Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Merry Christmas!

Don't send a lame Holiday eCard. Try JibJab Sendables!

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Hell's Cold Day, a new poker blog

I know I don't post to his blog but about twice a month, but I'm starting a new one. In contrast to this blog's randomness, my new blog focuses on poker and only poker.

Hell's Cold Day is for the common card playing audience, meaning it will not talk about the games with huge buy-ins and the strategy that accompanies them. The play can be quite different. What it takes to win a $10 tournament or .10/.20 cent blind games is different than what it takes to win $100 minimum buy-ins.

I will share my experience and observations of others based on both on-line and real world play. I'm no pro, but you need not worry I know how to improve your game. For a reference on my skill in low-limit games, long-term records show I make about $10/hr.

If that sounds like you cup of tea, check out Hell's Cold Day. If not, I'm still here.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

The Death of Superman made me love comics

DC Comics recently released an animated remake of their classic comic book series detailing the death and return of Superman. The animated feature, Superman/Doomsday, is a different take on the original and I recommend you watch it. As far as action goes, it is far better than the recent live action film, Superman Returns. If you have watched it, I recommend you read the original story.

The first comic book I ever read featured Superman's beaten corpse laid out on the streets of Metropolis on the cover. It was the first issue of A Funeral for a Friend, a story addressing the aftermath of Superman's fight with Doomsday. The battle ended in mutual death. Funny enough, I didn't read the actual fight until more than a year later. I also didn't stay with the funeral books for the whole storyline.

The story that really ignited my interest was the following Reign of the Supermen story arc. It was a very long epic told over four Superman titles detailing the four different Supermen who appeared after Superman's death. They were the "Cyborg Superman," the "Man of Steel," "Superboy," and "Superman, the Last Son of Krypton." I am not going to spoil it, because if you ever have thought yourself a fan of Superman, you need to read it. Looking back I now am amazed that the first 50 or more issues of Superman books that made me love the character, didn't even include the real Superman.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

In response to overly positive iPhone reviews compared to the iPod Touch.

Steve Jobs says the iPhone is the best iPod ever, but he's lying. Jobs wants to push the iPhone because he gets a cut from at&t, understandable. I, however, don't want to do business with at&t-- and that is reason #1 to opt for the iPod Touch.

The Touch has the same awesome interface as the iPhone and twice the memory for the price. The draws are there, and so are the drawbacks. It doesn't replace a phone, it doesn't have internal speakers, and you can't use internet anywhere that doesn't connect to a wifi network... I like my current phone (first time in my life I can say that), I think playing sounds from you personal media device in public is rude, and I almost never need the internet unless I am around wifi (besides the at&t data network is so slow I couldn't bear using it anyway).

If you need a new phone and are already with at&t, get the iPhone if you are in the market for one. But, remember the phone is only as good as the network. I'm happy with my iPod Touch.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Free Poker!

For those of you that didn't know, on-line gaming (gambling) was made illegal in the US not long ago when the law was slipped into some off-topic legislation by Bob Goodlatte (R-VA) and his counterpart Rick Boucher (D-VA). By the way, don't vote for them. I have since quit playing on-line even though some poker rooms still accept US money. I'm posting now because of a new development.

The European Union wants upwards of 100 billion dollars compensation for violating international trade acts by the illegalization of on-line gaming. Makes sense for them since most on-line poker rooms are in Europe or otherwise abroad. I say good for them.

What the US should do to make it right is to free us from this prohibition and let Las Vegas open up on-line poker rooms of their own. Hell, tax it it you have to. When you European Union gives you lemons, make lemonade.

That is all.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Join the 3rd Party Revolution


I talk to friends and coworkers about the usual stuff-- the weather, what's on TV, politics... and it got me thinking. Many people are Republicans because they don't want to be Democrats, Democrats because they don't want to be Republicans. I know some that would vote Libertarian, but think they would just be throwing their vote away. In almost all cases, people don't agree with most of their own party's politics. A friend of mine is almost the ideal Democrat, but is against abortion so votes Republican. Another would literally need a party formed around them to be happy.

I know not everyone can be completely happy with the wide range of issues a party deals with, but they could be happier.

There's my rational. Now a little background on me: First, I've never been into politics. I was always the last to enter a political conversation and the first to leave. I consider myself moderate. I do vote, but never criticize people who don't. This is why I think I can start the ball rolling at Politicl. Politicl.com is my new website to form a community around a new political party.

