geek perspectives inverted. ranting, raving, and rambling on a plethora of geeky topics.
| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| « Aug | ||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||
| 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 |
| 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |
| 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | ||
Posted on August 6th, 2007 by kyels.
Categories: everything else.
The value of a sister
Ask someone
Who doesn’t have one.
The value of ten years
Ask a newly
Divorced couple.
The value of four years
Ask a graduate.
The value of one year
Ask a student who
Has failed a final exam.
The value of nine months
Ask a mother who gave birth to a stillborn.
The value of one month
Ask a mother who has given birth to a premature.
The value of one week
Ask an editor of a weekly newspaper.
The value of one hour
Ask the lovers who are waiting to meet.
The value of one minute
Ask a person
Who has missed the train, bus or plane.
The value of one-second
Ask a person
Who has survived an accident.
The value of one millisecond
Ask a person
Who has won a silver medal at the Olympics.
The value of a friend
Lose one.
This was extracted from an e-mail sent to me by Kuya Ryan who’s currently staying in Melbourne. The moment I opened it and read all the stanzas, it further testified that we cannot throw Time away because it waits for no one. When it’s gone, it’ll vanish and can’t be found anymore. It also gave way to my thoughts that we ought to treasure everyone who appears in our lives because losing friends or relatives is painful especially when we don’t treasure and appreciate them in the beginning. Regrets; there is no way to turn it back to its original form if everything was taken for granted from the start.
What’s your say?
Posted on August 3rd, 2007 by Rikai.
Categories: everything else.
Apparently K33g is still alive and kicking XD
About the sociability of geeks thing:
A Nerd is someone who is passionate about learning/being smart/academia.
A Geek is someone who is passionate about some particular area or subject, often an obscure or difficult one.
A Dork is someone who has difficulty with common social expectations/interactions.
I got these definitions from the results of this test. (I scored as a “Pure Nerd” by the way).
“The times, they are a-changing. It used to be that being exceptionally smart led to being unpopular, which would ultimately lead to picking up all of the traits and tendences associated with the “dork.” No-longer. Being smart isn’t as socially crippling as it once was, and even more so as you get older: eventually being a Pure Nerd will likely be replaced with the following label: Purely Successful.
Congratulations! “
Posted on June 15th, 2007 by ephemere.
Categories: ink & paper.
(cross-posted from the Read Or Die Weblog)
Two hours or so ago, while trying to draw, I somehow came up with the idea of reading some books for inspiration. I remembered that I hadn’t read my copy of C.S. Lewis’s Narrative Verse yet, so I thought that I would just grab the book, read a few pages, and return to my drawing with renewed energy.
Then again, I hadn’t considered the state of my bookshelves.
I think it’s a common problem for readers: you buy and buy and read and read until you run out of shelves — and then any space not occupied by a household appliance, piece of furniture, or person is commandeered by crazy book piles. In my case, I have three bookshelves, and most of the shelves have double rows of books. Trying to get one of the “hidden” books often results in the whole front row crashing down on the unfortunate person. My room often resembles a disaster area, except instead of rubble I have books and the occasional stray page.
Once I tried to organize my books. It took me the better part of a day, but the sense of satisfaction lasted for weeks. The ordered arrangement didn’t.
So as I looked for my book I navigated shelves of physics textbooks jostling against high fantasy and apologetics, Christian devotionals rubbing shoulders with science fiction anthologies, books about cats and drug addiction and Japanese history; tragedies and comic book anthologies and cookbooks and computer magazines; and, just to confuse me, my old notebooks (empty of coherent notes) and sketchpads (which contain more equations than drawings). I dived into piles upon piles of hardcovers and paperbacks. Then I moved on to the books stacked on the floor, inside my cabinets, and in the space under my desk and computer table.
One and a half hours later I found Narrative Verse in my brother’s room, where it lay under two Calvin and Hobbes collections, the illustrated Stardust, vol.1 of the School Rumble manga, A Game of Thrones, Ateneo’s standard Theology textbook, Mathematical Physics, and Asterix at the Olympic Games. And a bedroll. I don’t know when my brother started lumping sleeping gear and books together, but I guess he’s just trying to make the most out of the available space. I’m just glad he isn’t piling his shoes on top of my books. Messy bookshelves are one thing, muddy covers are another.
Sometimes I feel that I should take better care of my books; should make sure, at least, that I know where things are instead of having vague combinations of Title-Author-Location floating around in my head. A lot of bibliophiles may think that I don’t treat books with respect and should stick to maltreating photocopied versions. But I do try. I certainly love my books and hunt the missing ones down with persistence, if not efficiency. I just can’t guarantee they’ll be the kind of copies secondhand bookstores will want to buy.
I don’t let books stay on their shelves too long. I believe in re-reading good books, in taking them around with you and sneaking a few pages in between classes or while standing in line, in slipping them into backpacks and handbags so you can share them with friends you happen to meet, in going to sleep with your head pillowed on Arfken and then waking up because the Belgariad is giving you backache. We have our own ways of loving for books. Mine is to live with them.
Posted on June 11th, 2007 by eclair.
Categories: opinions.
Maybe selective is more like it.
If geeks are really anti-social, how could you explain Linux Users’ Groups, MUDs, programming language users’ groups, and so on? Isn’t that being social?
The stereotype that geeks are anti-social is bleh if you ask me, especially when you think about that. And geeks do go out drinking, dancing, enjoying themselves in concerts, among others. It’s probably not always the stereotypical way of enjoying the events but still, geeks do that too. And it’s not necessarily as frequent as stereotypical party animals but I do know geeks who would be considered the life of the parties they go to.
