More Cowbell and other topics
Workout notes 5 mile walk on the treadmill in 58 minutes. It felt ok; then I went to the Red Cross to make my usual semi-annual blood donation.
My hands are usually cold after this and this time was no exception.
Off beat topics
The blog Rate Your Students asked professors what is the dumbest thing that they have done this semester. Go ahead and read.

Speaking of the Rate Your Students blog, this is one episode where I side with the students. We really aren’t there to be friends with them; we are there to teach them and lead them to new intellectual vistas.
Math Fail Talk about different ends of the spectrum. Cosmic Variance has advice for physics graduate students who encounter nasty integrals.
On the other end of this spectrum, check this out (via the Fail Blog)

see more pwn and owned pictures
Liberals are up in arms over the Warren invitation.
Some are already claiming that the Obama administration is a failure and that we should have nominated Hillary Clinton instead. (Really. Maybe it might be prudent to let him get sworn in first?)
Some think that those who show up to inauguration should boo when Warren speaks.
Note: I agree with the following from this link:
Well, I’m one Obama voter who thinks there shouldn’t be a religious invocation at all. But if there is going to be one, I don’t want a creep like Warren to be the one to deliver it.
Amen.
But in fact, maybe we need more cowbell?

Kossack dansac helped me realize something in a comment he made in a JeffLieber diary. Don’t let anyone tell you that it’s all dick-and-fart jokes in a Lieber diary because that just ain’t the case.
We’re getting ready to come out of our political exile. Have you listened to Sean Hannity’s show lately? He’s already calling himself “conservatism in exile.” They are entering the wilderness we’ve been wandering through, and we’re moving out.
Daily Kos was born out of exile. It’s all we’ve ever known. Many of us became users here because we were looking for a place that made the world seem sane again. And now here we are. Things are changing, and things still seem insane!
“The more things change,” right?
I haven’t been here since the beginning, but that’s the Kossack Oral History that has been passed down to me around many a campfire. I’m probably not the best person to write this, but I think it’s important for us to realize that the site is having a bit of an identity crisis at the moment.
As dansac puts it:
But the site has fundamentally changed. There’s major identity crisis. People don’t know what it means to blog AND have a Democratic administration, it’s simply a new thing for them.
While we had Bush to kick around, we knew who to rage against. Now, I believe most people who were around for the election have taken a break, but a core audience remains behind and knows nothing but raging against the machine.
But you know something? There’s nothing to be afraid of. I have an idea.
What do we need right now? We need to strut.[...]
Note: if you don’t get the cowbell joke, watch this video.
More silliness
Do you remember Bible tracts?
Here a wife beater (who spends one week in prison) finds out that is wife beating is just old original sin and all he needs to do is to come to Jesus. Of course, his wife welcomes him back:




December 19, 2008 Posted by blueollie | 2008 Election, Barack Obama, Democrats, Friends, education, humor, obama, politics, politics/social, religion, training, walking | | 2 Comments
Ice Storm: Peoria, December 2008
Workout notes Nothing yet; I may do an easy 5 mile on the treadmill in a few minutes.
Just for the heck of it, here are some photos of our ice storm (we now have power, duh, but we didn’t for about an hour) Kudos to the utility crews!

The icy streets in our neighborhood

The front of the house. Note the tree.

My poor car!

The smoke tree. That drooping branch was on the power line before I moved it off…that is quite a bit of weight to lay on a wire.

