##reduce dependencies @tech #wpress, WPS

Scope .. we could talk about all forms of dependency, but to give this blogpost a lasting meaning, we have to restrict ourselves. Just dependency on technologies please.

Managing this dependency is a lifelong struggle.

Technology is supposed to enhance our lives. I think healthcare and transport technologies are poster boys, but most of the technologies in our everyday life is just for convenience. It could breed over-dependency and weaken our self-reliance.

Technology reliability is improving, but still less reliable than traditional solutions.
— printer, with all the consumables + repairs
Prefer office printer, but ideally  .. “use to the max, but don’t bleed all over if unavailable”
— touchscreen .. on external monitor or laptops
— dual monitor at home .. After I return to office, I could put away the external monitor.
— wpress and git-blogging
Dhost is not free 🙁

Online blogging is dependent on connectivity 🙁 Git-blogging is slightly better.
— email is a better dependency than chat apps. Outlook is a big dependency. Gmail is a lighter dependency.
bold !
— MSOffice is reliable, familiar, but not free. As my cashflow high ground rises, there’s a lifestyle creep tendency to “just pay lah”. It does pre-empt some stressors, since I can pay once and use the same license across my 4+ laptops

Should try WPS office. zqbx, successZ, adaptation

===== above are infocomm dependencies. Below are other technological dependencies
— aircon
— washing machine .. less eco-friendly than manual

math: Chn students’ advtg=short-lived

Look at programming course. East Asian students don’t seem to have an edge over Americans.
Look at math. I believe East Asian students have an edge, but sometime during the 4Y in college (possibly starting in high school), in STEM courses American students somehow catch up to close the gap.

In the big picture, the math advantage is short-lived


Many say the Chinese students (including Singapore, HK …) are the smartest compared to Grade6 counterparts in other countries, largely due to their math standard. (More than other subjects, basic math is associated with IQ.) China students are traditionally known to be very strong in math “problem solving”, from primary school till pre-U level. If we take a random sample of 10,000 age-16 students from China to form a “China sample” and use a standardized test to grade them in A/A-/B+/B/C (not numerical score [1]), and repeat the same on a U.S. sample, and a Japan sample, and a German sample, … we get 150 national sample and a score for each country. Probably China team will be stronger than most teams. (I have reason to believe Russian team, Korean team, Singapore team will also be strong.)

[1] For the statistically inclined, the “score” is not a number, but rather a histogram. We can compare two histograms by their IQM or their median. We can even compare their mean since there can be no outlier in a letter-grade. Tthere’s no real difference between a score of 881 vs 882 — such granularity is completely misleading.

Now, how about programmers? If I take a random sample of 100 China-trained programmers (below age 28 [2]) and grade them on a standardized coding test, and repeat the same on a random U.S. sample or Australian sample… I believe China team will Not be so strong. Why? Below is my educated guesses.

(I will use “American students” as a proxy for students in developed western countries, where emphasis on math practice is much lower.)

My Answer — many American students before age 17 don’t bother to practice math problems as much as their China counterparts. (My son is this type. My sister’s Australian boyfriend Chris was this type when he was young.) They don’t see a purpose. If an American student and a China student are equally intelligent then the China students would end up practicing a lot more on math problems, and score higher. For a programmer, the American is equally motivated as the Chinese, so they put in similar effort.

My Answer — Also, China education system is academically more competitive. China’s top schools practice competitive enrollment. In American schools, before Grade 9, most exam scores don’t matter that much. Even at Grade 12 (last year of Pre-U), exam scores matter much less than in China. Most top colleges use national test scores as one of many selection criteria. Therefore, China students not only put up with a lot of practice, but also work hard to understand the concepts better, so they can cope with hard math exams. If we look at Google/Facebook coding interviews, competition is equally high for anyone, so the American programmer also feels motivated by the competition and works hard and competes effectively against Chinese programmers.

There’s a deep cultural factor that’s hard to describe fully — For centuries the Chinese family values education achievements more than other nationalities, esp. the visible signs of achievements like enrollment in a famous school, be it university, secondary school or a primary school. There’s enormous effort by parents, teachers and students to improve on standardized benchmark scores, something the American family don’t care that much and don’t put in so much effort. Therefore, at the middle-school level, the Chinese students have put in far more effort on math practice than the American students. As to programming skill …. well no such cultural factor… no prestige …

xxxxxxxx

By age 25, in the tech or scientific sectors, the Chinese young professionals are still strong, but not “head and shoulders above” the other nationalities.