The internet is allowing us to connect in ways we never have before. Look at the power of social networks. MySpace and Facebook have a user base so populous that it is easy for me to believe that Politicl can grow to a number of supporters beyond the current third parties in a matter of years. Strong enough that by the presidential election of 2012, we will have candidate of our own in position to truly compete and defeat the big two parties of today.

Politicl.com is currently closed. Comment here if you like the idea and I'll let you know when it's running again.

Thursday, August 9, 2007

The Ad-supported Cellphone

Now that everyone has had a chance to play with Apple's take of cellphones, who wants to see what Google can do? I believe Google is on that path.

Recently Google has acquired a variety of interesting cell and VoIP companies including GrandCentral.com, a start-up I mentioned in a previous post. Most importantly, they are taking part in the auction for the analog spectrum now open from television's switch to digital. They, or a major cell company most likely, will be purchasing the spectrum for over ten billion dollars. The winner would be in position to offer cell coverage cheaper than ever... or as expensive as ever while taking a much bigger profit.

If Google wins this I believe they will enter the cellular arena with an ad-supported phone. A phone that would involve either a free or cheap monthly plan as a trade off for ad placement. I could see ad placement taking advantage of the phone's built in GPS so the advertisments would be localized. Google knows a device you carry with you and listen to constantly is very valuable of real estate.

Even if Google is trying to take over the world, I hope this victory will be theirs. Cell companies as they are now take advantage of their customers to no end. They either need to be put out of business or change their business model.

Monday, July 30, 2007

Grundy On Poker: Part 1

I know a lot of poker players who are able play the game well enough to profit in the long run, but don't. It isn't because they're calculating the odds wrong or even misreading the opponents, it is because of their lack of discipline.

Playing a friendly game once a month for low stakes is one thing, but to make a living from the game is another. It's because playing at your best in the short game is far easier than stretching that amount of focus over a day-long tournament, a week-long tournament, or a multiple year-long professional poker career.

Next time you have a string of bad beats, and you will if you haven't already, stick to your game. You can do everything right and still loose in the short-run, but in the long-run the best player will be known. It takes patience, focus, and a little humility to stay off the tilt that will loose the day.

I leave you with a passage from Robert Service's poem "Carry On!"

It’s easy to fight when everything’s right,
And you’re mad with thrill and the glory;
It’s easy to cheer when victory’s near,
And wallow in fields that are gory.
It’s a different song when everything’s wrong,
When you’re feeling infernally mortal;
When it’s ten against one, and hope there is none,
Buck up, little soldier, and chortle.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

The Superman Debate

Today marks my first posting in response to another posting, in this case The Lars lastest episode. For those of you who don't listen to podcasts, I'm not going to try to convince you. For those who do, check out the Dharmalars on iTunes for movie reviews, discussion on the TV show Lost and (infuriating) debates on pop culture icons.

Most that know me personally know that my favorite fictional character is Superman. People have seen my wallet marked with the S-shield as well as a dog tag hanging on my computer supporting the Christopher Reeve foundation. This post allows me to both answer the question "why do I like Superman" and defend Ben of the Lars' stance on the "awesomness of Superman."

I don't like Superman for his powers or his status. He's not as cool of a character as Batman or Spawn or members of the X-Men. He's my favorite because of what he stands for. Ralph, the Lars counterpart to Ben, made the argument that Superman is irrelevant because he cannot relate to him. In his stories, Superman saves lives without taking credit because he cannot let the world know who he really is, Clark Kent, without endangering everyone he cares about. Superman restrains power enough to vaporize someone with a glance with his oath to never take a life. He has enough power to take the world and reshape it, but knows it's not his place. Absolute power never corrupts him. With greater power comes greater responsibility. You're right, Ralph, no one can relate to him-- that's why he's the best.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Atheists may Consider Gambling on Heaven

I've been thinking of the devout believers in my life. As far as religion goes, I know more devote Christians in my life then other religions, so I will be referring to them as my example.

Many people who do not frequent church or take part in organized religion, and even some who do, are often annoyed when a friend works to hard in an attempt to convert you. I suppose you can relate, after all who are they to tell you what to believe. However, if they are truly your friend and believe in their heart that if you don't convert to their beliefs that you will certainly go to hell, then what kind of friend would they be if they didn't spend every waking hour preaching to you the gospel.

