simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2016-12-26 02:23 pm
Entry tags:

North Carolina

In the past two weeks I've spent a lot of time either at the NC State legislature (2 blocks from where I work, conveniently) or following the various clusterfucks there. This is just my own personal recollections of what happened, and it may not be interesting to others.

first clusterfuck )

second clusterfuck )

simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2014-04-20 09:13 am

How many repetitions does it take before there's an available domain name?

2 - zonezone.zone
2 - academyacademy.academy
2 - buildersbuilders.builders
3 - guruguruguru.guru
4 - bikebikebikebike.bike
5 - ususususus.us
5 - orgorgorgorgorg.org
6 - netnetnetnetnetnet.net
8 - comcomcomcomcomcomcomcom.com

2017 Update:
4 - zonezonezonezone.zone
3 - academyacademyacademy.academy
2 - buildersbuilders.builders
3 - guruguruguru.guru
4 - bikebikebikebike.bike
7 - ususususususus.us
6 - orgorgorgorgorgorg.org
∞ - all repeated .nets from 1-21 are taken!
21 - comcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcomcom.com

As of 2017, five-coms dot com is available through GoDaddy if you have a couple thousand dollars to spare, and two-academy dot academy is a premium domain available for $20.
simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2011-12-12 09:27 pm

Fun fun fun 'til her daddy takes the S-box away

One of the most fun non-research things I've had the opportunity to do in graduate school is interview people with interesting backgrounds doing extraordinary things with computer science and then write about them for a computer science audience. All these are available from here.

My most recent profile, of the outgoing technical director of the NSA's Information Assurance Directorate, is twice as long as my previous ones, because, damn, it's the outgoing technical director of the NSA's Information Assurance Directorate. This felt a lot like Real Journalism, what with the interviews, synthesis of various first-person and second-person sources, and combing through IBM technical reports and recently declassified (through FOIA) internal histories of the National Security Agency.

There were two great tidbits I couldn't figure out how to include even given twice my normal wordcount, from little lines about life at the NSA like "People come in and they do miraculous things every day" to the line "There are not enough women in this field right now, and we really need to address this problem...We’re certainly not going to out-people them if half the people aren’t getting into the game" which is awesome both because it presents the fact that women are discouraged from involvement in computer science as a medium-term threat to national security - that's a new framing - while simultaneously showing George's cold-war origins by falling into the trope of the enemy-as-unspecified-they.

2017 Update: Wow, a lot of this reads differently in the year of our Luigi twenty seventeen, huh.

In March 2012, George wrote me back to complement the article. I particularly like that he said "I sent the article to NSA's public affairs Office and they thought it was great - fair, well written, even interesting."
simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2011-08-02 01:53 pm
Entry tags:

The View From My Window

I read Andrew Sullivan's blog, where one of the features is "The View From Your Window", where people take pictures from their windows. Simple enough.

While I was in Nancy for CLMPS, the only conference I've ever attended with a chemistry track, I took a picture from the dorm room where I was staying and it was published on the blog. So that's my most widely-seen publication for the last three years, easily, at least until my video lectures on Constructive Provability Logic go viral, Rebecca-Black style ;-).
simrob: selfie with a digital camera using reflection in a train window (Default)
2011-05-25 11:56 am
Entry tags:

Focus

Used a not-terrifically-worded question on MathOverflow and the fact that I had two hours to kill as an excuse to finally write out the cut-and-identity-based proof of the completeness of (weak) focusing for the negative fragment, where you don't have to admit that it's only weak focusing. I wrote out all the details in the Weak Focusing for Ordered Linear Logic tech report, but that TR has way the hell too much other stuff going on.