September 12, 2014
How To Identify Life
...from a few light-years away.
If we are looking for life on an exoplanet, What do we look for? Well, radio signals and TV broadcasts would be sure signs, but awfully unlikely. Seeing trees or animals moving on the surface is proof but far beyond the ability of any telescope we can build or imagine building*.
Instead, we hope to analyze light from the planet. From this light we can identify the chemicals in the atmosphere using spectral analysis. Oxygen (O2) would be a good sign. It reacts so well that most atmospheres would use it all to make CO2 or H2O unless there was life to release it. Computer models now show that it is actually possible for an atmosphere to have oxygen and even ozone without ever having life. So even though oxygen is still a good sign. It is not proof. For solid proof, you would need to find oxygen, ozone, carbon dioxide, and methane with no carbon monoxide.
(Oct'15) How Space Telescopes Will Find Earth 2.0: progress in seeing an exoplanet. *
If we are looking for life on an exoplanet, What do we look for? Well, radio signals and TV broadcasts would be sure signs, but awfully unlikely. Seeing trees or animals moving on the surface is proof but far beyond the ability of any telescope we can build or imagine building*.
Instead, we hope to analyze light from the planet. From this light we can identify the chemicals in the atmosphere using spectral analysis. Oxygen (O2) would be a good sign. It reacts so well that most atmospheres would use it all to make CO2 or H2O unless there was life to release it. Computer models now show that it is actually possible for an atmosphere to have oxygen and even ozone without ever having life. So even though oxygen is still a good sign. It is not proof. For solid proof, you would need to find oxygen, ozone, carbon dioxide, and methane with no carbon monoxide.
(Oct'15) How Space Telescopes Will Find Earth 2.0: progress in seeing an exoplanet. *
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
Pinewood Derby Tips
This video is design done right.
- Identify all the factors you can think of.
- Do some testing to know what the effects are and how big they are.
- Keep it simple.
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
Strike and Resolution: 4 Views
There are three significant parties in BC. What are their positions on the teachers' strike?

The Liberal government's news releases are here, with strike messaging is here.
The official opposition, the NDP, has news releases here.
The Conservatives have surprisingly detailed policy ideas on the issue, especially on the government dropping the court case.

The Liberal government's news releases are here, with strike messaging is here.
- The minister says he is eager for a resolution but the union won't move enough.
- They have issued an FAQ sheet.
The official opposition, the NDP, has news releases here.
- They think we should do mediation and return to school in the meantime.
- They say the government is "putting up roadblocks."
- They have asked for education minister Fassbender to resign.
The Conservatives have surprisingly detailed policy ideas on the issue, especially on the government dropping the court case.
Monday, September 8, 2014
Tuesday, August 26, 2014
What if Memorization IS Teaching How to Learn?
They say kids need to memorize their arithmetic. Other "they"s say kids need to learn how to figure things out on their own. Now they say memorization builds the brain that can figure things out.
(The "math wars" refers to a battle between math teachers that has been going on at least three decades now: to emphasize understanding or performance?)
(The "math wars" refers to a battle between math teachers that has been going on at least three decades now: to emphasize understanding or performance?)
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
A Scientific Approach to Good Luck
Richard Wiseman of the UK has studied lucky people and he has studied unlucky people. He has summarized his findings in a book, (or for busy people) an article, (or for people with short attention spans) three techniques.
My summary is this: relax and pay attention to the opportunities around you. My own addition,
tempt serendipity
Talk of making luck always reminds me of Heinlein's quote about making luck on a national scale.
Sunday, July 20, 2014
High-School Crushes - Anylysed Mathematically!
John Paulos considers some statistics relevant to romantic crushes.
A mathematical example: Three coins are before you. They look identical,
but one is weighted so it lands on heads just one-fourth of the time;
the second is a normal coin, so heads come up half the time; and the
third has heads on both sides.
Pick one of the coins at random. Since there are three coins, the
probability that you chose the two-headed one is one-third. Now flip
that coin three times. If it comes up heads all three times, you’ll very
likely want to change your estimate of the probability that you chose
the two-headed coin.
The second relevant statistical notion is Bayes’s theorem, a mathematical proposition that tells us how to update our estimates of people, events and situations in the light of new evidence.

Bayes’s theorem tells you how to calculate the new odds; in this case it says the probability that you chose the two-headed coin is now 87.7 percent, up from the initial 33.3 percent.
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
Saturday, July 12, 2014
Thursday, July 10, 2014
The Big Picture of the Summer Job
It looks like summer jobs are harder to get than they used to be. It's not just the recession. That was 7 years ago.
So what explains the trend? Are kids today lazy? Do they feel unprepared? Is minimum wage pressure pushing the lowest skill workers off the bottom? Are students competing with China or adults (who are competing with China?) This is US data. Is it competition from low-skill immigration?
(Dec'14) Megan McArdle talks a little about the effect of raising the minimum wage and a lot about how to read a social science study.
The Curmudgeon (p.42-4,91-5) says you should look for a lousy summer job (that pays well), or at least a real one. Avoid internships or cushy jobs with impressive titles.
So what explains the trend? Are kids today lazy? Do they feel unprepared? Is minimum wage pressure pushing the lowest skill workers off the bottom? Are students competing with China or adults (who are competing with China?) This is US data. Is it competition from low-skill immigration?
(Dec'14) Megan McArdle talks a little about the effect of raising the minimum wage and a lot about how to read a social science study.
The Curmudgeon (p.42-4,91-5) says you should look for a lousy summer job (that pays well), or at least a real one. Avoid internships or cushy jobs with impressive titles.
Wednesday, June 25, 2014
This Summer's Assignment
School can be a good environment to learn academic skills like arithmetic, algebra, geology, grammar, history and essay construction. It is a lousy place to learn how to use your academic skills. That is an executive function.
Your education doesn't stop this summer. Develop those critical skills. Go play.
Monday, June 23, 2014
It's a Show...It's an Education...It's Dinner

It looks like a kitchen surrounded by a bar. It has been described as being part of your own cooking show. You might call it a cooking class where you don't have to work and get to eat the food. Or you might call it a six hour dinner, with entertainment in the form of food talk.
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
Global Warming From a Sunnier Globe
What if pollution makes the planet cooler? That's what made the most sense to me when I first thought about the issue. (I think it was grade 2 that I had noticed that clouds make it cooler and my teacher told me that pollution causes clouds.). You'd think someone would have looked into this earlier.
It turns out that pollution does block the sun. The planet's mid-century cooling (from the 50's to the 70's) is explained by the blockage of the sun. The late century rise in temperatures is explained by pollution reductions.
Plus, clarity from the comments:
"If i get this right, industrial pollution masked the natural warming from the Little Ice Age and the clean air initiatives caused the earth temperatures to rebound to normal levels." - Lawrence Todd
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)