What I'm saying is that I at least understand their motivation. It is a mission of charity based on deep faith. What I didn't understand is the same devotion from an atheist. I think of atheism as a lack of belief in any god. I don't think anything is wrong with that, but why do they need to convert anyone? Religion should not matter to them because it has no influence on their life. I didn't want this posting to sound one-sided so I researched all possible motivatations for speading doubt in other peoples faith in god. The main reason that made sense to me was that most of the wars and bloodshed throughout human history have been grounded in two opposing beliefs in a higher power and widely adapted atheism would put an end to these holy wars. Also I can see that certain religions can slow scientific progress.

After realizing this, I can see their point. Ending widespread violence is a very good reason, but I doubt atheism would herald in world peace. And even if it could, it may be too big a price to pay. For those who have faith, it brings so much fulfillment to their life that they would never give it up, and are willing to give their lives for it. I think I understand atheism, and as a "man of science" I can emphasize with their doubts in Christianity, but for now I will leave you with an argument for faith based on a principle of mathematics- probability. Blaise Pascal, a mathematician from the 1600's, said: if you believe in god and there is a god, then you can go to heaven; if you believe in god and there is no god then it doesn't matter; if you don't believe in god and there is a god, you risk going to hell; and if you don't believe in god and there is no god, then it doesn't really matter. The possible gain from belief is so much greater than the possible gain from unbelief, christianity was the bet that gave the highest gain. This is what is referred to as Pascal's wager.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Telephones aren't just for telephones anymore.

On my mission to register my handle on every new Web 2.0 site, I've been coming across a trend of online telephony gimicks-- a couple of which I really like.

This post is to recommend these services, I'm not going to go into what VoIP or voice over internet protocol means, but if you've heard of Vontage or Skype you already know it's out there. I will just say that if you want a very cheap telephone line, look into Skype.

That aside, you don't need VoIP for these services. The first site is Jangl.com and it allows you to leave a callback number (or callback link) on your website, myspace page, email signature, classified ad or anywhere you want, which isn't you real number. You keep your pivacy and can discontinue the number for each or all callers who contact you through the service at will.

Jott.com I like even more. First you set up a number for you to call Jott. Then you can have it read your address book so that you can "jott" anyone with an email address. The voice regonition is great. I call the service, it replies "Who do you want to jott?" and I say the name of anyone in my address book and it prompts me to speak my message. Next thing you know, the recipent has your spoken message as text in their email. You can also jott yourself reminders.

Both those services are free. Y'know what else is free these days? 411! You don't ever pay for 411 information again, under the condition of listening to advertisements. Two services I've found do this now: 1-800-FREE-411 and 1-800-GOOG-411, a Google service. Both work well, and both have sponsors. Sponsors equal ads.

I may post more on these services in the future because they are always growing. GrandCentral.com caught my eye just yesterday for example. As for now, you're on your own.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

"I want to believe" or "Is life unique to Earth"

Lately I have been interested in life outside of earth. I don't know if it is because of reading one to many crazy Lost theories or zoning out to the Astronomy Cast postcast, but I've been wondering...

Put aside the fact that I saw a UFO years ago, I don't believe aliens have been spotted by humans. However, I have always believed that extraterrestrial life must exist in a universe this big. In fact, a lot of otherworldly intelligence must be out there, right? Law of averages and all. But then why haven't humans seen them if the galaxy is teeming with life?

I'm obviously not the first person to wonder. The Fermi paradox is the name of the contradiction between high estimates of the probability of the existence of alien life and the lack of evidence for or contact with such civilizations. (Thanks Wikipedia.) Mr. Fermi asked the question and a Frank Drake attempted to answer it.

The Drake equation I find very interesting. It multiplies the factors deemed necessary for our contact with ET, unfortunatly we can only estimate the values of these factors. The factors to consider are the rate of star formation in our galaxy the fraction of those stars that have planets, the average number of planets that can potentially support life per star that has planets, the fraction of the previous that actually go on to develop life at some point, the fraction of the previous that actually go on to develop intelligent life, the fraction of civilizations that develop a technology that releases detectable signs of their existence into space, and the length of time such civilizations release detectable signals into space. Estimates for these fractions range from .0001 to 10,0000 depending on who you ask.

From what I know now, I doubt we will find intelligent life in a long long time if ever, because I think earth is very unique. Earth is a prime breeding ground for life, the likes of which we have yet to see on any other planet. I am not only basing this on the presence of water and atmosphere, or the ideal distance from the sun. The type of sun matters too. Most stars are not like the sun. A star needs at least as much metal in it to support life as we know it. Also, earth is lucky to have Jupiter where it is positioned in our solar system. Without it, the meteors and a asteroids that now are pulled into its gravity would collide with earth on a fairly regular basis.