Q: if indeed the China students were technically strong at age 16 but no longer so strong at age 25, then at what age did they start losing their lead? I know it’s a gradual process between age 18 and 25, but please pick one age.
A: I would say in college, around age 20, when other nationalities start seeing a purpose in working hard and /building technical competence/. That’s consistent with my own experience. My friend Jack He pointed out that in college, the Chinese parents can’t control them.

The math subject is the best example. (To a lesser extent, we can talk about science, too.) The Chinese students are strongest in these subjects. Note there’s no such advantage in performing arts, visual arts, sports etc.

Q: what if I grade those high school student samples on a reasonably tough programming test rather than math test?
A: I would think China team would show no visible superiority, since programming is not a subject they practice for. They don’t have 20 years of past exams to study. There’s no purpose in practicing on programming since this skill doesn’t help them get into top colleges.

Q: what if I grade the students on a physics test?
A: I would think China team is still strong if the test is mostly theoretical physics, but their advantage will be smaller than in math test. Math is more abstract than physics.

Q: what if I grade the student sample on a standardized chemistry exam?
A: I don’t know, but I doubt the China team would show superiority. Chemistry is even less abstract and theoretical.

Q: how about history?
A: Not a subject with an international benchmark

Observation — Many China schools have impressive track record in training students on theoretical, abstract subjects like math and theoretical physics.
Observation — For two equally intelligent students, motivation (and therefore effort) is the key differentiator
Observation — China students were motivated to study math at an earlier age. Other nationalities can catch up when they find the motivation.

Therefore, I now believe math (or any other subject) test scores in primary school, middle school, pre-U don’t matter as much as some Chinese parents believe. We have a cultural bias to place too much emphasis on test scores.

The statistical correlation between Grade-10 test score and college GPA is probably not very high. The mediocre American students can often catch up with Chinese students later on, perhaps in college (or after leaving college) and become equally strong technically. The American students’ talent is Not wasted in middle school or high school.

Last Observation — when the China student loses motivation, he would lose the competition. This is a marathon. 龟兔赛跑,可以后来居上。

What I want to focus on in my kids is not academic benchmark, but learning habits, motivation, self-discipline, desire to learn. These attributes had better get built-in at an early age.

[2] I put in this condition because among the U.S. programmers, there are many older ones.

— Why I pick programming as the contrast against math?

In this blogpost, I chose programming because programming skill is highly correlated with math skill. Among all the secondary school subjects, math skill has the highest correlation with programming skill. Is there another mainstream professional skill that’s more correlated with math? statistician? actuary? I’m unfamiliar with them, and programmers outnumber these professions by a factor of 500.

I chose “programming test” also because it’s easily standardized. All programmers are trained to solve the same classic computer science problems. Math and programming are both highly abstract and well-defined, so every programmer can understand a standardized coding question.

I chose “programming” also because it can be self-taught with little outside help. If you have a grasp of basic math, and plenty of motivation, you can read tons of free books and practice on hundreds of problems and improve effectively. I think millions of young programmers/students world-wide do precisely that on leetcode.

video_xx ^ print media #recreational++

 


k_soul_search

Video learning is the focus of this blogpost, including scripted and animated slide shows, and recorded conference presentations (most boring).

Video learning is popular among majority of (esp. younger) learners but in my experience inferior to print publication. This observation applies to both tech xx and recreational xx. If you don’t bother to learn, then video is fine as a passive, laid-back recreation.

Videos have shorter shelf-life on the web. Too heavy, and they become outdated faster than text documents. Therefore, if my learning notes refer to a video URL it often becomes broken.

— eg: I watched some popular talks by leading intellectuals (+ some recorded tech lectures). The video format proved downright inferior to print media. Most video xx materials are for recreational, not acredited education, or technical learning, or serious self-growth.

