Thursday, February 18, 2016

Cornrows

Cornrows have dated back to 500 b.c. They have been etched into clay scultpures and even the majestic sphinx. Tightly braided cornrows were worn by in-house slaves, and after the civil war, during the civil rights movement, african americans wore cornrows as a sign of rebellion because the slave's heads were typically shaved. There are many types of cornrow braids. For example the Mende, or the natural. 

Room Drawing:


1. Laptop  
 Nintendo DS          
Mobile phone    
iPod with ear buds      
PS2
Radio(2)      
Television          
Toy car(3)          
calendar                      
Ribbons(3)
Sprite can
plaques (3)         
gold medal          
phone                          
mug
trophy      
picture frame      
posters(8)              
Hobbit poster            
lava lamp
glasses  
violin                    
globe                   
person                  
paintings(2)
shoe        
burger            
books(75)          
pizza                          
sandwich
goldfish  
toy soldiers(3)  
pringles can

2. the items in the room tell me that he is kind of an average teenager, he's more of a playstation person than xbox, he is kinda messy, but I'd bet anything he knows the exact location of everything in that room, and he can play guitar.
It doesn't tel us much else, like, what games he plays, what his personality is, what his friends are like, what grade is he in, other unimportant, yet important stuff.

3. alot of the items in the room are related to technology,  nerdiness, i might go as far to say.

4. 3

5.  oh yeah, definitely, of course the way i see things are going to be entirely different than what other people see. and what i see here what be different than what i would see there





part two:

1. 


2. 
tv, windows with city backdrop, posters/calendars/reward plaques, radio, violin, guitar, ipod, a lot of food/dishes, show, a lot of books, 3 toy soldiers, computer, toy cars, shelves, trophy, lava lamp, speaker, globe, paintings, glasses, pens, phone, fish, 

3. pretty much the same things but with 3 major additions:
a. a lot less detail, for example, you cant tell what the posters are of
b. a lot less items. obviously, im not going to draw 100 items
c. im a terrible artist

4. 1





\

Hand-shakes and Fence-posts

  1. Handshake Problem #1: Assume there are 20 people in a room, including you. You must shake hands with everyone else in the room. How many hands will you shake? If there are N (where N > 0) people in the room, how many hands will you shake? (Hint: Write a mathematical expression/equation)
  2. Fence Post Problem: You need to build one side of a fence that is 12 yards long. This fence will be built with fence posts and rails that connect one fence post to another. If each fence post is 1 yard away from the next fence post, how many fence posts will be needed for this side of the fence How many fence posts will be needed for a side of a fence that is N (where N > 0) yards long?
  1. Handshake Problem #2: Assume there are 10 people in a room, including you. Each person in the room must shake hands one time, and only time, with all the other people in the room. How many handshakes will occur? If there are 20 people in the room, how many handshakes will occur If there are N (where N > 0) people in the room, how many handshakes will occur?
  2. Reflections: Why are problems like these important to learn how to solve? How could this type of solution be of benefit to a carpenter, a chef, a teacher? 

1. 
p=people
 h=handshakes

PH

00
10
21
32
43
54
65
76
87
98
109
1110
1211
1312
1413
1514
1615
1716
1817
1918

2019


p-1=h

2. 
f=fenceposts
y=yards

FY
10
21
32
43
54
65
76
87
98
109
1110
1211
1312

f-1=y

3.
p=people
h=handshakes

PH

00
10
21
33
46
510
615
721
828
936
1045

P(P-1)
2    =H

Wednesday, February 17, 2016

Data Privacy Issues


  1. The 5 biggest online privacy issues: 

  • Cookies:

                    -My opinion on what they have to say about cookies, well, let me sum it up in one word: Bull. Cookies are far from invisible, especially nowadays. Everyone I know knows what cookies are, and all you have to do get rid of them is just go to your history and delete them. If you were to go back in time, say ten years, then no one would have any idea what cookies are, and granted, you would get very few cookies every time you open a website, they will add up very quickly without you knowing, but nowadays there is awareness and there is management of cookies. Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying I agree with cookies in any way shape or form, though with some people, they wouldn't mind. Some people don't care whether or not their internet life is tracked, but one perk that no one can disagree with is the internet showing them what they would like based on their history. Computers are getting smarter and smarter, and people just can't live with this.

  • Seizing Cloud History:
                     -I don't really understand this, What I got from it is, the government is trying to access your cloud, but the government is also trying to make laws against accessing your cloud...

  • Location data betrayal:
                     -To be honest, I don't really care about this. Whenever something asks whether or not I want  it to know my location, I always say no, but sometimes it doesn't ask you. But really, unless someone is trying to plan a murder on me, it still won't affect me too horribly much. But I can see why this could be a problem for some people. Am I saying nothing should be done about it: no. But I am also saying that I won't particularly care if something isn't done right away.

