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Showing posts from June, 2023

Bea Wolf is an amazing read

I read Bea Wolf  yesterday. It is written by Zach Weinersmith, the creator of the  Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereals internet comic  and drawn by Boulet . I've been a fan of their work for over a decade now, since I was in college. From the Bea Wolf book website - A modern middle-grade graphic novel retelling of Beowulf, featuring a gang of troublemaking kids who must defend their tree house from a fun-hating adult who can instantly turn children into grown-ups. I was smiling the entire time I was reading the graphic novel and I was laughing out loud multiple times. I hope the story continues and they come out with a Volume 2 of Bea Wolfs adventures. Listen! Hear a tale of mallow-munchers and warriors who answer candy’s clarion call! Somewhere in a generic suburb stands Treeheart, a kid-forged sanctuary where generations of tireless tykes have spent their youths making merry, spilling soda, and staving off the shadow of adulthood. One day, these brave warriors find their fun cut s

Sesame seeds, allergen labels and unexpected outcomes of government regulations

From todays edition  of Matt Levines' Bloomberg Opinion column Congress passed legislation intended to make life better for people allergic to sesame seeds. Instead, it made things worse.  The bill, passed with overwhelming bipartisan support and signed into law by President Biden in 2021, requires manufacturers to label sesame on their products starting this year.  In response, some companies began adding sesame to products that hadn’t included it in the past—saying it was safer to add sesame and label it, rather than certify they had eliminated all traces of it. People with sesame allergies say the result is fewer sesame-free food options, as well as new and unexpected risks from sesame in foods they used to eat without worry.  What do you think is the lesson here? In one of my earlier blogposts , I outlined the "8 things a government can do" framework of thinking about public policy. Regulating an industry to place allergen labels feels like "Drastically change in

Python, Astronomy and Me

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I wouldn't be where I am today if not for Astronomy and Astrophysics. I failed my Computer Science 101 course in my first year of college because I could not comprehend how the variables, conditionals and loops could ever help me with my Physics degree. I stayed as far away from programming as possible until the summer of my fourth year. I had an internship where I was tasked with processing astronomical data. The professor I was working with that summer told me that I could use any programming language I wanted to process the data and for reasons that I don't remember now, I chose Python. And I absolutely fell in love. Not with the programming language itself but with the fact that I now had access to a tool that helped me with Astronomy and Astrophysics. I graduated and I got a job as a Scientific Software Developer, not too far away from Science but far enough that I don't get to work directly on anything even remotely related to Astronomy and Astrophysics. I've foll

SpaceTraders should be educational

https://spacetraders.io/  popped up on Hacker News a while back. It is marketed as a "A unique multiplayer game built on a free Web API" I recently started working on a project that uses web technologies at work and we're still trying to figure out the lay of the land. One of the things that I started looking into this week is what the best practices for REST API design are and when discussing this with a colleague, Space Traders popped into my head. Yes, there are popular public APIs that I can use for learning like the APIs offered by GitHub and Slack but space traders should be more fun. I initially was considering learning a new language ( Elm ) while also learning web technologies but that might just be too much for now. So, for now, I will stick to writing code in Python and playing with the Space Traders API over the weekend. Let's see what comes of it.