  • no browsing fwd and esp. backward
  • no pencil-highlighting
  • no note-taking on the margin in my own words… crucial to digesting/assimilation…
  • no review, which is crucial for virtually all of my learning.
  • no comparing two sentences across pages.
  • The courseware can’t show permanent lists, tables or graphs since there’s only one page on display.  These “pictorials” are essential for reinforcement, clarification, comparison/contrast, highlighting similarities or key differences …
  • You can’t focus on one difficult, confusing, or surprise phrase and let it sink in, unless you pause the video.
  • You can’t copy-paste a paragraph into a blog to comment on it.
  • .. You can’t refer to a page in a book either.
  • ^^ Overall, reading is far more efficient and less tiring. The learner is far more in control

— eg: studying youth drug culture .. For years I had a deep concern over juvenile drug culture in the U.S. The numerous online resources [pictorials, videos, FAQ..] were long available to me but don’t provide me enough psychological relief. A paradox.

Now I guess that subconsciously I always knew I ought to commit myself and “study” this subject, but the prospect of online learning was /unappealing/unpleasant, heavy, even dreadful.

Then came a mini black swan, when the national library BigBookGiveaway gave away several beautiful pictorial books written for teenagers on some highly relevant topics. Those topics were exactly what I was unconsciously looking for. They scratched a big itch.

A less obviously but a bigger differentiator is the *hardcopy* print form — so much better than online including the videos. I kinda look forward to reading these books in my spare time. I will likely pencil mark, annotate and review them. For the first time, I felt relieved to have some promising resources to address part of my concerns.

— eg: LKY .. the books vs the videos.
I watched 30 – 60 videos of LKY’s talks, raning in length from 5 minutes to 2H. (I also watched some videotaped discussions over LKY’s legacy, but irrelevant here.) Content often overlaps.

There’s no table of content so I couldn’t pick a section. It was awkward to pause or rewind (like a book) so I seldom did.

There is often an introduction (uesless). There are often comments by a moderator or another guest on the stage, when I want to focus on LKY’s own words.

More seriously, there are words, perhaps one in a few hunrded used by LKY, that I want to but don’t understand. We routinely ignore them, since we don’t know the spelling. (No such issue with his Chinese talks.) Some of these unfamiliar words are LKY’s personal characterizations of a subject.

Then I picked up [[one man’s view of the world]]. The content is often similar to the talks, but the absorption rate is much higher. I underlined many key words or parapraphs for review.

The content is more organized, more comprehensive, more substantiated. With his talks, LKY often gives a brief answer. Many experienced speakers on stage would do that.

I also have a Chinese book. I will be able to compare the contents of the two books, something hard to do in videos.

exam success but professionally mediocre #XR#CNA late bloomer

k_miswanting_blindFOMO

XR,

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/commentary/psle-results-role-models-late-bloomers-beat-the-odds-568471  is a Channel News Asia commentary I read when receiving my son’s Primary School Leaving Exam results. Some of the words resonated with me.

“What’s wrong with being average?”

“The stories we tell ourselves matter. For once, I would like to see attention given to folks, who scored, for instance, 270 (something like top 0.2%), for PSLE, sharing that they are now working at an unimpressive job, but that their professional and social status doesn’t bother them”

Most of the top students I know in my career are not _that_ successful in terms of leadership, tangible (non-financial) achievements, or compared to your income. I think most of these top students turned out mediocre (普通人). I like to talk about these stories every time I discuss top schools and top students.

Many parents tell the late bloomer stories, but those stories drive home the wrong message (see the CNA article). I want to be different — I like to talk about the exam-success-but-mediocre-professional stories. These are the most powerful and valuable stories, like the kid at the end of [[Emperor’s new clothes]]. They reveal a startling truth about exam success.

(intellectual) lifelong learning .. Instead of exam success, you once pointed out a truer measure of learning capacity. I notice the same point in various articles — lifelong learning habit is a more accurate predictor of a person’s learning capacity. Those who keep learning throughout their lifetime .. tend to end up with better learning outcomes.

Note lifelong learning is related to, but not correlated with, late-bloomer. Late bloomers have tenacity, resilience, life-long self-improvement, but they may not be lifelong “learners” in terms of bookish knowledge.

My father and I are examples of lifelong learners — we both keep reading/writing, and we implicitly benchmark ourselves against fellow learners.

