Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Draft Text


Given I’m of the Quaker persuasion (there’s a more formal name) my angle on politics is who cheerleads wars? These are the ones I’m biased to disown, but I train myself to hear their arguments, partly so I understand what I’m up against.

Usually people who cheerlead for war are coming from a victim mindset, which typically involves wanting vengeance and redress, fantasizing about having someone get their comeuppance and so forth. That’s the pattern.

Does this mean Quakers don’t play victim? Of course we do. Speaking as a victim is like a tense in the language, akin to the subjunctive. 

Quakerism is more a monkey-bars / jungle gym of potentially beneficial workout practices, doing committee work, than it is a geopolitical ideology. 

Hatched in the 1600s, it knows nothing of many 21st Century obsessions. Yet committee work in support of a Meeting (a kind of business) remains an important opportunity.

Work out in a Quaker gym, so to speak, and you’ll probably become a more effective hotelier or restaurateur, because you were already not an avatar of violence, and therefore receptive to our teachings. 

However, if you’re an advocate for war, yet wish the attention of our Overseers (supervisors), don’t presume that your victimhood will go unchallenged, if indeed that’s what’s driving your despicable warmongering.

Sunday, November 17, 2024

Cultagory Theory (School of Tomorrow)


In the minds of some fans, presuming fans, the above might seem a bold new direction, in terms of stepping onto the world stage. But for me it's more a tying off loose ends, as I've got these long running themes I've made some waves about, and now want to further contextualize, while I'm around to do so.

However, I'm not denying there's new content. The "USA OS" meme has burgeoned and I've been in meetings about it. My School of Tomorrow curriculum has come together more tightly.

On the matter of where and how to introduce cryptography, I want to keep Elizebeth Friedman one of the portals and her crusade against the rumrunners. Glenn Stockton educated me about this chapter. He'd been a cryptanalyst (a code breaker) himself and during his stint with the NSA, Elizebeth's husband William's works, which she'd help organize, were still classified.

The Roaring 20s, Prohibition, and Bucky Fuller's experiences with radio, including encryption, sets up a  prequel chapter to WW2, with Alan Turing and the Martians of Science (see Istvan Hargittai's book). The Vienna Circle features prominently as well, for its contributions to logic, music, and psychoanalysis. We pick up on Fuller's remarks about Freud and the importance of the invisible, relating to the metaphysical.

From Freud we jump to Bernays and those Adam Curtis documentaries about the powers of persuasion and their importance in manufacturing consent. Now that Natural Language Processing has shown us ways to model word embeddings by means of a vectorized Hilbert Space, we're better able to appreciate "tensegrity" as Fuller meant it.

Thursday, November 14, 2024

21st Century Data Science

When I got to Princeton in 1976, graduating 1980, the stats department was already using APL to teach stats. I wasn't taking any stats but was looking over the shoulders of classmates, and for sure APL looked interesting, so I tackled that. APL = A Programming Language, by Kenneth Iverson, then at Harvard.

Nowadays I'm in that same realm, laying foundations in basic Python for ascending the data science mountain, a metaphor I'll use, and reminiscent of the "Calculus Mountain" I'd often decry on Math Forum, ala Andrew Hacker's The Math Myth. Calculus Mountain is abused by admin cullers to separate people from their dreams. 

So couldn't Data Science Mountain be used just as abusively? Surely it could be. Depends on the school, the curriculum. My approach is to encourage many options, many pathways, posed to a consumer willing to self educate (that's idealistic, I realize). 

If a high schooler prefers a discrete math route, such as statistics, abet that with more number and group theory, some programming, and accredit these cohorts and college ready. If their discipline requires calculus, let the discipline teach it the way it needs its students to learn it, as it comes in many flavors.

In retrospect, tackling programming has become closer to taking up an instrument, a more broadly spread skill. In this case you're the music composer, with ways of making the music loop (repeat) or flow conditionally and interactively..

The musician is in the composer role in other words, whereas the instrument plays itself (like a player piano), at superhuman speeds.

And why should only electrical or electronics engineers learn the flute? 

Obviously the question is rhetorical, the point being there's no reason stats can't be an entre into computer programming, and in fact stats have provided such a doorway since mainframes serving universities became available. The big corporations needed to keep churning out future staff. They would make their donations in the form of hardware. The PC revolution followed the same pattern, with many schools receiving tax deductible equipment donations.

