Sunday, June 20, 2010

Public Transport and no Private Transport?

One thing that I believe is extremely important is public transport. It's cheap, efficient, pollutes less, and convenient (when a good system exists). In fact, public transport rates as one of the more important factors I used to decide if I like a place or not.

With that said, one of the things I have always imagined is what would happen if all of the investment into private transport - the biggest being cars - went into funding public transport? Wow, what an amazing system that would be. The entire world would be covered my an easy-to use and comprehensive system now, reducing pollution, traffic congestion, time spent on finding parking spaces, etc. How wonderful that would be! And if people, for some reason, decided that they did want some privacy, perhaps there would be some shared facilities that people can borrow once in a while to use for a private family get-away or something.

Of course, it is understandable that this has not happened yet, since it's kind of a chicken-and-egg situation. Without such a system, it is difficult to convince people to invest so heavily in public transport (not to mention many huge industries who would block such a system), and without the investment, it would be impossible to support, not to mention build, such a system. Well, it does seem like many places are making the right investments over time - for example, China appears to be fiercely building up it's public transport system (along with many other sustainable infrastructure projects) with the surplus trade money, which is a very smart decision. Perhaps all societies should consider introducing a "long-term transport surtax" to help build up it's public transit infrastructure, which would save money, resources, and time in the long run. People need to start thinking more of the future rather than having everything about "now."

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Different Scales of "Corruption"

Recently, the government of New Zealand released spending information regarding government credit cards that the members of parliament receive. Apparently, some of the highlights, which made it to the front page of the national newspaper New Zealand Hearald, included such shockers as "so and so had a dinner at KFC on such and such date." I found this hilarious, as I am used to hearing about multi-million dollar misappropriation of funds in the US, and that isn't even worth talking about! One of the people in the lunch room I was eating in looked at the paper and commented on "oh my goodness, so and so spent $600 of government money on two suitcases!"

Another hilarious story I heard someone tell was that one of the ministers was revealed to have spent $20 on a mirror. After being questioned, he explained that the mirror was in his office, as he uses it to straighten his tie. But he decided to pay the $20 back to the government anyway!

Hilarious. Another example of why New Zealand has the highest rating of governmental trust in the world.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Differences and Similarities

I've noticed that by human nature, people always point out differences between things and not the similarities, especially between cultures, belief systems, and way of life. I have noticed this through travelling. Every time I go somewhere, although I am amazed and delighted at the differences and what different groups consider normal, I am also amazed at the similarities. No matter where I go, when I talk to the people and learn about their culture and way of life, I am amazed at how similar everyone is. Since people only mention differences, it is difficult to put in perspective how similar all cultures are to each other. Of course, this is to be expected, as similarities are just boring to talk about, in a way. Perhaps this is what is causing huge gaps in people understanding each other across cultures... more often than not, a current culture will consider someone from another culture an "outsider" who is vastly different than themselves. Many movies and other forms of entertainment centre around one character realising how similar a character from a different population group is. Perhaps all of this is just a misunderstanding due to human nature in which we mention only what is different and not what is similar. After all, how boring would it be if someone, who had just come back from a trip, spent hours describing how everything was similar to home before describing what was different? This is how the human mind works, it classified generalisations and then describes each sub-category by how it differs from the super-category, and the human mind can then differentiate between two sub-groups through its differences. Well, perhaps it would be a good idea in the future, that before talking about differences between cultures or places, or anything for that matter, to first mention the degree by which two items differ. That would help put everything into perspective.

Although I am constantly surprised by how similar different places are after visiting somewhere new, my best eye-opening experience would have to be my backpacking trip across the Mediterranean. Starting in southern Morocco, I followed the northern coast of the Mediterranean through to Spain, France, Italy, Greece, then Turkey, and finally up to Bulgaria and Romania. I was amazed. From the media, I had originally pictured vast differences between the Islamic and Christian worlds. Although the expected difference were present, the similarities vastly outweighed the differences. Instead of a clearly delineated Christian vs. Islamic world, I found a slow progression of change, blending aspects of both worlds everywhere I went. I started to get amazed at why there were so many religious wars in the past, and if there were religious wars, perhaps these were just wars between rulers with different beliefs rather than wars between populations with different ideologies and views on life.

Well, something to think about anyway. Once again, I believe that the world would be a better place if people spent more time learning about each other rather than just relying on negative knee-jerk reactions. Perhaps one way to aid this process is to be aware of the human nature of highlighting differences rather than similarities. Keeping this in mind, perhaps one could learn to see the world differently, even with the same information input.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Logical Programmers

As it turns out, there has been some controversy about room assignments at Media Design School (http://www.mediadesignschool.com/) in the Game Development Department. I won't go into the details, but someone in management seems to have screwed up and has too large of an ego to rectify the situation (with a five minute fix, which everyone in the games and tech department has suggested). The result is that the two IG (Diploma of Interactive Gaming) classes have to swap rooms half way through the day, and an extra room has to be booked on Fridays.

When we notified our students about the room swap, even without telling them anything else, one of the students remarked to another: ``that`s not logical, they should have programmers in managment,`` which to us is hilarious, since a programmer is in management, who is pushing the decision through, although he refuses to provide justification as to why the decision was made. Or rather, he avoids the questions and pretends to have answered the question every time we, or the tech department, asks him why the decision was made even when we have a five-minute solution.

On well, I suppose that`s what you have to deal with when you work at a small company where personal relations factor into who gets a certain role. I`m sure we`ll make the best of it.