Cate’s snow day

January 20th, 2009

It doesn’t snow very much down in these parts of South Carolina.  There’s so little snow here that today was Cate’s first time to see snow anywhere other than on the television.

It’s good that the college was closed, since that meant that we could stay howm today and allow Cate to enjoy the snow with us.

Cate's first snow day:  January 20, 2009.  Cate has noticed that she can leave footprints, so she's started stomping around the front yard.

Cate's first snow day: January 20, 2009. Cate has noticed that she can leave footprints, so she's started stomping around the front yard.

Cate enjoyed the snow quite a bit.  She was so wild abut the snow that we ended up taking her outside about four different times over the course of the day.  Cate has also learned the basics of the snowball fight – how to make snowballs, and how to throw them at things.  At the moment, she prefers large, stationary targets to moving ones.

Targets like Patty's car!

Targets like Patty's car!

I wonder if there will be any snow left for Cate to play in tomorrow afternoon.

We’re not looking for a few good chemists

January 18th, 2009

Are you a chemistry major hoping for a good job in the next year or two?  Well, you might still have some time to change your major …

According to C&E News, the American chemical industry has shed some 15.000 jobs this past year.  That’s 1.7% – pretty comparable to the 1.9% drop we’ve seen in the whole country.  Unfortunately, these figures are also missing some recent big layoffs from several major chemical companies.

Ouch.

Circuit City circling the drain

January 16th, 2009

Like Patty just said to me, this is hard to believe.  A huge electronics chain closes down while personal electronics are so popular.  But Circuit City now appears to be gone.

Circuit City Stores Inc. says it has reached an agreement with liquidators to sell the merchandise in its 567 U.S. stores after failing to find a buyer or a refinancing deal.

I felt a great disturbance in the economy, as if thirty thousand workers cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced. I fear something terrible has happened.

Friday cat: New Year’s Party

January 16th, 2009

“Friday cat” is back for the New Year!

I'm never going to do that much catnip again!

I'm never going to do that much catnip again!

Hiding  under the blankets isn’t usually Ash’s thing.  So, I suppose that Ash is feeling just a little bit hung over after her New Year’s Eve catnip party.


For more animal friends, visit The Friday Ark!

State of the State

January 15th, 2009

Governor Sanford had his “State of the State” address last night.  While I didn’t get a chance to watch it live, The State has a transcript up for us to9 read and analyze.

A common theme among conservatives is that government is wasteful.  While that’s true in a sense, it isn’t helpful.  Alternative systems for providing services that the government does are also wasteful – perhaps even more so than the comparable government system. (Consider the cost of our health care system compared to most other industrialized nations with various forms of “government” health care…)  Governor Sanford suggests that …

[…] every one of us tied to government can follow the lead of working South Carolinians in being creative in finding ways to do more with less. Whether in Dillon or Grey Court or Yemassee, doing more with less is what families across our state are indeed doing everyday – and those of us who work in government should find ways to honor these daily decisions being made by the people who pay for government.

It’s as if he doesn’t recognize that most of us state workers have been asked to do “more with less” for quite some time now.  As my three loyal readers know, I’ve worked as an instructor at one of our technical schools for nearly a decade.  I’ve watched enrollment increase as state funding stagnates.  Faculty workloads have increased because of all these new students, while at the same time money for salary increases to merely keep up with inflation and money for needed upgrades and maintenance to classrooms and labs has disappeared.

On a personal note, when I decided to introduce a digital blackboard to my classes – to make note-taking and interactive problem solving easier for my students – the money for the device came out of my own salary.  “Doing more with less”, indeed.

How about the governor and legislature figuring out how to make sure state services are adequately funded during times of economic stress.  In other words, a way to keep state services operational when these services are needed most.  Helpful hint:  The solution  probably doesn’t involve this:

The second leg of what we have proposed to stimulate the economy is a flat tax of 3.65 percent in one’s individual income tax return.

[…]

To pay for this part of the tax cut, we would raise our lowest in the nation cigarette tax from seven cents to 37 cents.

Jacking up the cigarette tax and using the money to prop up another tax cut strikes me as counterproductive at best.  Increases in the cigarette tax should be used for funding to help keep people off of cigarettes in the first place.  Subsidizing cigarette taxes for income tax is otherwise simply a way of taxing the poor, who are more likely to smoke and less likely to be able to quit.*** And aside from the regressive nature of this kind of tax, haven’t we already seen the dangers of substituting a stable tax for an unstable one?

*** The linked article is from the UK, but it likely holds up here, too.

No room at the inn

January 14th, 2009

This blog has been quiet recently.  That’s due to the fact that a new semester has started. New semesters mean getting swamped – not only by preparation for the semester’s classes and labs, but also by the onslaught of new students who have only just decided that they need to come to school.

Lots of them.

