Sunday, June 4, 2023

If you need a new desktop or laptop computer

 

I’m often asked to recommend what computer people ought to buy.  I’m not a PC hardware expert.  What to buy is a much more complex question than it seems.  I recommend you start with what is the most computer intensive work you want to do.  For your home computer, this is often a game you want to play.  For a business computer, it is often the video or picture editing software you want to use to create your marketing campaign.  If you have more than one application, pick a couple and look on their websites for recommended configuration data.  You’ll need to know how much memory, and what processor power they recommend.  Usually the required mass storage (disk) is too low.  For that, think about how many pictures or videos you are planning on keeping.  Also, look at the application configurations for DirectX release level or other graphics requirements. 

After you have some requirements for your applications, it is time to choose one or more vendors to approach  and ask if they have machines that meet these specifications.

I recommend nonprofit thrift stores if they can meet your needs, as they are definitely cost effective.

I volunteer one afternoon a week at Free Geek Twin Cities (https://freegeektwincities.org ) taking apart electronics.  They run a thrift store online at https://www.freegeektwincities.org/thrift-store  but you can also visit their store in person at 2537 25th Avenue South (on the alley). They sell refurbished computers for very low prices, starting at $40 but a good internet computer for less than $100.  They don't ship computers.  They usually put Linux, not Windows, on the computers, but they may put Windows on it if you ask.  Linux is a great free operating system (you may have heard of Android phones which use Linux).  If all you are doing is browsing the internet, it is quite close to the same experience as Windows.  But your applications may not run with Linux.  Free Geek also sells Apple products. 

PCs for People (https://www.pcsforpeople.org/) is a different model.  Based on their social services background, they make available computers to low-income people for almost nothing, but require evidence of your income.  They are becoming a national organization. They are at 1481 Marshall Avenue, Saint Paul, MN 55104.  Your income must be under 200% of the poverty level to work with PCs for People, and they offer less control over the kind of machine you will get.

Getrecycled (formerly Tech Dump) is a large electronics recycler which is part of the Jobs Foundation and employs many people with criminal records. You can visit its retail stores or go to its website at https://getrepowered.org/shop/. It sells better computers for more money than the other two.  They have free shipping for orders over $100.  They generally install Windows on the machines they sell.  Their two retail stores are in St. Paul and Golden Valley.

All of the above stores have inventory that changes daily and is whatever the people have brought in to recycle.  Also, they have unusual hours, so check before going.  So, they may not have a machine for your application at the moment.  There are many good retail stores in the area, including Micro Center, Best Buy and Staples.  Obviously, there are many more vendors out there.

Micro Center (https://www.microcenter.com ) seems to be the last of a number of national computer superstores.  It has a large stock of systems, parts, and accessories.  The local store is in St. Louis Park. My friends like the open box bargains they have found here.  Micro Center will build to suit, adding memory or disk, etc. if you ask.

Best Buy is a good source for computers and accessories.  They have a good selection but don’t discount as much as some others.  The Geek Squad will build to suit, adding memory, disk, etc.

Staples is an office supply store that occasionally has deep discounts on computers.  It is now in Apple Valley or Minnetonka.  Look for ads that show low prices, and brace for a hard sell on an extended warrantee.

Saturday, October 10, 2020

It's October in Minnesota

 It has been a spectacular October in my neighborhood.  This montage of pictures is just a sample of what it is like.  This is from Silverwood Park in Saint Anthony.

 


This is a panorama of the above picture and a few others made by Google Photos automatically.


Here are some photos of Roseville Central Park.





Monday, May 21, 2018

BBE2201 - Spring 2018 Class in Renewable Energy and the Environment

I took Bioproducts and Bioenegineering 2201 - Renewable Energy and the environment this last semester at the University of Minnesota.  This class stated with a review of the usual energy sources - oil, gas and nuclear energy, and then went into biomass, biodiesel, corn ethanol, hydroelectric, solar, wind, shallow and deep geothermal, and many other topics.  As an online class, I was able to stay home and do the work entirely on my computer.

As for output, I have a video I made as my Do Something and Report It (DSARI) project, and a formal research paper.  You can find other DSARI projects on Youtube (search on DSARI and BBE2201).  Some of them are fun.

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

Experimenting with movies

I've recently made some videos with my camera of running water, specifically around the Stone Arch Bridge on the Mississippi and on Minnehaha Creek below the falls.  These are quite large, over 10 megabytes per 10 second video.  Here are some of  them.




