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Paul's Journal

paul
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04/04/2014 18:44 #58862

Raleigh For Work
Category: work
I have to be there tues and wed. Check out the weather around those days, ugh.

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tinypliny - 04/07/14 03:12
You know those prediction models are wrong 41% of the times.
metalpeter - 04/05/14 08:52
Hoping you like the weather and that you have to see the city ......

04/04/2014 18:36 #58861

Washer Drain Trap Needed Cleaning
Category: machines

I can't believe I never cleaned the drain since 2006. It was so gross and smelled so bad.

We found a bunch of the keys that went missing over the years.

Without Patrick's story about his own drain and (e:Joe)'s help it would have never happend.

I wonder how much energy was wasted on this. It also got me thinking about how shitty it would be to not only have to compile your programs but wait an hour for the washer to finish to know if your program successfully cleaned the dirty wash or not.

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paul - 04/07/14 11:27
Patrick is a coworker who told me a out the drain issue when it's not draining right. I through all the money out. It smelled terrible and I couldn't get myself to touch it.
tinypliny - 04/07/14 03:17
  • quite! not quit!!
tinypliny - 04/07/14 03:16
And what was Patrick's story about his drains? (and who is Patrick?) You can't leave your readers hanging in suspenseful misery, you know.
tinypliny - 04/07/14 03:15
I don't quit get the drift between the programs and drains though. o_O
tinypliny - 04/07/14 03:13
On the positive side, it looks like you ended up with shiny spare change and a found a lost key! YAY?

04/04/2014 18:29 #58860

Pop Goes My Heart
Category: health
So I've had this sore throat for a while and decided to go see about it at the doctors today. (e:joe) had it too, kind of like a low grade scratchy throat cough.

While I was there my heart fluttered while she was listening with a stethoscope. It's been fluttering a bunch this week like the rhythm gets messed up.

Anyways, she immediately got me hooked up to ekg and then a 24 ekg to go. They had to shave my chest hair a bit with a dry straight razor. That was the worst part.

I hope it's nothing. If it's something, I blame the root canal infection or the copious ibuprofen for the tooth. They confirmed with a rapid test that it was not strep throat.

I had to keep a journal while it happend:
332 flutter driving
345 flutter sitting
359 flutter drive
403 flutter drive
404 flutter drive
420 flight walk
445 flutter eating
520 is flutter talking
538 flutter programming
543 flutter programming
556 flutter talking
606 flutter talking
608 flutter talking
654 bunch of flutters programming
753/4 flutter programming
843 heart flutter lying down coughing
903 heart flutter sitting by fireplace

Didn't really do it the next day weird. I get answers next Friday.

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tinypliny - 04/07/14 03:17
I hope it turns out to be inconsequential.

I always think you have too much stress and are gradually killing yourself.
metalpeter - 04/05/14 08:46
Hope everything is ok and nothing serious .... could be stress I know there are many side effects that can happen from Dental work and they freaked me out... maybe you had an infection and what caused it got him sick also ... Hope you get better ....
ExBuffalonian - 04/05/14 08:16
Good luck. Hope everything's OK.

03/31/2014 23:30 #58846

Bass Week Toronto - Andy C
Category: dance

The last night of the week that I was supposed to take a vacation that I never happend, we went to Toronto to go see Andy C at Sound Academy.

It was an amazing 24 hours with about 6 miles of walking around the city to eat and then to and from the club to the Hotel.

Dancing to Andy was awesome. I believe the Sound Academy used to be the place called The Docks in the 90s. Its such an amazing location on the outer harbor.

Despite the posters promoting it on the street, I did not eat any LSD like 17 year old me would have.

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tinypliny - 04/04/14 14:13
btw, LSD is not particularly a good thing for your neurochemicals homeostasis, in the long run.
tinypliny - 04/04/14 03:26
What are those pretty gems wrapped around paper bundles?

04/03/2014 23:31 #58856

Brendan Eich - I'm Sorry For You
Category: web
I'm as gay as gay gets and gay married and I can't believe stupid websites like OK Cupid forced the issue enough to make him quit. He is a brilliant guy that helped bring a lot of the modern computer world to us. So what if he supported anti gay marriage. Its his right to do so. We can't all have the same opinion and I don't think his personal beliefs and small personal donation need to overshadow the 15 years of amazing computer science he gave us. Imagine if we were all professionally judged for one stupid personal thing we did 5 years ago.

I was actually glad when I read he was not quitting before he quit.


Here are his last two blog posts:
The resignation

Slides for the brief talk that I gave at a Harvard seminar on privacy and user data organized by John Taysom last week.

My talk was really more about the “network problem” than the “protocol problem”. Networks breed first- and second-mover winners and others path-dependent powers, until the next disruption. Users or rather their data get captured.

