Mark Chu-Carroll is a Computer Scientist working as a researcher in a corporate lab. My professional interests run towards how to build programming languages and tools that allow groups of people to work together to build large software systems.
goodmath
Posts by this author
August 2, 2010
Finally, at long last, I can tell you what I've been up to with finding a new home for this blog. I've created a new, community-based science blogging site, called Scientopia. With the help of many wonderful people, we're ready. We launched this morning. So to continue following GM/BM - along with…
July 7, 2010
So my decision is made. I'm closing up around here. I'm in the process of working out exactly where I'm going to go. With any luck, Seed will leave this blog here long enough for me to post an update with the new location. But I'm through with Seed and ScienceBlogs.
July 6, 2010
As my friend Pal wrote about, Seed Media Group, the corporate overlords of the ScienceBlogs network that this blog belongs to, have apparently decided that blog space in these parts is now up for sale to advertisers.
We've been advertiser supported since I joined up with SB. I've never minded…
June 28, 2010
As regular readers have no doubt noticed by now, posting on the blog
has been slow lately. I've been trying to come back up to speed, but so
far, that's been mainly in the form of bad math posts. I'd like to get
back to the good stuff. Unfortunately, the chaos theory stuff that I was…
June 26, 2010
Today's recipe is something I made this week for the first time, and trying
it was like a revelation. It's simple to make, it's got an absolutely
spectacularly wonderful flavor - light and fresh - and it's incredibly
versatile. It's damned near perfect. It's scallion ginger sauce, and once you
try…
June 22, 2010
One of the things that's endlessly fascinating to me about math and
science is the way that, no matter how much we know, we're constantly
discovering more things that we don't know. Even in simple, fundamental
areas, there's always a surprise waiting just around the corner.
A great example of…
June 17, 2010
So, another bit of Cantor stuff. This time, it really isn't Cantor
crankery, so much as it is just Cantor muddling. The
href="http://rjlipton.wordpress.com/2010/06/11/does-cantors-diagonalization-proof-cheat/">post
that provoked this is not, I think, crankery of any kind - but it
demonstrates…
June 11, 2010
Today is another bit of rubbish from viXra! In the comment thread from the
last post, someone (I presume the author of this paper) challenged me to
address this. And it's such a perfect example of one of my mantras that I
can't resist.
What's the first rule of GM/BM? The worst math is no math.…
June 8, 2010
Sorry for the ridiculously slow pace around here lately; I've been
ridiculously busy. I'm changing projects at work; it's the end of the school
year for my kids; and I'm getting close to the end-game for my book. Between
all of those, I just haven't had much time for blogging lately.
Anyway... I…
May 4, 2010
I know that I just posted a link to a stupid religious argument, but I was sent a link to
another one, which I can't resist mocking.
As I've written about quite often, we humans really stink at
understanding big numbers, and how things scale.
href="http://thebeachnotes.blogspot.com/2010/05/…
May 3, 2010
A little bit of knowledge is a dangerous thing.
There's no shortage of stupidity in the world. And, alas, it comes in
many, many different kinds. Among the ones that bug me, pretty much
the worst is the stupidity that comes from believing that you know
something that you don't.
This is…
April 29, 2010
This past weekend, my friend Orac sent me a link to an interesting piece
of bad math. One of Orac's big interest is vaccination and
anti-vaccinationists. The piece is a newsletter by a group calling itself the "Sound Choice
Pharmaceutical Institute" (SCPI), which purports to show a link
between…
April 26, 2010
A while ago, I wrote a
href="http://scienceblogs.com/goodmath/2009/05/finally_finger_trees.php">couple
of posts that claimed to talk about finger trees. Unfortunately, I really
botched it. I'd read a bunch of data structure papers, and managed to get
myself thoroughly scrambled. What I wrote…
April 23, 2010
Stellardrive, Inlandsix: Reasonably good instrumental prog. They're
not particularly exceptional, but they're decent.
Gong, "The Octave Doctors and the Crystal Machine": Gong is a
perfect example of one of the differences between the great prog bands,
and a lot of the neo-progressive stuff…
April 21, 2010
Very quick post here: the third beta of my AppEngine book "Code in the Cloud" was released this morning. If you've bought a copy of the beta, you can go to your pragmatic account, and download a fresh copy with all of the fixes and new material.
