Archives

Category: Project 365

  • Day 258 – David Henderson


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    Today, economist and professor David Henderson visited Hillsdale today and gave a talk to Praxis, the political economy club. David Henderson blogs at Econlog. (This is not a photo from the CCA. I have yet to edit those photos.)

    David Henderson
  • Day 257 – Links I Found Today


    I have only been taking photos for paper assignments the last few days, as I have been pretty busy with homework. So, here are some cool links I found today. I will post a photo from the CCA tomorrow.

    A Pigeon can transfer data faster than South Africa’s Telkom : Now might be a good time to start investing in infrastructure in South Africa, provided you can get around the regulations of oppressive states.

    The current issue of Studies in Emergent Order : Yes, orders emerge. Read about it!

    21 great photos and how they were taken over at the Digital Photography School

    Mary O’Grady on Mexico’s useless war on drugs at the WSJ : Why do states still waste resources on this nonsense?

    Texas Stadium Fail at Failblog : Time to stop using Windows.

  • Day 256 – When I’m On the Other Side of the Camera…


    I rarely hand my camera off to someone else, and I rarely wind up in photos. When I do, however, here are the kinds of things I find on my camera (or on Facebook) afterward. I thought some of you might enjoy these:

  • Day 255 – Scenes from the Mock Naval Battle


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    Scenes from the Mock Naval Battle in the Arb Pond:

  • Day 254 – Another Beautiful Day


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    Here is a shot I snapped of Dr. Weaire teaching at the outdoor forum. After the fog cleared this morning, the weather was beautiful, and many professors took their classes outdoors. Click on the photo to view it at a larger size.

  • Day 253 – The Collegian


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    This semester’s first issue of The Collegian came out today! I am excited to take pictures for them this year–we have a great photo crew! (Also, some great writers, too!) Check out The Collegian online, at HillsdaleCollegian.com.
    Also, I had this photo run on the front page today:

  • Day 252 – Studying on the Quad


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    It finally stopped raining, and it was a beautiful day today. Many students were studying out in the sun on the quad this afternoon. Caroline (above) didn’t mind me taking photos of her. Natural lighting, f/2.8, 1/500, ISO 100. Click on the photo to view it at a larger size.

  • Day 251 – “Cleaned By Capitalism”


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    Starting on Earth Day in 2004, Don Boudreaux at CafeHayek.com did a series of posts titled “Cleaned by Capitalism”. These posts display low cost pollution-fighting technology that capitalism has brought the world. He only did a few posts in 2004, but in the last couple months, he has made a lot more posts displaying how capitalism cleans our lives.

    Check out the archives of these posts. They are really interesting, and usually things we take for granted, but would not have if it were not for capitalism!

  • Day 250 – Expectations


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    An aspect of human behavior has been puzzling me lately…Expectations. When we are asked a question, why do we expect there to be an answer? Since this is probably not terribly clear, consider this:
    A friend walked up to me in my dorm one day and asked me if I noticed anything different about his looks. I didn’t right offhand, so I looked at him for a minute, then said, “It looks like you have makeup under your eyes.” He was kind of puzzled at this answer, because he thought his hair looked strange, when in fact it looked no different than any other day. I did not know that he had his hair in mind when he asked me, so I studied him, looking for something different about his appearance. I looked to the point of actually making up something which was not there (makeup). Why? I expected something to be different since he asked me. Since I thought this, I rejected reality (that nothing was different about his appearance) and tricked myself into seeing something that did not exist. Why did I expect there to be an answer? I have no idea.

    This idea is kind of what yesterday’s post was about. The answer to my question is that the two photos are identical. I made a duplicate of the same file and posted them both. Even though they are the same photo, 5/10 people who left comments (and one person who did not comment) “found” something different about the two photos. Why? The only explanation I can come up with is that they must expect something to be different. Otherwise, why would I ask what is different, right? I did a little research to see if someone has published work on this type of thing, and the only thing I found was the subject-expectancy effect, which might help explain why 6/11 people saw differences between two identical photographs.

    Not until a few days ago did I fully come to terms with the idea that “no solution” (or, to the above questions, “nothing is different”) is a perfectly valid answer that should be seriously considered all of the time. I realized this when I was doing my linear algebra homework. I was trying to find an answer to a problem, and after a few attempts, I was getting frustrated that I was not getting an answer. I thought my math must have been wrong, so I poured over my work trying to find an error. Finally, it dawned on me that there could be no solution to the problem, which is a perfectly valid answer. Sure enough, there is no solution to the problem. I had a few more problems with no solution that night, so now that possibility is always in the back of my mind.

