Author Archives: admin

Would You Give Electric Shocks To Your Child?

Would you give electric shocks to your child?

I’m asking because while most of the so-called civilized world would react in horror at the mere suggestion of torturing children to alter their behaviour, this is exactly what’s discussed by the State Education Department at the University of New York, right now. The issue at hand is whether or not to allow aversion therapy to alter or hinder unwanted behaviour in children, especially in disabled children. Sounds abstract? Uncivilized? Let me give you an example.

Autistic individuals sometimes display seemingly involuntary body movement such as arm flapping, rocking, or tics of various kinds. They call this stimming and while such behaviour can certainly appear bizarre to “normal” people, it is actually a sensory coping mechanism and allows autistics to deal with outside stimuli and reduce overall stress. The fact that stimming works is well documented in autism research.

Adults with autism and Asperger Syndrome can often avoid stimming noticeably in public, knowing fully well that NTs (Neurologically Typical, in other words normal people; a term coined by autistics on the Internet) have difficulty accepting such deviant behaviour. Autistic children, however, often don’t realize this and happily stim whenever they need to.

But, as I said, many “normal” people consider stimming deviant behaviour; some even think it should be forbidden.

Which brings us to Judge Rotenberg Center in Canton, MA, an educational facility where aversion therapy is used. They use a Graduated Electronic Decelerator or “GED”, a device of their own design, to regulate the students’ behaviour. The GED is basically a zap box complete with two remote electrodes to be attached on the hapless student, up to six inches apart to increase the “therapeutic value”. Every time a student displays unwanted behaviour (stims are the prime time example here, but talking without permission is perhaps easier for most readers to relate to), the educator pushes a button and shocks the student.

Now, unless your children have special needs and must be educated outside the public school system, they are safe. You see, the Judge Rotenberg Center is a special needs facility, serving “both higher-funtioning students with conduct, behavior, emotional, and/or psychiatric problems and lower-functioning students with autistic-like behaviors”. Also, it is privately held, and here’s the key: aversion therapy is not approved for use in public educational facilities.

I ask again: would you give electric shocks to your child?

wine 0.9.12

Just upgraded to wine 0.9.12. It broke my XMetaL installation. It seems that wine now wants to handle ActiveX using built-in libraries, but unfortunately the new library either doesn’t implement OLE properly, or there is a bug somewhere. A quick Google search didn’t tell me anything earth-shattering but confirmed that others are having problems as well.

On the other hand, the Debian wine still lags behind; 0.9.14 is the latest version out from Wine HQ.

References

I talked to a friend yesterday. He works at an IT consultancy that is best left unnamed here, a well-respected one, I might add, and yesterday, they had a job ad in the paper. They have everything, the ad claimed, but they need to grow. They need a few more good men (and women).

My friend and I, we have a mutual acquaintance, a developer who’s one of three or four top developers in his field. He’s also a nice, likable guy, and so my friend recommended him to his bosses at the well-respected IT consultancy. Of course, they asked to see his CV, and so far, so good.

Except they said no. He isn’t what they’re looking for. He’s got the wrong profile.

So I started to think about this, and realized that the people who hire other people are usually the ones who are the least qualified for the job. They’re executives, salespeople, or perhaps HR people in som cases, but most of them have never done any dirty, hands-on work in “their” fields. They lead, and they hire people, and they make executive decisions, all of which is fine and dandy, but they don’t know the details of what their companies do.

Therefore, they shouldn’t be the ones hiring other people. In this case, everyone in the field but the bosses know the value of our mutual acquaintance. We all know he’s top notch, he’s a real find, he’s proven his worth many times over. Yet, the bosses are the ones doing the decisions, and they say no. Why?

A part of what’s supposed to make a leader great is the ability to listen, to trust those working for you. Why is it that this trust is so rarely extended to the employees?

XMetaL, Again!

Turns out that once I sorted out the localhost resolution problem, outlined below, wine and everything with it works like a charm. Therefore, today I pressed my luck by reinstalling XMetaL, according to my set of instructions from a February blog entry, and it also works like a charm.

Now I’m anxiously waiting for the Debian maintainers to update wine to the latest version. The unstable wine lags two versions behind…

Wine Solutions

It turned out that my wine problems, mentioned in previous posts, were pretty easily explainable: Somehow, my local DNS resolution was out of order, meaning that I couldn’t map localhost to 127.0.0.1. wine, just as many other programs, use localhost just about everywhere. All it took was a reconfiguration of my LAN, easily achieved with dpkg-reconfigure etherconf.

Tomorrow…

…could easily be my last day as a projectionist, as my theatre, the Draken, has its last scheduled commercial screening. It’s at 7 p.m., and it’s a Swedish classic by Bo Widerberg; it’s old, it’s black-and-white, and it’s boring, and for the life or me, I can’t recall its title.

See, the Swedish Film Institute is moving its Cinemateket film classics screenings to the Capitol theatre after eleven years with me and Draken doing their dirty work, and there’s very little I can say about the whole affair without losing the PG rating of this blog.

All of this has come about on a very short notice; a day or two before my theatre’s 50th birthday on April 26, I was still confident that the Draken still had many years left in public service. It was only on the day before the anniversary that I first heard about their plans, and this was an accident. I wasn’t meant to know. Nobody was.

Anyway, if you want to complain, the contact information is easily found at the Swedish Film Institute’s home on the Internet. There are laws against me publishing phone numbers here, apparently.

I suppose all this gives me more time to write.

Corrective Measures

I mentioned below that I haven’t been able to blog due to technical problems at Blogger. This is not entirely true. Yes, Blogger had problems, but I also have discovered that changing my router’s MTU from 1492 bytes to 1500 bytes makes all of my Blogger-related problems go away, including the intermittent connectivity problems…

Makes me wonder, now. Can my wine problems (also outlined below) be at least partly caused by the router problem? Watch this space.

More Wine!

wine is behaving more and more strangely. The timeouts have continued, and Internet Explorer won’t work properly. It starts, but crashes when it connects to anything outside my LAN.

There are a couple of possibilities here. First of all, I’ve switched to an older ADSL modem/router combo because my D-Link G604T keeps on losing DSL sync every few hours and behaves erratically in between, and so I suspect that this new (well, old) hardware doesn’t like IE on Debian, for some strange reason. (I mean, what’s there not to like?) Second, I’ve upgraded Xorg to 7.something, and the something might interfere with wine. Or it could be any random C library I’ve upgraded recently. I’m a dist-upgrade junkie and I need my fix practically every day.

In any case, I got tired of the whole mess today and removed wine and every Windows application I’ve installed. Yes, folks, that includes XMetaL.