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Anomalous Timestream

Chronos Tachyon

Donald King


Last Updated: 3/23/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 29
Sign: Taurus

City: San Francisco
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 1/29/2006

Blog Archive
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Wednesday, December 24, 2008 1:47 AM

Current mood:  bouncy
Category: Life
Crossposted from LiveJournal.

Hey, everyone.

Item 1:

On Sunday 12/28, I'll be flying back to Wichita for a week to do the Christmas thing with family (slightly belatedly).  I'll be in town through Monday 01/05 and staying with my sister.  Saturday 01/03 is booked (Christmas dinner on my mom's side) and Tuesday 12/30 is booked (hanging out with a friend), but other Wichita friends are encouraged to hit me up and write themselves into my schedule.

I was originally going to take a few vacation days, but my group is momentarily understaffed so I'll actually be on-call that week.  Shouldn't be too big of a deal, though.

Item 2:

As of this week, I now have a second phone:  the Android Dev Phone 1, sister of the better known T-Mobile G1.  The HTC Dream hardware is the first cellphone out the door that runs Google's new Android OS.  Android is notable for being the first open source cellphone OS that anyone actually cares about (sorry, OpenMoko).

The developer version is now available for sale for $400 (plus a slightly obnoxious $25 developer registration fee).  Not only is the developer version carrier unlocked, it also lets you flash the phone with your own custom builds of Android, including any modifications you like.  Not that that's actually useful if you're writing an application, since end users can't install your tweaked OS, but it helps if you're trying to patch a bug in the OS or proposing a new feature and you want to debug your code on a real phone.  (The cellphone/radio bits are all quite thoroughly separated from the OS, so unlike a lot of other phones there are no FCC legal implications to letting you flash the OS.  Yay Google!)

For now, I still have my old Sprint phone with the 316 area code, and that number will probably continue to work for at least another month or two before I kill it.  The new number is a 415 area code.  Despite the fact that my phone is carrier unlocked out-of-box, I ended up going with T-Mobile for service because the only other GSM carrier in the US is AT&T and their 3G network is incompatible with the G1.  (Doesn't help that the AT&T brand name gives me the heebie-jeebies.)

I went with T-Mobile's "MyFaves 300" plan ($40/mo for unlimited night, weekends, and 5 numbers of my choosing) plus the upper-tier G1 data add-on (unlimited data plus unlimited SMS/MMS text messages) for $35/mo.  They also offered to insure my phone, despite the fact that I didn't buy it from them, and at $5/mo it sounded like a reasonable deal.  Grand total: $80/mo.  And I get to ditch Sprint!
Currently playing:
World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King Expansion Pack
Release date: 2008-11-13
Friday, November 28, 2008 1:53 AM

Current mood:  thoughtful
Category: Religion and Philosophy
Crossposted from LiveJournal.

Recently, I heard through the blog grapevine about a site called thereprobablyisnt.com.  It's basically a place for people to post their personal stories about how they came to be atheists.  Yesterday I submitted my own story... which was in retrospect about twice as long as what they were looking for... but they accepted it anyway, and you can see it live on their website today.

Read the full text on LiveJournal... )
Monday, November 17, 2008 6:15 AM

Current mood:  content
Category: News and Politics
Crossposted from LiveJournal.

If you didn't hear, Join the Impact organized a simultaneous nation-wide protest against Prop 8 yesterday. They managed to hold at least one rally in each of the 50 US states, plus a handful in other countries. I attended the rally at San Francisco City Hall, which had roughly 7,500 in attendance; videos are available on YouTube. Apparently both Los Angeles (10,000 to 12,000) and San Diego (20,000 to 25,000) drew bigger rallies against 8... which is a little embarrassing from a prestige point of view, but we already had a bigger rally on the 7th, the Friday after the election, so I think a lot of people were already rallied out.

FWIW, the Wichita Eagle reports that about 100 people protested in my hometown of Wichita, KS.
Monday, November 10, 2008 1:32 PM

Category: News and Politics
Crossposted from LiveJournal.

I was flipping through What You Should Know About Inflation by Henry Hazlitt, and I encountered the following passage that neatly sums up the Federal Reserve System.

