Sunday, July 26, 2020

The New Blogger is Crap

Why?

With the old one, you could make a post a sticky top post simply by setting the publish date to something in the future.

Try that with the new Blogger and what do you get? You can't even see the damn post because it's "scheduled to post" on that date you set. *ds of Google!

So, what *can* you do? You can 

  1. Revert to draft
  2. Publish with the new (current) date

And that'll ensure you top-post 😊




Oliver Wyman : Why You Shouldn't Outsource Your Flagship Products

Here's how they spell quality : In ustries.. Great. They ain't no McKinsey or BCG or Bain. That's for sure.


Walmart -> Amazon -> Google Express -> Target

That's how I ended up - needed the shower cleaner.

Look on Walmart.com, tough luck - you can see people have searched for it, because of the predictions when you type... but it just doesn't show up.

Worse, the Adidas after shave I usually get for $5 and change is all the way from $10 to $22 from various private sellers - on Walmart.com!

The Church and Dwight Clean Shower Daily Shower cleaner thing you can pick up from Kroger for less than $3 is $33 on Google! *ds!

Anyhow, on the same page, you see Target has it for $2.4. Good.

Get on there, and they also have the other stuff you want to get from Walmart, so... that's where I'm heading lads.

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Loonycorn's NLP Class

Looks like they did this before Python 3 became mainstream..

page - urllib2.urlopen(url).read().decode('utf8')

No sir - first of all, urllib2 won't work with Python3.

Then, depending on the page you're pulling, you might not be happy with utf8.

Better to do :

(in Python 3) of course..

import urlopen.request

req = urlopen( url )
charset = req.info().get_content_charset()
page = req.read().decode(charset)

Falling in Love is Easy - Supposedly

Just go down Dr. Aron's list, says Mandy Lee Catron.. and then stare into each other's eyes for four minutes.

Set I

1. Given the choice of anyone in the world, whom would you want as a dinner guest?

2. Would you like to be famous? In what way?

3. Before making a telephone call, do you ever rehearse what you are going to say? Why?

4. What would constitute a “perfect” day for you?

5. When did you last sing to yourself? To someone else?

6. If you were able to live to the age of 90 and retain either the mind or body of a 30-year-old for the last 60 years of your life, which would you want?

7. Do you have a secret hunch about how you will die?

8. Name three things you and your partner appear to have in common.

9. For what in your life do you feel most grateful?

10. If you could change anything about the way you were raised, what would it be?

11. Take four minutes and tell your partner your life story in as much detail as possible.

12. If you could wake up tomorrow having gained any one quality or ability, what would it be?

Set II

13. If a crystal ball could tell you the truth about yourself, your life, the future or anything else, what would you want to know?

14. Is there something that you’ve dreamed of doing for a long time? Why haven’t you done it?

15. What is the greatest accomplishment of your life?

16. What do you value most in a friendship?

17. What is your most treasured memory?

18. What is your most terrible memory?

19. If you knew that in one year you would die suddenly, would you change anything about the way you are now living? Why?

20. What does friendship mean to you?

21. What roles do love and affection play in your life?

22. Alternate sharing something you consider a positive characteristic of your partner. Share a total of five items.

23. How close and warm is your family? Do you feel your childhood was happier than most other people’s?

24. How do you feel about your relationship with your mother?

Set III

25. Make three true “we” statements each. For instance, “We are both in this room feeling ... “

26. Complete this sentence: “I wish I had someone with whom I could share ... “

27. If you were going to become a close friend with your partner, please share what would be important for him or her to know.

28. Tell your partner what you like about them; be very honest this time, saying things that you might not say to someone you’ve just met.

29. Share with your partner an embarrassing moment in your life.

30. When did you last cry in front of another person? By yourself?

31. Tell your partner something that you like about them already.

32. What, if anything, is too serious to be joked about?

33. If you were to die this evening with no opportunity to communicate with anyone, what would you most regret not having told someone? Why haven’t you told them yet?

34. Your house, containing everything you own, catches fire. After saving your loved ones and pets, you have time to safely make a final dash to save any one item. What would it be? Why?

35. Of all the people in your family, whose death would you find most disturbing? Why?

36. Share a personal problem and ask your partner’s advice on how he or she might handle it. Also, ask your partner to reflect back to you how you seem to be feeling about the problem you have chosen.

