This is the website of Abulsme Noibatno Itramne (also known as Sam Minter). Posts here are rare these days. For current stuff, follow me on Mastodon

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December 2010
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Sleepy Time

The percentage of my life spent asleep as it has changed over the last year. Down roughly from 29% (about 6 hours 58 minutes per night) to about 26% (about 6 hours 14 minutes per night) over the course of the last 365.242 days. The best was last December when I hit about 30% (about 7 hours 12 minutes per night) and the worst was in early November when I was at about 25.5% (about 6 hours 7 minutes per night). Those are of course from the general trend lines, as you can see, some specific data points have been significantly higher or lower than those trends. The data points themselves are not single nights, but rather represent daily samples of the trailing seven days.

Anyway, I thought it was an interesting chart. :-)

You Got Me All Fugazied

In the latest Curmudgeon’s Corner…

Sam and Ivan talk about:

  • New Used Car
  • Old New Car
  • Korea Situation
  • MS Store Update
  • Non iPad Tablets
  • Tech Turkeys
  • Exponential Growth Forever

Just click to listen now:

[wpaudio url=”http://www.abulsme.com/CurmudgeonsCorner/CC20101128.mp3″ text=”Recorded 28 Nov 2010″]

or

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Go Go Starblazers!

[tube]-nIej5weq1U[/tube]

(via io9)

Kindle Ratio for 1 Dec 2010: 70%

Yet another update of the percentage of the last 20 books I have read which are available on Kindle as of right after I wrote the post about Shadow of the Hegemon. That book was available on Kindle, the one that fell off the 20 was not, and none of the ones in between changed status, so the percentage goes up from 65% to 70%. For reference:

  1. YES – Shadow of the Hegemon
  2. NO – The Visual Display of Quantitative Information
  3. YES – Ender’s Shadow
  4. YES – The Elegant Universe
  5. YES – Children of the Mind
  6. NO – Introduction to Algorithms
  7. YES – Xenocide
  8. YES – The Geography of Bliss
  9. YES – Speaker for the Dead
  10. NO – First Break all the Rules
  11. YES – Ender’s Game
  12. YES – Until the Sea Shall Free Them
  13. YES – Foucoult’s Pendulum
  14. YES – Java The Complete Reference
  15. NO – Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
  16. YES – The Audacity of Hope
  17. NO – Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
  18. NO – Data Mining
  19. YES – The Children of Hurin
  20. YES – Dreams from my Father

Shadow of the Hegemon

Author: Orson Scott Card
Original Publication: 2001
Started: 2010 Oct 30
Finished : 2010 Nov 8
Format: Kindle
7231 locations / 10 days
723 locations / day

So here I go, I am now up to Book 6 in the Ender Series. This book once again concentrates on the character of Bean, the minor character in Ender’s Game that got a deeper background in the last book, Ender’s Shadow. Now that the Buggers / Formics have been defeated, the action shifts back to Earth, where the unity of the planet during the war against an alien threat has fallen apart, and now major geopolitical shifts are under way as national powers start reasserting themselves.

In this context, the former members of Ender’s team (including Bean) become major players, as they are considered the brightest military minds on the planet. An old rival of Bean’s from his childhood who was introduced in the last book also plays a huge part as the villain, constantly plotting for his own power, but more importantly for revenge against all those, such as Bean, who had ever seen him in positions of weakness.

There is some interesting geopolitical speculation here, looking at how a world might look several hundred years in our future, after an interlude where the planet had been forced to unite, but no longer is. But even given the premise of this cadre of super-bright children who had already saved the world, it does start to stretch the suspension of disbelief a little bit when you essentially get a handful of teenagers engaging in machinations that direct the course of major nations as they go into and out of war. It is an entertaining story, and once again Card is doing a novel that concentrates on events and actions as opposed to philosophical speculation. They are different sorts of novels. Both good in their own way.

This is maybe in the middle of the pack of the series so far in terms of how much I’ve enjoyed it. Not as good as #1, #2 or #5 in this series, but probably better than #3 and #4. Dunno. They are all enough different from each other that it is hard to compare.

Worth a read if you like this series. I wouldn’t suggest picking it up without having read at least #5 though, since it follows directly on from that book.

Kindle Ratio for 29 Nov 2010: 65%

So, yet another update of the percentage of the last 20 books I’ve read that are available on Kindle as of soon after I posted about The Visual Display of Quantitative Information. The book that fell off was not available, neither was the one I just added, and none of the ones in between changed status, so the metric stayed at 65%.

  1. NO – The Visual Display of Quantitative Information
  2. YES – Ender’s Shadow
  3. YES – The Elegant Universe
  4. YES – Children of the Mind
  5. NO – Introduction to Algorithms
  6. YES – Xenocide
  7. YES – The Geography of Bliss
  8. YES – Speaker for the Dead
  9. NO – First Break all the Rules
  10. YES – Ender’s Game
  11. YES – Until the Sea Shall Free Them
  12. YES – Foucoult’s Pendulum
  13. YES – Java The Complete Reference
  14. NO – Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
  15. YES – The Audacity of Hope
  16. NO – Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
  17. NO – Data Mining
  18. YES – The Children of Hurin
  19. YES – Dreams from my Father
  20. NO – The Odyssey

I’ll note as I have the last few times that other editions of The Odyssey are available on Kindle, just not the specific edition I read.