2024-06-22
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#politics
#nontechnical
#essay
I was Googling for sources about nuclear power for my
new political views garden,
and I came across the following statement in reference
to nuclear waste:
I know that burning fossil fuels is bad, but we can’t just start
another problem just because we can’t fix the first one.
I’m not trying to single out the person who wrote this (and therefore
no link, and the quote has been edited for spelling and grammar which I
hope has rendered it un-Googleable), but I do want to respond, generally,
to the sentiment, which I think is unfortunately common.
2024-04-16
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#nontechnical
#psychology
#ADHD
How do we ask the other people in our lives for the things we need
and want? This can be difficult for everybody. Many of us have trauma
from a society that continually tells us that we don’t deserve to have
help meeting our needs, or from past situations where our needs have
been neglected. We are also often aware that asking for things can
sometimes be upsetting to the people we ask. We are painfully aware of
their ability to say no, and we know how much that can hurt.
2023-12-26
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#nontechnical
#politics
US politics continue to be interesting.
As many of you know, the Colorado Supreme Court has recently
ruled
that Donald Trump should be struck from the ballot in Colorado. Under
Section 3 of the 14th Amendment to the
US Constitution, if you’ve sworn to support the Constitution, and then
engaged in (or “given aid or comfort to”) an insurrection, you are no
longer eligible to serve in office. The Colorado Supreme Court applied
this law to Trump, citing the Capitol attack of January 6,
2021.
2023-09-30
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#nontechnical
#philosophy
#computers
This blog post isn’t about ChatGPT. It
isn’t about machine learning, neural nets, or any
mysterious or border-line
spiritual form of
computing. That’s a whole ’nother set of philosophical and metaphysical
conundrums (conundra?).
This is about a way people sometimes speak, informally, about bog-standard
boring non-AI computers and computer programs. You’ve probably
heard people speak this way. You’ve probably spoken this way sometimes
yourself:
- “The server thinks your password is wrong.”
- “The computer thinks you’ve lost the connection.”
- “The phone thinks you want to use your headphones. It’s wrong though.”
We normally interpret this as a metaphor, but I’m not sure it is.
Is the phone “thinking” you want to use your headphones rather than
your car speaker substantially different from us “thinking”
our friend would rather get a phone call than a text message?
2023-08-31
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#nontechnical
I remember hearing an idea once – I’d like to cite it, but proper
citation seems difficult, as I heard it from an acquaintance, and
Mr. Google isn’t being his usual helpful self. The idea was, different
politicians have these verbal tics, these filler catch-phrases,
that indicate their deepest conversational anxieties.
For President Obama, it’s “let me be clear.” According to this
thesis, he is really concerned about being unclear, and this
tic is so prominent in his speech that it shows that his
biggest anxiety is being insufficiently clear about something,
as waffling, or evading the deep issue underlying all the petty
concerns. And as an American paying some amount of attention,
this made sense to me.
2023-05-26
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#nontechnical
#politics
#economics
So you might or might not be aware about the debt ceiling argument
currently taking place in the US.
I’ve already written about this,
but President Biden for some reason didn’t listen to me (perhaps
because he doesn’t read my blog – which is disappointing). Other, more
famous
people have written about it
too,,
but the President insists on pretending he has to make a deal with
the Republicans.
So, to catch everyone up, here’s how this all works.
2023-05-22
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#nontechnical
#ADHD
I was reading my ADHD blog post today,
considering whether to send it to a friend, and it was surprisingly hard
for me to bring myself to. I realized I was embarrassed at the voice,
the phrasing, the lack of beauty in the individual words, all of which
is something I paid relatively little attention to before – and which
my friend, who also writes, will definitely notice.
It’s something I’ve paid less attention to than I should. “Writing is
thinking” is my philosophy, and I have tons of thoughts that I know
other people are interested in. Shouldn’t the structure of the thoughts,
both the logical structure and the order in which they’re presented,
be more important than voice? And I still believe they are – and yet
voice does still matter.
2023-02-28
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#nontechnical
#linux
#computers
#organization
#ADHD
#write-everything-down
I’d like to share with you how I use my computer, in a way that is
(for me) ADHD friendly and well-suited for implementing
my organization system. Tools are
important to any organizational and productivity system, and optimizing
your tools for your brain and your workflow are important. My computer
is my most important productivity tool, where my work happens, and where
my life/chore/errand/calendar organization happens, so it should be an
interesting example of an optimized key tool.
2023-02-02
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#nontechnical
#economics
#politics
The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law,
including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services
in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned.
- US Constitution, 14th Amendment, Section 4
The debt ceiling is unconstitutional. We’ve let the Republicans play their
games for long enough, in the interest of “stability of the economy” and a
general fear of rocking the boat, but that time is over now. President
Biden should simply announce that his administration will not follow
this brazenly unconstituional law, because unconstitutional is literally
what it is, and every Congressperson who wants to use it as leverage is
in flagrant violation of their oath of office.
2023-01-03
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#religion
#Christmas
#nontechnical
Today, in liturgical Western Christianity, it is the 10th day of
Christmas. Merry Christmas to those who celebrate the extended edition
of the holiday!
