Chess is Back in Style

Thursday, September 10, 2009
posted by mattadmin

Chess is one of the most popular games in the world today and has origins from India and Southern Europe century’s ago. I’ve recently noticed more and more people playing the game. Chess is definitely back in style. Try it at your next party or family gathering. If casinos could monetize it, chess would probably become more popular than Texas hold’em.

Chess is very inexpensive to purchase at your local store or it can be played for free online. I have used CHESSHere.com and recommend it if you like to play online.

Quit Tobacco, Cigarettes or Smokeless

Thursday, September 3, 2009
posted by mattadmin

For those trying to quit tobacco, whether it be cigarettes or smokeless, here is a simple and cost effective solution, peppermints. Smoking or chewing tobacco has one big thing in common above and beyond just the nicotine, your mouth. The tobacco for some people can really be more about doing something with the mouth then the smoke or nicotine like a pacifier or pen that you chew on. If that is the case for you, try a peppermint to keep your mouth busy during the time you would normally be using tobacco and if not try this solution anyways. Peppermints do have sugar, but for the most part they are cheap and often times even free if you go to the right restaurant. Peppermints are a perfect, non-additive solution to quit for good. Once you’ve gone a few weeks without chewing or smoking, simply wean yourself off of the peppermints and consider yourself a non-smoker.

We’ve all seen the gum, the pills, the patch, and now the water vapor. Well peppermints won’t give you crazy dreams or other side effects, unless you go overboard and get a tooth cavity. And while the new water vapor solutions might not be as bad for you or as smelly, it still reinforces the same behavior and can be a much more costly solution.

Whatever you choose, don’t quit quiting and kick the habit… you’ll be glad you did and proud of the accomplishment. Avoid cancer, bad breath, smelly clothes, yellow teeth, receding gum lines, yellow walls, second hand smoke, house fires, burn holes, and save a ton of money on tobacco and healthcare.

The Genius of reCAPTCHA

Tuesday, September 1, 2009
posted by mattadmin

Here is a stroke of genius for you… a professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, Luis von Ahn (biglou), developed the CAPTCHA and now had developed the reCAPTCHA to help stop SPAM on the Web and digitize books. Have you ever filled out a form on the Internet and then had to type a word or phrase from a distorted image to submit the form? Well that distorted and annoying image of a word, phrase, or numbers is called a CAPTCHA. CAPTCHAs stop computers from filling out forms thousands of times automatically and help web developers detect a human submitting real information vs. a spammer using a script to create thousands of fake submissions. After inventing the CAPTCHA and realizing how much time we were actually wasting on these distorted annoying images, Luis von Ahn set out to do something productive with that time, digitize books. Here is what one looks like:

reCAPTCHA Example

One of these words is known so it can be checked against what you typed in order to determine that you are human. The second word is not known and will be presented to many people and confirmed against all the responses to digitize a book and help assist an optical computer recognition program that couldn’t read the word or numbers and needs a little help from us humans. Very cool, very innovative and every webmaster should use this over any other CAPTCHA tool out there as it helps solve a problem and is very easy to integrate.

CAPTCHA = Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart

reCAPTCHA also helps protect your email address on the Web by forcing someone to answer a CAPTCHA before revealing the email address to a human instead of some computer spider seeking to send you SPAM. The program is called Mailhide and is also strongly recommended.

Luis was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship ( “genius award”) in 2006 and is the recipient of a Microsoft New Faculty Fellowship. He has also been named one of the 50 Best Brains in Science by Discover Magazine, and has made it to numerous recognition lists that include Popular Science Magazine’s Brilliant 10, Silicon.com’s 50 Most Influential People in Technology, and Technology Review’s TR35: Young Innovators Under 35. So basically he is a smart dude doing innovative things and helping to make the world better and more efficient.

Finally, his GWAP site uses games to tag images, sounds, videos, etc. to help search engines provide more accurate results with this new Web content and is worthwhile to look at as well.

