I'm back and a good read about homeopathy

I’ve been away this week visiting my brother in sunny Florida, a nice break from the freezing temperatures of New England this time of year. I didn’t read blogs or e-mail much and I didn’t post anything here but I have a number of posts in my drafts folder so, there should be a bunch of new posts over the next few days.

Catching up on my regular blog reading today, the JREF pointed me to a post by Ben Goldacre. He has written a very good article, The end of homeopathy? I Highly recommend this article to everyone.

Judgment Day

Just in case you haven’t heard about it yet, this coming Tuesday, 11/13 many PBS stations will be airing a new episode of NOVA, Judgment Day Intelligent Design on Trial. I would normally have said most stations rather than many stations but sadly I’ve encountered evidence that leads me to believe that some stations are not going to air the show.

Over at Sandwalk Larry mentioned that WNED Buffalo NY was not airing the show. I looked into this and found that WNED is not going to air it on its channel that reaches the largest audience (it is airing on their HD channel). 😦 If a north east PBS channel is doing this I think it’s a pretty safe bet that stations in more science hostile areas are likely not airing the program, check your local listings. If you are a contributor to your local PBS station and they aren’t airing it please let them know how you feel about it because keeping contributors happy is the #1 goal of most PBS stations.

Happy Birthday Louis Gray

Louis Harold Gray was born on November 10th, 1905 in London, England. Professor Gray worked primarily with understanding the biological effects of radiation. Because his work was instrumental in the birth of radiobiology, the SI unit of absorbed dose was named the gray to honor him.

Biographies:
Wikipedia
LH Gray Memorial Trust
UCLA Medical Physics

More information on his work:
Review Article: the birth of the Gray Laboratory at Mount Vernon Hospital
Gray Cancer Institute

Andy Grove comparing apples and oranges

This post at Pharyngula today is a reply to an interview with Andy Grove over at Newsweek. A commenter over at Pharyngula, Ashutosh also pointed me to a good reply by Derek Lowe.

This is a clear case of an apples and oranges comparison by Dr. Grove. In addition to the points raised by PZ and Derek I’d add the reliability question. It is one thing to design a semiconductor that can have severe problems without harming people and designing drugs that cure the sick without harming them. I mean there is no reset button on a human to give us a clean retry after the new drug crashes the humans life. Any engineer who thinks developing safe and effective drugs can be improved as easily as semiconductor processes is either lacking an understanding of biology and pharmacology or fooling themselves about what they know. Dr. Grove you are embarrassing to a rational thinking engineer like myself. Keep in mind Expertise is real and it matters and it sure seems that chemical engineer Andy Grove has no expertise in pharmacology, biology or medicine.

UPDATES: Oops, I needed to change Mr. to Dr. because he has a doctorate in chemical engineering.

Tyler raises some good points from a CS/Math perspective.

The Slashdot post has some interesting comments.

The Pharma Marketing Blog has a post with an industry insider perspective.

Most pertinent is the Variable Fragment blog’s post, the writer has worked in process development at Intel and now works in biotechnology. What more can you ask for, here’s someone with expertise in both areas.

Finally for silliest comment the award goes to TechNudge.net for this bit of ridiculous commentary.

Andy, maybe if researchers would stop looking for non-existent proof of serious man-made global warming theyÂ’d have a few minutes to get on with diseases. But thatÂ’s not where the funding is.

I mean really, this fool thinks there is but one type of research and researcher so, just re-task them from climate science to pharmacology. I guess he’d like to call on the Geek Squad for all his medical needs too.

Eye-Fi – WiFi for digital cameras

EETimes has put up a couple of articles on the Eye-Fi SD card in the past week, you can read them here and here.

