15 September 2010
Flesh may freeze and stick to cold surfaces
This is a real figure in the Oxford dilution refrigerator manual. Similarly, don't stick your tongue on cold surfaces.
14 September 2010
The zero Gmail inbox for minimizing distractions
In a somewhat old (but still good!) post, Cal Newport explains how to mark all your incoming messages to Gmail as "read." I also take the additional step of moving the messages to another label called "process."
So now I never see anything in my Gmail inbox, which is great for minimizing distractions. I can still go into Gmail and write messages, but without getting sidetracked by new messages in my inbox. Having a "zero" inbox means that I'm not tempted to check new messages. Now I can really stick to only checking my personal email once a day. I wait until the end of the day to look at my "process" label and respond to the messages then.
I restrict my Gmail account to personal mail, but I think this method might also be helpful to people who receive work mail.
Here's how to set up the filter.
The excluded email addresses ("me@gmail.com" in this example) will not be affected and mail from this addresses are delivered to your Inbox. So you can include important addresses in the excluded list, for instance: "mom@gmail.com". I know, for sure, that a list of hyphened addresses works, e.g. "-me@gmail.com -mom@gmail.com -dad@gmail.com". I have heard reports that using something fancier like wildcards and Boolean operators has problems.
So now I never see anything in my Gmail inbox, which is great for minimizing distractions. I can still go into Gmail and write messages, but without getting sidetracked by new messages in my inbox. Having a "zero" inbox means that I'm not tempted to check new messages. Now I can really stick to only checking my personal email once a day. I wait until the end of the day to look at my "process" label and respond to the messages then.
I restrict my Gmail account to personal mail, but I think this method might also be helpful to people who receive work mail.
Here's how to set up the filter.
- Go to the upper righthand corner of your Gmail screen and click on "Settings".
- Click on the tab "Filters".
- Towards the bottom of the screen, click on "Create new filter".
- In the "From:" field, type hyphen followed by your Gmail address, for example, "-me@gmail.com". This will prevent Gmail from marking your sent emails with the new label we are about to create. So any mail sent to me@gmail.com will not be affected and go to your Inbox normally. You can include several emails, for example, in the "From:" field, type "-me@gmail.com -mom@gmail.com -dad@gmail.com".
- Leave all the other fields blank and click on "Next Step".
- Gmail asks you to choose some actions. Select the following: "Skip the Inbox (Archive It)", "Mark as read", and "Apply the label:". For the "Apply the label" box, click on the drop-down box and select "New label". Enter a new label and click "OK". I called mine "process".
- Click "Update Filter" and you are done.
The excluded email addresses ("me@gmail.com" in this example) will not be affected and mail from this addresses are delivered to your Inbox. So you can include important addresses in the excluded list, for instance: "mom@gmail.com". I know, for sure, that a list of hyphened addresses works, e.g. "-me@gmail.com -mom@gmail.com -dad@gmail.com". I have heard reports that using something fancier like wildcards and Boolean operators has problems.
11 September 2010
Some interesting ideas summarized as quotes
“People always ask, ‘What is your greatest failure?’ I always have the same answer – We’re working on it right now, it’s gonna be awesome!” - Jim Coudal
"The key to success is to be cheerful in the face of constant failure." - my take on failure
"Hara Hachi Bu. (腹八分)" - a Okinwana saying which means you should eat until you are 80% full (not sure if my translation into Japanese is correct)
There is also some kind of Japanese saying that goes "made stupid by peace." I'm not sure if this is really a Japanese saying, so correct me if I'm wrong. The idea is that the peace and comfort we experience in first world countries makes us lazy and complacent.
"The key to success is to be cheerful in the face of constant failure." - my take on failure
"Hara Hachi Bu. (腹八分)" - a Okinwana saying which means you should eat until you are 80% full (not sure if my translation into Japanese is correct)
There is also some kind of Japanese saying that goes "made stupid by peace." I'm not sure if this is really a Japanese saying, so correct me if I'm wrong. The idea is that the peace and comfort we experience in first world countries makes us lazy and complacent.
04 September 2010
New top games list
Here is a new list of my favorite video games (from this decade). Most of these games are for the Nintendo DS and Gamecube. I've never owned an Xbox or Playstation console, so I wasn't able to play games on those systems. The old list of top games was from the 1990s decade.
- Paper Mario: Thousand Year Door (Gamecube)
- Prince of Persia trilogy (The Sands of Time, Warrior Within, The Two Thrones) (console/PC)
- Chrono Trigger (SNES/DS)
- Phoenix Wright series (GBA/DS)
- The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess (Gamecube/Wii)
- Mario Kart: Double Dash (Gamecube)
- Dragon Quest V: Hand of the Heavenly Bride (SNES/PS2/DS)
- Mario Superstar Baseball (Gamecube)
- The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass (DS)
- Tales of Monkey Island (PC/Wii)
- Dragon Quest IX: Sentinels of the Starry Skies (DS)
- Paper Mario (N64)
- Mario Power Tennis (Gamecube/Wii)
- Super Smash Brothers Melee / Brawl (Gamecube/Wii)
- Ikaruga (Gamecube)
- flOw (PC)
- Professor Layton and the Curious Village (DS)
- Space Invaders Extreme (DS)
- Sid Meier's Civilization Revolution (DS)
- Age of Empires: Age of Kings (DS)
- Animal Crossing (N64/Gamecube)
- Cooking Mama (DS)
- Super Mario Strikers (Gamecube)
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