Appetite For Shame

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Cord Jefferson, writing for Gawker, with a smart piece about racial slurs and the missed opportunities to affect actual change in our society:

What if, instead of forcing Paula Deen to beg everyone’s forgiveness through heaving sobs on national television, we instead used that airtime to chat with her about her beliefs? What if rather than giving her the idiotic question, “Would you have fired you?” as Matt Lauer did, we asked her to calmly understand why a white lady calling for black servers at a plantation wedding—a frighteningly common wedding them in the South—looks so ugly and so awful to a great many people? What if Deen were forced to confront an actual black person who was willing to speak rationally with her about her past racism and its origins? The conversation probably wouldn’t result in the Klan disbanding and volunteering for the NAACP, to be sure, but I have to think it would be better than seeing an old lady weep into Matt Lauer’s lap for 10 minutes.


Raising Concerns vs. Denialism

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Christie Wilcox, writing for Discover Magazine, on the debate surrounding the use of a pesticide called glyphosate (aka RoundUp). Here, Wilcox responds to an article by Kara Moses in which the necessity of peer-reviewed scientific confirmation is questioned. I’m not linking in regard the specific case, but rather to the broader points made by Wilcox:

The trouble is, it’s one thing to notice a potential danger and raise a few alarm bells to get scientists to investigate an issue — it’s a whole other to publicize and propagandize an unsubstantiated fear despite evidence against it. The former is important, as Kara suggests, and should occur. I have no problem with non-scientists raising honest concerns, if their goal is to have the concerns considered — so long as they’re actually willing to hear what the evidence has to say. The latter, on the other hand, is denialism. You see, once scientists have weighed in, you have to be willing to listen to them.

and to drive it home (emphasis mine):

To reply to Kara’s original question: no, you don’t need a body of scientific evidence to raise concerns, if that’s really the goal of what you’re doing. But you do need at least a shred that suggests such concerns are valid before you shout them as facts from the rooftops. You should support independent scientists that study what you’re concerned about instead of trying to tie every one (usually in some ludicrous way) to biased funding. And if those scientists weigh in with well-designed studies that don’t agree with your initial concerns, you should feel relieved, not betrayed. If scientists are in consensus on a topic, it’s because the evidence is strong. It’s because they’ve investigated and rigorously tested the possible hypotheses using different methods, and the same conclusions keep stubbornly arising. Scientists don’t come to consensus easily, so when they do, you should listen to them

There is value in advocacy groups creating small, non-scientific studies in order to investigate whether a particular issue merits concern. The key is in what happens next. If that group believes they have findings that warrant further study, then they should certainly seek rigorous scientific investigation. If peer-reviewed research backs up their initial concerns, the group should be commended. If, however, the results don’t confirm their initial concerns, that should come as welcome news.

Unfortunately, when peer-reviewed science doesn’t back up the claims of a particular lobby, that lobby all too often goes public with their initial findings and cries foul. The media is not adept at discerning which studies are scientifically valid and they particularly love using false equivalency to create the illusion of debate.1 After all, society surely finds it much more compelling to envision rogue scientists conspiring with governments and evil corporations than it is to believe that their unfounded concerns were wrong.

One need only look to climate change science, or the debunked link between autism and vaccines, to witness the embodiment of Wilcox’s main point. People, even when presented with sound and overwhelming scientific evidence, find it easier to subscribe to unreasonable conspiracy plots than it is to relinquish their emotional beliefs. Perhaps it speaks more to human behavior than to a specific distrust of science. However, as a scientist, I find the trend disturbing and depressing.


R.E. Warner: Neven Mrgan Is Wrong

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R.E. Warner politely responds to Neven Mrgan:

I have great respect for Neven Mrgan as a designer. He’s an accomplished artisan and not to be trifled with. However, his post on how the design of iOS 7 icons is “wrong” is misguided and I feel the need to address why I think that is, because I often see designers get caught by this particular hobgoblin of consistency—that a design just “feels” right to them without offering any rational justification. So, I feel it’s more constructive to write an extended objection here rather than leave it my less than poetic tweet.

Warner argues that Mrgan is basing his sense of wrongness on familiarity and not function.


Neven Mrgan: iOS 7 Icons Are Wrong

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Neven Mrgan critiques Apple’s icons in iOS 7:

Just about the most asinine, presumptuous, hubris-filled thing a designer can say is that someone else’s design is “wrong". That word is reserved for judgments of absolute truth or ethical guidance; for flawed mathematical proofs and crimes. And yet, allow me to declare the following: Jony Ive’s icon grid in iOS 7 is wrong.

Or perhaps I should say, it’s being used wrong. Let me give a specific example, and then I’ll explain.

The icons initially struck me as odd. However, over time they have grown on me. I’m sure they - along with the entire design - will be polarizing once iOS 7 is released this autumn.


iOS 7 As Defense

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Marco Arment with an interesting take on the impetus for Apple’s redesign of iOS:

Copying iOS 7 is going to be a big problem for cheap hardware. iOS 7’s appearance and dynamics require a powerful GPU and advanced, finely tuned, fully hardware-accelerated graphics and animation APIs. This will hurt web imitators most, but it’s also going to be problematic for Android: while high-end Android phones have mostly caught up in GPU performance, and recent Android versions have improved UI acceleration, most Android devices sold are neither high-end nor up-to-date. The gap is much wider in tablets, and even “high-end” tablets usually have insufficient GPU power to drive their high-DPI screens.