    Anyway, the point I was trying to get at (if it is not painfully clear) is most questions have the possibility of having no answer, so we should always consider that possibility. Don’t trick yourself into finding answers that are not there.

    By the way, I think horoscopes are utter nonsense. Most of them are written so vaguely that it is almost impossible not to find a way your “reading” relates to your life. It ties in to what I wrote about above: some individuals expect the horoscopes to relate to their lives, so they play Leonard Nimoy (In Search Of…) and find a way to tie the horoscope into their lives. It blows my mind how many people read horoscopes every day and believe them. Remember, it is possible (and the real answer, in my opinion) that horoscopes are arbitrarily written and have no relation to your life. Don’t trick yourself and find something that is not there.

    By the way, can anyone recommend any work that has been done in this area? I did quick research, but did not find anything. I would appreciate anything you can recommend.

  • Day 249 – What’s Different?


    What is different about these two photos? Please leave your answers in the comments. This is for a project I am working on, so I appreciate your answers. Click on the photos to view them at a larger size. You can then toggle between the two to examine them.


    A side note:

    The 2010 New Internationalist PlannerArchived Link is now for sale! (The reason I am so excited about this is because the project Sean Nelson and I started, Illum, has two photos in there, and the photos are part of a display page on the planner’s sale pageArchived Link!) You can also buy the planner from Borders. By the way, I do not necessarily agree with most of New Internationalist’s views, but I am pretty excited that they wanted to use two of my photos for an international planner.
    Click to enlarge..Archived Link

  • Day 248 – Touchdown!


    Hillsdale beat Michigan Tech 37–35 in a close game today at home. The photos below show number 22, Vinnie Panizzi, scoring a magnificent touchdown late in the fourth quarter. Click on the photos to view them at a larger size.

    A quick note: I had a guest post on William Clayton’s blog yesterday!

  • Day 247 – Frisbee Golf


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    I took some shots of the frisbee golf course at Baw Beese Lake this afternoon. This guy was really good.

    In other news, I tried swing dancing tonight. It turns out I am terrible at it. I wish I was better!

    By the way, the entry on the Team Fortress 2 hats is ridiculous.

  • Day 246 – Shadow


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    Today was the second first day of classes (Hillsdale has two schedules…MWF and TTH). I have a lot of homework, so I am just posting a photo today.

    I took this on my phone when I was walking Amanda back to her dorm after dinner. This makes me smile.

  • Day 245 – First Day of Classes


    Today was the first day of classes at Hillsdale! It is time to hit the books. I already have homework and reading piled on for Friday. I am excited about my classes, though, and I am looking forward to a wonderful semester! (The photo above is my roommate Trevor, studying away.)

  • Day 244 – Snow Leopard


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    Click on the photo to view it at a larger size:

    I installed Snow Leopard the day after it came out, since I was on a retreat in the middle of the woods when it was shipped. I can tell a major difference in how fast my computer processes and exports photos, and I like the new Expose and contextual menu layouts. The upgrade was definitely worth $30.

    I start classes tomorrow!

  • Day 243 – The Goodbye

    I took this shot at Freshman Convocation yesterday. These two sisters were saying goodbye before the older one went to officially start her college career.

  • Day 242 – Freshman Convocation


    Dr. Arnn, President of Hillsdale College, speaking at Freshman Convocation:

  • Day 241 – Michindoh Retreat Cont.


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    Today was the last full day at the retreat. In addition to going to the excellent lectures, I went on the blob in the lake, and on the waterslide. Here are a few more shots (also taken on my phone) of Michindoh.
    The blob (someone sits at the far end, and someone jumps from the platform onto the blob, and the person at the other end flies into the water) :

    The slide:

    The lake:

    The honors program:

  • Day 240 – Michindoh Retreat


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    Today was the first full day at the honors program retreat at Michindoh. So far the retreat has been great. We did some icebreaker activities to get to know the new freshmen, played ultimate frisbee, went on the huge waterslide, listened to wonderful discussions on Oscar Wilde and Picture of Dorian Gray, and had a bonfire. Here is a photo (taken with my phone…sorry about the low quality) at the bonfire:

  • Day 239 – Back to Hillsdale


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    I am on my way back to Hillsdale today. After I get there and unpack all of my stuff, I am going to Michindoh on a retreat with the honors program.