This device is a combination 2Gig SD card and WiFi adapter that turns any camera into a WiFi enabled camera. The scenario mentioned in the articles of sharing photos at a family get together sounds like a great application. However lets think more deeply about it, the scenario presented mentions technical glitches preventing the sharing of the photos on the day. I think throwing more technology at the problem is just as likely to cause technical problems. This is especially true since you can’t change the cards WiFi settings when it is inside a camera. Now if the person hosting the party had a bunch of these cards pre-programmed and tested for their WiFi network then gave them to people to use at the party it would probably work great. But at $100 a piece having a bunch of these things around for a party isn’t economical for most people.

I think a better plan would be to have a PC setup with a multi-format card reader installed. Then be willing to help the party attendees use the card reader to put the photos on the PC for sharing.

Add to this the possibility of a radio transmitter mounted within inches of a sensitive CCD in a camera causing noise in the CCD and the usefulness could be negated. In a few years if camera makers design and test for compatibility with the Eye-Fi this potential problem should go away.

Eye-Fi » Where to Buy

Seagate settles bogus class action

I heard of this news from Computerworld via Slashdot via Greg Laden. This is a case where the only winners will be the lawyers who filed the class action lawsuit. Basically Seagate was sued because they use the industry standard units of measurement that follow SI rules.

This is actually the third time the data storage industry has been hit with class action suits over units of measurement. The problems started when computer guys got past the 1000 mark for the various units of measurement in computers. The computer industry decided on their own to take the SI prefixes , re-define them and use the re-defined prefixes for their units of measurement. While this did create confusion it wasn’t too bad when only kilo was commonly used because 1000 and 1024 are only 2.4% different. Once we started to frequently use the re-defined mega and giga prefixes things became worse (mega 4.9% and giga 7.4% differences). The IEEE recognized this was going to get rapidly worse (tera is 10% different) so in the late 90’s they introduced IEEE 1541 to provide unambiguous prefixes for the binary units of measurement. Soon other standards bodies (IEC, CENELEC, CIPM, NIST, and SAE) endorsed the new binary units and that should have been the end of the troubles.

The first class action suit was against flash media manufacturers:

On February 20, 2004, Willem Vroegh filed a lawsuit against Lexar Media, Dane-Elec Memory, Fuji Photo Film USA, Eastman Kodak Company, Kingston Technology Company, Inc., Memorex Products, Inc.; PNY Technologies Inc., SanDisk Corporation, Verbatim Corporation, and Viking InterWorks alleging that their descriptions of the capacity of their flash memory cards were false and misleading.

The manufacturers agreed to clarify the flash memory card capacity on the packaging and web sites.[1] The consumers could apply for “a discount of ten percent off a future online purchase from Defendants’ Online Stores Flash Memory Device”.[52]

The law firms Gutride Safier, LLP and Milberg Weiss received $2.4 million.

The next year Western Digital was hit and here’s some interesting information from the settlement agreement.

They paid $500,000 in fees and expenses to San Francisco lawyers Adam Gutride and Seth Safier, who filed the suit.

The lawyers get the lions share of the cash, what’s new 😦

Surely Western Digital cannot be blamed for how software companies use the term “gigabyte” a binary usage which, according to Plaintiff’s complaint, ignores both the historical meaning of the term and the teachings of the industry standards bodies. In describing its HDD’s, Western Digital uses the term properly. Western Digital cannot be expected to reform the software industry.[2] Furthermore, there is no conceivable reason that consumers would perceive the size of Western Digital’s HDD’s as different in any respect from the size of other HDD’s on the market. All major HDD manufacturers offer HDD’s in the same, industry standard, decimal-defined storage capacities (e.g., 80 GB, 120 GB, 250 GB). Thus, a consumer buying an HDD is comparing decimal gigabytes from one HDD company to decimal gigabytes from another HDD company regardless of what software companies may be doing. Accordingly, price and reliability, not storage capacity nomenclature, are determinative of a customer’s decision to purchase from one HDD manufacturer over another. In short, Plaintiff’s claims are merit less.

I personally think someone should file suit against Microsoft for still using the re-defined unit prefixes in their OS’s. I guess the lawyers who put these suits together realize that they’d have a really hard time going after the big $$$ company that is actually abusing the standards so, they go after the smaller guys who are actually following the SI standard.

