Francesca Forrest's Blog, page 111

March 18, 2015

Two photos, one question

Little Springtime works at the media lab at her university. They have a 3D printer, which, from next semester (... I think?) will be available to students to use. She tested it out and made a hedgehog.

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Yesterday and today have been cold, with magnificent if somewhat ominous high winds, but the day before yesterday was warm and melty. Melted snow was coursing down the road. Or rather, it was lapping down the road.

Why does it go down the road in ripples like this? (See the smiles, one after the...
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Published on March 18, 2015 04:59

March 17, 2015

a foundation that evolved in response to those it committed to serve

Andy Posner wanted to bring microloans, a much-heralded form of aid in the developing world, to America's "underbanked" populations. When he established Capital Good Fund, it was with the notion that as in the developing world, the loans would be used to spur small-business growth.

What he discovered, though, was that the people he wanted to serve had a big need for plain old personal loans. If they wanted to put down security loans for an apartment or make a car repair, their only alternativ...
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Published on March 17, 2015 08:40

A rant on the topic of the insufferable genius





I posted a version of this as a comment on a Goodreads review, but it's more appropriate for an LJ post.

I really hate the notion that talent and genius excuse a person from appalling behavior. The trade-off that people seem to accept and be fascinated by goes like this: "On the one hand, the character is selfish, self-centered, heartless, demanding, you name it. On the other: they're a genius! Such art! [or: such science! or: such insights!]"

Stuff worth doing--art, science, whatever--takes ti...
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Published on March 17, 2015 05:05

March 14, 2015

Three mornings





Yesterday

Yesterday morning in the woods I met a man dressed in bowhunters' garb, using a golf club as a cane as he limped along, accompanied by his lovely, friendly English setter. This man had a face well used to smiling, though he had very few teeth. Our greeting pleasantries were interrupted by snowmobiles, grooming the trail. The second snowmobile dragged a thing like a harrow, un-compacting the hardened snow.

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Today

In the Dunkin Donuts this morning, "I'm going to make a man out of you," fr...
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Published on March 14, 2015 10:13

March 12, 2015

seen in passing

Outside the drug dispensary in the wellness center, a older man with thistledown white hair had some kind of musical-instrument-in-progress on his lap. It was bigger than a ukelele, and more or less guitarlike in shape, though not entirely like a guitar, and it was only about as deep as a fiddle. The wood was wheat-colored, raw, and held together by a series of metal clamps. It was, he told me, his own invention, a cross between a mandolin and a guitar. He explained things I couldn't quite un...
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Published on March 12, 2015 15:46

Jiji the goalie





To take your mind off the very sad news about Terry Pratchett, here is a 28-second video of Jiji acting as goalkeeper in a game of tinfoil-ball soccer.



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Published on March 12, 2015 10:53

March 11, 2015

yesterday morning and this morning





Yesterday appeared in a blaze of color
red sky in the morning

today was golden gauze

misty sun


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Published on March 11, 2015 08:01

March 7, 2015

The new Annie: a conversation

One of my Friday students, who's African American, told me about talking to her younger daughter on the phone. My student had wanted to have a word with her daughter about her daughter's grades (not so good), but her daughter had been too excited to let her get a word in edgewise:

"Mommy mommy, guess what!"

"What?"

"We went to see Annie!"

"That's great--"

"And guess what!"

"What?"

"Annie's a Black girl! And guess what!"

"What?"

"She's the star!"

I didn't get to hear the daughter say all this, but from...
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Published on March 07, 2015 19:03

March 6, 2015

newspaper footprints

I line my boots with newspaper when snow gets in there (which it often does), and then I leave that lining in until such time as I decide it needs to be refreshed.

Here are the old liners, soon to go the way of all things. (Japanese newspaper because Wakanomori brings home old Japanese newspapers from work.)

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Published on March 06, 2015 05:30

March 4, 2015

A response from the creator of the two-dollar challenge





Shawn Humphrey, the creator of the two-dollar challenge (and the author of the post I linked to at the start of my entry on it) shared some thoughts on the limitations, but also the strengths, of his campaign. As cecile_c says, pedagogy is a puzzle: how best to reach people? Shawn speaks from experience. His response is here, but for the click averse, I've posted it below as well. Thanks Shawn, for being such a great model of constructive engagement!

from @BluCollarProf

Can anything good come...
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Published on March 04, 2015 12:40