Ah, stereotypes.
Posted on June 7th, 2007 by eclair.
Categories: anecdotes.
It’s not about the TV show. It’s all about who’s geekier and who’s not quite as geeky. My co-worker and I were talking about it the other night. Why? Here’s the conversation that started it:
eclair: Glenn, there’s “Bambino!” on Crunchyroll! And here’s an RoR tutorial I could start with!
Glenn: Sounds great.
eclair: Now I wonder what I should do… *pause*
[eclair looks at the Rails tutorial and starts on it]
eclair: Hey, Glenn, look! Rails is cool. It did this… *points at the view created* *lightbulb moment* I just realized: between the show “Bambino!” and Rails, I chose Rails!
Glenn: Hahaha. Our hobby is working.
And maybe our past time is research. Or coding. Hahahahaha!
eclair: Our current events would be releases of our favorite text editors, etc. etc.
*Glenn and eclair laugh*
And we actually do these things. Hahaha.
How about you? How geeky could you be?
Posted on May 22nd, 2007 by kyels.
Categories: everything else.
One thing that is still puzzling me to this day is that why some people would choose to make others look like fools?
Is this just the nature of the lives of some ignorant human being or is it more than being an ignorant, maybe malicious intentions?
Sometimes, I wonder a lot and whenever I dwell into a certain topic, I realised how awful people can choose to be especially when we are dealing with the ignorant people or those who don’t try to put themselves into the shoes of others.
Honestly, I guess all of us should try to put ourselves into others’ shoes so that we would know what they are facing as an individual rather than permitting their own actions that will make the other party look like a fool in public.
Maybe this is just human nature after all; that people tend to be selfish and can’t care less about the feelings of others.
How sad, right?
There is nothing we could to do cure this social dilemma except that we change our attitudes if we realise that it is not in favour of others especially when it will make them look stupid.
Sigh.
Posted on March 30th, 2007 by ephemere.
Categories: science/math, anecdotes.
(title inspired by Taylor & Wheeler’s Parable of the Surveyors, Spacetime Physics; crossposted from Miamor)
(title inspired by Taylor & Wheeler’s Parable of the Surveyors, Spacetime Physics)
Imagine a room of students waiting for an exam to start. They talk in hushed tones about concepts and equations none of them really understand, reciting formulae like mantras. The room is cold with excess air conditioning and barely stifled dread.
The proctor — a graduate student — walks in carrying the exam papers and questionnaire sheets. He doesn’t look at the students; instead he goes to the blackboard and begins writing.

It’s standard procedure to write the starting time, the finish time, and the duration on the board, but this is ridiculous.
My first reaction was: “There’s something wrong here. That’s not a well-defined sequence and its limits don’t make sense. And the integral is really ugly. I don’t even think you can do that.”
And then I paused and thought, “No, really, there’s something wrong here; he shouldn’t be doing that.”
It wasn’t just the math that was off; it was his writing it in the first place. I found it terribly arrogant; sure, intimidate the undergraduates (most of whom have only limited knowledge of derivatives, much less sequences and limits) with unnecessarily arcane symbols. Be inconsiderate and obnoxious and rub it into their faces that they are worth so much less than you are.
Showing off is self-destructive because, of course, intellectual humility is always, always fundamental. You should never lose sight of that, never flaunt what you know — if you do so, you’re just displaying your ignorance (of the fact that there’s so much more you don’t know, for one thing). Once you get to the point where you feel you can start showing off your mastery of your field, you hit a wall and learn less and less every day. Or worse — lose everything you have.
The proctor collected our answer sheets ten minutes early. I didn’t bother correcting him; he didn’t look amenable to corrections anyway.
–
So this semester is over and I have one summer and two semesters left before I graduate. I’m starting to find some sort of grounding in economics: interesting problems, situations I’d like to explore. It’s like being given a whole new playground in which to wreak havoc…! There’s much to be said about being different; as an economics major who can read (and understand, and work on) physics papers, I straddle two worlds.
And there are so many things to learn!
–
In other news:
This made my day. It’s a formula that… graphs itself!
Posted on February 22nd, 2007 by ephemere.
Categories: admin, tech.
I’m still in the middle of tweaking settings and fixing how the default page looks, but I thought I’d let you guys know: I’ve enabled Google Apps for likhain.net.
Start page URL is http://partnerpage.google.com/likhain.net. You can also use http://start.likhain.net.
Please feel free to sign up for an account. I’m planning to use likhain.net Gmail myself.
Posted on February 17th, 2007 by sofimi.
Categories: everything else, tech, games.
Make: magazine has released a list of gift suggestions for the holidays on its blog and it’s nothing short of geeky—or should I say k33gy?
Here’s the short of it:
And here’s the long of it.
The OpenMoko phone is a refreshing sight from all the Nokia, Motorola, and Sony Ericsson phones clogging up the stores. (Add the iPhone to that list as well.) That media center looks a lot like the PS3. And of course, the Open Source Beer is a hoot. Do check out the post discussion for even more ideas!
How about you? Do you have any geeky things on your wishlists?
Footnote: Okay, I know this is uber-uber-uber late for Christmas or Valentines or whatever holiday I’ve skipped, but I’ll publish this post anyway. Kung Hei Fat Choi! Haha. Talk about procrastination—which I’ll write about next time. ^_~
Posted on February 16th, 2007 by ephemere.
Categories: games.
If you like mind games and enjoy dissecting pictures and text, you might want to try this. It’s an HTML-based puzzle game: the answer to the puzzle takes you to the next one. Very, very, very addictive.
(I’m currently stuck on a fake level. Heh.)