Computing: Software Tools and Solutions

My personal blog

Trusting Digital Reviews

TRUSTING DIGITAL CAMERA REVIEWS Digital camera reviews are abundant not just online but also in the newspapers, magazines and even TV shows. We often wonder why most digital camera reviews always pra...



Website Performance And Load Testing

Your company is rolling out its new web application. This web application is well designed and attractive. It has been well tested by your quality assurance group. You have spent a lot of money market...


The Truth About SEO And Meta Tags

In earlier days, when the Internet was still pretty new meta tags were everything. They were vital in helping search engines determine what the site was all about and how to rank the site in their sea...


Finding The Best Ergonomic Chair For You

It isn't always easy to find a cheap ergonomic chair or a low cost ergonomic office chair. Incorrect ergonomics can cause back pain, neck pain, shoulder pain, headaches, and other medical issues. When...


Try One of These Four Tips to Watch TV On The Computer

Imagine viewing with your PC the thousands of videos, TV shows and movies that the Internet has to offer. If you have a laptop, then your TV viewing can be done on the go wherever you have access to t...


Zombie Computers Roam The Internet

Spyware and viruses are so common that you would be hard pressed to find anyone that isn't aware of them. Under the umbrella term Malware, these little programs have been causing trouble for computer ...


Boost Your Affiliate Commissions 3 Different Ways While You Sleep

The ideal world of affiliate marketing does not require having your own website, dealing with customers, refunds, product development and maintenance. This is one of the easiest ways of launching into...


Hard Disk Data Recovery Still An Important Asset

Hard disks have evolved along the years to be a lot more reliable than their ancestors, but no matter how good they got to be, they are still open to damage and errors that could cause loss of data. I...


You're Data Recovery Guidelines

Hard drive data recovery is simply the process of retrieving the inaccessible or deleted files from failed electronic storage media, the hard drive. The world of data recovery is a big mystery for mos...


Download Firefox Free Mozilla: With Free Google Toolbar

Microsoft Internet Explorer keeps Crashing on you? Loosing all your hard work on the computer after many hours of typing? Here is your solution. Benefits: Firefox is free, it work for W...


Why do we need to buy wow gold?

For true passionate gamers, the appearance of multiplayer online role-playing games such as World of Warcraft was more than welcomed. They were able to build up their character, passing through some u...


Perform A Windows Registry Scan With A Registry Cleaner

Whenever you change any setting on your PC, these changes are stored in your "registry". The registry holds all the important configuration details that help to keep your PC running smoothly. ...


Fix Windows Registry Errors With A Registry Cleaner

Many people like to fix problems themselves and don't like to get other people involved or even buy anything to help. However, when it comes to PC problems, this really isn't the way to go. You can of...


Why Windows XP Registry Repair Can Fix Errors

To many people, talking about technical aspects of a PC such as memory speed or system registry just goes right over their heads. This is understandable as not everyone wants to know what goes on in a...


Download A Registry Fix To Cure Registry Errors

Have you ever had any of those annoying popup error boxes appearing on your screen? Or maybe your machine just freezes up for no reason at all and all you can do is manually reboot it? Well su...


Use The Best Registry Cleaners To Fix Registry Errors

Lets be honest, the technical aspects of working with your PC isn't something that everyone can deal with comfortably. Data, hard drives, modems, internet speed, there's a lot to deal with in one such...


GPS Tracking Systems. What they REALLY can do for you.

GPS Tracking is taking the corporate world, and this is a wave that is growing more and more everyday. However, there is still a lot of lack of knowledge when companies decide to go into this technol...


Registry fix - The most important chapter of computer maintenance

Description: Is your computer giving problems? Is it not working properly? Is it running slow? Does it keep crashing without an explanation? Check, it may have a messy registry and...


Building a House from Stock House Plans

As the owner of houseplancentral.com I thought it would be important to provide some information to people shopping for house plans about what it takes to build a house yourself. My parents are approa...


The Print Quality Of Refurbished Cartridges Compared To New Ones

Whether you invest in HP ink, HP laser cartridges, HP office supplies or indeed anything else that is part of the HP brand, what you can find right away is that all of the print cartridges that are pu...


