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I have moved to newlyancient.com and will be writing regularly there! Content on this domain is no longer updated, but will be maintained as an archive in its original form.

Tag Archive for 'rant'

The 26 Hour Day

Apparently, Senator Vince Illuzzi thinks he can extend the amount of time in a day. Or at least restructure the space-time consortium. In a ridiculous cost-cutting measure, he has suggested that all state offices and schools cut down to 4 day weeks, with 10 hour days. He cites the always-popular reasons of saving money on heat and gas. Screw learning, it’s all about the cash. In fact, screw the laws of time: if it will save taxpayers cash, then it has to be a good thing, right?

Absolutely not. Nobody is bringing up the fact that this would eliminate every vestige of free time a student has. First, let’s tackle the fact that this would essentially eliminate summer vacation. Since schools are required to have at least 175 days a year, this would mean summer vacation would be dipped into by many weeks. Depending upon implementation, a best-case scenario would be 2 to 3 weeks for summer vacation. This is certainly not enough time for students to do enough of the best kind of learning which comes with summer: volunteering, getting a job, or taking summer courses. Fortunately, the legislator could always wave a magic wand and eliminate the 175 day requirement. Unfortunately, I expect the eventual “solution” would involve less summer vacation.

Figure 1

Assuming the summer issue could be settled, it is worth considering that there simply is not enough time in a day for 10 hours of school. The typical high school student has approximately 3 hours of homework per night (this is being conservative). In my school, bus transportation takes 45 minutes in the afternoon and 1 hour, 45 minutes in the morning. Let’s also assume 1 hour for showering, eating breakfast, eating dinner, and doing chores (combined). Finally, the American Sleep Disorders Association recommends 9.5 hours of sleep per night for a teen. Adding this up, we get an impossible sum: 10+3+2.5+1+9.5=26. In order to do all homework and get a healthy amount of sleep, even without any free time, there would need to be 26 hours in a day for the 10-hour school day to work. Contrary to what Senator Illuzzi may think, there are only 24 hours in a day. So, even if a student never gamed, played sports, had fun or did anything normal, they would only be able to get 7.5 hours of sleep. (See Figure 2)

school-1.png key-2.png

Obviously, that doesn’t seem too unreasonable. 7.5 hours of sleep is less than recommended, but is still reasonable—until you remember the average student does far more than sleeping, homework, and learning. In a more typical situation, a student might spend 1 hour doing any number of clubs or after-school commitments in a day (volunteering, etc.): the sort of stuff young people are encouraged to do. In addition, they are on the varsity soccer team and have 1 hour of practice every day. In order to do everything, they would only have 5.5 hours of sleep per night. (10+3+2.5+1+1+1+5.5=24) That is going into the realm of stressful and unhealthy. This student still has no free time and isn’t able to do much outside of school (certainly no part-time job), yet only gets 5.5 hours of sleep per night. (See figure 4)

school-2.png

As you can plainly see, this proposed plan would wreak havoc upon already stressed teens. It would eliminate summer vacations and would force the average teen to only get 5.5 hours of sleep per night (or less). In the scramble to cut costs, there should be other places to look besides taxpayers’ right-less students’ time. I have another idea for you, Senator Illuzzi: try carpooling. Or, if you really hate schools this much, eliminate required schooling.

Privacy Rant

What are you looking at?

I am sick and tired of so-called privacy experts complaining about how much data companies store on users. As they continually cite Orwell, I believe they misunderstand. You see, nobody forces you to use these services. If you don’t want data stored on you, just don’t use it. Nobody can make you use Yahoo or Google, that is a choice. Google especially offers you the opportunity to opt out of their tracking services. That is, if you want to. However, I see no reason for you to do so. If someone wants to get your information, they need not resort to complicated hacks into Google’s servers. Instead, a quick Google search will just easily turn up far more information on you than could be gleaned from search records. You don’t see anyone objecting to the fact that major retailers all track your purchases, so why object to websites doing the same thing. Search engines offer a project (results) and track which product you “buy” so they can target results better in the future. Personally, I am happy to hand over my info to Google; they have some of the best data security in business, and have proven that they will go to great lengths to protect my data - including resisting the government. Additionally, I feel that Google makes good use of this data - I love the fact that I can simply search “Unicel” and it will come up with the Vermont branch and that nowhere in a search for “apple” does it mention the fruit. This level of personalization, that my results are vastly different from my mothers, makes the experience far better. If that means Google knows every girl I ever liked, then so be it.

Floats: The Designer’s Bane

Caution: This post is 85% rant and 10% information.

I hate floats. The float property is the single most annoying property of CSS. It is very fickle and often has unexpected results. The purpose of a float is to align some element left or right. In the case of an image inside of a text body, it does its job well. In all other cases, it can be very strange in how it does it. Sometimes, other elements are overlaid underneath or over the floated element. Other times, the float simply moves the element to an entirely different place on the page than where you want it.

Despite all their faults, I and every other web designer use floats in all our work. Let’s face it: you often need stuff aligned to the right and left or kept inline with other content. They are especially of use when you want to create a semantic unordered list for navigation. I just wish they would work across all browsers as you want them too. So, instead of trying to squash competitors and expand your market, just make your engine interpret CSS correctly. The rest will float follow.

Wondering where the other 5% from my warning went? The other 5% was simply the need for something to post about since things were getting dull around here since I’m back from Chicago.