South and east of the Stone Arch Bridge, a small water fall from the Mill Ruins area.


Sunday, May 15, 2016

Hill Capital Corp - Proposed IPO

The Hill Capital Corp is a new company that hopes to raise $20 million to be loaned to businesses that need $250,000 to $2 million to grow their business and can't get it from banks.

The founding members are local to St. Paul and led by the James J. Hill Center.  This is part of the extension of services of the James J. Hill Library, which is on a downward slope due to the internet and the nature of the current crop of entrepreneurs, and their needs.  They are officed at the James J. Hill Center.

This post is not a source for official information about this offering.  They have a website http://www.hillcapitalcorp.com/ for all official communications, and where you can download their prospectus.  They are not yet taking money, but hope to be by September 2016.  They hope to raise $15 million from accredited investors and $5 million from 5000 shares to be sold to the public.

They will be loaning all the money out except for a few salaries for the staff that will administer the funds and help the board of directors select candidates for funding.  They hope to be a business development company, where they will distribute over 90% of earnings back to the shareholders and pay no corporate taxes.  They do not plan to operate like a for-profit company where they would take fees out of the money first, or pay significant percentages to staff in commissions, etc.   They plan to be a low overhead operation.

They liken their efforts to an entrepreneurial barn-raising, where neighbors come together to help the neighborhood.  This is not for startups, but for businesses who have been in business for over a year with profit and positive cash flow and need to expand.

They plan to offer significant managerial support, both by the staff of the company and through arrangements with volunteer organizations and others, like the Small Business Development Centers, SCORE, and many other organizations.  

The actual funding will take the form of preferred stock, loans, or other equity arrangements, on a case-by-case basis.  They hope to be able to accurately value the investments at least quarterly to allow for reasonable information for investors to value the stock of the Hill Capital Corp. to allow for sale by the investors.  There will be no lockup periods for investors, but there also is no plan to list on any stock exchange, so it may not be a liquid investment, and may take some time to sell.

This post is based on a presentation by Patrick E. Donohue to the St. Paul SCORE Chapter on 10 May 2016, and on the prospectus dated February 1, 2016.

Monday, May 25, 2015

Review of The Teenage Brain – A Neuroscientist’s Survival Guide to Raising Adolescents and Young Adults

I was intrigued by much of what I read in this book. I got a copy from the Hennepin County Library.  It gives good recommendations on how to deal with this sometimes very misunderstood population. I will call them teenagers in this review, even though the brain normally isn’t fully mature until 26 years old.

The book has extensive references to scientific literature, with 18 pages of notes and 24 pages of bibliography and resource links.  The emphasis is on reasons for teenage behavior and how parents and other adults in these people’s lives can help them cope with the immaturity in their brain.
Mixed into the extensive discussion of brain areas and maturation cycles are good recommendations.  These are what I am going to focus on in this review.  Realize that this review is not  a good substitute for reading the book.

Learning needs to be structured in order to be understood well and to be retained.  So, be sure to give your efforts to teach some structure.

Teenagers need to experiment and make mistakes, as they have been doing since birth.  The structures that need to be in place to keep infants safe (a crib, a playpen, some barriers, etc.) are much simpler and more successful than the structures that teenagers need to keep safe (parental guidance, curfews, constant reporting of locations, requiring parents be home when parties are on, etc.)  Fortitude is required of parents to maintain contact with and understanding of their teenagers. 

Adolescence begins at puberty.  A lot of talk of raging hormones is misguided.  Teenagers can’t control their behavior well because the brain circuits are incomplete. 

Because they can’t see long term, you need to tell teens about the bad choices they might make and the consequences in great detail.  For instance, distracted driving can have very bad consequences.
Many teens try and do multi-tasking.  Many teenagers think they can focus their conscious mind on more than one thing at a time.  What they really are doing is “continuous partial attention.”  A good example is distracted diving.  Bad things that can happen are detailed in the book.

There is an extensive discussion of early brain formation and that the brain grows by connecting neurons.  After a while it has too many and it must prune the connections.  Also, it will accelerate the flow of thought by adding white matter (myelin) to “grease the wires”.  Myelin can make connection 100 to 3000 times faster.

