COMPUTER CHEMISTRY

Science — acosta @ 11:40 am

In this month’s Physics Today, there is an article called “Chemistry on the computer”. The first major quote from the article caught my eye. It comes from Auguste Comte, a natural philosopher, in 1830.

Every attempt to employ mathematical methods in the study of chemical questions must be considered profoundly irrational and contrary to the spirit of chemistry. If mathematical analysis should ever hold a prominent place in chemistry — an aberration which is happily almost impossible — it would occasion a rapid and widespread degeneration of that science.

Awesome. I don’t think that Mr. Comte would be very happy with me or a number of people here at Vdov.net.

HAWAII, FINALLY

Personal — acosta @ 1:08 pm

Many (some) of you might remember my last attempt at going to Hawaii. It was after my first year of college and myself, shollen, aboone and ifriedrich (no he doesn’t contribute to Vdov but I have to keep things consistent) had planned to go and stay there for about a week. I had tickets and everything. Then I came down with an absolutely horrific case of mono and couldn’t go. Shollen, aboone and ifriedrich went without me while I was lying on either the couch in my house or in a hospital bed. Awesome.

Well, tomorrow I finally rectify this as I’m traveling to Hawaii for Jason & Mica’s wedding. I’m in Honolulu tomorrow night then Molokai till Monday (where I have an 8 hour layover in Honolulu, I think I’ll go exploring). Not only is this going to be an awesome trip, but it will be the 45th state I’ve visited. That leaves only Alaska, North Dakota, Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas left on the list.

I really have no idea if I’ll have internet access there so you may or may not see Twitter feed updates from me during the trip. If not, trust me, I’ll be enjoying being completely unplugged and unable to be contacted. Otherwise, of course, I can’t help myself.

Cheers.

CHINA TIBET AND OLYMPICS

Politics, Site, World — afischer @ 5:19 pm

“Our contest is not only whether we ourselves shall be free, but whether there shall be left to mankind an asylum on earth for civil and religious liberty.” -Samuel Adams

Vdov.net is not normally prone to politicking and this post is mostly about principles rather than politics. The authors here, from what I know of them personally, tend toward unfettered freedom rather than more tempered and restrained freedom. I am personally enamoured of the cause of liberty wherever it arises. I have a soft spot in my heart for all democratic reformers and movements that sincerely want to replace repressive regimes with open societies governed by democratic principles, whether that be anti-theocratic student movements in Iran or the Free Tibet movement. (more…)

TOWN HALL WITH OBAMA

Personal, Politics — acosta @ 8:35 pm

Tonight I went to a town hall meeting with Senator Barack Obama in Lafayette, Indiana. Those of you who know me well are well aware of my feelings on the candidates, though I don’t consider Vdov the appropriate venue for that kind of analysis. As such I’d rather talk about the “Town Hall” experience rather than specifics about Obama and his platform. I had never been to one of these rallies before and it was a pretty interesting experience.

I had to show up and wait nearly 2 hours in line yesterday to get tickets for this town hall, and I showed up more than 2 hours early to get an even slightly reasonable seat. Now, it was a relatively small venue (a high school gym), and pretty much everyone had a decent seat, but I didn’t know that ahead of time. Getting into the venue was more or less going through an airport security checkpoint, only a bit worse. Not only was I “metal-detectored”, but I had a *very* complete wand scan as well. At about 5 o’clock, someone came out to recite the Pledge of Allegiance. This was interesting: I probably hadn’t said the Pledge of Allegiance since middle school. Then a pastor came out and gave a prayer. Another 20 minutes passed by before a major political figure in Lafayette/West Lafayette came out and gave a sort of pre-rally pump-up speech on issues important to her and those that would conceivably be addressed by an Obama administration. It was all pretty mundane up until the final speaker introducing Obama to the crowd. He was a regular guy from Lafayette who owned a small business, and who had obviously never given a major speech to that many people (over 3000) in his life. Most striking was his choice of attire. He was dressed in a ratty sweater and kakhis. I imagine this wasn’t intentional, though I have since decided that it was probably a play to the audience: before the big-wigs come out, get someone truly “of-the-people” to speak. Then he introduced Obama.

Obama looks exactly like you’d expect him to. The only other even pseudo-celebrity I have ever met/seen in person was Matt Fox (of Lost and other fame), and he looked completely different in person than he does on TV. Not Obama. I could have sworn I was just watching a youtube video or reading a Drudge Report headline when he took the stage. The only thing I’ll mention about the speech itself was that it was refreshingly original in structure. Yes, he talked about exactly what I thought he would talk about, tailoring it slightly to the Indiana audience, but the flow of the speech was new (at least as far as the videos I’ve seen of him previously … they are numerous). Standing ovations were abundant, as expected. However, it was only after the speech that things got really interesting.

He took questions. And the questions from the audience were interesting. The first question came from a middle-aged to slightly-over middle-aged woman who had obviously experienced some significant hardship in her life. There’s no question that she had real, serious problems that she was concerned about. But her 15 minutes of fame was ill-conceived. Instead of asking a well thought out question, she instead droned on about everything that was wrong with her life in great detail, to the point where it just sounded like she was whining. Then she says “what can you do for me *before* you get elected to fix all my problems?” Absurd. Here she actually has the opportunity to ask a real question and instead decides to kill her opportunity. I realized afterward that her question effectively boiled down to and would have been equivalent to her asking Obama to come over to her house and fix her broken down TV, an obviously ridiculous way to spend your time with a direct voice to the candidate. Obama did what he could: in this case all he could do is address some of the issues she brought up and those he had specific plans for, and try to come out of it looking good and with a cheer from the audience. He certainly succeeded.

The rest of the questions were fine. A cute little elementary school girl came out and asked a question her parents had obviously written down on a card for her about national and sub-national testing in elementary and secondary education, for which she received a standing ovation. It was a good question, and the audience responded in kind. Other questions were directed at specific issues, such as his thoughts on the election of supreme court justices (the most interesting of the questions and a policy of Obama’s I had not heard before), environmental policy, free trade agreements, etc. etc. etc. At the end Obama thanked everyone for their time and gave his farewell. After which he shook a lot of hands and exited the gym.

All in all it was a very interesting experience. Obama is a charismatic speaker, I think we can all agree on that. And regardless of your politics, I recommend trying to attend a “Town Hall”-like event in the future. It was really a lot of fun.

QUICK SITE NOTE

Site — acosta @ 10:00 pm

I am trying to move Vdov into the times with some major updates (mostly coinciding with the release of Wordpress 2.5). Unfortunately I had the old mechanics of the site heavily customized and/or written from scratch, so now that Wordpress is actually capable of doing what it is I want, it’s taking me some time and effort to make the switch. Point being, Vdov will probably look a little weird now and then as I test some stuff out. Don’t worry, all your favorite content is still here (and even backed up, theoretically).

Cheers.

BEST BIRTHDAY QUOTE SO FAR

Personal — acosta @ 12:15 pm

Yes, today I turned 25 … a quarter century. I can no longer fool myself, I am supposed to be an adult now. At least that’s what I thought, until I talked to my Mom who said, “back in the 60s and 70s, the mantra was, ‘don’t trust anyone over 30′, so I’d say you don’t have to be an adult until at least then”. Awesome.

Then Shawna sends me this birthday message:

HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
you are a quarter of a century now
which if you live to be old means you have already lived 1/4 of your life
and you have chosen to waste it doing chemistry
at least now you are doing physics masqueraded as chemistry

I laughed. Cheers.

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