Archive for June 6, 2010

Moving off of Matlab for numeric/image processing

Reardon abused me (not really) for still using Matlab and goaded me to look into the ImageJ world. So I am learning. Seems like I need to get smart on

  • ImageJ and the Fiji distribution
  • Python derivatives like Jython for ImageJ scripting and NumPy/SciPy for numeric/array processing
  • There are a ton of other scripting language choices but seems like python covers this well enough. I don’t want the brain damage of Clojure.

Other stuff to learn? I’ll have to pick up an editor and source management tool as well. The benefit of all this? Any code I write should be faster, more easily redistributable, and there is a large support community. The disadvantage? I have to assemble all these piece-parts to get something equivalent to MatLab, so more time d&*king around with software which is time taken away from research focus. And the Matlab universe has a pretty good support community too, so not clear I am trading up there. Certainly the ImageJ/Jython/NumPy path is “cooler” along a certain dimension, but do I care?

21st Century Procrastination

The great thing about living in the gadget and cloud age is the huge explosion of procrastination aids available to me. Yesterday was my uncle’s birthday so I better send him a message on Facebook, oh and I wonder if my own birthday wishlist is up to date on Amazon, and boy howdy do my Amazon recommendations suck, so I better tune those up, and I wonder what my friends are recommending on Goodreads, and maybe I should install the Goodreads iPhone app, oh and check out some other top selling iPhone apps, I can certainly use Fruit Ninja and FatBooth. Oh of course I got the iOS4.0 release installed on the iPhone, which also drug on the new version of iTunes, speaking of which I really need to update my playlists, oh and I better install all these other updates on my Mac, and hey I got some new RAW support for Aperture, and I’ve been needing to upload some photos from Aperture to Smugmug, and is my BackBlaze backup working ok? And maybe I should try Lightroom instead of Aperture, Lightroom has some cool plugins, though the Aperture Plugins are cool too, and I have to update my Firefox and Chrome and WordPress plugins, there are sure some nice Twitter plugins for WordPress, and maybe I should check my Twitter feed. And my email. And my facebook stream. And my rss subscriptions. Man it has been a full day and I’ve yet to check in on college football websites, halloween forums, haven’t posted any blog content, but I better take a DoodleJump break first. Though I wonder if I have any game updates on Steam and my two Kindles are out of sync with each other and I have some photos I’ve been meaning to scan in and I want to check the Tivo todo list to make sure I am getting Louie

Recent Software Trials

  • Default Folder — OK i really wanted to love this. But visually very funky. Ended up nuking.
  • PopCharX. This is one utility I can’t live without, and the new version with favorites is nice.

Software I haven’t tried but need to:

  • Things. So frustrated with todo lists on the iphone. I want something that syncs via the cloud with outlook, ical, and has a nice iphone app.
  • Panic Transmit. I am pretty happy with Filezilla but Transmit gets super raves.
  • Lightroom. I’ve been happy with Aperture and I hate the huge morass of software that Adobe foists on you when you install their apps, but I feel like I’m missing the Lightroom party.
  • Trip Journal. I’ve installed but haven’t had time to play with yet.
  • Yazsoft Sharetool. Always am drawn to these tools that punch thru all the networking goo and let you get your files anywhere — Homepipe is another one. But I never seem to stick with them. Something important in that statement.

Recent zombie books — Patient Zero, World War Z, Unholy Ghosts, Boneshaker, Feed

Feed by Mira Grant

OK, it is summer, so of course I am reading zombie books. There are enough of these to probably dedicate a blog just to the category.

  • Patient Zero by Jonathan Maberry. Terrorists and their greedy western sponsors create a zombie virus to bring the USA to its knees. Joe Ledger, supercop, leads the fight against the zombie plot. Typical escapist action fare. Amazon says 4 stars, goodreads 3.91, this is high, but an entertaining airplane read.
  • World War Z by Max Brooks. A grittier look at an imagined future zombie war. Of course the humans win but massive deaths, and no one left alive is untouched. Nicely structured as a series of interviews with survivors. Amazon says 4.5 stars, goodreads says 4.17, that might be rich, but this was entertaining with some emotional depth.
  • Unholy Ghosts by Stacia Kane. No zombies, just hordes of ghosts that won’t go away in the near future. Magic has been rediscovered to control them, and our heroine finds herself in the middle of multiple intersecting plots. An attempt to kickstart a franchise, but ultimately the attempt to create a flawed heroine just didn’t do it for me. Amazon says 4.5 stars, goodreads says 4.09, but I was left a little bored.
  • Boneshaker by Cherie Priest. In an 1880s steampunk alterna-Seattle, a manmade disaster has unleashed a toxic cloud of zombification. The zombies are not really the main protagonist, rather it is all the humans scrabbling to live in the transformed city. Really quite good, Amazon says 4 stars, goodreads says 3.7, this is fair, the setting and characters are good.
  • Feed by Mira Grant. A group of bloggers cover a presidential campaign and uncover a treasonous plot, against the backdrop of a world dealing with a virus which is pervasive in its dormant state and breaks out occasionally in its active zombie-inducing state. I like an author who isn’t afraid to kill off central characters, some real pathos in this tale. I’d like to read the next in the series. Maybe the most interesting science of any of the books. Amazon says 4.5 stars, goodreads says 4.24, this was probably the best of the set for me.

Recent books — Reacher, Goodkind crapfest, Infinite Jest, Cather

  • 61 Hours by Lee Child. Reacher’s back and never fails to entertain. And gasp a cliffhanger, that is a new element. I hope Child pushes the character more to be honest, Reacher needs to evolve to keep my interest and to avoid replaying the same plot over and over again with ever more outlandish elements — and the crazy WWII era abandoned military facility had a little bit of shark-jumping in it. But still entertaining. Amazon says 3.5 stars, that seems fair. 
  • The Law of Nines by Terry Goodkind. Goodkind seems to sell a lot of books based on shelf space at the local bookstore, so I decided to try one. What an epic piece of crap. Plodding, pedantic, characterless,derivative, logically-inconsistent crap. I am stunned that books this bad get published. How does it rate 3.5 stars on Amazon? This thing deserves negative stars, it saps the life out of any book it sits next to, it is a black hole of literature.
  • Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace. After the Goodkind crapfest I needed something of substance, and it was great to dive into a book of complex characters slowly revealed through events. Ultimately this book is not my style, a little too much towards farce, but I can admire the writing. Amazon says 4 stars and I guess I’d agree tho I didn’t finish as it just not my taste.
  • Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather. A great tale of a full life on the American frontier. Death comes easy when you have worked long and given much to people. A further cleansing of the mind after that terrible Goodkind book. Amazon says 4.5 stars and I’d agree.

Can’t miss gifts for father’s day

No way your father has any of these…

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