Took this photo the other day.
Morning light can be pretty amazing.
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Took this photo the other day.
Morning light can be pretty amazing.
Laura Hudson writes about The Videogame That Finally Made Me Feel Like a Human Being, which is a recent addition to the game The Last of Us.
We don’t just need more women in videogames — we need more women who don’t fit in boxes. Left Behind isn’t remarkable just because it meets a quota. Ellie and Riley aren’t just concepts or good intentions. They’re people: fully-realized, quirky, funny, dangerous girls. Ellie isn’t there for anyone – to inspire, titillate or motivate them. Ellie there because she’s herself, and for once, that’s reason enough.
I’m an Engineer, not a Cheerleader
One major problem, gender stereotypes, appears in the most mundane magazines, television programs, or music tracks. In toy stores, girls are relegated to the “pink aisle” with dolls and pretend ovens while boys wander into the “manly aisle” with train sets and toy cars. As a child, I loved to play with Legos, spending hours fitting the pieces together to build any structure I imagined. I adored dolls, but I could never find one that exactly mirrored my enthusiasm for science and engineering.
As part of the investigation after the Columbia a plan was explored as to how Columbia could have been saved. Lee Hutchinson summarized the plan for Arstechnica.
His rememberance of the memorial ceremony is touching.
DIRTBAG SHAKESPEARE imagines modern remakes of Shakespearean plays with a teenage dirtbag cast. The rest is pretty self-explanatory.
Dress for the job you want, not the job you have. pic.twitter.com/v9MoMSGwE0
— Dickie Greenleaf (@oobp) March 1, 2014
The game Life Goes On, made by some good friends (and their partners!) is now available for preorder.
Try it out by playing the demo, and then pre-order it at their site, via the HumbleStore, or through Steam.
Life Goes On will launch April 16th! Visit our website to pre-order for a 25% discount! http://www.lifegoesongame.com/ Life Goes On is a comically morbid puzzle platformer game, where you send a series of dauntless medieval knights through a trap-ridden gauntlet, sacrificing them one by one to make progress.
A bit late. Took off Friday for a Snowshoeing trip, so I missed the Friday posting.
As usual, I have no idea what the video has to do with the song.
The last couple of weeks have been pretty ugly, melting and grey skies. I haven't been taking pictures because it wasn't really inspiring weather.
It was a lovely surprise to find the crisp air and beautiful light this morning.
Amazing how a light dusting of snow, combined with a blue sky and rising sun can restore Edmonton to its glorious beauty
Like many young people, I wanted to be an astronaut when I was young. Space exploration was the coolest thing imaginable, and being an astronaut was, to a young person, the only acceptable entry. That I was raised on a steady diet of space exploration science fiction also helped, of course.
When I believed that various minor health issues made space travel an impossibility for me, that particular dream died. I never completely lost touch with space, but it slowly faded into the background of my interests, rekindled on occasion by an interesting project or discovery. Unfortunately, just as NASA was neglected, as was my own love of space travel.
It's funny to me what brought back my love of space: it was these guys:
or more specifically, the game in which they star: Kerbal Space Program (KSP).
KSP is a game which is still under development, but available for purchase today if you're interested in what it has so far:
Flying Suspension Bridge- it's KSP, so why not?
Playing KSP is a balance between fun, and literal rocket science. Blowing stuff up, and apoapsis and periapsis, retrograde and prograde, gravity turns, and delta-V. Lots of learning, but also, lots of fun.
I didn't really realize how much I had loved air and space as a child, nor how much I had revived that love with Kerbal Space Program until we went to the national air and space museum in Washington, D.C.
Andrea noticed it before I did, as I excitedly named almost everything I saw. When a tour guide approached, asking if we'd like some guidance, Andrea waved him off: "Apparently Matt has Wikipedia in his brain".
The trip to the Air and Space museum was my personal highlight of our trip to D.C. I was a little sad that we didn't get a chance to visit the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, which has some of the largest artifacts. Another time, I promise myself that.
Two links this week in this category.
Susan Sons wrote a response, 'Girls and Software', which I thought contained some interesting points. A trio of quotes I thought were thought provoking:
Unfortunately, our society has set girls up to be anything but technologists. My son is in elementary school. Last year, his school offered a robotics class for girls only. When my son asked why he couldn't join, it was explained to him that girls need special help to become interested in technology, and that if there are boys around, the girls will be too scared to try.
My son came home very confused. You see, he grew up with a mom who coded while she breastfed and brought him to his first LUG meeting at age seven weeks. The first time he saw a home-built robot, it was shown to him by a local hackerspace member, a woman who happens to administer one of the country's biggest supercomputers. Why was his school acting like girls were dumb?