Getting The Most Out Of Your Iphone Posted By : Andrea Dilea

iPhones are one of the hottest new consumer electronics available. To get the most you need some great extras and accessories.


Easy Tips for Article Submission Posted By : Robert Thomson

You can read about the ways of making the article submission easier tips in this article.


ALL ABOUT PAYMENT GATEWAYS Posted By : Thomas H. Lindblom

Payment gateways work as a middle layer between a portal and the bank. In other words, it is through these online payment gateways that credit card payments are done online. To an extent, payment gateways are equivalent to the credit card processing terminals in shops.


ALL ABOUT INTERNATIONAL MERCHANT ACCOUNTS Posted By : Thomas H. Lindblom

It would be difficult to imagine how anyone could do online business today but for the ability to use international merchant accounts that are excellent tools which you need to use when doing trading in the international market. You can get international merchant accounts through account providers that are located overseas and one of the great things about such accounts is the absence of them being connected to regulations as well as tax rules of a host country which means that you can get many benefits regarding taxation.


The Mind: It's All In Your Head

[We have a very sad note from our own boodler bc this morning:

'It is with a heavy heart that I tell you Bob Lewis, the man we all knew as Error Flynn, passed away yesterday after a long illness. I am in touch with his family, and will pass along information regarding arrangements as they become available. For the moment, I'll leave you with Error's Guest Kit, from July of 2006.'

Bob was a great friend to this blog, and I know he appreciated the support from the boodle (and especially bc, who visited him) during his long illness. I'll post some of Bob's comments this week, but for now let's remember what he wrote here less than a month ago, when something special arrived at his home:

'A strange and wonderful thing happened today... a fairy door showed up on my doorstep. I am truly speechless. Martooni makes very magical doors, and the Boodle makes for some very magical friends. I can't ever thank you folks enough. Martooni, you'll be happy to know it matches my bar perfectly.']

--

[My article in the Outlook section.]


If I were to be eaten by a shark, I'm pretty sure the worst part would be not the pain or the mutilation or the actual dying and so forth, but rather the thought balloon over my head with the words, "I'm being eaten by a [expletive] shark!"

Whereas a fish doesn't have this problem. A fish has no thought balloon, or just a teensy little one, with a monosyllabic fish-word like "Urp!" A fish probably suffers, but it doesn't have the additional suffering that comes from knowing that it's suffering, and from regretting that it went swimming instead of watching the golf tournament, and from hearing, as we all do whenever we're devoured by sharks, the theme music from "Jaws." You know: that tuba.

All of which is a deft way of introducing our subject today: The Mystery of Consciousness. It's one of the biggest unknowns, right up there with the origin of life. But it's under a multi-pronged assault by scientists, who vow to crack the code of the mind in the same way that they are deciphering the human genome. It's all very exciting, with the one catch that no one can really agree on what the mind is.

"With consciousness, there is no agreement on anything," says Giulio Tononi, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, "except it's very difficult."

Jim Olds, who directs George Mason University's Krasnow Institute, a think tank devoted to the study of the mind, says of his field, "We're waiting for our Einstein."

The human brain is a hunk of meat that weighs about three pounds. It contains about 30 billion cells, called neurons. The networking of these cells involves 100 trillion meeting points, or synapses. This is the most complex object in the known universe (though if we explore the stars we may eventually find organisms with brains that make ours seem as impressive as Twinkies).

Human brains can do things that no computer can match. Sure, a computer can beat a human at chess, but only with brute-force calculation of every conceivable move. The most sophisticated robots still lack the basic smarts of a 2-year-old, who can perceive the world in three dimensions and go searching for a kitty cat while somehow avoiding the jutting edge of the coffee table. Negotiating the world requires massive bandwidth.

"The engineering problems that we humans solve as we see and walk and plan and make it through the day are far more challenging than landing on the moon or sequencing the human genome," psychologist Steven Pinker writes in his book "How the Mind Works."

Beyond the basics of perception and motor skills, the human brain has a premium feature: consciousness. You could also call it sentience, or self-awareness, or just the thing that makes it such a drag to be devoured by a mindless oceanic carnivore. This is what keeps us from being zombies. We perceive ourselves as actors on the stage of life. We sense that there's an "I" somewhere inside our skull.

