Dedicated to my late brave, beautiful and silly mummy, Debra Ross. I love you mumster.

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Category archive for studies

Because archives are so much easier than having just hundreds of posts on the home page. I learned that the hard way.

Starbucks or Makkers for studying?

8pm Singapore Starbucks

So I was sitting at Starbucks in Tanglin Mall having a much needed tall Americano (you could take that many ways) when some school girls sat at the table next to mine and proceeded to get out their laptops. After 30 seconds one of their friends arrived and shouted “Go to McDonald’s next door to do this! They have french fry (sic), they have ice cream, much more bright”. After rummaging around, they all stood up and walked away again.

The question I pose is this: why the heck would you want to study in McDonalds when you could study in Starbucks? Come on, they’re playing a Rat Pack CD here, all the chairs are soft and comfy, and they use bright but warm lights instead of rows of fluorescent tubes! McDonalds would rate amongst the last places I’d want to study!

Am I so out of touch? Or is the caffeine affecting my judgement? :-).

Using HTML, XHTML for word processing

EDIT: I just realised that the draft version (without any links) of this post was the one that was published, not the final one. It’s been all fixed up.

With all the talk these days about online word processors such as Google Documents and gOffice replacing traditional client installed office suites such as OpenOffice.org, it got me thinking: do more technically inclined computers users actually need word processors at all anymore?

Think about it: if you’re a web programmer or have any experience in HTML (preferably one of the XHTML varieties) and CSS you have everything you need to create a professional looking document, and as I discovered, it takes a lot less effort.

With any word processor I’ve ever used I’ve always found it to be a struggle to use the inbuilt templates and formats for headings, lists and so forth. With HTML I have complete control over what everything looks like and where everything goes, I can change the entire formatting of a document on the fly, and the resulting document (if done correctly) is a standards based file which can be read on virtually any computer with a simple web browser, and it’s in a format which I know many years from now I will still be able to open and access, I can embed microformats such as hCards into my documents (very useful for letters), I can create different stylesheets for screen and print views, I can use easily edited meta tags to denote the copyright, language, date, author, keywords, owner and description of a document… the list goes on.

Now granted there could be some downsides depending on who you are. Some people might find the use of <tags /> to be cumbersome and annoying, and I certainly don’t expect everyone to pick it up, but if you have the experience it can work out to be a very efficient and quick way to type something up.

And the best part of it all? You don’t need a fancy word processing programme with bucket loads of features you’ll never use: all you need is a lightweight text editor, and maybe a PDF exporting programme to help with creating separate, printable pages if you run a flavour of Windows.

So how do I use HTML to create documents? Argh, two rhetorical questions in the one post. This is no good. I now have a file called master.html sitting in my home directory that I use as a template for new documents; I simply copy the file, change the meta data and write up the document.

<?xml version=”1.0″ encoding=”UTF-8″?>
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC “-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN”
“http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd”>

<html xmlns=”http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml” xml:lang=”en-AU”>
<head profile=”http://www.w3.org/2006/03/hcard”>
<title>DOCUMENT NAME By Ruben Schade</title>

<meta http-equiv=”Content-Language” content=”en-AU” />
<meta http-equiv=”Content-Type” content=”text/html; charset=UTF-8″ />
<meta name=”author” content =”Ruben Schade” />
<meta name=”copyright” content=”http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/” />
<meta name=”description” content=”DOCUMENT DESCRIPTION” />
<meta name=”owner” content=”Ruben Schade” />

<style type=”text/css” media=”all”>
body {
  font-family: Georgia, Antiqua, “Times New Roman”, Times, sans-serif;
  line-height : 1.6em;
  padding: 2em;
  text-align:justify;
}
</style>
</head>

<body>
<!– DOCUMENT GOES HERE –>
</body>

</html>

How does the McDonald’s theme song go? “I’m loving it!”

Ruthie Mazengarb’s third year! Good stuff!

Ruth (left) and I (right) in 2004Picture is of Ruth (right) and I (left) in the AIS high school common room, 2004. My facial expression was a result of having a nasty cold. My hair… I can’t explain.

Got an email today from a Singapore high school friend of mine, Ruthie Mazengarb! Munt! Ruth came to our school in year 11 I think, was one of the nicest, funniest, nicest (I think I said that already) people I ever met, and let’s just say I had a but of crush on her too. Ahem.

She’s doing great down there in New Zealand, just about to start her 3rd year of a Social Work degree, a real thrill to hear. She’s exactly the kind of person you would want working with people. That didn’t come out right, but you get the jist.

But possibly the second best thing of all after the fact I heard from her? I’ve got her to ditch Windows!

You will be pleased to know I have a Mac (ibook) the baby/smallest one…..I remember your comments at school that always put Macs above Microsoft and PC, now, i do actually understand what you where on about, and think Macs rock too!

Is good lah, bagus!