A myth is that IQ is static.  It is not.  Between 13 and 17 about a third of people increase their IQ, a third lower their IQ and a third stay even.  The studies that show this didn’t include any data gathering on what the people who gained were doing differently than the others.

There are a lot of best practices for parents of teens –
·         Write down your instructions for teens and limit them to 1 or 2 points – not 3-5 points
·         Encourage teens to write their appointments in calendars so they learn to stay structured
·         Set limits on just about everything
o   Internet socializing
o   Insist on knowing their logins to social networks and email
o   Review their actions and talk about what they are doing – You need to keep them safe
·         Treat them as adults as the earn it, and set high expectations that they will act as adults.
·         Hold them to the standards you set and reward/punish them for that.
·         Brain is an explanation – never an excuse
·         Repeatedly remind them that they are responsible for their own behavior

Unlike positive information, negative information is processed in the prefrontal cortex – a late developing part of the brain.  Thus, negative information is not learned with as much alacrity as positive information.

Learning gets harder after adolescence.  However, the more you learn, the easier it is to learn the next thing.

Sleep is an important topic for teens, as they are very different from young children or adults in their sleep patterns and need for sleep.  They are “owls”, working later and staying up into the night.  Infants and children are “larks”, waking early and getting to sleep early.  When teens must get up to go to school, they shrink their sleep periods.  The school schedules are usually on the normal adult sleep pattern, not the kid’s natural schedule.   Studies in Minnesota show that moving school start times back to at least 8:40AM increased scores on standard exams and improved overall learning.
Brain pruning takes place during the sleep periods.  Adolescents need more sleep than younger or older people.  You lose long-term potentiation (LTP) when you don’t get awake/rest cycles.  This means you don’t get long-term memories formed and thus learning is impaired.

All-nighters for exams are counterproductive.  You are better off studying all through the term, reviewing the material right before your normal sleep time, and then sleeping normally before an exam.

During sleep, memories are restructured and sorted by emotional importance.  If you miss this, you get less able to recall events.   Sleep deprivation can cause various mental health problems.

Adolescents use a lot of stimulants, legal (energy drinks) and illegal.  They have generally negative consequences for teens.

You should avoid arguing with teens before bed – it can lead to sleep deprivation and impact performance the next day.

Teens often exhibit “suboptimal choice behavior”.  They use criteria for making choices that are flawed or not correctly calculated.  The best predictor for teen behavior is the anticipation of a reward despite the risk of other outcomes.

Moving on, the book talks about addiction.  Addiction is a specialized form of memory; memory of the pleasure of the use of the substance.  Dopamine is the chemical released by pleasurable events, etc. and it is a reward.  Teenagers get addicted faster, have stronger addictions, and rehab fails more often in teens.

Smoking tobacco is obviously physically bad for you.  In a study of Israeli military young men, smokers were shown to have lower IQs than nonsmokers.  But, teens end up smoking as a form of rebelling against authority and as a form of bonding with their peers.  To overcome this, parents should drill teenagers on the consequences of smoking.  Also, all adults around teens should stop smoking themselves.

An unavoidable fact is that parents of teenagers share parenting with all the parents of their kid’s friends.  You need to monitor what is happening when your kids are at their friend’s houses and encourage the other parents in good parenting ways.

If various drugs were tools, alcohol is a sledgehammer.  And this is exacerbated by the fact that teens consistently overestimate the amount others drink.  So, they think they can drink more than they really can.

Adults think:
  • 1.       Youth have immature bodies and brain is not as good at handling the effects of alcohol.
  • 2.       Teens bodies are resilient and they can bounce back faster.

Neither of these is true.  Teens handle the sedative effects of alcohol better than adults.  The teenage brain, however, is devastated by alcohol; damage to cognitive, behavioral, and emotional functioning is common after alcohol consumption.  Long-term potentiation is affected as well.

Adults often think that if they start their kids drinking alcohol at home, they will learn how to use it responsibly.  But, studies show that the more teens drink at home, the more alcohol they consume outside the house.

Pot is not inconsequential, as some believe.  It damages brains because the active ingredient, THC, disrupts the development of neural pathways.  Studies show pot usage lowers IQ.  Teens are more likely to become addicted to pot.  Parents are big in stopping pot – Expectations should be high to avoid pot usage.  Parents should repeatedly tell teenagers to avoid pot usage, and they should regularly talk about it.  And, hard core drugs like heroin are worse and teens are more likely to be badly affected.