Another tree shot.
December 19, 2008 Posted by blueollie | Illinois, Peoria, Peoria/local | | 3 Comments
End of the Semester; Obama’s picks, etc.
Workout notes: yoga class then 6 miles on the track (6.38) in 58:11; 8 lap splits (7.5 laps per mile in lane 3): 9:58, 9:43, 9:30, 9:35, 9:48, 9:35. This was similar to my December 2 workout though 43 seconds slower though this run was much, much easier.
What I am noticing is that I feel like death during the first mile (out of breath, etc. and don’t really start feeling good until 20 minutes into it).
Academia Yep, the final grades are in. I decided to post them on blackboard; but this program is set up so that you load one column of data at a time. One of my snowflakes panicked when he saw his numerical course score and final exam score (both not-so-hot) but I hadn’t loaded the final grade column yet. He got a big “benefit of the doubt” for the final grade, though given his “when can I come in and see you” e-mail…well I am very tempted to change the grade that I assigned him thereby removing the “benefit of the doubt”. (yeah, I am going to come in over break to listen to whining…NOT!!!!)
(see this article by a Georgia Tech physics professor; I’ve linked to it previously.)
Mathematics and Science
Interestingly enough, integrals came up in a blog that I read:
Having recently slogged through grading an enormous pile of graduate-level problem sets, I am compelled to share one of the most useful tricks I learned in graduate school.
Make your integrals dimensionless.
This probably seems silly to the theoretical physicists in the audience, who have a habit of changing variables and units to the point where everything is dimensionless and equals one. However, in astrophysics, you frequently are integrating over real physical quantities (numbers of photons, masses of stars, luminosities of galaxies, etc) that still have units attached. While students typically do an admirable job of setting up the necessary integrals, they frequently go off the rails when actually evaluating the integrals, as they valiantly try to propagate all those extra factors.
Here’s an example of what I mean. Suppose you want to calculate some sort of rate constant for photoionization, that when multiplied by the density of atoms, will give you the rate of photo-ionizations per volume. These sorts of rates are always density times velocity times cross section:
Go ahead and read the column; it has some interesting mathematics in it. Finally, they boil down one integral to:
Have fun! Ok, I haven’t tried this yet, but I strongly suspect that this is a residue integral or perhaps could be changed into a probability function by a clever change of variable.
Algebra
I also finished my abstract algebra grades. Here is an interesting little problem: roughly speaking, a field is a system of “numbers” in which every non zero element has a multiplicative inverse. For example, the integers don’t form a field (only 1 and -1 have a multiplicative inverse in the integers) but the rational numbers do form a field.
It is a known fact that the integers mod p (p a prime) do form a field.
So what about this question: consider the set consisting of
where
and
are mod p integers (p a prime) and
is the square root of
and multiplication is defined as it is with complex numbers. What conditions must be met for
to be a field? Hint: p = 3 and p = 7 yields fields whereas p = 5 does not!
Note: this problem is not at all difficult but you do have to play around a bit.
Science and Politics
I’ve been critical of some of Obama’s choices. But I’ve been ecstatic over others; from Science Debate 2008:
We want to congratulate President-elect Obama on continuing to assemble an outstanding science team.
A few days ago we told you about the appointment of Steven Chu as Energy Secretary.
Today we have two more outstanding appointments to announce:
1. We have learned that John Holdren will be President Obama’s Science Advisor. John has an excellent knowledge of science policy, and a deep understanding of how the public needs the government to engage on science policy issues. He is a recent past president of the AAAS and an early and ardent Science Debate 2008 supporter. You can watch a 1-minute video he did for us last February, promoting a primary science debate at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia.
2. Jane Lubchenco, we’re told, will head up President Obama’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Admninistration (NOAA). She is an outstanding choice with a deep background in marine biology. Jane is also a past AAAS president, and also an early supporter of Science Debate 2008. When we issued candidate invitations to an Oregon debate, Jane was a close advisor. Here’s a 1-minute video of her.
Why are these choices so important? Here is a 1-minute video President-elect Obama’s transition chief, John Podesta, did for us earlier this year that answers that. Clearly, this is a man who gets it, working, it seems, for a president who gets it.
There is widespread hope that these excellent picks (in science) will continue.
In all, I haven’t educated myself on all of his picks, though I’ll do so over the weekend. Here are my initial impressions:
* Department of Agriculture
Tom Vilsack: I am leaning favorable here.
* Department of Commerce
Bill Richardson: I am very happy; smart and multi-talented
* Department of Defense
Robert Gates: Yes, a Bush holdover but he appears to be smart and competent.
* Department of Education
Arne Duncan: Chicago area superintendent; I don’t know much.
* Department of Energy
Steven Chu: Nobel Laureate in Physics; head of the Livermore lab, passionate and out of this world brilliant.
* Department of Health and Human Services