Princeton had APL terminals scattered all over, including in my dorm (Princeton Inn) and at the Firestone Library. I taught myself APL, and much later J, also with Dr. Iverson on the team. I was following from Portland, writing web pages on that language, some of which Iverson saw as he helped spot some typos.

APL and J are what we now call "array based languages", such as R and BQN. Operations are performed on n-dimensional arrays, treating the latter as atomic, whereas in conventional computer languages, one has to write busy looping code to hit all the cells in the matrix, one by one. 

The Python community got busy a while back adding array-based packages, such as numpy (Travis Oliphant, 2005) and pandas (Wes McKinney, 2008), which allowed it to stay competitive in the APL-friendly array-based arena. 

Python might seem less pithy than say APL or BQN, as it sticks with the ascii-qwerty keyboard and prefers a more English wordy syntax, even though Guido himself (Python’s inventor) is a Dutchman. 

My students come through Python to the tabular data structure of rows and columns we're so used to from ancient times. Ledgers of rows and columns are in no way a new invention. Computer code becomes a way of automating the job of ledger keepers tasked with keeping those ledgers accurate and up to date, once their composer-designer has orchestrated the perfect system (I’m being idealistic again)..

Equipped with these tools, a data scientists learns to lay pipe (metaphoric pipe) from where the sluices open, allowing raw data to flow in, through successive shaping, cleaning, cutting and patching operations that transform said data into something pristine, polished and suitable for the gods. 

The gods, in this case, are the model makers of Machine Learning, where the models are like golden egg, crystal ball, magic flutes that predict (with some likelihood) the future. Data science is about inferring and predicting, and also about sensing and measuring. How small a data sample might I get away with, and still reliably track the action? That question becomes a topic for deep analysis.

Where data science meets machine learning is where Artificial Intelligence gets much of its nutrition, in terms of achieving practical results, such as when performing text to voice, voice to text, text to graphics, text to video, and extruding synthetic suggestive strands from the LLMs. 

Those famous deep learning neural network algorithms fit in here. Welcome to Hilbert Space.  

Data science is as much about data visualization (showing what’s so)  as about stochastic extrapolation (predicting what’s next). Data science is about providing dashboards, often updated in real time, meaning a set or combination of instruments sufficient to monitor and perhaps influence or control a situation (I’m bundling the car steering wheel and pedals in with the dashboard instruments).


Data science is largely about anticipating the future based on the intelligent leveraging of what's known about the past.

In my Heuristics for Teachers regarding my Silicon Forest Digital Math, the data science stuff mostly fits into my Casino Math, one of four realms. 

Casino Math about risk, taking a gamble, rolling the dice, and developing winning strategies, designing games and simulations, imparting best practices and training chief risk officers. 

The Silicon Forest is in the North American Pacific Northwest where casinos play an important role in the economy. Next to Casino Math we have Supermarket Math, Martian Math and Neolithic Math.

What's true about learning basic programming is one cannot help but butt up against well-worn math topics such as: sets, set operations, number sequences (rule based), random numbers, primes, fibonacci numbers, cryptography, the web, history of the internet, and so on. 

A data scientist is someone becoming fluent with a lot of lore, especially as the discipline becomes increasingly about representing data sets geospatially and considering Planet Earth the relevant display object. 

Landlubber math gets augmented with lat/long and spherical trig. The data scientist is likewise a geographer, taking advantage of what GIS/GPS has to offer.

Monday, November 11, 2024

Dorkbots or Dorks for Short


Friday, November 08, 2024

Isolationism

I hear a lot of talking head pundits expressing their frustration with "isolationist" tendencies within the American electorate, as if blundering on the world stage, pistols drawn, shooting at anything that moves, weren't a perfect recipe for self-isolating. 

I can't think of a more isolationist regime than this outgoing one run by President Blinken (not a typo). Threatening the world with sanctions or worse is no way to make friends. To alienate everyone else is to isolate oneself: these are basic facts of English grammar.

The real issue is the world needs high IQ solutions whereas bombing and rubblizing is low IQ barbaric. We see a lot of throwback Planet of the Apes behavior, as outgoing boomers act out their tired old fantasies, juvenile and retro though they be. No one can stop them apparently. The endless cycle of revenge, punch and counterpunch, keeps the melodrama churning.

