Sep 30 2008

lawsuits and healthcare

Charlene @ 11:07 pm

If there was universal healthcare, would lawsuits concerning personal injury decline or disappear? At least from a compensation standpoint, if the government took care of your injuries, why would you need to sue someone/a corporation (I know they’re one and the same in legal-land) for medical care?

Wonder what the world would be like with less fear of personal injury lawsuits…perhaps our kids could play on those merry-go-rounds and tire swings again.

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Sep 30 2008

random work thoughts

Charlene @ 3:35 pm

This flowed from various conversations I’ve had today as well as a slashdot article called “The Stigma of a Tech Support Background.” I’m sympathetic to this person’s job woes, though it’s not a great time to be looking in the US and as several commenters suggested perhaps it’s him, not the job. From that post, anyway, I got a few books to look into concerning interviewing.

In my field, whenever I breathe “computer science” I get back a flurry of responses roughly like “bioinformatics! data manipulation!!” Any further discussions about social sciences, behaviour change, or structural health issues are swept away, much to my dismay.

Don’t get me wrong – I like data. I like learning new programming tricks, or connecting disparate data sets, or arguing that all this data isn’t worth a thing without a way to easily access it. Data helps make good decisions. But, for all the interest I hold in it, data’s only truly neat to me if it distinctly relates to people and change. This change could be a new approach, a new program, or just a better understanding, but it needs to be rooted in something that affects us.

Fundamentally, I like getting things done and seeing a change. I especially like getting things done that help [1] people, irrespective of what shape that help takes. I know that to get more things done, you have to work with (more) people. So I’m going to work with more people. I don’t like to admit it but I actually rather like people – albeit in some cases only in a wtf!? sort of way.

One of the comments on the slashdot post brought up these points:

Try telling your prospective employers these three things :
1) If I don’t know what you need me to know, by the end of the day I will learn it.
2) If my project isn’t done by the end of my workday, then my workday doesn’t end.
3) I want this job, and am willing to work my ass off to get it.

#1 and #3 are exactly how I feel a job should be; #2 is a bit painful but I tend to err on the end of long workdays rather than short anyway. Unfortunately, most people only focus on this flavor of work style in service-oriented jobs such as IT when this philosophy actually applies to all work, in particular people-centric work. With IT, ok, your computer’s down. With people, there is real shit going down. It’s why I would find it frustrating at times to work at a deliberate, pre-planned-3-years-ago pace.

I want to see things not only get done, but in the best/most appropriate way possible, and that means I’ll get passionate even about plans that are seemingly set in stone. Part of what I’ll bring to a job is my own self, and that means needing to be convinced that what we’re doing will work in the best interests of people or if not working hard to make sure it becomes so. If my job truly cares about people, I’ll care about my job. Though it would be nice if the job gave me partner and health benefits…

Other random bits related to work – your career decisions are only as good as the information and preparation you had at the time of the decision. If it doesn’t work out, don’t mull over the event; try to figure out what didn’t work and be ready for the next go-’round. There’s not enough time in the world for people to be rehashing old work decisions, of all things. If I’m going to think about the past, it’s going to be about non-work things: times I was happy, things I miss, tasty secret ice cream, that kind of stuff.

Anyway, hope I have a job that fits all this someday.

[1]Yes, yes, “help” as in facilitating or supporting in a culturally sensitive/empowering manner, not what I filter as appropriate change or next steps, as that’s not really nice. Among other things. [back]

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Sep 29 2008

reCAPTCHA and helping with ebooks

Charlene @ 7:56 pm

Not that I like OCR or anything, but I came across reCAPTCHA while fixing up another website that has apparently gotten noticed by spammers (boo trashing a wiki!).  It’s a verification plugin that has you type in verifying words that come from OCR’d media from, say, Archive.org, so when you verify you’re not a spammer you’re also helping scan in a digital text accurately.  A useful two seconds spent killing two birds with one stone, and there are plugins and extensions for various languages and software.  Here’s a list of their plugins; I used the MediaWiki one, and I’m going to put the WordPress one on here after this post.

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Sep 29 2008

The cold is coming…and other thoughts

Charlene @ 7:06 pm

The overnight temperatures are starting to hover around freezing – I’ve heard from unreliable sources that “heating” will come on on October 1st.  I can’t wait…for lukewarm water :)

Swiped from WeatherUnderground, here’s Khovd’s seasonal weather:

January February March April May June July August September October November December
High Temperature ( F / C ) 3 / -16 10 / -12 33 / 0 52 / 11 66 / 19 75 / 24 76 / 25 74 / 23 64 / 18 48 / 9 28 / -2 9 / -13
Low Temperature ( F / C ) -22 / -30 -17 / -27 6 / -15 26 / -4 40 / 5 51 / 10 54 / 12 50 / 10 39 / 4 24 / -5 4 / -16 -14 / -26
Precipitation ( in / mm ) 0.06 / 1.4 0.04 / 0.9 0.09 / 2.3 0.23 / 5.9 0.37 / 9.5 1.04 / 26.5 1.38 / 35.0 0.89 / 22.7 0.42 / 10.6 0.18 / 4.6 0.07 / 1.8 0.06 / 1.6
Average Percent Sunshine 24 27 35 37 42 42 42 41 37 32 25 21

Hmm.  Would’ve thought more sunlight.  I’ve always thought of that as the upshot to the cold.  Bah, that’s what I get for looking.

Otherwise, tomatoes have mostly disappeared, but bell peppers have made an appearance.  So far the most exciting buy has been the gouda block that has just come back to the local (regional) department store, Nomin’s.

A few days ago people came over and we had bread omelets and chocolate-chocolate-covered-raisins-oatmeal-blueberry Andycakes.  And a bottle of red wine and some beers as we watched the McCain-Obama debate after the fact on youtube (in 11 irritating parts).

People are converging on Khovd soon to go to Eagle Festival in Bayan-Ulgii this weekend.  I’m thinking I may need to wear my midweight long underwear just in case…

Work-wise, I’m getting (a year late) into English lessons.  It at least guarantees uninterrupted face-time with my various coworkers.  I also really really need to email Clarence and get cracking on my thesis.  I swear I’ll write an email to him tomorrow…

Random thoughts:
I would like someday to have concrete counters like this and a similar (yet less schizoid and big) house like this. You know, cool southern house, but with some full-wall windows and lots of light.
Listening to classical music again (heh, can we say bored? all sorts of old habits), I think I may like to pick up an instrument again, if only to play for myself.  Have become a fan of Saint-Saëns.
Or those musical endeavors may be chalked up to a lack of large productive group activities here.

I guess I’m feeling like nesting – despite the lack of offspring :P

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Sep 27 2008

software posts untangled

Charlene @ 12:54 am

Due to a variety of updates to my software list as I try and discard things, I’m making it into a more manageable permanent page. Pretty much if you’re thinking about using free software to do those things with other packages that cost way too much, check out the page. I added a few things concerning LaTeX and coding tools as well as an awesome open-source Tablet PC app.

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