Thinking back through what we know of our biological history, life almost didn't arise many times over; and then, almost didn't evolve. If the dinosaurs never died off, humans would not be here. As for hoping aliens could develop as far as we have or further, we have to look at history as well. Our civilization as been crippled in the past (fall of Rome) as well as nearly destroyed (nuclear war.) What's to say alien cultures would be as lucky to avoid these growing pains?

My conclusion is this: I now believe that life may be out there, but rare enough for civilizations to never cross paths. Which may very well be a good thing.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

PRS not the same as drawing straws

I hate it when people use paper, rock, scissors to make a random choice-- when it is the equivalent to drawing straws. On more than one occasion I have been with a friend facing some situation in which one of us had to do something neither of us wanted to. How to decide who falls victim to the unfortunate act? Flip a coin? Draw straws? No, paper, rock scissors always comes up. Now depending how badly I want to get out of said situation, and how fair I want to be to the other person, I will agree or disagree to this. If I agree, I turn what should be a random choice into a definite outcome, and I take away from the skill game of paper, rock, scissors.

What do I mean by this? I mean I will not lose. I know my friends well enough that I will win every two-out-of-three games of paper, rock, scissors along with most one-shots. I know this because it is not a game of chance, it is a game of skill.

Poker comes to mind, a game of skill that involves chance. A good player will profit over a bad player certainly in time, but the element of luck can't guarantee a win for the good player in any one game. Paper, rock, scissors is even less so. It doesn't involve cards or dice or fate, just what you know of the other person. It requires even more of a "read" than poker does.

So here's a tip to improve your game. Until you get very good at predicting what your opponent will throw, focus on predicting what he will not throw. For instance, if he or she just threw rock and you know he wouldn't use it twice in a row, you should throw paper. That way you are safe, and have a 50/50 chance of winning the round.

Sunday, April 15, 2007

It's the Social Network Hoedown!

There is a lot out there for social networkites. MySpace is still the leader in number of users, but I'm here to tell you about lesser known, but perhaps better options.

Everyone who would ever consider joining a social network at least knows of Facebook by now. Students have known about it and used it for the longest as it was originally open only to them. Now it's public and has enough users that Yahoo reportedly offered over a billion dollars for the site. The amazing thing is the offer was turned down. I suppose the Facebook founders are holding out for two billion, but I doubt that Facebook will become any more relevent than it is today-- meaning the next offer will no doubt be less.

The social networkites are fickle, you see. And new networks are popping up better than MySpace and Facebook. I just started toying with Virb.com, which has more in common with MySpace but is a whole lot prettier. It allows customizing the HTML and CSS code to make pages look like high-quality web 2.0 sites. Though even without the customization, pages look better than 90% of MySpace profiles.

A little outside the box are sites like Twitter and Jaiku, which are less profile page oriented. Twitter is more like the status option of facebook, or an away message. It is microblogging that answers the question "what are you doing right now?" Actually Twitter's creator was also the guy behind Blogger before Google bought it out. If you want to see how people use Twitter, try out twittervision.com.

Jaiku is different still, it displays your web presence. Visitors can see messages you add, similar to Twitter's microblogging, as well as feeds from other sites you use across the internet. My Jaiku page displays bookmarks to my favorite sites as I add them through del.ici.ous, as well as photos added to Flickr, and new postings to this very blog.

So now you know. Go check them out and be my friend!

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Why must God rest?

I clocked in 4 hours of church this Easter weekend and one of the readings that came up was from Genesis, which got me thinking. God is generally accepted as an all-powerful-omnipotent-being... so why did he need to rest on Sunday? Now we must assume this is symbolic, after all there wasn't a calender at the begining of time, much less one like today's. I would go further to say that most of the Bible is symbolic, meaning not literal, especially the Old Testament.

Adam and Eve then, literal or sympolic? If symbolic then all those "theories" of evolution could be true. I am more of a science-minded guy, so I know that the evidence of evolution makes it more then just a theory. And if Adam and Eve was just a moralty story, that means original sin is most likely not the case. That means there is a major crack in most Christian religions.

I'm not trying to disprove Christianity. I, for one, believe most of the new testament to be literal, which is not easy to do considering the miracles preformed thoughout go against science as well. It is just easier for me to accept the version of God portrayed here, then the God of the old testament that often went against his own commandments.