Grammar test
Understanding Physics
I’m a big fan of all sorts of books.
I read lots of science fiction. Â It’s my go-to genre when I’m bored and want to read something. Â You would assume my favorite book would fall within the genre, I know I made that assumption.
Today I realized that wasn’t the case. Â Understanding Physics by Isaac Asimov holds this distinction. Â I read this first probably in junior high and it just blew me away. Â I was always an underachiever in school. Â A lot of that had to do with the fact that, while I knew I was smart, I didn’t feel like I was smart enough to understand complicated things. Â This book changed all of that.
Asimov’s writing style is just fantastic when it comes to explaining topics. Â In this book he does a great job of not only explaining how things work, but how we figured them out and how scientists depend on the work of their predecessors.
I would put this book somewhere between pop science books without a bit of math and a full-on textbook. Â However, even though it has math in it, it is completely attainable to someone who normally only reads the pop science books.
I rarely re-read books, but I find myself reading this one every couple of years. Â You will too.

Woofi and finding an access point
One of the main points of an app like woofi is to conserve battery life, so implementing features in a resource-conscious manner is paramount.
Of course, the biggest thing we do is make sure the WiFi radio is on for the smallest amount of time possible. Â This brings us to the first trade off we have to juggle. Â We can’t know for sure if we want the WiFi radio to be turned on without turning it on and checking for available access points. Â If we turn on and then connect to an access point, all is good. Â If we turn on and there is no access point to connect to we just wasted a bit of your battery life.
What we want to do is turn on the WiFi radio and then only stay on for the absolute shortest time possible. Â The problem is this: Â we don’t know what the shortest time possible is! Â Some Android devices and some access points take longer than others. Â If we only turn on WiFi for 5 seconds and then decide no access point is available, but your device and access point normally take 10 seconds to establish a connection we’ve failed the user.
Our solution to this is to pick a reasonable default time, and allow the user to increase it if they have a slow-to-connect access point.
Related articles
- An Android WiFi App I Need (avc.com)

woofi, a location-aware WiFi switcher for Android devices.
My most recent project is an app called woofi. Â Let me quote the apps description from its market page:
Simply put, with woofi you define locations like “home”, “work”, or “Joe’s house”, and woofi turns your WiFi radio on when near those points and off when not.
More detailed explanation:
Say, for example, that the only place you connect your phone to WiFi is at home. This means you don’t need for the WiFi radio in your phone to be on when you’re not at home. The rest of the day it’s just sitting there trying to connect to access points and wasting battery.
With this app you would save your “home” location (and wherever else you connect to WiFi regularly…like at the office), and the app would keep track of your location throughout the day and when you weren’t near these saved locations turn your WiFi radio off, and then when you were near them it would turn your WiFi radio back on.
You can, of course, simply turn the WiFi radio on and off manually when you are at-home/not-at-home, the only purpose of this app is to automate doing this for you. I always forget to do this manually…thus the idea for this app.
Most people seem to leave their WiFi on all the time and not realize that it’s on because it just connects to networks that they’ve connected to before automatically.
Here’s what normally happens without this app: Once you’ve connected to your home (or office, or wherever) WiFi, Android will just connect to your home WiFi every time you’re in range. The only way it knows to do this is because the WiFi radio in your phone is on all the time looking for WiFi networks to connect to.
This app replaces that procedure by checking your phones location and leaving the WiFi radio off unless it is needed. Doing this saves battery life.
Coming soon expect some posts about the logic and trade offs made in the development of this app.

Toggle Caps Lock with program.
Someone wanted a program to toggle the Caps Lock key on Windows. Here you go! Each time it’s run it just changes the state of the Caps Lock key.
Placebos, dude
- Ben Goldacre shares some amazing studies about the placebo effect in stand-up comic format in this video.
- Daniel Keogh talks some more about placebos.
- HDL cholesterol makes you live longer.
- This is what it’s like to spend nearly thirty years in prison for something you didn’t do.
- Infographic of the day:

Tip for asking questions on StackOverflow (or anywhere else).
Don’t say “urgent”, “deadline”, “QUICK”.
These are just people answering questions because they like to share knowledge. Â Saying you need an answer quick sounds ungrateful, and doesn’t speed up getting an answer, and probably reduces your chances of getting a speedy answer.
The person who is going to give you the answer you need isn’t going to answer your question more quickly. Â He’ll answer it when he sees your question.
How long does it take to play the Half-Life series?
I recently played all the way through the following games on the hardest difficulty.
[table id=1 /]
I have played through all the games before, but it’s been years. Â I didn’t rush through any of the games. Â I didn’t look in every nook and cranny of each level, but things that were interesting, I investigated.
I must say, the whole Half-Life series is a blast to play. Â I am, however, disappointed at how much shorter Half-Life 2 was then Half-Life 1.

No wires for your monitor
Sure, it’s not ready for prime time yet, but I’m sure this will be available sooner than later.
From Engadget:
Well, Fujitsu’s taken it one step further here at CeBIT this week, throwing together what it claims to be the world’s first totally wireless desktop display — no video, no power. The imagery is handled via wireless USB and can connect to any appropriately-equipped PC, while the juice is sucked in using a newly-minted proposed standard for wireless power delivery called SUPA
Our alien benefactors
Ten years ago a powerful alien race appeared in the skies above humanity’s major cities.
These aliens are so far in advance of our technical abilities that they have what seems to be magical powers. Â Remember Clarke’s third law: Â “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” Â These aliens, who call themselves the Oodat, claim to have experience all over the universe helping species like humans reach their full potential and in fact to reach a state of “perfection”. Â They’ve helped millions of species. Â If you accept them at their word, you have no reason to doubt that they know whats better for you than you yourself does.
To receive their aid, all you have to do is do what they say.  Because of their unique history, they have many customs for you to follow.  For example, they have a large digital archive full of advice and stories from their past that they require you to read from every day.  They require you to gather together with other like-minded individuals and read from this archive together and listen to others expound upon what they think this archive means to you.  The Oodat require you to hold them in…something even more than esteem and appreciation.  Maybe the right word is reverence.
The most important part of the Oodat’s requirements is this: Â you must reject the any ideas that could possibly be construed as not agreeing with what they’ve taught you no matter what the outside evidence. Â Not only that, you must also reject any people who aren’t living up to the requirements the Oodat have set out for you.
After awhile, it becomes apparent that many people who follow the Oodat actually are happier. Â Of course, it isn’t possible to know whether they are actually on the way to perfection, but the evidence for some people is that their lives are better.
On the flip side, some people actually seem to be worse off. Â There are conflicts on the edges between people who follow the Oodat and those who don’t. Â Even people who are happier under the Oodat’s tutelage lie, murder, and steal just like other humans.
Would you follow the Oodat?
Say you knew that the Oodat were legit, and actually had raised people of many species to “perfection”. Â Would you follow them?
What if you realized that your idea of perfection wasn’t the same as the next person contemplating following the Oodat?
What if you realized that the Oodat’s idea of perfection was different from your own?

![captchas[1]](https://i0.wp.com/blog.contriving.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/captchas1.jpg?resize=600%2C438)




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