Because deep down we’re all snickering little sixth graders, I figured we could all laugh at the privacy of our computers about cities, towns, and localities in Kentucky that are innuendos. I first heard about Sugartit, KY and thought there might be a story there, but without an official website for the government, newspaper, or really anything on-line, there wasn’t much I could do. I decided to use “Piddleport.com”:http://piddleport.com/index.php to find out places in Kentucky with dirty/laughable names. I’m sure I could’ve made this a bit more extensive had I had the consultation of an 11-year old boy, but we don’t have one on staff here at duenos. Nevertheless, in addition to Sugartit, there’s Beaverlick, two towns called Climax, Dingus, Gays Creek, Goochland & Goochtown (Don’t get those two? Check “here”:http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/gooch), Greasy Creek (I just thought that was funny), Hicksville, Hooker, Hot Spot, Knob Lick, Limp, Mackville, Pleasureville, and Poindexter. There are 49 other states to make us feel like kids again, so sit tight.
Gay flamingos raise chick of their own
After years of stealing eggs from the neighbors Carlos and Fernando, the only gay flamingo couple at the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust in Gloucestershire, England, have a chick of the their own. The newly-hatched flamingling was abandoned by its biological parents and so was a logical choice for the gay flamingo couple who have been together for 6 years. I know this sounds like anthropomorphizing, but homosexuality has been observed in a number of species, including penguins, humans, sheep, dolphins, orangutans, beetles, bats and humans. Here’s a picture of the new family, for a larger version and the full story you can read “The Daily Mail”:http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=456716&in_page_id=1770.
Real Research, Silly Statistics, and an Enabler
So I suppose it’s a sign that I’ve managed to get myself knee deep in graduate school: I’m starting to do my own research. It’s funny, despite the fact I teach a class on research methods I’m quickly finding out how little I really know about real research process. Two methods courses and a statistics class notwithstanding none of my experience has been literal real world graduate caliber research. I learn so much by application – I wish I could see how professors do their own research. So as it stands I’m doing a lot of mimicking what books tell me and what I can discern are proper methods. In less classier words, fake it until you [hope to] make it. Thank God I found some help in an unexpected place: Survey Methods instructor Jane Burris.
I’ve begun to gather my own data for the Facebook project, with a formal DMI 1100 student random sampling and IRB’s blessing and all that jazz, and like any good researcher I of course find a couple hundred million questions I want to ask after my survey is released into the wild. I made an ultimate newbie mistake too – turns out the ambiguous category on the form builder labeled “number of responses allowed” doesn’t pertain to individual respondents but how many people can respond to your survey period. Cleared that one up this past week, I’m praying it doesn’t mar my response rate too badly. The UIUC form builder is insufficient to perform real survey functions – it doesn’t support skip logic, use of visual aids, or partial response records. In order to perform research at UIUC we have to use it, though. The 20$ subscription to Survey Monkey for my convenience sample my senior year was leagues better, you’d think the university could afford something superior. I know, I know, it’s probably like one LAS social science IT guy who gets tasked with that and 1800 other things. So make it an assignment in a CS class, problem solved.
Here’s the interesting part to me, though. I wouldn’t have been able to do any of this research if I didn’t happen to take a flexible methods course this semester with an amazingly helpful instructor: Jane Burris. Not only is Jane not officially in sociology, but she doesn’t have any formal professorship standing – and she’s the best methods instructor I’ve had to date. Why? She guides the advanced students through whatever research they wish to do. No contrived artificial projects on far away unrelated countries or pretend ethnographies on environments we all know too well – I was told to design my own survey, collect my own data, and work to analyze it for an eventual publication! No other class in Sociology (that I know of) offers that kind of opportunity. Thanks to Jane I’ve been able to not only start the Facebook Project, but start it with a little confidence about my methods.