Today the method is a little more indirect. Our government sells its bonds or other IOUs to the banks. In payment, the banks create "deposits" on their books against which the government can draw. A bank in turn may sell its government IOUs to the Federal Reserve Bank, which pays for them either by creating a deposit credit or having more Federal Reserve notes printed and paying them out. This is how money is manufactured.

The greater part of the "money supply" of this country is represented not by hand-to-hand currency but by bank deposits which are drawn against by checks. Hence when most economists measure our money supply they add demand deposits (and now frequently, also, time deposits) to currency outside of banks to get the total. The total of money and credit so measured was $63.3 billion at the end of December 1939, and $308.8 billion at the end of December 1963. This increase of 388% in the supply of money is overwhelmingly the reason why wholesale prices rose 138% in the same period.

Monday, November 10, 2008 12:30 PM

Current mood:  cynical
Category: News and Politics
Crossposted from LiveJournal.

In my previous post, I basically gave a condensed history lesson on fractional-reserve banking, the creation of the Federal Reserve System, and the last gasps of the gold standard as Nixon fully switched the US dollar to a fiat currency. I meant to post a follow-up soon after, but I got sidetracked by Real Life™. But late is better than never, so without further ado...

Next in the series: so, how does the modern Fed work, anyway?

The system as a whole is much bigger than the Federal Reserve itself. For this discussion, the important parts of the system are the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, the 12 Federal Reserve Banks spread throughout the United States (collectively, "the Fed"), roughly 2,000 national commercial banks, and around 900 state commercial banks. (There are almost 5,000 state commercial banks that are FDIC insured but choose not to be members of the Federal Reserve system. Nationally-chartered banks are required by law to own stock in a Federal Reserve Bank, making them part of the system. State-chartered banks can choose to buy stock and join the system, but it's not required. Shares in a Federal Reserve Bank are very bizarre, because they give no voting rights and are illegal to sell back or trade to someone else — but they do pay dividends.)

Read the rest on LiveJournal...
Monday, October 20, 2008 9:37 AM

Current mood:  pensive
Category: News and Politics
Crossposted from LiveJournal.

It's occurred to me that, in my previous post describing how inflation causes the boom-bust cycle, I hadn't really adequately explained some of the details of how the Federal Reserve System works, or why it is inherently inflationary. I think the best way to lead up to that is to describe the history of banking, show how the older banking systems worked, and explain how the transition happened to the Federal Reserve System.

First up: a rather lengthy history lesson, focusing on the appearance of bank runs.

Read the rest of this post on LiveJournal...
Currently listening:
Diversions
By Orbital
Release date: 1994-05-11
Friday, October 10, 2008 5:22 AM

Current mood:  worried
Category: News and Politics
Crossposted from LiveJournal.

I've always found Macroeconomics to be deeply unsettling. And not in the sense that I don't understand it: when it comes down to it, I don't really understand General Relativity, or Electrical Engineering, or Organic Chemistry, either — not in the hard sense that I can make sensible statements about them and be taken seriously by experts.

With those other fields, though, I can see how they build on what I do understand about them. While there are a lot of subtle nuances that go completely over my head, I can at least form a vague picture of how things work when you look at the bigger picture, and when I take a peek at the deeper details, I can see how they can combine to form the parts that I'm more familiar with (even if there's a certain amount of trust that people smarter than me have taken the time to rigorously prove it).

Macroeconomics gives me the same feeling I get when I read particularly bad bits of Philosophy or Literary Criticism. In short, when I compare Macroeconomics (the big picture) to Microeconomics (the details), I feel like I'm being tricked or swindled, because I don't see any possible way to build the former on top of the latter.

Read the rest on LiveJournal...
Wednesday, October 01, 2008 6:24 AM

Current mood:  satisfied
Category: Parties and Nightlife
Crossposted from LiveJournal.

Here are the photos I took while in Zürich:



Also, the timing of my trip worked out quite nicely: I ended up missing the trip to Munich for Oktoberfest, but I got back to San Francisco just in time for the Folsom Street Fair. I ended up sticking around for about 4 hours, admiring the scenery. If you're not familiar, Folsom is pretty much the world's premiere fetish festival, drawing hundreds of thousands of visitors from countries all over the world.

Read the rest on LiveJournal...

