Saturday, December 10, 2005
ice cold
A white Christmas? Not quite.
Cleared the -20C chest freezer with Dr.Li. Got out a whole bucket of ice from it, and we only did half the fridge! The problem was the accumulated ice at the bottom of the fridge caused the racks to be unable to get stacked into the fridge without poking out and thus the fridge door could not be closed. Nobody bothered to clean it up so we did it. Spent 5 minutes hacking, another few minutes scouping and then half an hour of frostbite. Intended to do the other half before we started but at the end of it, after the cold finger thingy, erm... another day maybe.
Friday, December 09, 2005
no more bottles on the shelf
Thursday, December 08, 2005
new phone
Old phone used the normal telephone line, made normal calls, and normal sounds:
The new phone!
Using the latest in IP technology, WooHoo!
Super cool with lots of features, got call memory, voice mailbox, recieved calls, dialed numbers, missed calls, etc.
But the best part is, its connected to the uni directory. Just key in the staff's tel number and you can check the location of the phone and the directory of the staff that is using the phone. It supposedly is also linked to the government intranet and phone system.
I forsee many dull afternoons filled with phone phreaking in the future.
Muahahahah!
The new phone!
Using the latest in IP technology, WooHoo!
Super cool with lots of features, got call memory, voice mailbox, recieved calls, dialed numbers, missed calls, etc.
But the best part is, its connected to the uni directory. Just key in the staff's tel number and you can check the location of the phone and the directory of the staff that is using the phone. It supposedly is also linked to the government intranet and phone system.
I forsee many dull afternoons filled with phone phreaking in the future.
Muahahahah!
Wednesday, December 07, 2005
The clean water bath
The screw. Screw it! Got in the wrong one. Somebody's loose screw was lying along the bench and I picked it up and screwed it into the water bath only to be told it's the wrong screw. But it fitted! This proves that screws can multitask, which my laptop can't.
After lots of toil and washing, here it is, gleaming. What a work of art.
The washing process is a long and arduous one. First, bring the water bath to the sink (its super heavy) then release the dirty water into the sink. Unscrew the shaker and then scrub the insides of the tub and shaker. Fill the bath with water to flush out the scrubbed and now floating around dirt. Let water drain again. If dirt persists, repeat scrubbing step, else close one eye and procede with next step. To end wash step, place face directly in front of a metal surface. Should face be seen reflected on the metal surface, cleaning step is considered accomplished. If face cannot be seen, repeat scrub step or check if lab lights are on. Failure to on lights may result in false negative results. Reattach the shaker and screw it back with the correct screw (not the loose screw lying around there).
Ah see, can see face, means pass liau! Thats why smiling. Also note that the lights are on.
You might be wondering who the heck Littlefroggie is, well, after this post, you will wonder no more. Yes avid readers, today the identity of Littlefroggie will be revealed! Feast thy eyes:
(photos obviously by Littlefroggie)
Tuesday, December 06, 2005
Write poems, get lucky
News at Nature
Published online: 30 November 2005; doi:10.1038/051128-5
They may be badly paid, but artists have more sexual success.
Tom Simonite
Creative people have more sexual partners than the rest of us, say a pair of psychologists. They surveyed a hundred or so artists and poets, and claim that traits similar to those of schizophrenics explain these people's success with members of the opposite sex.Artists and schizophrenics are known to share characteristics, and they pose a certain kind of puzzle to evolutionary psychologists. Neither artistic talent nor schizophrenia offers an obvious reproductive benefit, nor are they expected to, but does their existence suggest they might have one?British researchers Daniel Nettle, of the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, and Helen Keenoo, at the Open University in Milton Keynes, decided to investigate by surveying 425 professional visual artists and poets, amateurs and regular people. They found that active artists had had an average of five or six sexual partners; those without artistic ambitions had had nearer four."I think it's to do with attention," says Nettle of artists' sexual success. "Art forms are things that hold people's attention, and that can be a powerful aphrodisiac."