[…]

The theme is clear: iOS 7’s UI requires some of Apple’s biggest strengths, and efforts to copy it will be hindered by some of Android’s biggest weaknesses.


Google Reader Replacements

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In case you weren’t aware, Google announced in March that they are shutting down their RSS service, Reader. That shutdown will occur July 1 - this upcoming Monday.

Josh Centers, TidBITS, writes about the potential list of replacements for you to consider:

The good news is that the developer community has come through, and there are now several compelling alternatives to Google Reader, though all are far from complete. And our previous favorite, Feedly, even has some new flair to share. I’ve sorted through the competition to find the best choices that work for multiple platforms, have third-party support, and, if possible, follow sustainable business models.

If you haven’t done so already, be sure to export your existing Google Reader subscriptions to OPML. All the services we mention here will import Google Reader’s subscriptions.xml file for you, and some don’t yet export, so be sure to hold on to your export until you’re good and settled.

I know Feedly is getting a lot of press, but I will avoid them for now. For one, they are a free service. I’d rather pay for something and have a direct relationship with the provider. Google Reader was free and we see how that worked out. Secondly, Feedly doesn’t currently offer an export option. I’d rather not have my information locked into a platform.

I’m leaning toward using Feedbin or Feed Wrangler because they are affordable paid services and offer great features. I’m currently invested in the Reeder applications for iOS and Mac, so a bonus reason for me to try either of these RSS services is that Reeder has announced support for both.

No matter what you decide, export your subscriptions prior to the July 1 shutdown date.

(via: Daring Fireball)


Parallax Effect

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Marco Tabini, writing for Macworld, describes the science of the parallax effect - a feature coming to iOS 7:

The basic principle that makes parallax possible is a quirk in the way the human perception of size works. Because the eye works by forcing light through a single point, the brain has learned to measure the size of objects based on the apparent angle between their extremities, as measured from our pupils. As a result, objects that are nearer tend to appear larger, while things that are farther away seem smaller.

This is the basis for our perception of perspective, and parallax is simply the apparent motion that objects take when you move around them. For example, when you travel on a fast car or train, objects that are closer to you appear to move much more quickly than those that are farther away, even though it stands to reason that, in reality, everything is changing place at the same speed.

Tabini further describes the hardware and software needed to pull off the effect. The technology actually has roots in rocket guidance systems.


Zach Epstein, reporting for BGR:

Barnes & Noble on Tuesday morning reported fiscal fourth-quarter earnings that missed Wall Street’s consensus. Revenue was down 7.4% to $1.3 billion while the company doubled its net loss to -$118.6 million. Where Barnes & Noble’s Nook business is concerned, revenue fell 34% on-year to $108 million, resulting in a net loss of $177 million. As was seemingly just a matter of time, the struggling book seller confirmed that it is abandoning its Nook tablet hardware business and will instead rely on a ”partnership model for manufacturing in the competitive color tablet market” that will seek third-party manufacturers to build eReaders that run Nook software.

In short, B&N will no longer manufacture Nook tablet hardware, opting instead to license their software to third-parties. Given the problems for manufacturers in personal computing, coupled with even tighter margins for e-book readers, I cannot envision this being successful in the long-term.


Why Tipping Should Be Outlawed

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Elizabeth Gunnison Dunn, writing for Esquire:

If you are of the belief that a tip is an optional kindness you’re doing for your server, you might be surprised to hear that you are not in France. Here in America, the practice is voluntary only in the legal sense of the word. You are not technically stealing if you don’t tip the customary 15 to 20 percent, but that’s probably the best that can be said of you. The tip you pay is a sort of wage: federal law allows tips to be used to make up the difference between a server’s salary and minimum wage, meaning they can make as little as $2 to $3 per hour from their restaurant employer. Tips are absolutely depended upon to make up the shortfall.

When you leave a bad tip, you are docking a person’s wages. This may either be because you’re confused about what’s expected or because you’re an asshole, and you really believe that your sea bass arriving lukewarm is justly punishable by making it a little harder for the guy who brought it to you to pay his rent.

Dunn goes on to smartly point out the flaws in the tipping process. Consumers are forced to subsidize the incomes of service industry employees because the employers (backed by federal law) refuse to pay a livable wage. If that is the reality of service industry margins, fine. But that further illustrates the stupidity of tipping. Instead of simply adding a service line-item on bills, employers leave it to confused, math-challenged, and often immature customers to decide the service fee. Not only does that eliminate fairness, it leaves employees susceptible to the sexual and racial judgements of their customers. In short, it’s 2013 - tipping as currently constructed is dumb.


Wine Tasting: Junk Science

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David Derbyshire, writing for The Guardian:

Every year Robert Hodgson selects the finest wines from his small California winery and puts them into competitions around the state.

And in most years, the results are surprisingly inconsistent: some whites rated as gold medallists in one contest do badly in another. Reds adored by some panels are dismissed by others. Over the decades Hodgson, a softly spoken retired oceanographer, became curious. Judging wines is by its nature subjective, but the awards appeared to be handed out at random.

So drawing on his background in statistics, Hodgson approached the organisers of the California State Fair wine competition, the oldest contest of its kind in North America, and proposed an experiment for their annual June tasting sessions.

Each panel of four judges would be presented with their usual “flight” of samples to sniff, sip and slurp. But some wines would be presented to the panel three times, poured from the same bottle each time. The results would be compiled and analysed to see whether wine testing really is scientific.

You can probably guess from the title what Robert Hodgson found.