The book “On Intelligence.” is one of the most intriguing I’ve read in a long time. I read it as context to understand Dilpeet George’s thesis which is based around the concept of “Hierarchical temporal memory.” or HTM for short. HTM is a mathematical model of a learning machine based on the organization of the neocortex of the mammalian brain. HTM is a tree, with a complex interface between the nodes. At the bottom of the tree are the sensors: touch, light, sound, smell. At the top it the hippocampus, which seems to have its own rules. The focus in HTM is the nodes between root and leaf.
Category Archives: Philosophy
I don’t want Star Wars 3-D
I want, instead, the series that I was promised as a pre-teen boy back when the original movie came out. The series I never got. Let’s review:
Fedora as an Adjective
I’m reading the IRC #fedora-board-meeting as I write this, with a discussion going on about the Vision statement for Fedora and it occurs to me that Fedora is really an Adjective.
My “Two Main Problems With Java” Rant
This is not an Anti-Java rant Per Se. It is a rant about the two main things missing from the language that force people into code heavy work-arounds.
Java has two flaws that hurt programmers using the language. The first is that the reflection API does not provide the parameter names for a function. The second is that Java allows null pointers. This article explains why these two flaws are the impetus for many of the workarounds that require a lot of coding to do simple things. This added complexity in turn leads to code that is harder to maintain and less performant.
Earning the right
I recently read a complaint that the Ushers at Michael Jackson’s funeral wearing what appeared to be West Point Full Dress uniforms was insulting.
Men’s fashion has always been derived from military uniforms. Look at many hotel employees, SGT Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band, or any Gum Shoe that walked down the street wearing a WWI era trench coat. In the days of horses, gentlemen wore long tall boots, long stockings and short breeches, all of which were driven off the cavalry needs to not get caught up in your stirrups. High hats with plumes came from the uniforms designed to make the front rank look taller. The original designs were practical for military purposes, the later often mimicked the form without providing the function.
Jim Peckham ran a wrestling camp where the motto was “Earning the Right to Win.” I like the concept that a Right is something that can be denied to those who haven’t met the minimum standard. Yes, life, liberty and pursuit of happiness are the right of all, but victory is the right of the one who has earned it.
If you earned the right to wear the uniform and then dishonour it, that is insulting. If you never earned the right to wear the uniform and wear clothes that look like it, it is merely that same sincere form of flattery shown by a younger brother that wears his older brothers Jacket. If the ushers claimed to be Active duty military, that would be inappropriate, probably illegal, but even then it would not be insulting.
In the days when gentlemen carried sabres, and were expected to protect their honour at the risk of their life, it was understood that a Gentleman could only be insulted by another gentleman. While the modern USA is an egalitarian society, I still reserve the right to select who is entitled to insult me. You have to earn that right.
Attitude Shift
When I got out of the Army, I had the choice of moving back to Massachusetts or anywhere closer to my last duty station. Since I was in Hawaii at the time, I could choose from a huge swatch of the country. I went on several job interviews, and had a few places I could have moved. I picked for location as much as for the job: I moved to San Francisco.
Continue readingMove to Red Hat
Sometimes you can’t tell where you are headed. But, after a while, if you look back, you realize that you have been headed in a straight line exactly where you want to go. Such is the case, I find, with my current acceptance of an offer of employment at Red Hat.
Very shortly, I will take a position as a senior software engineer at Red Hat, in Westford , MA. I am on the team responsible for, amongst other things, Red Hat Satellite Server. This pulls together several two trends in my career: Java, Linux, Systems Mangement, and JBoss. I look forward to posting lessons learned from this new venture.
Subjective
Last week, a friend and I had a discussion regarding the question of whether Quality was subjective. While I subscribe to the position that quality was neither subjective nor objective a-la Robert Pirsig, I found myself unable to defend that position. The argument was disturbing for several reasons. First, when I attempted to show that this was an absurd position, I was accused of changing the subject, or redefining terms, etc. I have to question whether I was. Perhaps the word “Quality” is, as my opponent in the discussion stated, the very definition of Subjective. If Quality is not Subjective, then nothing is. If a subject is defined by their values, if a person is nothing but values, as Pirsig states, then isn’t the perceived quality purely subjective? Do to the very enjoyable adversarial nature of this discussion, I shall refer to the other participant as my opponent.
From another point of view, if two people agree that something has quality, it just means that their subjective view of quality aligns.
An example he gave was that “A long law is a bad law.” This is an objective guideline, but accepting it is subjective. One problem with this argument is that I feel fairly certain that he does not, nor does anyone agree to this hard and fast, but most people would agree that the longer a law, and , by implication, the harder it is to understand, the worse a law it is likely to be. This concept could be hammered out to the point of actually providing a guideline for judgment of law quality.
Response to yet another “Atlas is Shrugging” Article
Oh no, not you too. If I see one more of these “Ayn Rand’s messages are about to come true” articles I am going to…not sure exactly what. Listen, Rand has a fundamental Flaw in her philosophy. I ‘ve written about it earlier. OK, so lets forget the her basic premise is flawed, cuz she still might be right despite that.
Cool it with the Ayn Rand comparisons
No, we are not entering the time of Atlas Shrugged. No, Obama’s plan to deal with the economic melt down is not the same thing as the various acts passed during Atlas Shrugged. No, we are no about to enter a world dominated by socialism.
If you feel the need to drop out of society and move to a valley in Colorado, please feel free to do so. I will be understandably jealous.