Showing posts with label Product review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Product review. Show all posts

Jerusalem audio guides [Product Review]

On January 2014, during a visit to the old city of Jerusalem, I used an excellent set of audio guides, provided by the Israel Ministry of Tourism.  Each guide focuses on a specific walking tour such as, "The Jewish Quarter", "Via Dolorosa", "Mount Zion to Jaffa Gate", etc.  The tours last a couple of hours and are informative and fun.

The guides can be downloaded unto any mobile device, and contain the audio, the text, and a detailed map of the walking route.  In addition, I discovered that using a GPS-enabled device (such as my Nexus tablet), your current location is displayed on the route map.  What a delightful feature.  No more getting lost on a tour.  When will Lonely Planet have it?

I downloaded the guides via WiFi at the tourism office located by the Jaffa Gate, but I failed to note the URL.  If you know it, please post a comment.

A Brief History of Humankind [Product Review]

Yesterday, I completed "A Brief History of Humankind" a course taught by Dr. Yuval Noah Harari, from the Hebrew University, and presented on the Coursera platform.  I like this method of learning, known as MOOC, and loved the course.

Dr.  Harari's presentation was informative, often entertaining, and above all, thought-provoking.  To condense all of human history into seventeen lectures, requires both a broad vision, and a personal point of view.  Dr. Harari has both.  In a narrative similar in style to Jared Diamond, he explored the development of Homo Sapiens from the age of the great apes, through three revolutions (Cognitive, Agricultural, and Scientific), till today.  Towards the end of the series Dr. Harari treated us to a somewhat frightening vision of the future.

I liked the Coursera platform.  Unlike the Obamacare web site, there were almost no technical glitches.  Each lecture was broken down to digestible, thirty minute segments, and each few lectures were followed by a quiz.  The quizzes as well as the final exam reassured me that I have grasped the material.  BTW, both the quizzes and the final exam could be attempted many times.

I am also taking "Introduction to Philosophy", an MIT class, presented on EdX, another MOOC platform,   This course is more technical and much more interactive.  The lectures are broken down to five-minute segments, each followed by multiple choice questions.  Participation in the online forum is highly encouraged, and added much to my depth of understanding.

It may be a while before you can get a college degree online, but as of now, MOOCs seem to be a perfect tool for expanding the horizons of retirees living in Oaxaca.






Amour, directed by Michael Haneke


Amour (2012)The movie "Amour" was recently presented as part of the Oaxaca International Film Festival.  In the movie, Anne and George are aging gracefully together.  We can observe the quiet love and respect they share.  Suddenly, Anne suffers a stroke.  Her condition continuously deteriorates until she can not take care of herself, nor communicate with her family.  George tends to all of his invalid wife's needs.  He does so with love and tenderness.  Only rarely does he display resentment towards this hard and thankless job.  Anne cannot express herself, yet we can share her suffering.  Although she has some brief quasi-lucid moments, at other times it is clear that she would rather end her life.  Eventually, George complies by smothering her under a pillow.   The story is sad, yet it is told in a factual and non-emotional manner.  I was impressed by the way the couple, and eventually George alone, face their situation with calm acceptance, without resorting to self pity, and without soliciting the pity of others.  The acting is excellent, and Haneke, in his usual dark style, displays meticulous mastery of the movie-making art.


The movie prompted me to review my attitudes towards life.  I realized that I am not afraid of death, nor do I crave a long life.  I exercise daily and eat well in order to stay active far into old age, hoping that when the inevitable decline arrives, it will be short and steep.  If that declining path is lined with extreme discomfort,  I believe I can make a calm choice whether to follow it to its natural end, or not.  Most important, I think that Dignity is a higher value than Life.  Dignity, to me, is being aware, being able to communicate this awareness, and having some control over my environment.  I should take steps now, that would help my loved ones, if these criteria are not met, to make the same hard decision as George.

"Antifragile" by Nassim Nicholas Taleb



"If you have more than one reason to do something," says Taleb "just don't do it."
This is one of the many exasperatingly true edicts I found in "Antifragile", a book that changed the way I view the world.  Taleb is a modern day prophet.  He points out the errors of our ways, loudly rallies against the evil-doers  (Economists, bankers, and politicians), and warns us to return to the "righteous" path (Antifragile). Prophets are often derided until their predictions come true.  Taleb  has earned his prophet credentials by predicting the banking meltdown, and profiting nicely from it.  His book is approachable, sprinkled with personal stories and entertaining parables (Math equations are confined to the appendix).  I have only one reason for my attempt to condense it.

Taleb's observations:

1.  Social systems and natural systems are similar.  Both domains are complex, non-linear, and composed of  little-understood inter-dependencies.  Any attempts to model them is bound to be simplistic and inaccurate.
2.  Such systems are affected by external events- "stressors".
     2.1 The stressors are random in frequency and magnitude.
     2.2 Low magnitude stressors occur frequently.  Stressors of high magnitude occur very rarely.
     2.3 It is impossible to predict the timing or even the probability of these rare events.  (A very small error in estimating the shape of the distribution curve will cause a big change in the prediction)
     2.4  However, history has been largely shaped by those large-cataclysmic rare events.  Taleb names them "Black Swans."
3.  With enough time and variability,  anything fragile will break.  However, nature, our body, and economic systems survive due to their ability to learn and improve from variability.  They are "Antifragile".  Quoting Nietzsche, "Whatever does not kill me, makes me stronger"

Too much human intervention disrupts the natural tendency to self-heal.  We are becoming more fragile and more susceptible to Black Swans.