What's someone else's take - someone who says don't bother going online :


1. Rock your appearance - so you are confident approaching - "magenetic attractability"
2. Use a casual contextual icebreaker. This is not a pickup line. Practise : compliment drive-by - 3 second rule - start with no-risk target - someone you are not interested in.

and then

2. Start conversing : How's your day going

Elements of meaningful conversation :
1. Ask awesome q's - non intrusive - shouldn't feel forced. best part of your day. open ended - why/how-make-your-fell avoid what/where/who. tell me more about that..
2. Give space for silence - let person collect and take a breath.
3. Listen empathetically - put yourself in that p's position. It'll feed your addition to connection. 
4. Share about yourself. stories, best part of your day 

Killer Jupyter Notebook Tips

A keeper

 

How to Clear Cell Output : 

ESC - R

will do it. ESC goes into command mode.

R then takes you into Raw mode, which clears the output.

And there you have it :)

Monday, July 20, 2020

Anaconda You Miserable Piece of Crap

Sure, it's free and you get what you pay for, but why can't you get something so basic right?

You go into your env and change the drop-down thingie to "Not installed", then, you put in the name of the package you're interested in. Then hit the checkbox, and then click Apply and it tells you, "the following xyz will be modified" kay - sounds a bit like Abort/Retry/Fail, but you click ok thinking it will do the basic job of installing said package so you can move on with your life.

No! Go to a new notebook and.. no module named xyz! *ds!

After that, it's back to conda install -c conda-forge <name>

Tom Rahill and the Swamp Apes


Since 2008, Tom Rahill and his grou, called the Swamp Apes, have captured at least 400 pythons. Though Rahill is a prolific hunter, he also has a day job working with computers. To hunt pythons, he uses a camera probe, a knife and his hands.

"The Everglades is a World Heritage Site. It's a international biosphere. To get to that point very clearly shows that it has a uniqueness unto the world. (weep ;-( ) The E's are a very flat geologic area that, effectively, have a river running over it. That river really is the health of the E's."

The South Florida Water Management District is tasked with protecting the health of the E's and managing the python problem.

Rory Feeney (Land Resources Bureau Chief) : They were first found in the 80's in the E's, but really became a problem after Hurricane Andrew, when several pet facilities were destroyed and also, people were buying these snakes and keeping them in their houses and eventually they become too big to maintain. You know, a six foot snake is one thing but when you have a 15-foot snake that needs to eat regularly, it becomes too much, to burdensome, so people found a place to release them, and that ecosystem in the E's is uniquely similar to their native habitat in the southeast Asian range. (Really? So after domestication (growing up in cages and homes) these guys learnt from scratch to hunt in the wild?)

Since 2000, the E's National Parks has seen a massive decrease in raccoon, possum, bobcat and rabbit populations (really? they'll tangle with bobats? Hats off then!) Pythons have been consuming up to 25 species of birds, including the endangered wood stork.

Now the bureaucrats have gotten funds for up to 25 highly trained people to go out and remove as many pythons as possible.

Rahill : "The pythons have made a significant impact, a negative impact, on the health of the ecosystem. It throws off the entire ecosystem." (man, this dude's into computers? I sure hope he don't write python code like he talks, or his kids is goin to starv)

After hours of searching, Rahill and his team spotted signs of a python.

"What is that down in there? See that?"

"Oh, it's a big shed, man. " (talking about the moulted skin)

Now, they figure out which direction the snake was going in based on that position of the moult - man, isn't the snake smart enough to figure out to shake it's dead skin up so as to not give it's bearing away?

Anyways, they go grab the thing and it's no big deal for the three of them. I say, how come? A python also has about a hundred teeth!


Jeez, the 15' female they get in this video has 61 eggs (112 pound weight). Phew! What a machine! It does all that it does while carrying that load inside its body. Man!


Alexander Green : I Want You to Buy Foxconn So I Can Cash Out

Hey, it's less than $3

My verdict : don't bother. Apple goes to them because they do the job cheap, but, they're already an $80b company. How big can they get before AAPL and DELL go to the next guys who're willing to sweat for their business?

Friday, July 17, 2020

It's Peter Munson, Not Peter Zimmerman

Who was Peter? This was Peter of "Smacked: A Story of White-Collar Ambition, Addiction, and Tragedy":

Peter R. Munson

Peter Munson is a partner in the San Diego office of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati. His practice focuses on all aspects of intellectual property, including strategic counseling, prosecution, litigation, licensing, and other transactions, as well as counseling on other intellectual property and business matters.