Unfortunately, this essay is not a celebration of Christmas, but rather
an explanation of why I have often found it disappointing recently in life,
because of a disconnect between the promise and the reality.
Every time Christmas comes around, I think of a classical sacred choral
piece that I’ve performed in multiple different choirs in youth and
adulthood, from Mendelssohn’s Christus, namely “Es Wird ein Stern aus
Jakob Aufgeh’n” (“There shall come a star out of Jacob”).
2022-04-20
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#organization
#nontechnical
I’ve been feeling recently like I’ve been spinning my wheels in my
personal life. I’m pressing on the metaphorical accelerator as hard
as I can, probably too hard for safety, and instead of moving forward,
the wheels are just spinning, spinning, spinning. I think a large part
of it is my perspective of time. “Time is canceled,” my friends and I
would say continuously during the lockdown. And it isn’t back, not yet,
not how it used to be, not for me.
2022-04-19
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#finance
#nontechnical
Mortgage interest rates have recently risen, and are currently very
volatile. At the time of this writing, PSECU, my credit union, is
offering mortgages at 5.125%, much higher than the 3.125% I locked in
at, but lower than the peak above 6% I had recently read about in the
news. But what does this mean in practice? Well, let’s run some numbers.
Understanding how expensive a house is can be confusing. The total
price of a house is a huge number, more money than we normally ever
deal with, for most first-time buyers more money than they’ve
ever actually had or seen. It can be intimidating.
2022-03-22
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#computers
#programming
#nontechnical
NOTE: This post has the #programming tag, but is intended to be comprehensible
by everyone, programmer or not. In fact, I hope some non-programmers
read it, as my goal with this post is to explain some of what it means
to be a programmer to non-programmers. Therefore, it is also
tagged with “nontechnical”.
What is the most important skill for a software engineer? It’s
definitely not any particular programming language; they come and
go,
and a good programmer can pick them up as they work. It’s not estimating
how long a project will take, as important and elusive as that skill
is – because fundamentally, no one can, and many, many programmers are
successful without having fully built up that skill.
2022-03-07
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#travel
#nontechnical
I am out of biking shape. I know I am out of biking shape. The pandemic
has not been good to my physical fitness. (For the record, this isn’t
a proper edited and outlined and triaged essay,
just some notes on my past weekend.)
But as out of shape as I am, I also know it’s only
25 miles from here to Philly on the Schuylkill River
Trail, and so I
figured maybe I could do it without any additional prep. When I found
out that it was less hilly than the longer bike rides I used to do,
I was sold, and I did it.
2022-03-04
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#ADHD
#organization
#nontechnical
For a time, I tried to cultivate an interest
in Go. Not this Go, but this
Go. The interest didn’t
last long – like chess, I had a hard time getting up to even a fairly
basic level of competence. And I quickly developed another enthusiastic
interest to replace it – sometimes, an interest just doesn’t work out,
and it’s nobody’s fault, and you have to just move on and not get too
sad, because there’s plenty of fish in the sea.
2022-02-08
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#finance
#nontechnical

I just bought a house, and it came with a mortgage. I bought the
house and committed to the mortgage all in one ceremony, in a cute
little office where I signed enough papers that the sellers were
able to solemnly hand me the keys to my new castle. In the lead-up to
this, I was told how early payments, mortgage insurance, and refinancing
works, and it’s – I think very reasonably – been on my mind since.
2022-02-02
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#writing
#programming

Imagine you don’t know who Napoleon was. You know he’s a figure from
history, but you don’t even know he has to do with France. And imagine,
when you read the Wikipedia article, for some reason you skip the opening
paragraphs above the fold, and you’re reading about his upbringing
in Corsica as a petty Italian noble under French rule. And you just
want to know, why’s this guy important, what’s his deal, why do people
keep talking about him (something military, it seems?) but you have
to read two-thirds of the way through the article to find out, oh, he
became Emperor of the French. Finally, you have context to understand
everything else, and you now know the first thing about Napoleon.
2020-03-23
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#politics
#nontechnical
Even early last week, before restaurants were closed, before we were
banned from unnecessary gatherings, when many people still had to go
into their office jobs, the bars were empty on my street. I walked
into one, ordered a cocktail, asked the bartender why it was so slow.
It was usually slow on Tuesdays, of course, but normally there was
at least one other customer. But the pandemic had already scared
everyone else away, and if it continued, the bar would surely have
to close.
2019-06-20
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#religion
#nontechnical
Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing.
- Jesus, on the cross (Luke 23:34)
My grandfather always used to love telling a certain anecdote about
Calvin Coolidge. He was a man of such few words that one time, President
Coolidge went to hear a world-famous preacher preach. Upon returning from
the sermon, his wife asked what it was about. He replied “sin.” Not
satisfied with the answer, the wife asked, “Well, what did the preacher
have to say about sin?” The response: “He’s against it.”
2019-06-19
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#travel
#nontechnical
Just wanted to write up a summary of random notes from my Switzerland
trip, not including the conference which
was also a lot of fun but I think less interesting for my non-programmer
friends, slash it might make for a better separate post.