Weak linksThe survey also measured psychological characteristics associated with schizophrenia. The results showed that possession of one trait, the tendency to unusual interpretations, was associated with artistic activity, which in turn was linked with more partners. Critics point out that this schizophrenic trait is not directly linked to increased partners. And although an unconventional attitude to social rules, another schizophrenic trait, was directly associated with increased sexual partners, it was not linked to artistic tendencies.Charles Crawford, an evolutionary psychologist at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, Canada, applauds the study for trying to put numbers on the suspicion that creativity has an evolutionary role. But he is surprised that male artists do not enjoy more success than their female fellow creatives. "Because of the demands of pregnancy, having more partners doesn't really help women have more children," Crawford says, "but for men it really does." So one would be pushed to use the findings to defend a link between creativity and reproductive success, rather than just creativity and number of partners.Balanced viewNettle's suggestion is that creative works are like the displays that animals have evolved to attract mates. "They function as indicators of quality because they are hard to maintain," he claims. "Just like it's hard to have a huge, fantastic peacock's tail, it's not easy to be a successful artist. But it can help you reproduce and pass on your genes."Even if some schizophrenic traits are linked to sexual success, others include being socially withdrawn and lacking interest in one's surroundings, and these reduce mate numbers. So Nettle suggests that mental characters associated with schizophrenia and creativity are retained in the population as a result of an evolutionary balancing act. "We've shown that some of them can increase numbers of sexual partners, so you would expect them to get more frequent," he claims. "But in others they manifest as mental illness."Of course, the assumption that correlations between schizophrenic traits, creativity and mate number indicate a causal relationship between them might well be questioned.
Crawford says it's an interesting and provocative pilot study. But, he adds, "before I believe it, I want to see bigger samples and a focus on sex differences."Nettle agrees and says that he plans to investigate the social side of artists' sexual success as well. "This kind of work can't offer tips on how to get more sexual partners," he says, "but I would like to look at how artists manage it. My gut feeling is that they are given a licence that other people don't receive."
Published online: 30 November 2005; doi:10.1038/051128-5
They may be badly paid, but artists have more sexual success.
Tom Simonite
Creative people have more sexual partners than the rest of us, say a pair of psychologists. They surveyed a hundred or so artists and poets, and claim that traits similar to those of schizophrenics explain these people's success with members of the opposite sex.Artists and schizophrenics are known to share characteristics, and they pose a certain kind of puzzle to evolutionary psychologists. Neither artistic talent nor schizophrenia offers an obvious reproductive benefit, nor are they expected to, but does their existence suggest they might have one?British researchers Daniel Nettle, of the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, and Helen Keenoo, at the Open University in Milton Keynes, decided to investigate by surveying 425 professional visual artists and poets, amateurs and regular people. They found that active artists had had an average of five or six sexual partners; those without artistic ambitions had had nearer four."I think it's to do with attention," says Nettle of artists' sexual success. "Art forms are things that hold people's attention, and that can be a powerful aphrodisiac."
Weak linksThe survey also measured psychological characteristics associated with schizophrenia. The results showed that possession of one trait, the tendency to unusual interpretations, was associated with artistic activity, which in turn was linked with more partners. Critics point out that this schizophrenic trait is not directly linked to increased partners. And although an unconventional attitude to social rules, another schizophrenic trait, was directly associated with increased sexual partners, it was not linked to artistic tendencies.Charles Crawford, an evolutionary psychologist at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, Canada, applauds the study for trying to put numbers on the suspicion that creativity has an evolutionary role. But he is surprised that male artists do not enjoy more success than their female fellow creatives. "Because of the demands of pregnancy, having more partners doesn't really help women have more children," Crawford says, "but for men it really does." So one would be pushed to use the findings to defend a link between creativity and reproductive success, rather than just creativity and number of partners.Balanced viewNettle's suggestion is that creative works are like the displays that animals have evolved to attract mates. "They function as indicators of quality because they are hard to maintain," he claims. "Just like it's hard to have a huge, fantastic peacock's tail, it's not easy to be a successful artist. But it can help you reproduce and pass on your genes."Even if some schizophrenic traits are linked to sexual success, others include being socially withdrawn and lacking interest in one's surroundings, and these reduce mate numbers. So Nettle suggests that mental characters associated with schizophrenia and creativity are retained in the population as a result of an evolutionary balancing act. "We've shown that some of them can increase numbers of sexual partners, so you would expect them to get more frequent," he claims. "But in others they manifest as mental illness."Of course, the assumption that correlations between schizophrenic traits, creativity and mate number indicate a causal relationship between them might well be questioned.
Crawford says it's an interesting and provocative pilot study. But, he adds, "before I believe it, I want to see bigger samples and a focus on sex differences."Nettle agrees and says that he plans to investigate the social side of artists' sexual success as well. "This kind of work can't offer tips on how to get more sexual partners," he says, "but I would like to look at how artists manage it. My gut feeling is that they are given a licence that other people don't receive."
Monday, December 05, 2005
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