(I don't want to risk angering TPTB of MySpace.)
Monday, September 29, 2008 12:00 AM

Category: Travel and Places
Crossposted from LiveJournal. The LiveJournal version is better: MySpace eats the links to Google Translate.

Cool: Public transportation

The Swiss S-Bahn heavy rail network is superior to BART, and the Zürich tram system completely kicks Muni's ass. Seriously.

The tram system has multiple transfer hubs, it actually obeys the posted time schedule, and it goes places other than downtown. It's a bit more expensive than Muni — CHF4.00/US$3.70 for one trip within town, or if you're smart CHF82.00/US$75.50 for a monthly pass, versus US$1.50 for a two-hour Muni pass or US$45.00 for a Muni adult monthly fast pass. However, Zürich tickets also more useful: they're good for all buses, ferries, and the S-Bahn. The catchphrase is "Ein Ticket für alles" (One ticket for everything), and it lives up to the name. A normal-price ticket is tied to a single zone, but Zone 10 contains pretty much everything significant in and around Zürich, except for the airport itself, so you hardly even notice it. Buying the S-Bahn ticket to cross zones to the airport is only CHF6.00/US$5.50, so it's right around the same price point as what BART would run you here in San Francisco (and the S-Bahn is far nicer than BART).

Oh, and the S-Bahn can actually take you to other countries. Beat that, BART and Caltrain!

Cool: Walkability

San Francisco is a very walkable town by US standards. The hills are sometimes a bit more than you bargained for, but the idea of driving to the grocery store is a pretty foreign concept here.

Zürich, however, beats San Francisco handily on this front. All the guide books suggest a two-hour walking tour from the Hauptbahnhof ("Main Train Station") down Bahnhofstrasse, past all the ritzy shops, then across the river to Bellevue and then back up Niederdorf through Altstadt ("Old Town"), which includes both the old churches and the red light district, and finally crossing the river again to the Hauptbahnhof to wrap up the tour. The "two hours" figure assumes quite a bit of touristy gawking; you can easily walk up one side of the river in about 25 minutes, so the whole route would be an hour or so if you were in a hurry.

San Francisco doesn't quite have this. If you flattened out the hills, moved downtown to a more central location, relocated Haight-Ashbury, The Castro, the north end of The Mission, and the Folsom/12th end of SOMA to all be one continuous neighborhood on one side of Market, relocated North Beach, Union Square, and Nob Hill to stretch along the other side of Market, then replaced Market with a river, then you'd have a version of San Francisco vaguely similar to how Zürich is laid out.

Cool: History

Zürich was the birthplace of Dadaism, and thanks to Switzerland's famous neutrality it was also a crossroads for many famous figures and an incubator of many 20th century schools of thought and ideological movements. Café Odeon, which today is sorta halfway a gay bar, was once an old haunt of Lenin and Trotsky (before they got famous), Mussolini (ditto), James Joyce, and various other figures who were staying in Zürich to take advantage of Swiss neutrality.

Oh, and Zürich was an important crossroads going back to pre-Christian Roman times, continued to be so through the Holy Roman Empire, and was one of the epicenters of the Protestant Reformation. Zürich is chock full of famous churches and abbeys that are steeped in that history: for instance, Fraumünster abbey once held absolute power over the city, but in 1524 as Zürich was being swept by the Swiss Reformation, the last Fraumünster abbess Katharina von Zimmern turned control of the abbey over to the city, abdicated her position, and even got married the next year.

Not cool: Schweizerdeutsch

One of my co-workers, a U.S. native who's now been living in Zürich for over a year, previously spent some time living in Germany and is a fluent German speaker. Even he has trouble wrapping his head around Swiss German, which is a mostly-spoken dialect of German so distinct from High German that it's almost its own language: not only does it have a lot of peculiar vocabulary, but it also changes a lot of pronunciations, a few spelling rules, and the occasional grammar rule. German-speaking Swiss are capable of speaking Swiss Standard German, which is mutually intelligible with standard High German, but would rather speak English than speak what they consider a clumsy dialect.

Mixed: Multilingualism

Basically everyone in Zürich speaks two versions of German (Schweizerdeutsch and Swiss Standard German), plus English, possibly plus either French or Italian. Any American posessing even a sliver of shame will feel embarrassed at how monolingual he or she is. Imagine how Americans react to a tourist visiting the US who speaks no English, and contrast that with how Zürich natives don't bat an eyelash as they switch to speaking your foreign language, and how the restaurants almost always have English menus (or bilingual German/English descriptions).

