I wish “Journalists” would stop writing their articles on tablets

NewImageI’m serious, 

I’m as much a techno-geek as the next guy, I’ll leap to new technology and sometimes I leap before I look.

BUT we all know writing a text message on your apple or google device often leads to nonsensical messages.

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It’s become a running joke & there are sites dedicated to some of the more amusing autocorrect faux pas. 

Knowing this, why do “Journalists” continue to write full articles on these devices and then hit publish?

Heck, I’m writing short pieces in this blog and I screwup using a computer, a 21” screen and I have told the computer not to autocorrect for me.

What makes someone writing an article on a phone or phablet with full autocorrect turned on think they’re going to generate something error free or readable?

This is especially evident since most autocorrect employs heuristic algorithms which often amplify an initial error.  

The first word autocorrect replaces for the user dictates the selection of the next probable words used in the sentence. If the user is accepting words based on the first few characters typed,and aren’t really reading what’s on the display, the entire meaning of the sentence can be very different from what was intended.

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Scan the headlines prominently displayed on various news feeds and the assault on English is clear.

Most of the time you can figure out what the author meant.

Two bottle of beers were found in a shipwreck in Finland and according to its chemical analysis, brewed beer before probably tasted the same as modern day beers

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Then there are winners like this one. In addition to being almost completely nonsensical, subsequent articles from NASA seem to be contradicting this report.

It is being anticipated that after experiencing a short circuit, Curiosity Mars rover has its robotic arm left to be obsolete. Scientists believe that the explorer could continue to exist as being disabled for good.

How are these pieces getting past an editor? 

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At first I thought this kind of thing was actually due to translation errors. I’m not so charitable anymore. I’ve seen “Journalists” at local events using their Tablets and Phones as voice or video recorders. I saw one guy trying to use a speech to text application so he didn’t have to write anything, he just had to show up at an event. I noticed him because he was complaining about the errors in recognition because his cell coverage was too weak.

I think we should go back to the days of real reporters. You remember don’t you? People who listened, asked questions, and did research about a piece. They verified information and vetted their sources then fought with their editors about what needed to be cut or included before publication. You know… Professionals.

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In thinking about this and trying to read my morning news I find myself wondering if perhaps this is just another artifact of our over-reliance on technology. I’m not sure reliance is really the appropriate term. Perhaps its better described as an almost religious Faith in our technology.

That would explain why so many otherwise rational people lose their minds when the power goes off.

Remind me to tell you about my experience sitting in a bar after the San Jose quake sometime…


Update March 8, 2015

I had to include this article that showed up at the top of Google News on Sunday.

This is a prime example of an article desperately in need of an Editor. The reporter would have been better served by just republishing the press release from Fish & Game. 

At some point in their scholastic career they probably should have been told that they were not all that clever. Oh, right we don’t tell children that they failed at anything anymore. We just tell them they’ve done less good than their peers.

In the spirit of George Orwell then, Here, for your entertainment is a double plus un-good piece of reporting.

EMPIRE STATE TRIBUNE – Science Department

http://www.esbtrib.com/2015/03/08/6948/lacey-act-snake-of-1900-forbids-drawing-venom-from-constrictor-breeders-owners-and-lovers-snake-partners-are-advising-the-federal-government-not-to-tread-on-them-saturday-taking-after-a-ban-on-four/


Lacey Act Snake of 1900 Forbids Drawing Venom from Constrictor Breeders, Owners and Lovers

March 8, 2015

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Snake partners are advising the federal government not to tread on them Saturday taking after a ban on four extensive types of constrictors. The ban, declared Friday by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, will restrict importation and interstate transport of the reticulated python, DeSchauensee’s anaconda, the green boa anaconda and the Beni anaconda, all of which were proclaimed “injurious wildlife” under the Lacey Act of 1900.

The move is intended to help stop the spread of huge snakes in the wild where authorities say they are debilitating jeopardized species. In an announcement Friday, Dan Ashe, director of the Fish and Wildlife Service, said huge constrictors are costing the American open a large number of dollars in harm and “placing at risk” 41 protected or endangered species in Florida alone.

Be that as it may raisers and vendors of the snakes say the new standards will devastate their jobs while managers say the ban is superfluously prohibitive. Taking after the declaration, two contending petitions were dispatched on Change.org, requiring an inversion of the choice. All things considered, the petitions have drawn about 2,000 marks in under a day.

A few signatories, distinguishing themselves as constrictor holders or specialists, portrayed the issue as a “Florida problem,” saying pet managers in whatever is left of the nation ought not to be rebuffed for it. “I keep these [animals] and I believe they are misunderstood and are falsely listed on the Lacey Act because of an isolated problem in Florida,” one commentator composed, including the government ought to consider controlling the snakes “instead of a ban.”

In an interview with the Palm Beach Post, Matt Edmonds, who makes his living rearing and offering reticulated pythons, said the office ought to have restricted the ban to Florida.

Nonetheless, the Center for Biological Diversity said Friday the ban doesn’t go sufficiently far. In an announcement, the association scrutinized the legislature for not confining the broadly exchanged boa constrictor, which the gathering said is dislodging local reptiles in Puerto Rico and undermining untamed life in the United States.