The president of the State Board for Technical and Comprehensive Education said “enrollment is booming” at the state’s 16 technical colleges – up to 20 percent – as laid off workers seek training for a new job.

That’s something the legislature should consider when deciding how much to slice off of the technical college budget during this legislative session.  Tech schools are retraining the state’s workforce – and they need money to do it.  Withiout adequate funding, students will come … but there will be no room at the inn.

Quarts Accuracy

January 5th, 2009

While shopping at the outlet parks over the holidays, I found a watch at the Van Heusen store.

A very accurate Van Heusen watch

A very accurate Van Heusen watch

I’m impressed.  The last watch I owned was accurate only to the nearest gallon.

Christmas lights

December 22nd, 2008

If you were in North Myrtle Beach, here’s what your Christmas lights might look like.

North Myrtle Beach, 12/22/2008 - View #1 - 1024x768 JPG

North Myrtle Beach, 12/22/2008 - View #1 - 1024x768 JPG

North Myrtle Beach, 12/22/2008 - View #2 - 1024x768 JPGh

North Myrtle Beach, 12/22/2008 - View #2 - 1024x768 JPGh

Fingernail growth

December 12th, 2008

A little while ago, about 384 hours if you want to be exact, I was in the lab doing an experiment with some of my students.  The experiment involved isolating proteins from milk, then doing some chemical tests to show that what the students had isolated was actually protein.

One of the tests the students used on their isolated protein was the xanthoproteic test.  This is a simple test for proteins that works on proteins containing an aromatic ring, and involves the addition of a nitro group to the ring by reaction with nitric acid.  If a protein or amino acid with an aromatic ring is present, the test will give a yellow color.

You may, if you’ve ever been in an introductory chemistry lab, heard your teacher warn you about nitric acid.  In addition to causing you some pain, it will also turn your skin or fingernails yellow.  This is the same sort of chemistry in the xanthoproteic test.  Your skin and nails, after all, contain proteins.

Now, back to 384 hours ago.  While I was cleaning up the lab after my students had left, I spilled a small amount of nitric acid onto the top of my finger.  Sure enough, my finger turned yellow, along with a small part of the fingernail.

Here's the nitric acid stain.  I originally spilled the acid at the point where my skin meets the fingernail.  It's moved a bit, now.

Here's the nitric acid stain. I originally spilled the acid at the point where my skin meets the fingernail. It's moved a bit, now.

384 hours after the spill, all the yellow skin had been replaced.  But the nail has to grow out.  We can find out how fast my fingernails are growing with a simple measurement.

Here's a (somewhat crude) neasurment using a ruler from the lab.  The nitric acid stain has moved about 0.18 cm.

Here's a (somewhat crude) neasurment using a ruler from the lab. The nitric acid stain has moved about 0.18 cm.

So, my fingernail has been growing at a rate of (0.18 cm) / (384 hr) = 0.00047 cm per hour.  That works out to be 3.4 mm per month, which is right about what Wikipedia claims for the average rate of fingernail growth.

Now who says you never learned anything useful from chemistry?

You can’t fight dumb with more dumb

December 10th, 2008

I’m something of a Linux advocate.  I use Linux in my everyday work as an educator, and the only machine in my house that runs a Microsoft OS is the Xbox 360.  So I found this mess linked by both Slashdot and Linux Today somewhat interesting.

If the linked blog post is accurate, a Texas middle school teacher confiscated a boy’s Linux discs because she believed that distributing the discs was illegal.  That’s definitely ignorance on the teacher’s part.  A typical Linux distribution can be freely distributed, and distribution maintainers typically encourage this sort of thing.  That a Texas middle school teacher is not aware of this isn’t really surprising.  And the teacher’s response to Linux distributions is quite silly:

No software is free and spreading that misconception is harmful. […] I along with many others tried Linux during college and I assure you, the claims you make are grossly over-stated and hinge on falsehoods.

After all, all that’s missing from here is “…I didn’t inhale.”***  Clearly, this teacher is in need of some education on what free software is.  She’s clueless.  But the response by the blogger who’s causing all the fuss is just as dumb.

Then again, being a good NEA member, you would spout the Union line. Microsoft has pumped tens of millions of dollars into your union. Of course you are going to “recommend” Microsoft Windows”. To do otherwise would probably get you reprimanded at the least and fired at the worst.

Keep in mind that this is happening in Texas, where teachers are prohibited by law from collective bargaining (or striking).  Texas just isn’t a union shop, and it’s entirely possible that this middle school teacher doesn’t even belong to a union.  And if she did, it’s unlikely to be one that could get her “reprimanded or fired” for using Linux.

Sheesh.  You can’t fight dumb with more dumb.


*** The “I tried Linux in college” quote is the reason I still think the whole thing is satire, and should be posted on The Onion.