Tom Daschle: lean favorable but I’ll have to learn more; I didn’t follow his Senate career all that closely though he was minority leader at one time.
* Department of Homeland Security
* Department of Housing and Urban Development
Shaun Donovan: really don’t know other than he is from New York.
* Department of the Interior
Ken Salazar: mixed; he has political skill and is the Colorado Senator; from reading the stuff he wrote I don’t get the impression that he is all that intellectual. Here is an example.
* Department of Justice
Eric Holder: I don’t know all that much about him.
* Department of Labor
* Department of State
Hillary Clinton: Love the pick. She is sharp, knowledgeable and well respected around the world.
* Department of Transportation
Ray LaHood: Barf; this guy is a mediocrity where I think excellence is needed. But one commenter at Prairie State Blue said:
Politically speaking. LaHood will help deflect some of the inevitable Republican criticism of these massive spending projects. And it’s not the job of a Cabinet Secretary to come up with fresh, imaginative solutions to complex problems. In fact, someone too in love with his own ideas could easily become a liability.
That is probably the best defense of this pick that I’ve seen.
* Department of the Treasury
Tim Geithner: seems sharp, creative and full of energy. I like the pick, but we’ll wait and see.
* Department of Veterans Affairs
Eric Shinseki: love this pick; he is best noted for falling from the grace of the Bush administration by telling the truth about how hard the Iraq occupation would be.
Ok, the Rick Warren thing
No, I don’t like the fact that is @sshole was chosen at all; I think that this wooish bigot sets a terrible example for the country. But remember this: politically speaking, this is one way to throw a bone to the yahoos (e. g., right wing evangelicals) without giving them one tiny bit of policy.
Some takes: Friendly Atheist (aka Hemant Mehta ) says to “chill out” (though he doesn’t like the pick either). He asks: “who gave Bush’s invocations? ” Of course, few really remember that.
Markos Moulitsas (founder of the Daily Kos) is disgusted but sees a silver lining:
I’m with Aravosis on this one.
I’m reading a lot about how Obama “reaches out” to his adversaries, and that’s why he’s building a track record of inviting avowed homophobes to stand front and center at his campaign events and now his inauguration.
Okay, I’m game. So we know being a gay-basher doesn’t disqualify you from a seat at the Obama table – in fact, it seems to be an outright qualification for proving Obama’s post-partisanship. If Obama prides himself on reaching out to all sides of every debate, then why is it that Obama has never sat down with, or promoted at his events, an avowed racist or anti-Semite?
Yeah. Where is David Duke’s invitation? Or as Blue Texan notes, when do Phelps and Hagee get their invitations? Heck, throw up Tom Tancredo up there for good measure, so us Latinos can feel some of the hate!
On the other hand, John Cole also has a point:
You would think that folks would be ecstatic that they have a President-elect who, for the first time I can remember, is publicly, openly, and repeatedly stating that he supports equal rights for gays and lesbians and that the Christian right is wrong about these issues [...]
I think the Warren choice is bullshit, but if we want a silver lining, it’s that the President of the United States has just said:
I am fierce advocate for equality for gay and—well, let me start by talking about my own views. I think it is no secret that I am a fierce advocate for equality for gay and lesbian Americans. It is something I have been consistent on and something I intend to continue to be consistent on during my presidency.
That’s not a bad silver lining. But let me add this to John — Obama wouldn’t be out there making perhaps the strongest statement in support of gays and lesbians by a president (though he’s still not technically one, I know) if it wasn’t for the sturm and drang this choice generated. It is precisely this backlash that has forced Obama to clearly affirm his commitment to equality. And it will be continued pressure that will force him to do the right thing on the issue.
If we shut up, he’ll take the path of least resistance. And that path of least resistance is kowtowing to the conservative media, the clueless punditocracy, and bigots like Warren.
And let’s face it: it is Barack Obama’s style to blow off his strongest supporters and reach out to the other side.
You can read what Obama has to say here:
Let me start by talking about my own views. I think that it is no secret that I am a fierce advocate for equality for gay and lesbian Americans. It is something that I have been consistent on and something that I intend to continue to be consistent on during my presidency. What I’ve also said is that it is important for America to come together, even though we may have disagreements on certain social issues, and I would note that a couple of years ago, I was invited to Rick Warren’s church to speak despite his awareness that I held views that were entirely contrary to his when it came to gay and lesbian rights, when it came to issues like abortion. Nevertheless I had an opportunity to speak, and that dialogue I think is part of what my campaign’s been all about, that we’re not going to agree on every single issue, but what we have to do is to be able to create an atmosphere where we can disagree without being disagreeable, and then focus on those things that we hold in common as Americans.
December 19, 2008 Posted by blueollie | 2008 Election, Barack Obama, bill richardson, education, hillary clinton, mathematics, obama, politics, politics/social, ranting, religion, running, training | | No Comments Yet
About Blueollie