There are drawbacks though. I never really learned statistics. I mean sure, I can tell you about how to use and interpret a few statistical significance tests or even a little bit about linear or logarithmic regression. But I have absolutely no idea how to employ which statistical tests to my own data. In class we were taught the mechanics of a test, how to interpret the results – but not how and when to use it! I’ve picked up some basics from the crosstabs and Pearon’s Chi-square material I teach in 380, but I want to know when I should isolate specific variables to determine a causal factor. If I’m studying social capital and have all of these substantively defined concepts and conceptualized variables to represent this, how then do I take a statistics test and say something about them? I’m not just talking oh look the median number of friends on Facebook – I’m talking about controlling for race and year in school to identify if gender alone significantly impacts the ways Facebook is used as a supplement to social capital! We’re talking many variables that all intersect that I don’t know how to relate to one another with statistics in meaningful ways. So enough complaining, I just wanted to give examples. I’m hoping I can find a class or an individual who can tell me that Cronbach’s alpha would best illustrate the connections between my matrix of Facebook usage variables to say, perceptions on digital privacy. So that is, designing a plan of analysis for my data. I can coax a computer into doing the thuckethead statistics for me and check with a book to see what the results mean in technical terms.
A happy conclusion? Jane has offered to help me sort through my data this summer. I’m looking forward to seeing what results!
Apple starts recycling program
We previously covered “Apple’s last place”:http://duenos.net/article/120/greenpeace-releases-latest-green-electronics-rankings environmental record, and then the subsequent “green statement”:http://duenos.net/article/266/AGreenerApple from Steve Jobs, but it seems there is more. Apple announced last week that they were to start a school computer recycling program. Any school (k-12, University, College, etc…) with more than 25 computers to recycle, Macs or PCs, could sign up. After scheduling a pick-up, the rest of the work would be done by Apple who are, it seems, asking for nothing in return. There’s more about this story at “The Apple Insider”:http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/07/05/18/apple_offers_green_take_backs_for_old_school_computers.html.
Via “The Inquirer”:http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=39749
Dissolvable Plastic
One of my favorite “podcasts”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podcasts, “60-Second Science”:http://sciam.com/podcast/ (available at “Scientific American”:http://sciam.com/ and “iTunes”:http://www.apple.com/itunes/download/), spoke about research being conducted by the “University of Southern Mississippi”:http://www.usm.edu/index.php to make stretch wrap plastic that is dissolvable in saltwater. In a nutshell, by incorporating “hydrophilic molecules”:http://www.wordconstructions.com/articles/technical/hydrophilic.html like “carboxylic acid”:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carboxylic_acid into the plastic, the saltwater can break it down within 5 months to CO2 and water. The US military is funding the project so that on-board storage of plastic waste can be reduced by safely dumping it overboard after some minor preparations. For a more complete run-through of the application and hurdles of this research, please check out “this article”:http://www.sciencefriday.com/news/040307/news0403071.html from “sciencefriday.com”:http://www.sciencefriday.com/.
StarCraft 2 in the works
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/StarCraft_professional_competition leagues will show you how special the first in the series was with thousands of devotees following and attending StarLeague competitions. It's international popularity ranks StarCraft as the most popular real-time strategy game in history and while there's not much information available yet about its sequel, what can be found is on the "official site":http://starcraft2.com.
Killer Apps for Mac – img2icns
This is more of a specialty program than ones we’ve profiled in the past, but it has been a great help to me lately so I thought it worth sharing. Nerd declaration: I am a personalization fiend. Everything I can change or modify on my Mac, I do. The first line of customization on the Apple is of course the dock icons, which can sometimes prove frustrating. That’s where img2icns comes in.
Img2icns was made by “Shiny Frog”:http://www.shinyfrog.net/, an Italian software design firm. The official English site for the app is “here”:http://www.shinyfrog.net/en/software/img2icns/. Normally with most icons, you can just copy and paste previously made icons (instructions and examples “here”:http://interfacelift.com/icons-mac/faq.php), but sometimes I’ve wanted to make my own using photoshop or fireworks. Img2icns is a very simple application that converts any kind of picture file to Apple’s proprietary .icns file type, and therefore make that image able to be used as a dock icon.