4.  We don't like uncertainty.  Catering to this tendency, economist try, unsuccessfully  to predict the future. Hearing these prediction, (even knowing they are wrong), we make risky decisions, resulting in catastrophes.
5.  We don't like variability.  We appoint people (like Greenspan) to reduce it.  As a result, instead of experiencing many small slowdowns, from which the system can recover and improve, we get large meltdowns.
6.  Our society promotes a new class of people such as Bankers and politicians, who have great power, yet take no risk.  We, the public, carry the risk and bear the losses.
7.  We let physicians, and the big pharmas, over-medicate us, exposing us to the rare but real danger of unintentional harm..

Taleb suggests that the way to handle variability and mitigate the problems above, is to become more Antifragile.  One of his definitions for the term is as follows.
"Anything that has more upside than downside from random events is Antifragile."  The reverse is "Fragile."  Something that is not affected by variability is "Robust"

Below is some of his advice on how to survive, and even thrive from variability (my order).

8.  Don't try to compute risk.   "It is far easier to figure out if something is fragile than to predict the occurrence of an event that may harm it."  Once fragility is detected, work to reduce it.
9.  Top-down is fragile.  Bottom-up  thrives under stress.
    9.1 City-states are better and more effective than modern Nation-states.
10.  Big is fragile.  Create disincentives for companies to grow to "too big to fail" status.
11.  New discoveries are made by engineers/tinkerers, not in bureaucratically-funded academia.  Develop an environment that tolerates (even honors) failure (i.e. Silicon Valley).
12.  Do less.  Better still, procrastinate.  Avoid interference with things we do not understand.  Let time take care of it.
13.  Look for opportunities for exercising optionality.  Optionality provides limited downside and open-ended upside.
14.  Limit medical treatments to situations where the benefits are large and clear.
13.  Adopt a "Barbell"  strategy.  A strategy that employs a combination of extremes, while avoiding the middle.
       13.1  Combine aggressiveness and paranoia.  Play it safe in some areas (robust to negative Black Swans) and take many small risks in others (open to positive Black Swans.)
       13.2  Put 90% of your funds in (inflation proof) cash, and the other 10% in extremely risky securities.
       13.3  Exercise hard, than take long rest periods.
       13.4  Eat a large steak, then abstain from meat for a few days.
       13.5  Marry an accountant, and have an affair with a rock star.

Enjoy the book.

Product review 3: Lonely Planet Vs Rick Steves

After my trip to Guatemala, I compared  Lonely Planet (LP) to Rough Guide.
(http://isaacohel.blogspot.com/2010/01/new-testament.html).
On this trip to Spain, I loaded my kindle with both the LP guide and, Doron's favorite, Rick Steves (RS).  Now I realize that while LP and Rough Guide are similar guidebooks, Rick Steves' book is different from the two.  Below, I'll compare RS to LP, my bible.

Scope
LP is like an encyclopedia.  It has almost everything a traveler needs.  However just as in using an encyclopedia, you should seek data, not advice, from LP.  RS claims to be a "Personal guide in your pocket".  As such, he filters the data, and describes only what he thinks is important for you to see and do.

Audience
Due to its wide scope, LP does not need to focus on a particular demographic.  However, a tour guide needs to know his audience.  In my opinion, RS focuses on the middle aged, middle class American traveler.  Surprisingly, although I wouldn't describe myself that way, I found that RS guidance fit most of my needs.

Itinerary
LP provides enough data to travel anywhere. It provides only brief itinerary suggestions.  RS' book is structured around a tight, fast paced itinerary (Spain in three weeks).  Points of interest outside that itinerary are described only briefly, or not at all.  I was happy to accept RS' prioritization but not his schedule.  I like it slow, and I spent more than twice the time to see the sites in his itinerary.

Budget
LP:  Low to mid-budget travelers.
RS:  One notch higher.

Sleeping and eating
LP provides more hotel options, but due to the book's popularity they are often booked.  I found the online service of http://www.booking.com/ (or hostelworld.com for lower budget options) to be more helpful than either book.  RS likes to eat.  I enjoyed his personal style of reviewing restaurants.

Other
LP maps are impossible to read on the kindle, while RS hand-drawn maps are usable.
RS' website provides free, downloadable audio guides for important locations.  I played them on my kindle, and found them to be useful and fun.

Conclusions
First visit in a country:  RS
Subsequent visits, or extended time in one region:  LP
Adventure opportunities: LP
My choice:  I started in Spain using both books, and soon reverted to using only RS.  However, when I decided to linger in Galicia, RS had no information, and I used LP.  For my trip to Italy, I downloaded only RS.

    Product review 2: Book Vs kindle

    I took a kindle on this trip to Europe.  I needed several guidebooks to cover the six months of travel, and my obsession for light travel demanded a better solution.  This obsession, which may not be common to everyone, tints this review.  Note, that I only used the kindle as a travel guidebook, not as a regular reader.

    Observations

    Plus
    • The kindle is much lighter, even after I tear out (gasp), then discard, used pages.
    • I can fit a kindle into my pants' cargo pocket.  (Though I can't close the flap.)
    • Kindle's hyperlinks are an efficient way to provide diverse information.
    • Enlarging the font size is a welcome feature.  It enables reading, in a dark cathedral.
    • Pages are easy to 'bookmark'.
    • New books are easily downloaded during travel.
    • The kindle opens to the same page it closed.

    Minus
    • Carrying a kindle is less comfortable than carrying the few pages I tear out of the book, then fold in my shirt pocket.
    • Reading maps on the kindle is hard, and sometimes impossible.
    • Opening the kindle to a random location is impossibly tedious.
    • Opening a 'bookmarked' page is slower than the equivalent action in a book.
    • kindle's 'Search' function is primitive and produces duplicate results.  A book's index is better.
    Conclusion
    • If I need only one guidebook on a trip, paper is a clear winner.
    • Since I usually require more than one book, I'll keep using the kindle.