  • Data never forgets a face:
                     -Really, I don't see the problem with this. Yeah, so what, someone posted a picture of me eating noodles, and now the NSA knows that I like pasta. So what, big whoop, every time I go outside wearing jeans and a T-shirt, it proves to everyone that I'm an average Joe. Then there is the argument, but what if they use that information to invade your privacy, Well, if you have nothing to hide, then you have nothing to fear, I mean, it's not like they are distributing images of you partying with your friends to your parents, but if they are getting images that could help solve a crime case, then good, use that information all you like. As long as ya got a warrant (... she's my cherry pie... I'm sorry, I had to)

  • Scanning in the name of cyber-security 
                     - Okay, really, this is basically saying that the internet shouldn't give the government proof of you committing crime. Even so, it is legal evidence, and according to the 4th ammendment, the law is still allowed to use it as evidence so long as hey have A. the owner's consent, or B. a warrant... Now they're just grasping for straws

2. AOL User Face Exposed:

     You know, the real story here isn't that an old lady got her internet history tracked, it's that an old lady uses the internet. So what, the internet now knows who she is, what is the point of writing a multi-paragraph article about it. It isn't like anyone is going to care that an old lady likes her three dogs, or cares about her friends. The only way I can see this being a bad thing is if you are intentionally trying to hide something, say, your internet history, but then google gives your cloud to yahoo. So what, it isn't like yahoo is just going to hand out fliers listing off everything you've used the internet for over the last 4 months to every one you know, and now your parents know that you committed a guilty pleasure in February. And if it truly bothers you that much, just use an incognito window, or here's an idea: DELETE YOUR HISTORY! It's not that hard, you go to your history, and click delete, boom, done, now alone time stays alone, and come absolute worst case and someone DOES abuse information they obtained illegally, you could just plead the 4th amendment and there's a law suit, so long as you could prove that it's your internet history and that they obtained it illegally

3. instagram privacy

ok, first I would like to say, the only social media accounts I have are facebook and google, and I almost never use google as social media, and facebook is all I really need. And even if I did, the idea of what this person is saying is preposterous. He is proposing that if you share an image on 1 social media, and share into other social media through that social media, it will not stay private, even if in the original social media you have the privacy settings. I don't think he realizes how amazingly ridiculous what he just said is. Of course I share a video/picture in facebook with privacy settings on, then share it onto twitter (if i even had one) it is not going to remain private to that social media. He then proceeds to list a whole plethora of ways to avoid this, when the simplest solution is one he has already mentioned: turn the privacy settings on. Except, I mean turn privacy settings on with both social media. 

4. Twitter tracking

As I stated earlier, I don't have a twitter, but if i did, I wouldn't see this as a problem. Big whoop. twitter takes my search history and shows me what I think I would like. I don't see the problem here. Unless I were to supposedly be recklessly going into porn websites without incognito mode on... I mean, uhhh, going into those websites in general, yeah... and new twitter is showing me playboy. However as I jokingly mentioned, there are easy ways around this, go incognito, for computers you can do it manually (click your network name at the top right corner of the screen, just before the minimize button, and click o incognito) or use the shortcut (ctrl + n), however on a phone you can only use it manually, click the drop down list inside the search bar (3 dots) and click open a new incognito tab). Or, simply enough, you could delete your search history. In the long run, the problem here, runs directly back to #2, people are to stupid to not know how to read terms and conditions or to merely know how a website works, and get all nit-picky when they figure it does something they do not agree with, even when there is an extremely simple solution that they do not see because they are in blind and pointless rage.

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Programming final

Brief description-My game is a game in which the objective is to click the key the cat tells u to before time runs out. I made this work using the "When ___ key pressed..." (I chose keys in chronological order in which they were in available in the drop down list) . From there, I used different keys to be different levels.
"space" = level 1 - click "N" to win
"up arrow" = level 2 - click "K" to win
"down arrow" = level 3- click "F" to win
"right arrow" = level 4- click "X" to win
"left arrow" = level 5 click "Y" to win
"a" = level 6 - click "M" to win
"b" = level 7 - click "Z" to win
"c" = level 8 - click "Q" to win
"d" = level 9 - click "U" to win
"e" = level 10 - click "J" to win
after that u win the game. I made this work by using the, as stated earlier, "When ___ key pressed...", but to go into further detail, when a key is pressed, it would start a timer, not the timer in the corner, but i used the "wait__ secs." I tried to make it so that when u clicked the key to win, it stopped all, so that u could still go to next level but everything would be stopped, timer included, but it didn't work how i thought it would, so i had to improvise. In addition to the cat instructing u through the game, I have 3 other sprites. A stopwatch placed to encourage u, but also provide irony. A strip of Caution tape, not only encouraging u, but also advising u to take heed, for the starting levels are easy, but they get harder. And finally, a computer, placed to discourage u by glorifying herself, or insulting u. Essentially, she represents your opponent.

Friday, January 22, 2016

Scratch Programming assignment #10

Monkey Game.sb

1. play the game with the arrow keys. What blocks make the monkey move.
A. "when ____ key pressed"

2. Does the banana always appear in the same place
A. No

3. what blocks do you think decide where the banana appears
A. "If ___, then ____"    "touching ____"     "pick random _ to _"     "If ___, then ___"       "data" "___ equals ____"       "*put number in*"       "move to _x_, _y_"

4. What are the name sof the orange under variables.
A. "points" "change points by ___" "set points to ___" etc. ... or data, depends on what exactly the question is askiing

5. what blocks are used to change the score?
A. "Change points by __"


Pinball Game.sb

1. he made it a variable
2. A "If touching *insert color here* then turn *180 + *random -50 - 50**" B. if on edge then bounce
3. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
4. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^  ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
5. to stop the game
6. creativity, less chid-ish, run a little more smoothly (i certainly did not complete that last task)
Programming blogpost

when you click something, it sends a signal (binary) to the computer, and it reads the code, and from there it deciphers the code and follows the message.