On England’s fair and pleasant land
A lot of us all over the western world watch England with fascinated horror, to see what our own futures may bring.
Our friend Hal G. P. Colebatch has an article today over at the American Spectator about local government actions to restrict the freedoms of Christians in England that occurred in one single week.
I frankly don’t approve of all the challenged actions, but the pattern of repression, along with the reasons given for repression, are troubling.
I am a man of iron
Short one tonight. I just spent a grueling two hours with a bathroom upgrades salesman.
One of the lessons I’ll have to learn as a homeowner is never to say yes when a salesperson comes around and says, “Hey, we’ll just send a guy around to give you a quick estimate; tell you about our sale prices. No pressure.”
It ends up as 120 minutes of close interaction (with visual aids) in which a poor working stiff brings out all his hyperbole and powers of persuasion, talking in the “when” mode while I’m keeping to the “if” mode.
In the end I told him I never make such decisions on the same day, as a matter of policy. He then called his boss and asked him if they could offer me the job at parts plus labor only, just because they want to list an address where they’ve done a job in this area on an advertising card. I still said no, and the estimate price jumped back up a couple thousand.
I think it would have been great to do, and I’m convinced the product is well worth the cost. But I don’t have the money, and I ended feeling guilty I’d wasted his time.
He went off disappointed.
But I guess he’d be more disappointed if I ordered the work and couldn’t pay for it.
Power of the Internet: Spot Translation
Have you seen the websites on which you have type out the misshapen letters in a little box before you leave a comment? In that moment, you are doing the work of translation.
In fact, your brain has deciphered words that had baffled the scanning software used for an enormous project to digitize every public domain book in the world.
“We can coordinate literally millions of people on the Internet to work together to do something that computers cannot do,” says Luis von Ahn, an assistant professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh.
… Some 200 million of these words, dubbed “Captchas” for Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart, are typed every day by people around the world.
Buy It Only at Barnes & Noble
Store-exclusive books?
Britain’s Waterstones, the biggest bookseller in the United Kingdom, may be working a direct deal with publishers.
High Resolution Virtual Museum Visit
With Google Earth, you can zoom very close to the masterpieces in the Prado Museum in Madrid. (via Very Short List)
I Am Second
Nate Larkin says he had to drop his religiosity to find real love from his Father in heaven. Working to please God simply didn’t work and wasn’t what He wanted anyway. Nate is second in his life to the Lord and the author of the book, Samson and the Pirate Monks: Calling Men to Authentic Brotherhood, which has his testimony and a description of a men’s discipleship group called The Samson Society.
10 more anathemas
Cold and snow (actually snow and cold, reading left to right) returned today. But although the temperature never topped 25°, most of the snow disappeared anyway. Go Sun!
Yesterday was a weird day. I missed not one but two appointments—my mind was obviously poorly seated in its housing. And my post on foods I don’t like—which was, frankly, a desperation post, composed because I couldn’t think of a good idea—garnered a fair number of comments and got linked both by Hunter Baker and the Thinklings.
Which shows that you just never know. And you may quote me on that.
So, on the principle that if something works you should beat it to death, I shall follow up with a post on Things I Don’t Like At All, But That Are Extremely Popular.
1. Sports. I don’t wonder why other people like sports. I have one semi-sport (live steel) that I enjoy myself, so I can comprehend the fact that other people find sports engaging and life-enhancing. I just can’t share the experience. Sports, for me, have always been merely a way to exhibit my inferiority in a good, strong, public light. Continue reading 10 more anathemas
Limitations Seen As Stress
Libraries Get Some Relief From Stimulus Package. Several billion dollars appears to be available for state education programs, and potentially state libraries, in the new economic stimulus law. I don’t suppose money for schools and libraries is unacceptable in a law targeting the general economy, but the headline struck me the wrong way. Liberals seem to believe all government programs righteous and should not be restricted, even by natural limitations like not enough money to go around. The Chattanooga libraries, for example, are struggling, and I’d like to see them get the resources and leadership they need, but I don’t want the Feds to overtax the successful people in our country to funnel money into my city. The libraries should be supported by the community and the state.
Andy Crouch is Hopeful
He says we’re in hard times, but he’s hopeful for us “because I believe the coming years are going to reveal some pernicious weeds in our culture for what they are.”