Vaccinating our children

I just finished watching The Vaccine War, a Frontline investigation into the benefits and risks of early vaccination.

I didn’t feel like it was completely fair to parents who decided to not apply all of the recommended vaccines to their children. My wife and I fall into this group, but our reasons were different than those given by the parents selected for the program. The majority of parents interviewed either had some conspiracy theory reason for not vaccinating, or simply believed that vaccination in general was unnecessary because these diseases had been eradicated. We actually were unaware of many of these conspiracy theories surrounding early childhood vaccines at the time we made our decision, and we are (and were) very aware these diseases have not been eradicated because we in fact have relatives who suffered from some of them.

Our reasons for not supplying our child with certain vaccines (I hope) were a bit more nuanced:

  • We felt the vaccine was too new and had not undergone sufficient testing yet, and/or
  • The disease the vaccine prevents is rarely deadly, or requires transmission through a means we doubt our child will engage in anytime soon

I’ll leave the reader to figure out which vaccines we declined.

Herd immunity was an important aspect of our decision making process. But I am concerned that by immunizing ourselves to all of these common (and rarely deadly) diseases we may be leaving ourselves open to being susceptible to some new disease that would otherwise not be possible. So in fact, we could be doing the herd a disservice by vaccinating too large a population. Perhaps this is completely unfounded, but I give Methicillin-resistant staph bacteria as an example of human intervention creating a far more serious health concern than the concern it was originally trying to address.

In the last several years we’ve engaged with many health professions on this topic both for our children and ourselves, not just with vaccinations but also with preventative medication. In my opinion, the medical establishment needs to perform longer term studies, have detailed information readily available for patients, and not discriminate against them because of their decisions.

Anytime Golf on iPad: First Impressions and Video

Yes, first impressions.  I developed the game entirely in the simulator (and on Windows), but until today I had never played it on the actual hardware it was designed for.

I pre-ordered an iPad but missed the April 3rd window… I thought I was going to have to wait until April 12th or later.  On a whim I decided to run by Best Buy and to see if they had any demo units.  They did.  They also had about 20 left in stock so I snagged one.

First thing I did (of course) was download and try out my game.  Having never played the game on iPad before I was incredibly nervous.. “Could it handle the framerate?”  “Would I get hit with some strange hardware-specific bug?”

Maria played the first while I watched. I was in no condition to play.  But anxiety turned to elation almost immediately–it not only ran smooth, but it looked amazing, far better than I ever imagined.  The color gamut POPS on the iPad screen.

After the first three holes I ripped the iPad from Maria’s hands and she made a video of me playing it for the very first time.

I couldn’t believe how fun it is on the big screen!  I re-scaled all of the UI input
by just guessing what it might feel like on a larger device and I hit it
spot-on.  I was completely shocked that I nailed it having never
touched the device before.  (Oh and I birdied my first hole).

I’m just bouncing off the walls over here.  This is a very proud moment for me.

iTunes App Store Link: Anytime Golf

I should probably take this opportunity to plug my game engine I developed that made this possible without an iPad. If you’re interested in iPhone, iPad, MacOS or Windows cross-platform game development, check out the Bork3D Game Engine. It’s $49 for an indy license. There are a lot more about it details on the website.

Movable Type FTW

That was almost too easy.  A few hours after I posted Blogger was shutting down FTP publishing, I started looking for blogging software that supported sqlite and importing from Blogger.

No more than 20 minutes after I downloaded MT I had my entire blog imported from Blogger. This plugin connects over the Blogger API and grabs your entire blog and all metadata, including comments. 
The only thing it got wrong were the timestamps of my blog entries, but sqlite made short work of that:

update mt_entry set entry_authored_on = datetime(entry_authored_on,’-8 hour’);

I’m loving this!  I wish I had switched over a long time ago.  I’m gonna miss that old theme though, I had been using it for 8 years.

Thanks for the kick in the pants Blogger!

Blogger shuts down FTP publishing

This may be my last post for a while. Blogger has announced they’re soon going to be shutting down FTP publishing.

I knew this day would come. I always thought it was kinda ridiculous they allowed FTP publishing. It frequently breaks and it doesn’t generate them any revenue.

I guess I’m gonna have to install wordpress. Figuring out how to import my 300+ posts over the last 8 years will be interesting.

Trader Joe’s English Breakfast

Water: 6oz
Time: 3min
Milk: 2oz

Verdict: Stale. Old. Bitter with very little flavor. Does not take milk well at all; texture becomes watery like an herbal tea. I would consider taking it back to the store had I not paid only $2 for it.

Installing Ubuntu 9.10 desktop w/ software RAID + LVM

I have 4 hard drives in my system and I’ve been running them with RAID 1 pairs tied together using LVM. The first couple GB of each are set aside for /boot and swap space.

I was running Debian and I wanted to try Ubuntu, but Ubuntu Desktop out-of-box doesn’t support this kind of configuration. Ubuntu Server advertises LVM support, but for whatever reason didn’t recognize my configuration. I probably could have recreated the same configuration w/ Ubuntu Server’s installer, but I didn’t want to risk losing my data and then discovering it doesn’t actually support it.

Finally after some trial and error I figured out the Ubuntu Alternate distribution has LVM and software RAID support if you run it in “expert” mode. It was a bit of a pain to manually walk it through the installer, but eventually it recognized my existing drive configuration. Definitely not the “friendly” Ubuntu installation experience I was hoping for, but it worked.

When the install was done it left me with a console-only bare-bones install. But since I had the Ubuntu Desktop CD handy, I popped it in the drive and ran:

apt-cdrom add
apt-get install ubuntu-desktop

…and away it went.