Thanks so much, modern-day "feminism", for putting very unfeminist ideas in my son's head.
The new breed of open-source programmer isn't like the old. They've changed the rules in ways that have put a spotlight on my sex for the first time in my 18 years in this community.
When we call a man a "technologist", we mean he's a programmer, system administrator, electrical engineer or something like that. The same used to be true when we called a woman a "technologist". However, according to the new breed, a female technologist might also be a graphic designer or someone who tweets for a living. Now, I'm glad that there are social media people out there—it means I can ignore that end of things—but putting them next to programmers makes being a "woman in tech" feel a lot like the Programmer Special Olympics.
It used to be that I was comfortable standing side by side with men, and no one cared how I looked. Now I find myself having to waste time talking about my gender rather than my technology...otherwise, there are lectures:
The "you didn't have a woman on the panel" lecture. I'm on the panel, but I'm told I don't count because of the way I dress: t-shirt, jeans, boots, no make-up.
The "you desexualize yourself to fit in; you're oppressed!" lecture. I'm told that deep in my female heart I must really love make-up and fashion. It's not that I'm a geek who doesn't much care how she looks.
The "you aren't representing women; you'd be a better role model for girls if you looked the part" lecture. Funny, the rest of the world seems very busy telling girls to look fashionable (just pick up a magazine or walk down the girls' toy aisle). I don't think someone as bad at fashion as I am should worry about it.
With one exception, I've heard these lectures only from women, and women who can't code at that. Sometimes I want to shout "you're not a programmer, what are you doing here?!"
I've also come to realize that I have an advantage that female newcomers don't: I was here before the sexism moral panic started. When a dozen guys decide to drink and hack in someone's hotel room, I get invited. They've known me for years, so I'm safe. New women, regardless of competence, don't get invited unless I'm along. That's a sexual harassment accusation waiting to happen, and no one will risk having 12 men alone with a single woman and booze. So the new ladies get left out.
I came to the Open Source world because I liked being part of a community where my ideas, my skills and my experience mattered, not my boobs. That's changed, and it's changed at the hands of the people who say they want a community where ideas, skills and experience matter more than boobs.
There aren't very many girls who want to hack. I imagine this has a lot to do with the fact that girls are given fashion dolls and make-up and told to fantasize about dating and popularity, while boys are given LEGOs and tool sets and told to do something. I imagine it has a lot to do with the sort of women who used to coo "but she could be so pretty if only she didn't waste so much time with computers". I imagine it has a lot to do with how girls are sold on ephemera—popularity, beauty and fitting in—while boys are taught to revel in accomplishment.
Give me a young person of any gender with a hacker mentality, and I'll make sure they get the support they need to become awesome. Meanwhile, buy your niece or daughter or neighbor girl some LEGOs and teach her to solder. I love seeing kids at LUG meetings and hackerspaces—bring them! There can never be too many hackers.
Do not punish the men simply for being here. "Male privilege" is a way to say "you are guilty because you don't have boobs, feel ashamed, even if you did nothing wrong", and I've wasted too much of my time trying to defend good guys from it. Yes, some people are jerks. Call them out as jerks, and don't blame everyone with the same anatomy for their behavior. Lumping good guys in with bad doesn't help anyone, it just makes good guys afraid to interact with women because they feel like they can't win. I'm tired of expending time and energy to protect good men from this drama.
Interesting piece. I've been sitting on this piece for about a week now. I can't decide what I think about it if I'm honest. I find myself unconvinced that we need to go back to days before gender was an issue, but I also can't articulate why this doesn't seem the right course of action.
ISSCC 2014 - IBM dévoile le Power8 (photo) http://t.co/LTUWCFu83S pic.twitter.com/kItSA7kJPV
— Kiril Isakov (@KiriSakow) February 11, 2014
I really like Chance the Rapper and James Blake. So news that they're moving in together is terribly exciting to me. The first result of their collaboration has me excited.
However, this cover of the collaboration is quite possibly even better. I want them to take my money so badly.
This little post by tptacek
echos most of my thoughts on passion
There might be nothing in the industry that gets under my skin quite as effectively as engineers making hiring decisions based on the perceived "passion" of candidates. "Passion" doesn't matter. What matters in a job is effectiveness and competence. Effectiveness gets things done. Competence ensures that what's getting done isn't going to backfire and create more work down the line.
There's a little followup here.
Think it and blink it! HQ sending commands and showing led state by listening to events! https://t.co/pbXWgtZUoN
— Pinoccio (@goPinoccio) January 31, 2014
Black Lives Matter