Previously featured _Killer Apps for Mac._
* “Adium”:http://duenos.net/article/129/killer-apps-for-mac-adium – an alternative chat client
* “Sidenote”:http://duenos.net/article/111/killer-apps-for-mac-sidenote – a VERY helpful note-taking program
* “Darwiin Remote”:http://duenos.net/article/193/KillerAppsforMacDarwiinRemote – an application that allows the use of the Wii-remote as an input
* “Mac Pilot”:http://duenos.net/article/174/KillerAppsforMacMacPilot – an interface to control more options on the Mac
* “Disk Inventory X”:http://duenos.net/article/163/KillerAppsforMacDiskInventoryX – visualizes the hard disk
* “Tangerine”:http://duenos.net/article/150/KillerAppsforMacTangerine – analyzes and organizes the iTunes library by beat characteristics
* “SizzlingKeys”:http://duenos.net/article/119/killer-apps-for-mac-sizzlingkeys – allows universal control of iTunes through simple hotkeys
* “Vienna Reader”:http://duenos.net/article/204/KillerAppsforMacViennaReader – an OS X-integrated RSS reader with an internal browser
* “VLC Player”:http://duenos.net/article/228/ – the best media player in existence, it plays anything
* “App Zapper”:http://duenos.net/article/231/ – tracks down all the caches and libraries for deleted applications and deletes them
* “TV Shows”:http://duenos.net/article/232/ – automatically downloads torrent files of TV shows
* “UnRarX”:http://duenos.net/article/234/KillerAppsforMacUnRarX – very good at decompressing .rar files
Visual Thesaurus
You may have already heard of this cool web-tool but just in case you hadn’t, here’s the “Visual Thesaurus”:http://www.visualthesaurus.com/. This program/website is not really all that useful (and probably not worth the “price”:https://www.visualthesaurus.com/store/buy.do) but it is a cool alternative way to see the relationships between words. The people at ThinkMap make it easy to try the service, just not for very long. Go over to “VisualThesaurus.com”:http://www.visualthesaurus.com/ and try the free trial, maybe you’ll find it invaluable.
Steven Milloy, the evil "scientist"
There are two sides to every argument, fine. But maybe there are certain things that shouldn’t have two sides, the protection of the environment for one. That’s why people like Steve Milloy and his “JunkScience.com”:http://junkscience.com/ really doesn’t make any sense to me. Milloy has set himself up as the defender of truth AGAINST the science of global warming. His site is hard to get through for all the clever wordplay (“Help fight Global Fooling” and the like) and needless Gore-bashing, but once you do it just gets more sinister. Of course, global warming isn’t the only accepted science he argues against, here’s a list of his “top ten”:http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,189706,00.html junk science instances.
This move doesn’t make much sense, but for some reason Milloy was behind the very false rumor (you may have heard this one) that compact fluorescent bulbs cost up to $2,000 to clean up if they are broken. The rumor was then perpetuated by his main employers, Fox News and the gang, but he’s the source. For more about that controversy and how full of shit he was, go to “this article”:http://www.treehugger.com/files/2007/05/the_real_dirt_o.php from “TreeHugger”:http://www.treehugger.com.
Worst web site ever: Watching Grass Grow
That’s right, this site (“Watching-Grass-Grow.com”:http://www.watching-grass-grow.com/) is a dedicated web cam watching some bloke’s yard. The goal? To watch the grass grow, that’s it. The webcam updates every 3 seconds and, well that’s it. I’ve already spent too much time writing about it.
Previously featured inane things:
* “Roomba TV”:http://duenos.net/article/138/RoombaTV, another hard-to-believe-anyone-watches web cam attached to a guys autonomous vacuum robot.