Tag: stupid

A glut of Ninjas

i had no idea unemployment was so bad. social media maven is what someone calls himself when they are between jobs.

As a public service, I like to periodically check in on the number of self-proclaimed social media “gurus,” “ninjas,” “masters” and “mavens” on Twitter. Why? Well, it seems like an important metric, an indicator of something.

Whatever it means, this is one indicator that is most definitely on the rise. In January 2013, the number of Twitter users with “social media” as part of their bio has grown to epic proportions. The list now tops 181K – up from a mere 16K when we first started tracking them in 2009

Mosquito Gene Drive

Engineered sterile male mosquitoes
Brought down mosquito population in a test run in small town by 85% in 4 months.

2016-02-17:

Obviously there are some risks here, but risks have to be weighed against benefits – if we don’t do it, mosquito-borne diseases keep killing 1M people each year.

2016-07-15:

Today, worldwide, 3000 people will die of mosquito borne illnesses. 3500 will die in auto accidents. I don’t have good numbers to scale the problem of hospital errors globally — but I’m guessing between 5000 and 20000 deaths a day. These problems are easy or at least easy-ish to fix. The medical profession can break the culture of “let’s wing it” and “who has time to wash their hands?” in hospitals. It is possible to get rid of the mosquitoes that carry malaria, dengue, zika and the rest. The technology to deliver self-driving cars is close.

There are loads more real problems that kill people in huge numbers that have easy-ish ways to fix that I can name. By contrast, the terrorist attack yesterday was a single, small incident. Terrorism kills very few people.

2016-10-06: Wow, awfully clever name.

Bad mosquitoes spread disease. Good mosquitoes can stop them. Debug is a group of scientists and engineers developing technology to raise and release sterile mosquitoes to eliminate the ones that carry disease.

2016-10-08: The anti-vaxxers found a new hobby.

If the Keys scuttle the project, it may go against broader public opinion. A national survey found that 78% supported using GMO mosquitoes to fight Zika. Last month a bipartisan group of 61 Florida state legislators issued a statement asking the FDA to use emergency powers to give them Oxitec right now. “What’s happened now is you have various mosquito districts saying, ‘Why can’t we use this technology?’ ” If the vote goes against Oxitec, “we would move the trial somewhere else. But obviously it would be more preferable and more convenient to do it where we planned to do it.”

2022-07-04: Changing host smell

Some diseases can change how their hosts smell. Certain viruses and microorganisms have evolved to use this to their advantage. For instance, plants that are infected with the Cucumber mosaic virus release a molecule that attracts aphids, which the virus uses as a vector to infect new plants. Parasites that cause malaria advertise their hosts to passing mosquitoes through changes in body odor. Mice infected with Zika or dengue produced 10x as much acetophenone as did healthy mice. Daubing healthy mice — and a few human volunteers — with acetophenone revealed that mosquitoes were drawn to the smell. Giving infected mice vitamin A, which is commonly used to treat skin conditions, helped to lower the amount of acetophenone the animals exuded, potentially providing a new way to control the spread of both diseases.

2022-11-26: Data from a new field trial

treated mosquito populations were suppressed by 88-96%. Male mosquitoes have short lifespans as it is—just seven to 10 days—and the self-limiting trait becomes less prevalent in each subsequent generation of males. Eventually, it fades within the gene pool. That means more releases are needed.

FAA nonsense

Turns out the FAA, just like the TSA, is in the fear-mongering business, with just as much evidence behind their rules, ie none

The agency has no proof that electronic devices can harm a plane’s avionics, but it still perpetuates such claims, spreading irrational fear among millions of fliers.

2013-03-29: Ground regulations

Some FAA rules don’t make sense to us either. Like the fact that when we’re at 11900m going 640 km an hour, in a plane that could hit turbulence at any minute, (flight attendants) can walk around and serve hot coffee and Chateaubriand. But when we’re on the ground on a flat piece of asphalt going 16 km an hour, they’ve got to be buckled in like they’re at NASCAR.

2014-12-15: These new drones are amazing, but sadly not in the US because the FAA is confused.

Those cool nighttime drone cam shots from your local news networks? Illegal. Those YouTube hobbyist flyovers of Apple, Inc.’s (AAPL) headquarters? Illegal. Amazon.com, Inc.’s (AMZN) wild Prime Air delivery drones? Illegal. Google Inc.’s (GOOG) internet drones? Facebook Inc.’s (FB) WiFi-providing fliers? Likely illegal. Hobbyist drones, like the Da-Jiang (“Great Territory”) Innovations (DJI) Science and Technology Co., Ltd. Phantom? Likely illegal too, unless you have experience aboard a real airplane.

2015-09-02: and it is going to be a Zoo

security risks mean everyone from your city’s taxi commission to the federal Department of Transportation, will want to get involved in AV regulation. With costs likely to fall between 50% to 90%, a consumer could increase VMT by anywhere from 2X to more than 5X.

2016-09-04: Pilot grift

Drones only become truly disruptive when they don’t have pilots at all. Yet, the FAA is regulating them in a way that forces drones to have pilots.

Let me put this in terms of work. Drones without pilots make the following things possible (none of which are possible with pilots at the controls):

Tireless. Accomplish tasks 24x7x365.
Scalable. Billions of drones can be used at the same time.
Costless. The cost per minute for drone services would drop to almost nothing.
If these capabilities are unleashed, it’s possible to do for drones what the Web/Internet did for networking.

2023-05-01: Flying is still far too regulated

Contrary to the narrative that today’s airline industry is a deregulatory success story, commercial air travel remains one of the most highly regulated industries in the country. Effectively what changed after 1978 was that the federal government no longer told airlines where they’re allowed to fly, and how much they can charge. That’s no small deal. However, nearly every other element of the experience continues to be dictated—and even directly managed—by the government.

We can have a future where travel is an easier, cheaper and more pleasant experience—where we’re delayed less often and where commercial airlines genuinely compete with a host of different products so we can buy the one that suits us best instead of one size fits all. But to have this kind of abundance, we need a more open and competitive system that focuses on passengers and their needs rather than existing airlines and other special interests.

Against cupcakes


someone turned my thoughts on cupcakes into a cupcake. this makes me really happy. the sooner this sugary crap disappears into the 7th circle of hell where it came from, the better.

This shouldn’t be a surprise to anybody, even those of us who really like cupcakes. Gourmet cupcakes are a terrible business to start or expand for a number of fundamental economic reasons.