Just surfacing

If it seems like I’ve been awfully quiet of late, well, it’s because I’m currently working on a full-time contract about an hour’s commute away. Combined with the demands of a toddler and a four-week old infant, that just doesn’t leave much time for anything else. My previous entry (favourite TV series) may look relatively coherent, but it was actually cobbled together from fifteen minute chunks of time here and there over the last fortnight.

If I owe you an email, you can probably expect it, oh, around Christmastime.

Favourite TV series

Sara’s comment on my Farscape entry the other day set me thinking. Does Farscape feature in my top 5 all time television series? What are my top 5 (or 10)? I’ve produced lists of my favourite films, albums, and videogames, but top TV shows is not a list I’ve ever given much thought to. (Some day I’ll need to put together a list of my favourite books, too, but that’s going to be really difficult.)

Continue reading “Favourite TV series”

Farscape, season 1

farscape season 1 on DVDMmm, look what the Amazon Fairy brought me yesterday….

Abi’s not mad keen on Farscape, but I like it. I’ve seen most of the first series, a lot of the second, but practically none of seasons 3 and 4. The Sci-Fi channel is still running repeats, but we’ve got completely out of the habit of watching TV for specific shows. If we have the TV on, it’s either tuned to CBeebies, or to one of the Discovery/History/National Geographic-type channels as a background drip-feed of infotainment. It’s exceedingly rare for us to actually sit down and just watch a TV programme for its own sake.


5 kg?

The health visitor weighed Fiona again today, and she came in at 5kg, or just a shade over 11lb. That’s 300g more than she weighed just three days ago, and a full 25% more her birth weight less than three weeks ago. Yowza.

According to the graphs, she is now tracking the 98th percentile for weight. So out of every 100 babies, there are only two that are heavier than her. No wonder Abi’s feeling drained. Fiona’s a milk vampire.

Fun with mathematics: Benford’s Law

If you gather a large collection of numbers from a naturally occurring source (for example, the surface areas of rivers, or typical sales figures for a shop), what is the probability of any given number in the collection starting with the digit “1”?

Because numbers don’t start with the digit “0”, there are nine possible digits for a number to start with: 1-9. So you’d expect the probability of the first digit being “1” to be one in nine, or about 11%, right?

Wrong. Because of an curious statistical phenomenon known as “Benford’s Law“, the probability is actually about 30%. The odds of the first digit being “2” are about 18%, and they decrease down to 4.6% for a “9”.

Simon Newcomb, an astronomer, first pointed out this phenomenon way back in 1881, but it never got much attention. It wasn’t until the physicist Frank Benford did a much larger study of numbers from dozens of different sources in 1938, and found that the rule applied pretty much everywhere, that it received more notoriety. And it still isn’t as well known as the birthday paradox (where the odds of two people sharing a birthday are about 50% if you get as few as 23 folk in a room), so you can easily use it as an amazing fact for impressing chicks at parties.

But Benford’s Law can be used for much more than just courtship. Because it applies across most naturally occurring number distributions, it can also be used to detect fraud in financial accounts, and to spot faked results in clinical trials. In recent years, professor Theodore Hill of the Georgia Institute of Technology has written several papers discussing the difficulty of faking data. His 1996 paper, “A Statistical Derivation of the Significant-Digit Law” also provides a solid explanation for just why Benford’s Law works the way it does.

Nifty.

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Fionaberry

I don’t know how long it will last, but Fiona is currently going by the nickname “Fionaberry”. She is small, round, and goes very red when she cries. So she’s a berry. (For evidence of her roundness, check out Abi’s description of Fiona’s crash weight gain programme. No steroids or protein drinks involved. Just home-grown milky goodness.)

She also looks very good in pink.

Fionaberry in pink: 1
Fionaberry in pink: 2

(Also, after two weeks we still can’t figure out if her eyes are dark blue, or brown. In sunlight there’s no doubt they’re blue, but under artificial light they are definitely brown. Very odd.)