"Consciousness is a big thing," Tononi says. "It is the single biggest thing of all. It is the only thing we really care about in the end."

But we don't understand it. We don't know how, in the words of philosopher Colin McGinn, "the water of the physical brain is turned into the wine of consciousness."

Will we ever know?

--

Earlier this year, Jim Olds gathered a bunch of big thinkers at George Mason University for a two-day conference on the mind. He and his allies want the federal government to invest $4 billion in an initiative that would be called the "Decade of the Mind." This would be a follow-up to a 1990s program called the "Decade of the Brain," which brought increased attention to neuroscience. The new initiative would be an attempt to take science into a realm previously explored only by philosophers, theologians and mountaintop yogis.

"Brain science is an exhaustive collection of facts without a theory," Olds says. "This is for the nation as a whole to invest in one of the fundamental intellectual questions of what it is to be a human being."

In a letter published a few weeks ago in the journal Science, 10 scientists said that a Decade of the Mind would help us understand mental disorders that affect 50 million Americans and cost more than $400 billion a year. It might also aid in the development of intelligent machines and new computing techniques. A breakthrough in mind research, the scientists wrote, could have "broad and dramatic impacts on the economy, national security, and our social well-being."

There's reason to be optimistic. Look at what has happened in recent years with the development of brain scans, such as MRIs, that let us observe the brain at work in real time. As the technology improves, the brain becomes more transparent, less of a black box.

That said, the mind isn't something that pops up on a computer screen. People have been poking around the brain in search of the mind for many centuries, and no one is even sure what neurological structures are the most critical to generating consciousness. Descartes, who gave us the most famous line in the annals of philosophy ("Cogito, ergo sum" -- I think, therefore I am), believed the center of consciousness to be the pea-size structure known as the pineal gland. Nice stab, but it turns out that the pineal gland does not seem to have much to do with creating the "I" in our head.

Other brain structures are important, such as something called Brodmann area 46, and the anterior cingulate sulcus, and the thalamus, and of course the knurled, dipsy-doodle structure called the cerebral cortex. We can also be confident that consciousness does not depend on the cerebellum, which is 50 billion neurons worth of brain matter that you could surgically remove without "losing your mind." As Tononi puts it, you could toss the cerebellum in the garbage and " you would still be there."

The classic idea of "dualism" solves the location problem by defining it away: The mind is perceived as separate from the body, something that can't be reduced to machinery. It's unreachable by the tools of the laboratory. Dualism flatters us, for it suggests that our minds, our selves, are not merely the result of rambunctious chemistry, and we are thus free to talk about souls and spirits and essences that are unfettered by the physical body.

Dualism is pretty much dead to serious researchers, though an echo of it can be found among philosophers who are sometimes called the Mysterians. The philosopher David Chalmers has famously made a distinction between the Easy Problems, which involve the ways that the brain creates specific elements of consciousness (vision, language, memory, attention, emotion, etc.), and the Hard Problem, which is the mystery of how all the elements


Future-Pain Award Survives Beneficiary's Sudden Death

The estate of a woman who died the day after a New York judge awarded her $150,000 for future pain and suffering is still entitled to the award, her curtailed future notwithstanding, an appellate panel has ruled. "Moreover, under the circumstances of this personal injury action involving an elderly woman, where the defendant caused significant delays, this court's interest in justice lies in affirming the judgment," Justice William E. McCarthy wrote for the unanimous Appellate Division, 2nd Department.


Prosecutors Seek Tougher Sentencing Rules for Former Brocade CEO

Prosecutors won guilty verdicts on 10 counts against backdating poster boy Gregory Reyes in August. But they still need to explain just who it was the former Brocade Communications CEO hurt, and how much. In a preliminary sentencing brief filed in the case Friday, prosecutors laid out the numbers. The prosecution is also recommending that Judge Charles Breyer apply current sentencing guidelines, arguing that Reyes' crimes continued until 2004, when harsher penalties were put in place for financial fraud.