Notwithstanding the fecklessness of Plaintiff’s claims, Western Digital recognizes not only the inherent risks and uncertainties of litigation, but also that the litigation would be an undesirable distraction and would require significant investment in employee time, attorneys’ fees, and costs. Taking into account these considerations and Western Digital’s desire to put this matter to rest, Western Digital believes that settlement on the terms set forth in the Settlement Agreement is in its best interests.

Par for the course in a US civil case, it usually is far cheaper to settle than to go to trial and prove you are right. 😦

[2] Apparently, Plaintiff believes that he could sue an egg company for fraud for labeling a carton of 12 eggs a “dozen”, because some bakers would view a “dozen” as including 13 items.

I love this footnote they stuck in the agreement, watch out egg producing industries they can get you next. 😉

As to this recent case, Seagate had to settle to limit how much cash they loose. From the Settlement Agreement :

Awards attorney’s fees of up to $1.8 million.

Yep the lawyers are the big winners again. 😦 I wish that by simply following standards manufacturers could avoid these class action suits but sadly that is not the case in the USA.

Two blogs I've started reading

I’ve added a couple of blogs to my regular reading list and blogroll today. Warning, both of the blogs contain no holds barred opinions and language that is realistic so, people who are easily offended by free speech, you have been warned.

The first one I found today is PANDA BEAR, MD, tip o’ the hat to Orac at Respectful Insolence for pointing me there. The other is PowerUp by Tyler DiPietro a New Englander like me that I found via his comments over at Blake’s Science After Sunclipse blog.

The posts that got me hooked on these blogs are, Kicking Off Complementary and Alternative Medicine Month : PANDA BEAR, MD and, PowerUp: Cranks Cluedo: The Murder of Science with Pseudomathematically Enhanced Ignorance, enjoy!

Lawn Tiger Foiled

This little Black Capped Chickadee at first doesn’t notice the lawn tiger peeking out below the lower rail in the deck corner.imgp0069

But that doesn’t last long, lawn tiger is foiled again, better go back to hunting chipmunks.imgp0070

How to get kids to hate your church

Father Ronald Barker has pulled the Harry Potter books from from the St. Joseph Parish School in Wakefield Massachusetts. He’s been there for two years already so, it seems odd he chose to take them out of the library now. I wonder if the recent news had anything to do with it.

According to these quotes from the WCVB web site the reason is:

“I’m in the business of Jesus and this is the enemy camp,” Barker said. “It has sorcery spells and it’s not appropriate.”

The removal, according to Barker, spares those students who are vulnerable to cult practices and sees his decision as no different than protecting students who are allergic to peanut butter.

“What I did is start a spiritual peanut butter ban on Harry Potter,” he said.

Of course he must be basing his decision on actually knowing what is in the books, right?

Barker said he had not read any of the Harry Potter books and had no plans to do so.

Wrong 😦 Watch him start pulling the other fairy tale and fantasy books or banning Halloween Trick or Treats next.

The Catholic church has no formal policy on RowlingÂ’s books.

Well at least the rest of the Catholic Church won’t be getting the kids ticked off at the church.

Update – I noticed a PDF on my desktop after I finished this post. It was the current weekly bulletin for the parish. Father Barker’s writing shows me he is an old school priest (emphasis mine).

It is one of the spiritual works of mercy to pray for the dead. Some of our loved ones are in the process of being purified (Purgatory) and our prayers are able to hasten the process. May we always remember to pray for our loved ones and to also pray for the souls who have no one praying for them. I encourage you to have a funeral Mass for your loved ones when they die, not a funeral service. A funeral service does not provide the graces that your loved ones would receive from a Mass. Sometimes I hear a family member saying that their loved one just wanted a service at the funeral home. I tell them that on the other side the loved one is now screaming to have a Mass, have a Mass.

Yep, old school, scare everybody about what happens after death, great way to comfort the bereaved, NOT.