Whereas the males of the planet deserve better, the oldsters still see them as cannon fodder, expendable, unto "the last Ukrainian" as they say. The IDF is likewise full of males and females alike who never signed up to become expendable extras in someone else's grand plan. Hearts and minds are still relevant.

As always, we need to draw the line between respect and fear. People may fear being carpet bombed by B52s, but I can't think of anyone I know who thinks carpet bombing is the answer, or has respect for those that do. My inner circle isn't that degenerate. Too bad if yours is. I'm not an isolationist in that way, even if you are.

Monday, November 04, 2024

Yurt Village

Biofirm

Screen Shot 2024-11-03 at 8.33.58 AM

Friday, November 01, 2024

Hardball City

Hardball City 2

hardball_city_3

hardball_city_1

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

Ant Works

My School of Tomorrow, in terms of curriculum, is not trying to be all things to all people. On the spectrum, it’s further from For Everyman (mainstream) and closer to Quirky Kirby (one guy’s take).

For example, in the course of learning more about Zelda Fitzgerald from her grandson, as his guest, I was constructing a mental timeline of that time between the wars, WW1 and WW2. H.G. Wells came to New York City for a confab on how to prevent further warring, post-WW1. 

He’s writing in the first person, as a journalist on the ground, at the scene. He mentions his giddiness, the effect of being in a booming city, quite different from the mood in Europe.

In looking for something to quote from those writings, I came across his Empire of the Ants. That got me to reading and listening. He’d become friends with Joseph Conrad. Here we’re going up the Amazon to battle smart ants. Which takes me to ants more generally and the M4W “codacombs”. Ants, the many species thereof, is a core topic in that tunnel system.

Speaking of Zelda, what’s coming together is the graph connecting women’s suffrage, Dora Marsden, Prohibition, Art Deco, flappers, Great Gatsby, roaring 20s, H.G. Wells, feminism, Nick Consoletti’s mom, (a French woman who embodied independence — she comes later on the timeline). 

Orson Welles, Hearst, Homer Davenport, Silverton, New Thought, ETs, UAPs, science fiction, Martian Math… now add in all the Bucky stuff. We’re talking about a time period (the 1900s basically) consisting of partially overlapping world lines (time tunnels, scenarios).

Friday, October 25, 2024

Casino Math (USA OS)


Wednesday, October 23, 2024

Tractor Math

STEAM Powered BASKET Tractor
Tractor Math

You may have seen our BASKET tractor before, in another context. We were saying BASKET meets STEAM, which we're saying here too, but we want to put the tractor to work, pulling a mower that plants Unicode seeds.

Lest you suppose Unicode is something proprietary or underground, on the contrary it's a public standard and your emoji are encoded therein. Meaning when we do tractor canvases, one could say fields as if seen from high up, from a drone's vantage point, we get to paint with a full palette, anything within the range of fonts used, which may be many.
Unicode on Windows

We've used our Unicode and/or ASCII art output to show the Mandelbrot Set, to write simple messages, to write out patches of skulls for a Halloween greeting card. What I've suggested to some Facebook friends they go to Youtube and look for my Lightning Talk on Pythonic Andragogy. Quite a few of you have maybe already seen it, or were even there at the time, in Santa Clara, large meeting hall, at a Pycon.

Another Youtube I have out there, Leveraging Python, likewise gets into a lot of tractor imagery. And yet back then I had yet to drive one, a gap in my knowledge base since partially rectified.
Looking Up an Emoji by Hex Code

So what's the BASKET stuff, even if my Just Use It! Mandelbrot tractor doesn't use it? 

One of our main mentors around here was into dissecting polyhedrons in terms of his own vocabulary of particular tetrahedron shaped modules, irregular, relatively sized. A & B have the same volume, T & E have the same shape, while S seems an outlier, and there you have it: BEAST. 

However a couple K-named guys, Koski especially, but also Kirby, ended up with a 7.5 volumed rhombic triacontahedron we wanted to emphasize and came to the conclusion that: 

(a) BEAST could be rendered less scary by adding a K and 
(b) the K was warranted, because the 7.5 RT, three halves times the 5.0 RT, holds hands the the 6.0 RD (rhombic dodecahedron). 

The K therefore shares the shape of the ET (so KET or TEK is a family) in being 1/120th of an RT, 60 left handed, 60 right handed.