Privacy is only one concern among several, including how to realize economic value for many-yet-individually-weak users, not just for data-store/service owners or third parties. Can we do better with client-side and private-cloud tiers, zero-knowledge proofs and protocols, or other ideas?

In the end, I asked these four questions:

Can a browser/OS “unionize its users” to gain bargaining power vs. net super-powers?
To create a data commons with “API to me” and aggregated/clustered economics?
Open the walled gardens to put users first?
Still be usable and private-enough for most?

I think the answer is yes, but I’m not sure who will do this work. It is vitally important.

I may get to it, but not working at Mozilla. I’ve resigned as CEO and I’m leaving Mozilla to take a rest, take some trips with my family, look at problems from other angles, and see if the “network problem” has a solution that doesn’t require scaling up to hundreds of millions of users and winning their trust while somehow covering costs. That’s a rare, hard thing, which I’m proud to have done with Firefox at Mozilla.

I encourage all Mozillians to keep going. Firefox OS is even more daunting, and more important. Thanks indeed to all who have supported me, and to all my colleagues over the years, at Mozilla, in standards bodies, and at conferences around the world. I will be less visible online, but still around.



Pre Resignation:

I am deeply honored and humbled by the CEO role. I’m also grateful for the messages of support. At the same time, I know there are concerns about my commitment to fostering equality and welcome for LGBT individuals at Mozilla. I hope to lay those concerns to rest, first by making a set of commitments to you. More important, I want to lay them to rest by actions and results.

A number of Mozillians, including LGBT individuals and allies, have stepped forward to offer guidance and assistance in this. I cannot thank you enough, and I ask for your ongoing help to make Mozilla a place of equality and welcome for all. Here are my commitments, and here’s what you can expect:

Active commitment to equality in everything we do, from employment to events to community-building.
Working with LGBT communities and allies, to listen and learn what does and doesn’t make Mozilla supportive and welcoming.
My ongoing commitment to our Community Participation Guidelines, our inclusive health benefits, our anti-discrimination policies, and the spirit that underlies all of these.
My personal commitment to work on new initiatives to reach out to those who feel excluded or who have been marginalized in ways that makes their contributing to Mozilla and to open source difficult. More on this last item below.

I know some will be skeptical about this, and that words alone will not change anything. I can only ask for your support to have the time to “show, not tell”; and in the meantime express my sorrow at having caused pain.

Mozilla is a movement composed of different people around the world, working productively together on a common mission. This is important to our ability to work and grow around the world.

Many Mozillians and others know me as a colleague or a friend. They know that I take people as they come and work with anyone willing to contribute. At the same time, I don’t ask for trust free of context, or without a solid structure to support accountability. No leader or person who has a privileged position should. I want to be held accountable for what I do as CEO. I fully expect you all to do so.

I am committed to ensuring that Mozilla is, and will remain, a place that includes and supports everyone, regardless of sexual orientation, gender identity, age, race, ethnicity, economic status, or religion.

You will see exemplary behavior from me toward everyone in our community, no matter who they are; and the same toward all those whom we hope will join, and for those who use our products. Mozilla’s inclusive health benefits policies will not regress in any way. And I will not tolerate behavior among community members that violates our Community Participation Guidelines or (for employees) our inclusive and non-discriminatory employment policies.

You’ll also see more from Mozilla under my leadership in the way of efforts to include potential contributors, especially those who lack privilege. This entails several projects, starting with Project Ascend, which is being developed by Lukas Blakk. I intend to demonstrate with meaningful action my commitment to a Mozilla that lives up to its ideals, including that of being an open and inclusive community.



metalpeter - 04/05/14 08:36
I think a bunch of things and hope this comes across clear.... We often think that only our views and opinions matter and that it is ok ostracize those with different ones (Cause we are better then them or smarter then them or more moral then them) [happens on both sides] And this is what happened here this guy has a right to his opinion as long as he isn't using his company to hurt anyone else or bother anyone else.... If he was pro gay and the rest of the company was anti gay and forced him out it would be the same thing but people don't see it that way ......

Now there is a difference between Thoughts, how you treat people and actions ...... They act like this guy was getting people from fire fox to go to the pride parade and protest and yell and scream with his company .... He wasn't doing that .......

I wonder what else was going on that we don't know about though.... I only say this cause there where a few ? at least people who left the company before him so I wonder ......
joe - 04/04/14 22:42
I agree.
I feel this ended up being more like a witchhunt than anything that really contributed to equality for anyone. He apologized, said he changed his position and was clear it had nothing to do with Mozilla. Are people's opinion's not allowed to evolve? It's crazy to hold every accountable in every aspect of their life for something they regret or have rectified in some way.
YesThatCasey - 04/04/14 19:22
Glad you wrote this. There's a rabid obsession with this issue, and while I'm obviously glad with the trend, there are a lot of other important and underlying matters that very much need our attention and consideration. If we don't correct the behavior, we are only changing who is being persecuted, and not fixing the problem.