Stress is a fact of life, but it is especially bad in teens.  Much of a teenager’s response to the world is driven by emotion instead of reason.  Learning is badly affected by stress.  Parents can mitigate some of this by verbal and physical reassurances during stressful incidents.  Some incidents may be confusing to teenagers.  Make sure they understand what is happening and how it is likely to affect them.  One bit of advice is that you may need to recognize that you aren’t the best listener for your kids – maybe an aunt or uncle, or adult friend is a better person for your kids to talk to at times of stress.

Nobody likes to talk about mental illness, but many mental illnesses start in the teenage years.  Watch for behavior changes that seem to cluster or are associated with other symptoms; they may reflect mental illness.  It is better to be safe than sorry – take your teen to a provider if you have any doubts.  In the internet age, various warning signs like isolation from friends, and preoccupation may be more difficult to detect.  Parents will need to be proactive.  Check their internet activities.  Ask questions about their friends, their activities and how they are feeling.

The internet can be addictive in itself.  There is a new disorder to be studied in the latest DSM 5.0 (the “bible” of mental health): Internet Gaming Disorder.  It isn’t formally a diagnosis, just listed for further study.  Parents should organize no-internet pauses to force teens to do other things.  You will also want to watch for bullying online.

Gender is important in that girls mature at an earlier age.  This leads to them doing better than boys on SATs and other tests in high school.  There is no evidence of cognitive differences except timing of maturation.

The book addresses concussions as having long-term impacts on brain function.  An often missed symptom is confusion after a brain injury.  You need to avoid hits to the head. 

The book talks about how teenagers are going to make mistakes and we need to make it safe for them to do that.  But, sometimes bad decisions are crimes, and the criminal justice system is going to kick in.  The fact that the brain will mature later isn’t much of a defense in court.  But, it is a reason for what happens.

Due to the delayed maturation of the brain, a gap year between high school and college may be very good for the potential student.  If used to get work experience or a year abroad, it can lead to better college outcomes.

Finally, neuroscience is being rapidly developed. This book is not the final word on the adolescent brain.  Keep in touch with the continuing research and applications of neuroscience.

And, be tolerant of misadventures and keep calm as your teenagers are growing up and getting better.  Don’t be shocked when teenagers do something stupid and don’t know why they did it.  Communicate and relate to your teenagers continuously.  Emphasize the positive, and encourage them to try different things.  Learn different things yourself – try using texting to reach them.
Just reading this review is a poor substitute for reading this book.


Citation: Jensen, F., & Nutt, A. (n.d.). The teenage brain: A neuroscientist's survival guide to raising adolescents and young adults. HarperCollins. Library of Congress Catalog QP363.5 .J46 2015 http://www.harpercollins.com/9780062067869/the-teenage-brain .

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Book Review: Generation of Wealth by Donald Hall

Donald M. Hall has written a new book on "The rise of Control Data and how it inspired an era of innovation and investment in the Upper Midwest."  It is a mix of stock market comments and high technology business insight.  I wasn't too impressed by the sections on the local stock market in the Twin Cities, as it was incomplete and episodic.  By that I mean, it was only highlighted in a very few cases and there wasn't a consistent message easily visible in the sections.

Having watched the high technology marketplace in the Twin Cities as a manager at Univac and Unisys I know more about those sections of the book. I have always been impressed by the people of Engineering Research Associates, and this builds on that.  Bill Norris and Seymour Cray stand out in a large group of highly competent people who joined ERA and then split out into very many companies over the next 50 years.  One person of which I wasn't very aware before is Manny Villifana, who was instrumental in a number of medical device companies, and particularly St. Jude Medical.  He is an interesting character who was definitely comfortable with risk.

The book highlights the financial successes that were Control Data, Medtronic, and others in the Twin Cities.  But, it also points out that there were many companies that didn't succeed.  And, there were many more projects that failed.  Bill Norris, in particular, toward the end of his career seemed to like to start things that were not likely to succeed financially, but might help people or further some philanthropic goals. However, these were distractions to the computer company, and probably took a lot of management time away for the mainstream of Control Data.

This is by no means a complete story on Control Data, Cray Research, Cray Computer.  There is a display that was made for the Minnesota Historical Society that tracks ERA and its successor companies.  I don't know what happened to that display,

It was an interesting read in many parts.