“These exotic snakes pose an unacceptable — and preventable — risk to our nation’s most treasured natural habitats,” Collette Adkins, a lawyer and scientist for the middle, said in an announcement. “Unfortunately, it appears that the agency caved to pressure from snake breeders in its decision not to restrict trade in the boa constrictor — a snake that is clearly damaging to U.S. wildlife.”

The new regulations are relied upon to be distributed in the Federal Register, and the restrictions will become effective 30 days after distribution.

Hahahaha, Another day another blog post in the trash!

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Yep, started working on a post yesterday.

I re-read it today and thought, “What was in that coffee?” 

So after spending a while seeing if I could figure out where I was going with the piece, I decided to admit it was a scratch.

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“It’s dead Jim.”

Maybe tomorrow will be a better day for blogging,

No Guarantees!

I hate having public profiles…

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Lets face it looking for a job these days is pretty sucky.

Gone are the days when you sent your resume to an actual company after reading an ad in the paper. Now you’re directed to some web site where your profile is suddenly visible to the world.

Even if you try to maintain some small amount of privacy by minimizing the number of job web sites you visit, or job site accounts you’re still exposing all kinds of information.

Literally within one hour of my making a profile on a well known job search site, I’ve been receiving strange emails.

Most of which ask for this kind of information.

First and the last name                                   : < They Already Have this – They saw it on my resume
Email ID                                                          : < They Already Have this Its on my resume and they contacted me via email
Phone/Mobile number                                     : < They Already Have this – They saw it on my resume
Willingness to relocate (Y/N)                           : < Reasonable
Availability for F2F Interview/ Phone Interview: < Obviously anytime
Availability to start                                            : < Reasonable
Current Location                                               : < They Already Have this – This is on my resume
Work status                                                      : < I’m guessing they’re asking if I need an H1B1 visa 
Expected Hourly rate                                       : < What are they paying?

And yet most of these silly headhunters ask for all of this AGAIN!

They have the ability to download and have no doubt seen my resume. But for some reason they want to wast everyone’s time by engaging in busy work.

Here’s a another one.

Full name:
Work Authorization status:
Current location:
Contact Number:
Best time to reach you on weekdays:
Rate $/hr on W2 (Without benefits):
Onsite availability:
Willing to Relocate:
Preferred location to work: MS OR AL

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This one is funny because he claims the position is in California but is still asking me where I prefer to work, Is that Mississippi, Oregon, Alabama? Or is he asking if I want to work in Mississippi OR Alabama?

Yet there’ve been absolutely no responses from the actual positions that I applied for, other than the perfunctory confirmation emails saying, “we got your email”.

The problem is this.

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If you want to participate, you have to give up any illusion of privacy. You know beyond a shadow of a doubt that virtually all the information that a bad guy could want is going to be available either because someone got careless or that they looked legitimate and you actually gave them the keys to steal your identity.

Talk about a rock and a hard place!

Over the past four years, I’ve tried faxing my information to headhunters and / or corporations in response to their ads. I’ve received to date no response to any of those inquiries. In fact, attempting to followup on those resumes or applications has resulted in one run-around after another because HR departments are so focused on using an on-line system, they never think to look at actual paper.

I’m under no illusion, that anything I fax to a corporation ever hits paper. The fax is converted directly to an OCR’d version of the document, codified, modified and distributed to various databases.

Which leads me to sending something via mail.

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I’ve considered going really OLD SCHOOL because the paper would be handled, is a pain in the ass, and might actually be noticed while it was being scanned into the corporate databases. The fear is that if stuff is too much of a pain in the ass, that my resume will simply end up in the shredder without being scanned or handled at all.

So that leads back to exposing information that really should be private to the freakin world.

This is one of those times when I really miss the old days.

I’d get a phone call asking me to come in for an interview, meet the hiring manager, have a conversation,  then depending on that interview I’d go to the next stage. 

Sigh.

 

 

Goodbye Mr. Nimoy

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Thank you for the years of entertainment.

Thank you for the Poetry, Photography, and Mr. Spock. 

Thanks for owning your age and showing us all that aging can be done with grace.

I wish I’d had the chance to thank you personally for all these things and for providing such a great role model. 

You’re going to be sorely missed.

Earth, out.

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OK We’ve got Snow…

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While I could have gone off the hill Monday and I was scheduled to, I decided to stay home warm and safe.

I’m glad I did, it snowed most of the day. 

I drank tea tried to write and failing that blogged a bit.

Then I yelled at a lab for screwed up accounting.  I really lose my mind over late notices, especially when I’ve paid the bill they’re bitching about 2 weeks before the date of their nastygram.

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But mostly what I did on Monday was either watch it snow or shovel the snow from the driveway, and tweak some websites.

Here are some pictures for you to enjoy.

Don’t bother coming up here to play in it… We’re hosing our side of the mountain down with steam so it’ll be gone soon! 

Not really but that’s the PR we’re putting out to keep folks from over-running us like they did on Jan 1st.