February 17, 2016

Becoming Unbecoming by Una: A Review

Picked this up off the shelf, sight unseen.

It was a smart pick.

The story is about a young woman, growing up.

The background is the hunt for the so-called “Yorkshire” Ripper, a serial killer who was tracking down women and killing them.

The killer took too long to get caught because the people looking for him were incompetent. They were incompetent in that they were men who made unfair assumptions about women.

All the men do.  Though there is the backdrop of the useless police, the story can be seen as a universal story of women growing up - where the threat of sexual violence is complete both in society as a whole and even within relationships. It was a powerfully told tale, and one that makes me worry for my daughters in the future and all the daughters ever.

January 28, 2016

A review of the Fitbit Charge HR

I write this because I forgot to put it on as I walked out the door this morning.

I'm not wearing it, and my wrist feels naked. I was walking to work when I realized I had forgotten it, too late to turn around and go get it.

I was just walking in the hallway to a colleague's office, and I thought "getting my steps in" and was sad when I realized that they don't count.
Those steps will not be on the device, and they won't show up in my app.

I had first bought one of the cheaper versions of the activity tracker, one of the zips that I kept in my pocket. I must have hit it on something, since I looked at it and the screen was cracked. The tracking still worked, but I thought I should just level up and get the more involved version.

I like this one better because with the one I put in my pocket, it was easy not to think about the steps. The main reason I even started was because I wanted to be more conscious of the activity I was doing, and hoping to do more of it. The quantification here helps. I can see how many steps I did today versus yesterday.

I'm not certain how accurate it is though. I have a feeling that it overestimates my mileage. That's not wholly important to me because the way I look at it, it is an instrument that is comparable to itself. That is, of one day it tells me that I did 5000 steps and the next that I did 6000, I know that I was 20% more active than the day before. I think the same for the heart rate monitor, which is handy because it shows you what's going on inside you in real time. I think that though I don't use that info for fitness, it is what makes this a must-have tracker. Plus the battery last fairly long and charges quickly. You just have to not forget it when you have it on the charger, and then have your wrist feel naked all day.

December 4, 2015

Gun Control in Our Time

Here's an idea.

If you want to keep a legal gun, you have to join the national guard or reserve. There is that sticky clause in the first part of the second amendment that gets ignored. Maybe have a one-time amnesty, where you can turn in your gun and get compensated for part of its cost.

It may sound harsh, but freeing the slaves was done without any compensation on the former owners. From an economic standpoint, it was one of the largest exportations of wealth in that didn't involve a revolution.

That represented a different turning, one where we collectively said that this was no longer a moral way to order society, I think we are at that same point with weapons that exist solely to kill in the most efficient way possible, No other machine has one use that we allow private citizens to hold but that one use is against the law.

Perhaps have some carve out for smaller-caliber single action rifles used for subsistence hunting, but the past week has been too much and federal action is needed.

Prayers don't stop bullets, nor do laws, but a large scale manufacturing industry can be curbed.