The Target issue is a little different. It is also an example of how focusing on an issue instead of a behavior diminished the results. In that case, they were one of the first major corporation's to make a political donation that was exposed due to new state laws on disclosure. It was a prime example of corporate influence on local legislators. Instead, everyone focused on one view of one politician. Many of those same people are unaware that outside spending on elections increased tenfold.
tinypliny - 04/04/14 15:55
I trust you, creepy Paul, just possibly because you are creepy.
paul - 04/04/14 14:56
Trust me I am a creep in most people definition of creepiness and morality. Who isn't in one way or another? I like to think I am still employable based on my capabilities. He was never abusing his position of "power". What power does the CEO of Mozilla even have outside the company where it appears they already have a tolerant environment.
tinypliny - 04/04/14 14:11
I think there will always be people at polar ends of any controversy, opinion or discussion. However, in the case of Brendan Eich, what redeemed him, in my opinion at least, is he took the time to acknowledge and address the sentiments that were directed against him within his company on his personal blog. I don't know what was going on in his mind when he made his thoughtless donation but the fact that he realized and admitted that it offended some people and that he would do his best to not let any of this history affect his workplace is a very positive thing to do.
ExBuffalonian - 04/04/14 13:16
I think his personal beliefs and his small personal donation, which was meant to deny equal rights to the LGBT community, make him a creep. But that doesn't mean he wasn't a good CEO or doesn't have a brilliant mind, and it doesn't mean he wasn't effective in his job. Same thing happened in Baltimore when Dr. Ben Carson, a brilliant and celebrated African American neurosurgeon at Johns Hopkins, expressed his opposition to marriage equality and made public remarks about gays, linking us to pedophiles and practitioners of bestiality. Next thing you know, he's retired from medicine and is now a columnist with a show on Fox News. Same thing happened when it was discovered that Dan Cathy, President and COO of the fast-food chain Chick-fil-A, was donating money to anti marriage equality groups and shooting his mouth off about how gay people should not have the same rights and protections under the law as heterosexuals because that's what God wants. Everyone called for a boycott of their chicken sandwiches. I think it's unfortunate when people express their ignorant and misinformed opinions, and extra unfortunate when those people are in position of power and can do real harm to people who have to deal with the consequences. Each situation needs to be evaluated carefully and separately, and we should try to avoid a knee jerk reaction of trying to silence these people. I always say let the haters hate, and let them speak. They usually do more harm to their cause anyway, because they sound ridiculous. In the case of Brendan Eich, I feel like maybe it's different because he didn't donate money to support Prop 8 on behalf of Mozilla. I do think it's possible for people to keep their personal lives and professional lives separate, so as I said in the beginning of this, he may be a creep...but so what?
sina - 04/04/14 13:15
oh oh oh
unfortunately here people talk about gays in bad cases and I'll be so angry when them open their dirty mouths
especially these days that european union got a Human rights resolution against Iran
tinypliny - 04/04/14 03:24
And I kind of love you, Mike Visco. I actually think twice before shopping at Target now because of the whole credit card fiasco. Now that is some stupidity worth reconsidering.
tinypliny - 04/04/14 03:20
I read his blog last week and I thought, what idiots don't see the greatness of this man!? How does it matter what he does in his own personal life?! Its not as if he is forcing his beliefs on someone (like all those lunatics with pointy church spire buildings - who actually funded Proposition 8).

Arrgh. It makes me mad that people would be so so so insular! Especially ones who support gay rights!
tinypliny - 04/04/14 03:14
Paul, this is EXACTLY what I told my brother almost at the same time that you were probably writing this. You expressed my sentiments perfectly when you say:

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We can't all have the same opinion and I don't think his personal beliefs and small personal donation need to overshadow the 15 years of amazing computer science he gave us.
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It's absolutely "redonk" in every single way.

I cannot believe that gay-rights activists who forced his resignation would be SO narrow minded! It's almost as if they are following fads rather than truly believing in a progressive tolerant society. It's a stupidly sad day for technology and open source communities. :/
mike - 04/03/14 23:48
I felt the same way when Target had donated money to some anti- gay rights candidate at some point. I thought Target has brought me amazing deals and lots of cheap clearance crap so does all that good get outweighed by one bad thing. No it doesn't. Actually I love Target so much that I think even if they ran an Anti-Mike Visco campaign I would still shop there.