SIM set up
It was relatively easy to buy a Swisscom SIM card in the airport, although they
did not offer to set it up in my phone for me. This would’ve been useful, as it
turns out my phone was locked (which is more an idiosyncracy of the US as opposed
to Switzerland). I instead ended up purchasing a mobile hotspot (the German word
for which, I was told, was “Mobile Hotspot”), which was easy to set up and worked
perfectly with my phone.
2019-05-12
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#music
#religion
#nontechnical

I just finished singing Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis
in a concert as a member of the Grace Church Choral
Society, and it was
the most technically difficult piece I have ever sung in
a choir. It was a single piece of concert length, a mass
setting,
as is custom for our spring concerts. It was all in one language: in this case,
in Latin. This is different from our holiday concerts
in the winter, where we sing a variety of Christmas-y and otherwise
celebratory works in a variety of (European, Christian) languages, including
English.
2019-03-22
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#politics
#nontechnical
A common trope within left-leaning American circles is to claim that the
US is the only “developed” or “industrial” or “major” or “first world”
country to not have X, where X is usually something like “publicly funded
health care” or “government-guaranteed paid family leave” or similar.
Recently this came up with Bernie Sanders and his common refrain that
the US was the only “major” country to not guarantee health care as a
human right. Much to my relief, the often myopic fact-checkers at Politifact
marked this one as half-true. I think it bothered me so
much because it implied that India was not “major” — a country that I
lived in for two months, made good friends in, and would have lived in for
at least another two months if not for an entire year if it hadn’t been
for the vagueries of careers, and also a country that economically is
having a lot of impact, and contains around 15% of the entire world’s
population.
2019-02-28
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#religion
#nontechnical
[Jesus said:] You have heard that it was said, “You shall not commit
adultery.” But I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with
lustful intent has already committed adultery with her in his heart. If
your right eye causes you to sin, tear it out and throw it away. For it
is better that you lose one of your members than that your whole body be
thrown into hell. And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and
throw it away. For it is better that you lose one of your members than
that your whole body go into hell.
2017-08-26
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#travel
#nontechnical
Second collected thoughts on India.
More Communitarian, Less Individualistic, Through Food and Beverage
- There is much less emphasis on individual choice. If you order tea (chay in Hindi) it will come with milk in it. If you order coffee, it will come with milk in it. They will not ask you how you want your coffee.
- Similarly, when I was in a cab ride between cities, I was not asked what food I wanted at the rest stop. The driver’s brother (who I suppose had tagged along for company) simply bought some snack and insisted I eat some.
- Everyone is very considerate that you might be vegetarian. If pork is involved in food, everyone is very considerate that you might not eat pork. No other preferences or restrictions are particularly accommodated, however: if I ask what meat something is, I might just be told that it’s not pork.
- The exception to that is everyone also falls over themselves telling me which foods are not spicy, until I eat a spicy food and then they believe me. American food is going to taste very bland after this.
- Beef is straight-up illegal.
- Everyone at the lunch table gets up at the same time at work. The conversation about when to finish lunch does not last longer than one conversational turn, and often is expressed purely in body language. I once got up to get more food, and everyone else at the table immediately also got up — I guess I’d made the signal.
- On a related note, I’ve never seen anyone else go up for seconds, but I have seen people somehow squeeze twice as much food on their plates as I do without having it run together.
- When you go out to eat, everyone always agrees on what to order and then shares with the table. Decisions over what to order can be complicated.
Office Culture
This might be Tower-specific:
2017-07-30
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#travel
#nontechnical
The Way of NYC
When I first moved to New York City, someone older and wiser than I gave
me the following “rules” of New York City:
- Nothing is cheap.
- Nothing is easy.
- There are no exceptions to the first two rules.
I found this to be extremely true in New York City. It was stressful
and exhausting, and I was broke and living off an advance I’d gotten
from my then-employer, living in AirBnB’s I could put on credit card,
where I could maybe stay in each for a month, tops. I was continuously
getting lost, having to take trains home, learning some trains don’t run
as reliably as you’d like, or go to the stations claimed on the map. This
was in the pre-Uber days where the way to get a car service was to go
to the local bodega and ask them for the phone number of a car service.
2017-07-25
:: Jimmy Hartzell
#essay
#travel
#nontechnical
Everyone’s been asking me how India is and has been wondering if I’ve
gone exploring. I haven’t really. Sunday I was just recovering from
jetlag and yesterday I had work and then I immediately had to go home
and crash I was so tired: so I guess again recovering from jet lag? This
would normally not prevent me from exploring, but I’m honestly a little
outside my comfort zone.
I am not in a walkable neighborhood of a city
like I expected, but next to a huge highway. There doesn’t seem to be
a “downtown” to visit at all, so taking taxis everywhere seems to be
the modus operandi. I’m sure this will change very soon, but so far,
in my two days (and long morning) I’ve been here so far, I’ve been to
the airport, my building, and the office — and of course all the taxi
trips in beteween.