These moral standards apply to
everyone, even when we age beyond youth. Life isn't too different
when we're all grown up. Responsibilities may greater, but the
difficulty of our challenges tend to stay relative to our ability to
handle them. Those same principles that help a youth tackle the
challenges of youth-hood will help an adult handle the challenges of
adult-hood.
CS404
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
First Things First
A man's death bed regret is never
failure to achieve the next level in his favorite video game. Time
is a precious gift, one not to be idled away in enticing game play.
Our time should be given to those people or things that matter most.
Video games should never trump relationships.
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
The Half Life of Knowledge
Knowledge decays over time as society
transforms by adopting new technology. Nobody knows how to work a
VCR or a cassette player anymore. Therefore, it is important to
focus on knowledge that won't likely become outdated. Everything
else we can look up on Wikipedia.
Long term knowledge isn't tied to any
particular technology or application. Algebra is a good example
because no matter what language or platform you program for, you
still have to manipulate numbers. Though my eventual career may be
in a technological field that does not now exist, chances are algebra
will come in handy. The more I am tied to a particular technology,
the most limited I am in my opportunities in life. If, rather, I can
learn good foundational skills that apply in every field, then I can
adapt when the world shifts again.
One pertinent example is the realm of
social media. It has transformed that landscape, but the people on
the landscape are still fundamentally the same. Facebook friends
have not changed the nature of friendship or people's need for a few
deep, personal relationships. You will be better served by learning
relationship skills outside the context of social media, and then
applying them to the social media landscape.
Monday, November 18, 2013
"C'mon Women, Call the Bluff Already!"
If someone verbally advising against
your career of choice deters you from pursuing it, you probably don't
want it bad enough anyway. Even more so, if stereotypes, which are
perceived but not real opposition, are keeping women from studying
computer science, then perhaps it is for the best. The real problem
is that pre-college exposure to computer science (CS) is so limited
that both males and females need to rely on stereotypes to evaluate
CS as a potential career. The solution is not to change the
stereotypes, but to decrease ignorance by increasing early exposure.
Once an individual has decided on CS, outside pressure shouldn't have
any influence on that decision.
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
If Kids Enjoyed School
Students in school and developers in
open source software both do work, but achieve very different
results. On the one hand, open source developers novel projects of
their own choosing and set their own deadlines. On the other hand,
teachers assign students to jump through hoops by certain deadlines.
Unlike the open source environment, school kills incentive to
innovate because school work has no real value outside school. The
open source paradigm has a superior power to motivate because
contributors like what they do and make something of value for
themselves and the world. Other systems, like school, would be wise
to adopt some of these principles.
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
The Gospel to All the World
The medium is the message. Newspapers
are for news. TV is for entertainment and commercials. The Internet
is for, well, everything. Many web pages (especially social media)
have a unique way to spread content and can be considered a unique
medium. These media are still relatively new, and the content is
produced by amateurs, so the expected messages are not fixed. Have
you ever said, “that doesn't belong here,” in response to
anything you've seen on Facebook? Probably not, because Facebook
content is a digital form of everyday conversation, which can be
anything anyone feels like talking about. Then, is there any reason
to say that the Internet is not a medium for spreading the gospel?
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