(click to go to whitehouse.gov)
Abundibot at the Daily Kos has published a guide to Whitehouse.gov.
President Obama’s address to the National Academy of Science.
How well is President Obama doing at keeping his campaign promises? Here is an even handed running assessment.
Government is Good: a source of much is good about government.
This is my online diary. My facebook stuff is here.
Note: there is an interesting facebook application called Visible Vote by which you can record your opinions on various bills and see how your opinions compare to the votes made by your Senators and Representative.
I use this blog for the following purposes:
- To keep track of my training. I train for ultramarathons (I usually walk these) and sometimes do running races, bicycle rides and open water swims for variety. My best ultra accomplishment was walking 101 miles in 24 hours in 2004. There was a time when I could run a sub 40 minute 10K (did that once), but that was another lifetime ago; these a days 24 minutes for a 5K would be more like it. I also have an off and on interest in yoga.
- From time to time, I post what I am thinking about mathematically
- I often post links to science articles, especially articles about cosmology and evolution.
- I am very sympathetic to the “new atheist” movement, though some might consider me to be an agnostic. I reject any notion of a deity that interferes with physical events, but remain agnostic to the idea that there might be something “grand and wonderful” (Dawkins’ phrase) outside of our current spacetime continuum.
- I am a liberal Democrat who thinks that the current social atmosphere is tilted way too far toward the interests of big business, and I reject the idea that a “free market” cures all ills, though pure socialism doesn’t work either. I am also a believer in the freedom of speech, including speech that I might not like. Also, I’ve been involved (to a moderate degree) with political campaigns, ranging from City Council races up to Presidential races. I back Barack Obama enthusiastically. As far as John McCain: I admire his courage and military service but he simply doesn’t have the ability to grasp the nuances of world affairs; he simply isn’t up to the job.
- Since being targeted by neo-nazis, I’ve started to identify with the anti-racist and the anti-fa movements.
- I like to post photos of trips and vacations.
- I sometimes blog about boxing matches and football games.
- I like women in spandex.



- This is where the old blog blueollie migrated to. My old posts can be found here.
Who links to me?
Ollie is a Reality-Based Intellectualist, also known as the liberal elite. You are a proud member of what’s known as the reality-based community, where science, reason, and non-Jesus-based thought reign supreme.
Take the quiz at www.FightConservatives.com
The above refers to me; the below refers to Barbara (my wife)
Barbara is a Peace Patroller, also known as an anti-war liberal or neo-hippie. She believes in putting an end to American imperial conquest, stopping wars that have already been lost, and supporting our troops by bringing them home.
Take the quiz at www.FightConservatives.com
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