If you haven't bought a copy... Well, if you're…
April 20, 2010
Against my better judgement, I've ended up writing a lot about the
financial mess that we're currently going through. If you've read that, you
know that my opinion is that the mess amounts to a giant pile of fraud.
But even having spent so much time reading and studying what was
going on, the…
April 7, 2010
(Unfortunately, this post has been linked to by a white supremacist site. Instead of providing a forum for their foulness, I'm shutting down comments on this post.)
Unfortunately, I lost the link that inspired this. But I recently saw a post by a conservative about "reclaiming" the word racist. It…
March 19, 2010
I'm glad to report that electricity has been restored to the Chu-Carroll
household. So now I'm trying to catch up.
During the outage, I got a bunch of questions about the latest news coming
out of the big financial disasters. A major report came out about the failure
of Lehman Brothers, and one…
March 17, 2010
As I've mentioned before, I've been spending a lot of time working on a book.
Initially, I was working on a book made up of a collection of material from blog posts;
along the way, I got diverted, and ended up writing a book about cloud computing using
Google's AppEngine tools. The book isn't…
March 9, 2010
A bunch of people have been asking me to take a look at
href="http://arxiv.org/abs/1002.4433">yet another piece of Cantor crankery
recently posted to Arxiv. In general, I'm sick and tired of Cantor crankery -
it's been occupying much too much space on this blog lately. But this one is a
real…
March 1, 2010
In my post yesterday, I briefly mentioned the problem with simulations
as a replacement for animal testing. But I've gotten a couple of self-righteous
emails from people criticizing that: they've all argued that given the
quantity of computational resources available to us today, of course
we can…
February 24, 2010
This post is off-topic for this blog, but there are some things that
I just can't keep quiet about.
Via my friend and fellow ScienceBlogger Janet over at Adventures in
Ethics and Science, I've heard about some absolutely disgraceful
antics by an animal rights group. To be clear, in what follows,…
February 19, 2010
Transatlantic, "The Whirlwind (Part 4) - A Man Can Feel":
a track from the new Transatlantic album. Transatlantic is
a supergroup: it's made of members of Marillion (Pete Trevawas on
bass), the Flower Kings (Roine Stolte, guitar), Spock's Beard (Neil
Morse, vocals and keyboards), and Dream…
February 15, 2010
For a lot of people, I seem to have become the go-to blogger for
information theory stuff. I really don't deserve it: Jeff Shallit at
Recursivity knows a whole lot more than I do. But I do my best.
Anyway, several people pointed out that over at the Disco Institute,
resident Legal Eagle Casey…
February 7, 2010
The last major property of a chaotic system is topological mixing. You can
think of mixing as being, in some sense, the opposite of the dense periodic
orbits property. Intuitively, the dense orbits tell you that things that are
arbitrarily close together for arbitrarily long periods of time can…
February 4, 2010
So, remember back in December, I wrote a post about a Cantor crank
who had a Knol page supposedly refuting Cantor's diagonalization?
This week, I foolishly let myself get drawn into an extended conversation
with him in comments. Since it's a comment thread on an old post that had been inactive…
January 29, 2010
Poor Georg Cantor.
During his life, he suffered from dreadful depression. He was mocked by
his mathematical colleagues, who didn't understand his work. And after his
death, he's become the number one target of mathematical crackpots.
As I've mentioned before, I get a lot of messages either from…
January 26, 2010
It's been quite a while since my last chaos theory post. I've
been caught up in other things, and I've needed to do some studying. Based
on a recommendation from a commenter, I've gotten another book on Chaos
theory, and it's frankly vastly better than the two I was using before.
Anyway, I want…
January 13, 2010
In the Haskell stuff, I was planning on moving on to some monad-related
stuff. But I had a reader write in, and ask me to write another
post on data structures, focusing on a structured called a
zipper.
A zipper is a remarkably clever idea. It's not really a single data
structure, but rather a…
January 5, 2010
A lot of people have been sending me links to a numerology article,
in which yet another numerological idiot claims to have identified the
date of the end of the world. This time, the idiot claims that it's going to
happen on May 21, 2011.
I've written a lot about numerology-related stuff before…