Pan Am Alleges Sheppard Mullin Helped Ex-GC Conceal His Fraud

The re-reincarnation of the airline Pan American is suing Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton and one of the firm's D.C. attorneys for legal malpractice, alleging the firm, which represented two of the airline's subsidiaries in the past, breached a fiduciary duty by agreeing to represent Pan Am's general counsel without the company's knowledge. The case provides an interesting, though convoluted, look at what can happen if your wayward in-house counsel lawyers up with one of your outside law firms.


Baker & McKenzie's New Managing Partner Runs With a Pack

When Shane Byrne fled the charging livestock in Pamplona, a fellow partner and a client who was also a friend risked life and limb with him. And when he fled the wreckage of Jackson Tufts Cole & Black in 1999, switched firms again in 2000 and escaped the collapsing Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison in 2003 for Baker & McKenzie, a core group of corporate technology lawyers also stuck by his side. Now, Baker wants him to use his magnetic powers as the new office managing partner in San Francisco and Silicon Valley.


2nd Circuit Hears Arguments on Letting NYC's Gun Suit Go to Trial

In arguments before the 2nd Circuit, Corporation Counsel Michael Cardozo said a law passed by Congress to limit suits against manufacturers and distributors whose guns end up in criminals' hands was unconstitutional and does not apply to the suit New York City brought in 2000 to halt illegal firearm sales. But an attorney for the manufacturers and distributors said the public nuisance lawsuit was just the type of action Congress meant to block by passing the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act.


False Liens Filed Against Federal Judges Land Inmate 20 More Years

Mycal Antoine Poole was already serving a 60-year state prison sentence in Texas, but now he'll serve an extra 20 years for filing fraudulent liens against two federal judges. U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks says Poole filed three liens for more than $4.1 million against him with the Texas Secretary of State's Office. U.S. Magistrate Judge Andrew Austin says Poole filed one lien against him for $37 million. Sparks and Austin had presided over two suits that Poole brought against public officials.


Will Judges Let Gonzales' Picks Remain in Play?

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales is out, and while evaluating his legacy will take a while, part of it will be front and center next month when the terms of 11 interim U.S. Attorneys expire. The prosecutors, including Washington, D.C.'s Jeffrey Taylor, whose nomination has lingered in the Senate Judiciary Committee since February, will find themselves at the mercy of the same U.S. district courts that the Justice Department saw fit to cut out of the U.S. Attorney appointment process last year.


Experts Call Judge's New Instructions in Spector Trial Unorthodox

Jurors in Phil Spector's murder trial resumed deliberations after a two-day break with a new set of instructions from the judge that legal experts deemed an unprecedented effort to break a deadlock. Outside the jury's presence, defense attorneys on Thursday fought vigorously against the instructions, which inject new scenarios of how Spector might have killed actress Lana Clarkson. They complained that Judge Larry Paul Fidler was turning the defense's own evidence against Spector.


DLA Piper Recruits Corporate Partners

DLA Piper has recruited New York corporate partners from the local offices of three different Chicago firms. The partners are the latest recruited by DLA Piper corporate chair Roger Meltzer, who joined DLA Piper earlier this year from New York's Cahill Gordon & Reindel. DLA Piper has tasked him with building a world-class New York corporate practice for the 3,400-lawyer firm.


Inmate's Diet Protest Lays an Egg With Rhyming Judge

A federal judge was driven to rhyme after receiving a hard-boiled egg in the mail from a prison inmate protesting his diet. Reaching for Dr. Seuss' "Green Eggs and Ham" for inspiration, Judge James Muirhead wrote, "I do not like eggs in the file. I do not like them in any style. I will not take them fried or boiled. I will not take them poached or broiled. I will not take them soft or scrambled/Despite an argument well-rambled."


The Appendix on Appeal: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 10 states that the record on appeal consists of the papers and exhibits filed in the trial court, the transcript of proceedings if any, and a certified copy of the trial court docket entries. To qualify for inclusion in the appendix on appeal, the item or document must be a part of the record on appeal. And yet, disagreements about the appendix's contents still arise. Appellate litigator Howard J. Bashman takes a look at the issues.