Sitting by the fire at sunset is pretty nice, too … sun sparkling on the lake … this is where I’m taking meetings these days.
Author Archives: Robert Marsanyi
PURDAH
Back in the day, Douglas and I were speculating about password replacements (!) We ended up thinking about physical tokens that could be embedded in, say, jewelry, that could be used to authenticate you to some computer system the background, without you explicitly doing anything. Now, there’s Token, about to go mainstream (http://tokenring.com)
Another idea that we dreamed up was that of using the entire history of a person’s interaction with the web, hashed, as a way of proving who they were. Only a person who had a history of the same interactions, all performed in the same sequence over the same time, would be able to authenticate as you. And I’m reading about exactly that in a sci-fi book at the moment, The Fall, by Neal Stephenson. He calls it PURDAH, “Personal Unseperable Registered Designator for Anonymous Holography”.
State v Federal response
I am disappointed that the state of California has not taken the initiative and stepped up to lead the response in the US to the coronavirus epidemic.
It’s been clear for weeks that citizens of CA (and WA, and OR, and …) will need support while we all weather this pandemic. Hospitals will need to ramp up. There’ll be a need for testing, for contact following, for basic support including food and shelter while people are unable to work. There will need to be scientific work on vaccine development, and development of testing methodologies that return results quickly.
It’s also been clear for years that the Federal administration has been steadily destroying the ability of federal departments, including those responsible for these things, to do their jobs. From the fabulist in charge, through the suck-ups whose entire function is to kowtow to the fabulist, through the heads of departments whose publicly-stated function is to shut down or make ineffectual the departments they are put in place to lead, including the NIH and CDC, it’s been clear that expecting a well-planned and well-executed response to a national or international emergency from the Federal government is no longer reasonable.
Given these facts, the states have chosen to carp at the Feds about what they’re not doing, rather than stepping up and doing the work themselves. California in particular has financial and academic resources equal or greater than most countries on the planet, and could have, weeks ago, instigated a program to ensure that every UC campus medical center be ready to function as a regional pandemic control facility, with all the resources needed to test, quarantine and treat the general population, funded by the state government. They could then have shared that knowledge and those resources with WA, OR and any other state that needed them.
The Federal government is broken. It is simply not capable of responding well to a national emergency with anything other than rhetoric, misinformation and finger-pointing. Rather than participate in those games, state governments have an obligation and an opportunity to take the reins.
Update: they figured it out (“California exceptionalism is the new American exceptionalism”, Todd Purdam, Atlantic Monthly https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2020/04/coronavirus-california-gavin-newsom/610006/). Better a month and a half late than not.
Dear Governor Inslee
I just heard on the radio that you’d asked people to “self-quarantine” in the event that they exhibit symptoms of CoVid-19. I’d like to suggest that this is impractical for those of us who are not salaried, nor have paid sick leave included in their terms of employment.
If you’d like us to perform the service of not infecting our fellow citizens, perhaps you might urge the legislature to make cash grants to those of us who find themselves in this situation, so that we don’t compound the problem of contracting a life-threatening illness with that of going bankrupt.
Regards, etc.
Update: of course, within a week or so the state was gearing up to do exactly this. Strange times, but in a lot of respects things that used to be problems with government just … aren’t … any more. Our governor, our bureaucracy and our legislature is handling things exceptionally well, IMHO, so I apologize for the irritation in the above post. We’ve all moved past the finger-pointing to the what-can-I-help-with phase, which is great.
Living expenses
I’ve been seeing this chart around a few places recently. A succinct explanation of the disconnect between the official figures showing a robust economy, and the reality that most people are feeling.
For those who can get through the paywall, the latest discussion is at https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2020/02/24/this-chart-is-best-explanation-middle-class-finances-you-will-ever-see/
Winter is over
for a day or so.
Politics is for Power
Really interesting take on how politics is evolving in the US.
The politics-as-sports metaphor isn’t new, but the discussion of the antidotes is.
The Electoral College and the popular vote
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/12/opinion/electoral-college-2020.html?referringSource=articleShare
An article about the statistics of the Electoral College as opposed to the popular vote. The graphic showing the relative unimportance of most states in the Presidential elections is particularly illuminating, as is the conclusion, that it is only those states that have any incentive to change the system. Come on, Coastal states, time to assert ourselves.
More disinformation
Just saw JoJo Rabbit. One of the main things I see is the way the some of the adult characters believe all sorts of bullshit, about Jews, about Russians and Americans, and how the 10-year-old kid who’s the main character absorbs all that. And how some of the characters of course don’t believe any of it, but profess to because of the power it gives them, or because it keeps them safe. Part of the reason the movie works is because these ludicrous ideas are treated seriously by the children. Why wouldn’t they think Jews had horns when all the serious adults are telling them so? And when you could be killed for not believing it?
Bad UI design
Started Quicken this morning, and it
- fired up a dialog saying “searching for updates”
- fired up a second dialog upon completion, with the message “no updates found, you’re up-to-date, make sure you check frequently” and an “OK” button
This is the “normal” case: I’m going to check for you to see if something needs to be done. One would hope that, in the normal case where nothing needs to be done, no further information needs to be imparted and no further action required on the part of the user. It would all seamlessly happen behind the scenes, and a dialog would only be shown if the user needed something or needed to tell the system something. I suspect the “make sure you check frequently” was just added to the text as a rationalization for having the dialog box in the first place.
I don’t consider myself much of an expert on UI, but I know what I don’t like …
update: … and then it didn’t bother to open the program (!)