On a side note, I don’t even think top exam scores equate to academic achievement. High school and lower-grade exams are all about knowledge, repetitive practice, not research, not innovative, not ground-breaking, not even close to the frontier of human knowledge. My father wrote 20+ academic books, some ground-breaking. High-school top exam takers can’t write a single research paper … until they shift focus off the exams.

italics ^ /some words/

Both text effects are used for valuable English vocab items.

🙂 double-slash is usable in plain text
🙂 italics is the better choice for longer strings, esp. when you don’t want the highlight due to bold or color.

— visibility/highlight .. For /one to three/ words (but not beyond), double-slash can sometimes be more visible than italics.

Without bold or color, italics alone is not really effective for highlighting/visibility.

_Incidentally_, double-underscore is more visible than /xxx/ or italics.

sizing up strangers: socioeconomic #wellness^nationality

First impression is like judging a book by its cover. In this bpost I’m looking at socioeconomic strata. For better focus, let’s limit to no more than 3 elements:

  • physical wellness [posture, skin, dental] .. 5% ~~> 25% of my assessment
  • educated and sophisticated vocab/articulation/manners .. continues to be 45%
  • implied_nationality/ethnicity/accent .. 50% ~~> 30%, esp. relevant when sizing up Caucasians
  • How about Dress? .. not a factor in itself but often a subtle hint of education, income, and socioeconomic strata. Somehow, dress is rather important in China.

— Caucasians .. Interestingly, when we meet a Caucasian from Latam or Eastern Europe (including Russia), we don’t perceive them as wealthy, sophisticated and privileged.

But hey, how do we know which region she comes from? Nationality is usually unknown, so here I am talking about implied nationality.

I remember meeting some Eastern European professional in Singapore. He talked about the welfare (available to foreigners) while working in Britain.

CSASS: quick life-evaluation #fulfilment

k_Kahneman

My blogs feature many similar evaluations of my life. For them, a sound framework is the CSASS yardstick.

— the yardstick: “Imagine a ladder with steps numbered from zero at the bottom to ten at the top. The top of the ladder represents the best possible life for you and the bottom of the ladder represents the worst possible life for you. On which step of the ladder would you say you personally feel you stand at this time?” (Emphases are mine.) That’s how D.Kahneman introduced the CSASS [Cantril Self-Anchoring Striving Scale].

“The best/worst possible life” is always (to me) defined within a finite scope of possible lives. I feel the majority of the respondents (at least for my cohort) interpret the yardstick not as self-evaluation in isolation, but in comparison with other people of the time[1] in familiar countries. I don’t know Latam/African nationals so I can’t include them in my scope.

As explained in liv`with chronic conditions: wellbeing by xpSelf^rmSelf, most folks only does a quick-n-dirty evaluation once in a blue moon. (Intellectual writers like me and grandpa spend far more time, but we are a tiny minority.) Even if we try to be thorough and objective, the CSASS score would never be objective.

— (experienced) well-being^ fulfilment [satisfactory life]

Some respondents may say the question specifically asks how “I FEEL at the moment” i.e. experienced well-being, but to most respondents, this evaluation is more about fulfilment over “my entire life”, with lots of long-term effects of previous life events. Therefore, as Kahneman pointed out, this is all about the rmSelf, not the xpSelf.

  • eg: ill-health .. Kahneman pointed out (and I agree) some forms of ill health have a much stronger effect on experienced wellbeing than on rmSelf’s life evaluation.
  • .. however, liv`4decades with chronic conditions mentions that paraplegics have a normal experienced wellbeing but poor fulfillment. I think the difference is that paraplegics go through a painful adaptation and learn to live with a stable disability and become fairly healthy.
  • eg: healthy longevity .. (or the prospect thereof) is important to my evaluation and to my rmSelf, but not to my cohort.
  • eg: Education .. is one example factor Kahneman gave of high impact on the rmSelf’s life evaluation but possibly low impact on the xpSelf’s wellbeing. Kahneman said the more educated often report higher stress in experience sampling. I feel exclub[FOMO] is a big factor to both the rmSelf’s evaluation and the xpSelf’s wellbeing. The more educated are likely to work in highly paid jobs and have higher academic expectations of their kids… the highly-educated exclub. Their self-evaluation is likely to be dominated by peer comparison.
  • eg: academic kids .. weighs heavy in many Chinese mothers’ fulfilment and self-evaluation of life, but has lower impact for other parents. It is becoming slightly less impactful on my xpSelf.
  • eg: blogg system (dhost etc) .. has a huge impact on xpSelf but probably not much on rmSelf’s evaluation.