Peter provides comprehensive counseling to clients on intellectual property and related business matters. He has analyzed intellectual property portfolios and performed IP due diligence for both venture capital firms and businesses in a variety of investment environments, including mergers and acquisitions. He has written opinions, negotiated and drafted transactional documents, performed IP audits, and formulated strategies for, and carried out, company formations, structured spin-outs, license renegotiations and acquisitions, and out-licensing of intellectual property in such fields as pharmaceuticals, medical devices, immunology, molecular biology, proteomics, microarrays, and gene therapy.

Peter has litigated patent, trade-secret theft, trademark, and trade-dress disputes in a diverse range of technical areas, including pharmaceuticals, cosmeceuticals, molecular biology, microarray, bone-substitute materials, DNA-sequencing instruments, and dental implants. He has prosecuted patent and trademark applications before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, including managing the national and international patent prosecution docket for multiple start-up and major San Diego pharmaceutical, device, and biotechnology companies.

In addition to his legal career, Peter has worked as a chemist at Cytogen Corporation in New Jersey and at Agouron Pharmaceuticals (now Pfizer) in San Diego.

Good to know

Areas of Practice 1) Intellectual Property, 2) IP Litigation, 3) Global Generics, 4) IP Counseling & Patents and 5) Life Sciences
Law School Franklin Pierce Law Center (J.D.,1997)
Admitted Year 1989
Education Cornell University (B.S., 1986)

He was making $1.4 million per year (and told his ex that it was only $700k per year)

Saturday, July 11, 2020

Apparently the Belgians Beat the Nazis to It

Lumumba tells you the Belgians weren't much to write home about.. but, it's much worse :


As the wickedly evil King Leopold II of Belgium forced the Congolese to produce rubber, he sent in his Force Publique to whip the natives into shape through genocidal murder. (Think of them as a Belgian Congo version of the Nazi’s SS.) Fearful that his soldiers would waste bullets hunting animals, Leopold ordered that the soldiers bring back the severed hands of dead Congolese as proof that they were enforcing the rubber decree. (Leopold himself never even visited his colony, although he did cause at least 10 million deaths.)

Sure, you can point to what the Spanish did in Latin America, but.. did you ever suspect the Belgians? Scum!

Saturday, July 04, 2020

Igor Tulchinsky's Four-Month Data Science Course

1 Program flow, data structures
2 Data structures, algorithms, classes
3 Data formats
4 Multi-dimensional arrays and vectorization in NumPy
5 DataFrame, Series, data ingestion and transformation with pandas
6 Data aggregation in pandas
7 SQL and Object-Relational Mapping
8 Data munging


9 Introduction to Machine Learning
10 Regression and classification
11 Metrics and overfitting
12 Model selection
13 Principal Component Analysis and Dimensionality Reduction, feature engineering
14 Statistical methods and nonparametric analysis, probability distributions
15 Ensemble methods
16 Support Vector Machine and Natural Language Processing


This by the way is the man who claims to find peace disturbing - "I'm serious. I'm so used to fast pace of things and ideas and emails and events happening that, if you take it away from me, I'll have a withdrawal."

Eilene Zimmerman Says It

Make your collar burn, don't it? :)

New York Times : What Makes Some People More Resilient Than Others..

The most significant determinant of resilience — noted in nearly every review or study of resilience in the last 50 years — is the quality of our close personal relationships, especially with parents and primary caregivers. Early attachments to parents play a crucial, lifelong role in human adaptation.

“How loved you felt as a child is a great predictor of how you manage all kinds of difficult situations later in life,” said Bessel van der Kolk, a professor of psychiatry at Boston University School of Medicine who has been researching post-traumatic stress since the 1970s. He is the founder of the Trauma Research Foundation in Boston.

Outlook Positive, Realistic Outlook. They don’t dwell on negative information and instead look for opportunities in bleak situations, striving to find the positive within the negative.
Moral Compass They have a moral compass. Highly resilient people have a solid sense of what they consider right and wrong, and it tends to guide their decisions.
Belief They have a belief in something greater than themselves. This is often found through religious or spiritual practices. The community support that comes from being part of a religion also enhances resilience.
Altruism They are altruistic; they have a concern for others and a degree of selflessness. They are often dedicated to causes they find meaningful and that give them a sense of purpose.
Acceptance They accept what they cannot change and focus energy on what they can change. Dr. Southwick says resilient people reappraise a difficult situation and look for meaningful opportunities within it.
Mission They have a mission, a meaning, a purpose. Feeling committed to a meaningful mission in life gives them courage and strength.
Social Support System They have a social support system, and they support others. “Very few resilient people,” said Dr. Southwick, “go it alone.”