I suppose if you have no shame, this counts entirely as a "Cool".

Not cool: MySpace

Dear MySpace,

Wow, this Internet thing sure is exciting, huh? Did you know that a bunch of computer engineers got together and wrote a bunch of standards on how it works? It's true! There's even one for the web! It's called RFC 2616, and it was published in June 1999. That was almost ten whole years ago! Wow, time sure does fly, doesn't it? There was even this nifty feature called the "Accept-Language" header: the user tells the web browser what languages he or she can read, and then the web browser tells the web server so that the server can figure out the best web page to send back to the user. The best part is that the user doesn't even have to click anything!

It sure is better than guessing what language the user speaks by figuring out what country their computer happens to be in. People visit other countries sometimes, and they might even bring their computers with them! It sure would suck for a native English speaker to visit Switzerland, then be forced to navigate the "MySpace Schweiz" page in German, then be forced to choose between German, French, and Italian with no option for English. That would totally suck if you guys did that!

Um, you guys don't do that, right? Right?

Hugs and kisses, Chronos.

As a side note, MySpace has taught me that I'm apparently "schwul". Humorously, I have trouble keeping the words "schwul", "Schwert", and "Schweiz" separated in my head.

Not cool: Uptightness

Switzerland tracks fairly well with the rest of Europe on a lot of things, like gay rights or a laissez faire attitude toward nudity. (It was interesting to walk around Niederdorf and actually have to stop and ask myself, "Back in the US, could someone get away with showing this in plain view of the public, even in San Francisco?" Doubly so when you consider how close Niederdorf is to various famous historic churches.)

But on most other matters, Switzerland is apparently the Singapore of Europe. If you have the (mis)fortune of owning a car, you do not speed, even by 1kph, or you will be ticketed. Also, many places in Europe have become less and less religious over the years, but not Switzerland: many businesses are required by law to close on Sundays, and apparently it's a little bit scary to be atheist there — the country is very Christian and very Protestant (and I don't mean Methodist).

Worse than all that, the level of xenophobia manages to exceed even that of the US. The Swiss People's Party (SVP), which holds beliefs roughly analogous to, say, Pat Buchanan, is now the single most widely supported party across Switzerland, and enjoys 29% popular support — which is large when you consider that Switzerland has a 4-party parliamentary system with proportional representation. One of their ads shows three white sheep standing on a Swiss flag and kicking out a black sheep, with the words "Bringing safety" emblazoned across the poster — and these people get votes in Switzerland.

Not cool: Prices

Eating at a fast food place like McDonalds or Burger King (both are ubiquitous) will set you back around CHF15.00/US$13.80 for a combo meal, or CHF10.00/US$9.20 for just a burger by itself. A sit-down meal at a restaurant will normally run between CHF30.00/US$27.60 and CHF50.00/US$46.00, and that's for a steak-and-potatoes kind of restaurant.

Housing is even worse. Zürich makes San Francisco look cheap, and house prices are such that only 37% of the Swiss own their home, which is one of the lowest ownership rates in Western Europe. From what I understand, rents are a 60%-80% premium above San Francisco prices for equivalent space — although most renters instead opt for spaces that are small by any American measure.

Not cool: Food

The Swiss policy on vegetables is similar to the German one: they boil vegetables until they are no longer a threat. Hopefully you like potatoes, because you're going to be eating a lot of them. Seasoning consists of salt and, if you feel adventurous, ground black pepper. Spicy mustard is sometimes available for those who like taking their life into their own hands.
Currently reading:
Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion and the Appetite for Wonder
By Richard Dawkins
Sunday, September 14, 2008 12:55 AM

Current mood:  busy
Category: Jobs, Work, Careers
Crossposted from LiveJournal.

I'm flying to Zürich, Switzerland tomorrow morning, and I'll be flying back on Friday the 26th. Sprint's CDMA doesn't work in Europe, and I wouldn't want to pay for international roaming even if it did, so I'll be leaving my cell phone behind and turned off. I'll still be online, though.
Currently reading:
The Origin Of Species
By Charles Darwin
Release date: 2003-09-02