What really aggravates me about situations such as this oil spill, and in other similar catastrophes, is the large number of instant experts it creates. I cringed as I watched the first Congressional hearings into the spill. Congressmen and Congresswomen lectured with phony fluency (and a sanctimonious tone) about deep-sea drilling, underwater concrete, safety and shutoff valves, and similar complex engineering subjects as if they knew what they were talking about. They may have known the words, but they had no idea what they were saying, I have no doubt about that.
...
Can you see any Congressman asking a doctor at a hearing, "after you cut through the pericardial layers, why didn’t you insert the stent from the left side, instead of the right side?" or a similar question? The questioner would look like a fool, for sure. But expounding about deep-sea drilling technology? Why, that's OK!
A site devoted mostly to everything related to Information Technology under the sun - among other things.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Useful Links
- .Net Code Samples
- AJAX for MS Developers
- C# Tutorials
- Channel9
- Code Search Engine
- Douglas Crockford's JavaScript Site
- DZONE
- Google Code
- IBM Developer Works
- IBM Public Skunkworks
- Is This Thing On?
- Java tutorials, hints, tips
- Jon Udell Weblog
- Knowing .Net
- Massive List of Information for Programmers
- MIT Courses
- MSDN
- Simple-Talk
- SUN Java
- That Indigo Girl
- UC Berkeley Lectures
- Yahoo UI Library
Topics
- 3-D Printing (13)
- AI (228)
- Art (95)
- Article (120)
- book (11)
- books (83)
- Business Intelligence (18)
- Careers (72)
- Cloud Computing (19)
- Cognition (13)
- Complexity (8)
- Computer Science (20)
- COVID-19 (1)
- Cyber-security (79)
- Data Analysis (39)
- Data Management (19)
- Data Visualization (30)
- Design Thinking (1)
- Embedded Tools (34)
- Gadgets (74)
- Games (32)
- Google (7)
- Hardware (39)
- High Performance Computing (32)
- History of Mathematics (1)
- Humor (73)
- Inetrview (7)
- Intelligent Transportation (17)
- IoT (15)
- IT as Metaphor (2)
- Magazine Subscription (8)
- Mathematics Tools (4)
- Microsoft Platforms (22)
- Microsoft Tools (63)
- Mobile Computing (2)
- Motto (3)
- Network Tools (12)
- News (121)
- Offshoring (6)
- Open-Source Sofware (7)
- Outsourcing (1)
- Philosophy (5)
- Pictures (143)
- PLM (5)
- Programming Languages (74)
- Quantum Computing (5)
- Reports (52)
- RFID (3)
- Robo (2)
- Robots (103)
- Science (57)
- Scientific Computing (17)
- Search Tools (7)
- Semantic Networks (11)
- Simulations (34)
- Social Computing (25)
- Software Architecture (27)
- Software Development (151)
- Software Testing (4)
- Software Tools (268)
- Some Thoughts (44)
- Speech (6)
- Standards - Telematics (9)
- Transportation (14)
- Video (11)
- Visualization (9)
- Web Site (224)
- Web Site for Science (48)
About Me
- Babak Makkinejad
- I had been a senior software developer working for HP and GM. I am interested in intelligent and scientific computing. I am passionate about computers as enablers for human imagination. The contents of this site are not in any way, shape, or form endorsed, approved, or otherwise authorized by HP, its subsidiaries, or its officers and shareholders.
Blog Archive
- November (11)
- October (10)
- September (7)
- August (11)
- July (6)
- June (11)
- May (12)
- April (7)
- March (5)
- February (1)
- January (3)
- December (1)
- October (2)
- September (4)
- August (1)
- July (3)
- June (2)
- April (2)
- March (2)
- February (2)
- January (10)
- December (1)
- October (1)
- September (1)
- August (4)
- June (1)
- April (6)
- March (2)
- February (4)
- January (3)
- December (1)
- October (1)
- June (3)
- April (1)
- March (1)
- February (1)
- January (6)
- December (8)
- November (3)
- October (5)
- September (2)
- August (3)
- July (6)
- June (2)
- May (7)
- April (19)
- March (22)
- February (6)
- January (5)
- December (4)
- November (4)
- October (9)
- September (3)
- August (7)
- July (3)
- June (2)
- May (6)
- April (4)
- March (8)
- February (5)
- January (18)
- December (6)
- November (10)
- October (6)
- September (7)
- August (2)
- July (4)
- June (5)
- May (8)
- April (5)
- March (9)
- February (3)
- January (7)
- December (2)
- November (1)
- October (3)
- September (5)
- August (10)
- July (8)
- May (5)
- April (8)
- March (9)
- February (6)
- January (11)
- November (6)
- October (9)
- September (5)
- August (13)
- July (9)
- June (9)
- May (8)
- April (4)
- March (2)
- February (8)
- January (9)
- December (3)
- November (7)
- October (9)
- September (7)
- August (4)
- July (2)
- June (4)
- May (7)
- March (4)
- February (2)
- January (1)
- December (2)
- November (1)
- October (6)
- September (1)
- August (1)
- July (4)
- June (1)
- April (1)
- March (1)
- February (1)
- January (2)
- December (5)
- October (4)
- August (2)
- July (3)
- June (8)
- May (7)
- April (5)
- March (9)
- February (3)
- January (7)
- December (4)
- October (7)
- September (5)
- August (5)
- July (8)
- June (6)
- May (9)
- April (5)
- March (4)
- February (5)
- January (6)
- December (12)
- November (7)
- October (5)
- September (4)
- August (19)
- July (12)
- June (4)
- May (8)
- April (5)
- March (15)
- February (5)
- January (9)
- December (14)
- November (6)
- October (12)
- September (2)
- August (10)
- July (8)
- June (8)
- May (11)
- April (10)
- March (10)
- February (9)
- January (20)
- December (16)
- November (9)
- October (25)
- September (24)
- August (12)
- July (18)
- June (20)
- May (13)
- April (29)
- March (26)
- February (14)
- January (17)
- December (17)
- November (9)
- October (32)
- September (27)
- August (27)
- July (11)
- June (22)
- May (25)
- April (33)
- March (33)
- February (28)
- January (38)
- December (12)
- November (39)
- October (28)
- September (29)
- August (29)
- July (18)
- June (27)
- May (17)
- April (23)
- March (40)
- February (31)
- January (6)
No comments:
Post a Comment