It’s amazing that I have several slow weeks in my email inbox (I don’t count work on university correspondence!), but just in the last week I’ve met three new people and caught up with four others!

Rebecca Hagelin shoudn’t try economics lah!

Ruben does economicsAnother example of why people like Rebecca Hagelin shouldn’t try their hand at economics!

In her latest typo filled article entitled THe Coming Entitlement SPending Tsunami?, Ms Hagelin goes into great detail explaining why the newly appointed Democratic majority in the United States is going to be causing a spending tsunami:

This tsunami is a financial one that threatens to bankrupt our children. The “perfect storm” has been created by the convergence of the promises our government has made through the Big Three entitlement programs: Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.

If policymakers in Washington do nothing — and let’s face, inaction is a specialty of theirs - and the deficit keeps rising, then by 2027 the Big Three (plus the resulting interest on the debt) will consume the entire U.S. budget.

Sorry to rain on your party Ms Hagelin, but your argument that the Democrats are going to bankrupt the country is entirely backwards.

On Bill Clinton’s watch (a Democrat), the United States government had a record government surplus. Under the fiscal mismanagement, wastage and corruption of George W. Bush’s administration, the government has had the biggest deficit in history.

The reckless spending “tsunami” you describe isn’t coming Ms Hagelin, it has already come through. The Republicans and George W. Bush caused it, eclipsing even Reagan’s wasteful spending and damaging tax cuts (see my previous article). It doesn’t take a bachelor’s degree with minors in Keynesian theory and Microeconomics, (which I’m currently undertaking by the way) to see this.

Now granted the “Big Three” which you describe do cost large amounts of money, and it is true that it can put a strain on a government’s budget; however your argument that they are the sole reason for possible bankruptcy is, to put it as politely as possible, absurd. Just because the government in power manages to blow incomprehensibly large amounts of money on pointless and irrelevant pet projects doesn’t mean that social security spending becomes any more of a money drain. Quite the opposite, the relative percentage actually drops.

You don’t solve a problem by patching up the symptoms, you solve a problem by attacking the root cause. In this case, you don’t cut the “Big Three” because you have less money to spend (a symptom), you investigate the administration’s ridiculous fiscal management and find out why you have less money to spend (the cause) and take steps to address it.

But as my wise and devilishly sarcastic granddad on my mother’s side of the family always says: “very interesting article [Rebecca Hagelin], but please, don’t let the facts get in the way of your argument!”

Uni Student Habitat on Flickr


Photo is in my Flickr account, click to view gallery

Want to see what the habitat of a computer science university student in Australia looks like? An Apple notebook computer, an iPod, a Blackberry, a bit of money and a cup of hot coffee: what more do you need?

Click here to view the gallery if you dare ;).

Organise Your Life with PMWiki

PMWiki

If your interested in wiki software, I’ve posted my official review of PMWiki on the University Chronicles of Ruben.

In summary, it’s a great piece of software and is ideal for running locally on your own machine to organise uni notes and so forth, as well as being darned easy to backup because the data is created is contained in text files instead of in a myriad of MySQL tables.

Organise Your Life with PMWiki

Academic Integrity and Plagiarism

Academic Integrity

I received this email regarding Academic Integrity. I think it’s important to understand as many different universities, schools and the like take the words plagiarism, integrity and ruben is awesome to mean different things.

Dear Student

In your time studying at UniSA, you may have come across the phrase “academic integrity” - in your Course Information Booklet, on the UniSA website, from your lecturer.

So what is academic integrity?

Academic integrity is a term used at university to describe honest behaviour as it relates to all academic work. This includes papers written by staff, student assignments, conduct in exams, use of data etc. One of the main principles is respecting other people’s ideas and not claiming them as your own in your writing or presentations. If you do use resources from other people you will need to reference them correctly.

The University of South Australia takes academic integrity very seriously. The website has information for you including:

  • academic integrity and why it’s important
  • referencing resources
  • what you can do to avoid unintentional plagiarism
  • UniSA policy

You should familiarise yourself with the procedures that the University uses to deal with cases of academic misconduct and also the possible outcomes.

If you are still unclear about referencing, you can access individual advice from learning advisers at Learning Connection.

New to 2006

Academic Integrity Officers have been appointed to each School. These people will be work directly with cases of academic misconduct identified by teaching staff. The University is also using text-comparison software to check for plagiarism.

If you have concerns about any aspect of academic integrity please don’t hesitate to contact Learning Connection staff or the Academic Integrity Officer in your School.

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Closeup of Mug Boss

Remember a few hours ago when I typed:

Remember back on 5th March 2006 when I said I wanted the Accepting Applications for Japanese Girlfriends Tshirt? Well while you’re at ThinkGeek buying that I’d also love this [Mug Boss]!”

Here’s an even better shot of it:

The Mug Boss

RichardDawkins.net