Archive for March, 2010
Purpose of Life
Mar 30th
“What is the purpose of life” is obviously not a stupid question. It’s a very good question.
The purpose of life is more life.
All life is purely trying to create more copies of itself. The purpose of every living organism on this planet (yourself included) is to create as many copies of it’s genes as possible.
That is all.
That’s not what you meant right? What is the deeper purpose of life? What is the meaning of life?
That question is actually a lot like “What is the square root of a tomato?”
It doesn’t make sense.
There is no deeper purpose of life. Life just is. It is a bleak realization, but that doesn’t make it any less true.
I was recently reading the preface to Richard Dawkins’s Unweaving the Rainbow which contains this excellent quote:
Gone is all purpose; all that is left is direction. This is the bleakness we have to accept as we peer deeply and dispassionately into the heart of the Universe.
It’s awesome to make fun of Kim Jong-il
Mar 19th
The excellent Big Picture blog from The Boston Globe recently published a set of photos of that lunatic leader, Kim Jong-il touring North Korea.
North Korea is so screwed up that it’s really interesting. Thank heavens I don’t live there.
Anyway, this blog has taken some of those photos and added hilarious captions to them. Kim is a pretty hilarious character to begin with (what he is doing to his people is no laughing matter).





Simple video explaining Google web search
Mar 15th
Google has created a site called How Google Works that explains how Google does what it does in very simple terms.
For example, the video below is a simple, 3 minute explanation of how Google search works.
Watch it.
The Red Queen in Iraq
Mar 9th

The Economist has a fascinating article on the arms race going on between American soldiers and bomb makers in Iraq and Afghanistan.
A great example is something called “Darwin” patrols. Many early improvised explosive devices (IEDs) were triggered by remote controls for garage doors. The CIA quickly realized this and began driving around pressing their own garage openers. Any bomb makers nearby would be blown up.
Predictably, these easy wins didn’t last. By killing those bomb makers the CIA effectively improved bomb making. Only better IEDs and bomb makers survived – hence the name “Darwin” patrols.
As the coalition forces become better at detecting IEDs the bomb makers get better at making them. There are plenty more examples of innovation being met with innovation in the article.
Both sides must constantly keep improving just to keep up. This is common in evolutionary biology and is known as the Red Queen effect.
In Through the Looking Glass (the sequel to Alice in Wonderland) the Red Queen tells Alice:
“It takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that.”
It’s a great name for this effect.
Wherever there is competition, from biology to the Iraq war to the office, the Red Queen effect arises. We have to keep moving, just to stay where we are.
Lonely Okavango wild dog teaming up with jackals and hyena
Mar 3rd
This fascinating article describes a case where a lone wild dog is actively teaming up with hyenas and jackals.
There were plenty of wild dog in the area in the past, but as lion population increased the local wild dog clan was wiped out.
This single adult female remained, and the rangers assumed that she would soon be killed.
However, she has been thriving with “help from some highly unusual and totally unexpected quarters.”
She has integrated fairly well with the larger members of the local hyena clan. She has been photographed interacting and even touching noses with them.
She also “solicits adult black-backed jackals to follow her on the hunt and even regurgitates meat on her return for the growing jackal pups!”
It seems that wild dogs have incredibly strong social instincts. So strong that when this animal had no other wild dogs to interact with she formed bonds with animals of another species. Amazing.

How credit card numbers are formed
Mar 3rd
The first time I had to replace a credit card (stolen) I noticed that many of the digits were the same. My wife has a card from the same bank and she also shares most digits with me.
Obviously the first few digits are bank specific.
This page has a brief outline of the meaning behind the numbers.
The first digit is the type of card:
- 3 = Amex or Diners Club
- 4 = VISA
- 5 = Mastercard
The rest of the digits depend on the type of card.
The format of VISA credit card numbers
TBBB-BBAA-AAAA-AAAC
- T is for the type of card. In this case always 4 as this is a VISA card
- B is a six digit code for the bank
- A is a 9 digit account number
- C is a check digiti calculated from all of the other digits

Let me be clear: I think
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