Communication Warfare

Saturday, August 29, 2009
posted by mattadmin
The Tehran, Iran uprising this year after the disputed June presidential election sparked a new idea in future warfare. If you watched CNN or any other channel, you would have seen iReporters, Facebook posts, Tweets, and various other forms of communication coming out of Iran. The country quickly blocked access to sites in an effort to control communication coming out of the country. Iran can’t make up its mind as to whether or not it will block or unblock sites as it continues to exercise its power over its people’s freedom.
So on to the idea, if popular social networking sites can have such an impact in the media and enhance the power of the people in countries where the government attempts to suppress its people then why not consider communication warfare instead of traditional warfare? What if the United Nations had dropped supplies into Iran giving them more power to communicate? Supplies being computers, cell phones, digital cameras, video cameras, software, satellite Internet access that can’t be controlled by the country, and any other gear that could be used to increase communication and the voice of the people.
During the Iraq wars, those opposed to the war used the argument that the people don’t want the U.S. and others in their country and that may or may not be correct. So instead of dropping bombs in certain situations maybe we need to drop communications to empower the people so they can communicate what they want. Countries in wars have to take over all kinds of communications gear anyways, but ultimately we could keep soldiers and innocent people out of harm’s way and drop communications hardware instead of deploying deadly weapons.
I think it should also be said that this idea may only be part of a broader solution. When dealing with terrorists, modern tactics of deadly warfare may be required, but it would be nice to have some alternative ideas that could potentially help avoid a major war and the deaths and injuries that result.

The Tehran, Iran uprising this year after the disputed June presidential election sparked a new idea in future warfare. If you watched CNN or any other channel, you would have seen iReporters, Facebook posts, Tweets, and various other forms of communication coming out of Iran. The country quickly blocked access to sites in an effort to control communication coming out of the country. Iran can’t make up its mind as to whether or not it will block or unblock sites as it continues to exercise its power over its people’s freedom.

So on to the idea, if popular social networking sites can have such an impact in the media and enhance the power of the people in countries where the government attempts to suppress its people then why not consider communication warfare instead of traditional warfare? What if the United Nations had dropped supplies into Iran giving them more power to communicate? Supplies being computers, cell phones, digital cameras, video cameras, software, satellite Internet access that can’t be controlled by the country, and any other gear that could be used to increase communication and the voice of the people.

During the Iraq wars, those opposed to the war used the argument that the people don’t want the U.S. and others in their country and that may or may not be correct. So instead of dropping bombs in certain situations maybe we need to drop communications to empower the people so they can communicate what they want. Countries in wars have to take over all kinds of communications gear anyways, but ultimately we could keep soldiers and innocent people out of harm’s way and drop communications hardware instead of deploying deadly weapons.

I think it should also be said that this idea may only be part of a broader solution. When dealing with terrorists, modern tactics of deadly warfare may be required, but it would be nice to have some alternative ideas that could potentially help avoid a major war and the deaths or injuries that result.

Obama, Henry Louis Gates, & Sgt. James Crowley

Tuesday, August 25, 2009
posted by mattadmin

I know this post is a little late, but seeing all the hullabaloo in the news about this and President Obama’s involvement have given me cause to make a statement about the story. We all know that Obama is the first black president and I’m sure he is sensitive to issues of race as we all should be, but I think his statements that the police were “stupid” and the final “beer” meeting just send the wrong message. I think as president your response should be that if Sgt. James Crowley suspected Henry Louis Gates of possible criminal activity because of the color of his skin, then that is wrong. And if Henry Louis Gates assumed that the police were targeting him because of his race, then that is also wrong. If I could speculate for a moment, I’d speculate that Henry Louis Gates & Sgt. James Crowley were probably both wrong in this situation, and then they got to have a beer with the President.

The Start of Something Good

Tuesday, August 25, 2009
posted by mattadmin

Peotician.com’s goal is easier said than done. The goal is to discuss and devise innovative solutions to problems throughout the world. Since most major issues are debated publically, that’s where the name of the blog, Peotician, comes from. Peotician is the combination of two words, “People” and “Politician.” The reason for this is to emphasize that politics is about issues and issues are about solving problems for people, not lobbyists, financial contributors, and other distracting constituents that affect the judgments of our elected officials.

Please feel free to contact me or contribute to this blog in a constructive manner. Please don’t try to advertise or SPAM this blog as attempts will be thwarted. As always, feel free to provide ideas, opinions, and feedback.

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