[1] We don’t compare with our grandparents. For some of us, we don’t even compare with our relatives 20Y older or 20Y younger.

##declining capabilities #aging++#chin-up

  • eg: recreational reading .. my dad is an avid reader, but due to his declining health, he had to stop recreational reading since 2021.
  • .. Harmony? I choose zqbx more than serenity
  • eg: chin-up/Sudhir .. when we reach a certain age, we won’t be able to do any chin-up, as Sudhir of MorganStanley told me.
  • .. Harmony? I choose zqbx more than serenity
  • eg: running .. for decades I was a good middle-distance runner and always wanted to run faster, but in my late 40s I realized that many younger runners are too fast for me.
  • eg: forgetful .. when we are too old we can forget to turn off the lights (my dad) or turn off the stove (my mom). My mom also tends to lose things outside the home.
  • eg: driving .. requires quick response. Some older drivers can lose the quick response. See https://tanbinvest.dreamhosters.com/14312/car-dependency-in-old-age/
  • eg: ED.. when we reach a certain age, we will have more ED. Sometimes, the more you want the intimacy, the more frustrated.

— opening eg: BMI.. (unrelated to aging!) BMI harder to control in Singapore.
Harmony? I choose zqbx

— big eg: forced retirement.. too old2work explains my father’s observation that one can get too old, too frail to carry out the duty of a job. Focus of attention to read or write can be demanding of Sys2 energy. In such a scenario, I would choose serenity more than zqbx.

switch` language/IME @win10 #winKey+space

These are important issues to my usage [blogg, email,,,]

Q: what if too many hotkeys for the same purpose, causing accidental switch?
A: in theory yes, but not in practice

— to configure, typingSettings (bottom) ->advancedKeyboardSettings -> inputLangHotKeys. This applet shows two pre-installed hotkeys, which work the same way:

  • pre-installed default: winKey + space
  • pre-installed default: alt + shift .. harder to remember

 

to delete stubborn folders #WindowsApps

— tcost of learning .. This windows annoyance will last beyond my lifetime. However, the instructions are opaque (hard to troubleshoot) and not guaranteed to work. Hopefully, the knowledge has longevity.

— https://windowsreport.com/administrator-permission-delete-folder/ method 1 worked for Lenovo userGuide folder. The older method below didn’t work.

— based on https://www.minitool.com/data-recovery/delete-access-windowsapps-folder.html . I used it on WindowsApps folder in A95 and HP71

  1. Click on the Continue button in the above prompt window.
  2. Another prompt window will pop up, saying that You have been denied permission to access this folder.
  3. Click the security tab (You can also right click on WindowsApps folder and choose Properties, to access the Security tab.)
  4. Click Advanced under the Security tab.
  5. Click on the Change link beside the Owner.
  6. Find Enter the object name to select area in the Select User or Group window.
  7. Type Administrators and click on the Check Names button on the right side.
  8. Click on the OK button at the bottom right to open Advanced Security Settings for WindowsApps window.
  9. Check Replace owner on subcontainers and objects under the Owner.
  10. Click on the OK button to confirm your action to take the ownership of the WindowsApps folder.
  11. The Windows Security window will appear and start the process of Changing ownership of WindowsApps files.
  12. Wait for it to complete.
  13. Click on the Advanced button again under the Security tab.
  14. Click on the Continue button under the Permissions (Auditing?) tab in Advanced Security Settings for WindowsApps window.
  15. Click on the Add button at the bottom left.
  16. Click Select a principal link in the Permission Entry for WindowsApps window.
  17. Click Advanced and Find Now to select your account.
  18. Below the CheckName, Click OK button to confirm. In some cases, there is just an OK button to bring you back to a previous window, and you click OK.
  19. Next page title is Auditing Entry for <folder name>. Principal should show the chosen account. Check Full control under Basic permissions.
  20. Click OK at the bottom right.
  21. Check Replace all child object permission entries with inheritable permission entries from this object.
  22. Click on the OK button and wait for the system to apply all the changes successfully.