Tuesday, 3 April 2012

SQL and RA

It seems to me that asking a question of a database is much more like very carefully explaining to it exactly what answer you want

Monday, 12 March 2012

Information

Information
Origin:
1350–1400; Middle English: instruction, teaching, a forming of the mind < Medieval Latin, Latin: idea, conception. See inform-ation

Inform
Origin:
1275–1325; Middle English informen < Latin infōrmāre to form, shape, equivalent to in- in-2 + fōrmāre to form; replacing Middle English enfourmen < Middle French enfourmer < Latin, as above

Explanation:
Origin:
1350–1400; Middle English explanacioun < Latin explānātiōn- (stem of explānātiō ), equivalent to explānāt ( us ) ( see explanate) + -iōn- -ion

Explanate:
Origin:
1375–1425; late Middle English explanen < Latin explānāre to smooth out, make intelligible, spread out on flat surface. See ex-plane

Information needs a medium, and media takes up space. The same information may be stored in different material. Information can be stored as pictograms, a set of pictograms called an alphabet is arranged into words which store language information, figures etc. this takes up 2 dimensional space, the paper or tablet (the plane in ex-planation) takes up 3 dimensional space, hence books are rectangular prisms, because even though they are 'planar' in reality they have 3 dimensions, because in reality information takes up space.

The spacial arrangement of information is important to it's meaning, although this is not fixed, it depends on the media, the spacial arrangement of alphabetical characters and words in lines matters to the meaning, the arrangement of bit-patterns in integrated circuits words matters to the meaning, the address of variables in RAM matters to the meaning, the spacial arrangement of beads on a abacus matters to the meaning, the sequence of base pairs in DNA matters to their meaning, the positions of genes matters to their meaning. the same information can be stored on an abacus, a digital computer, on a page, in a book - the same information uses space differently, but all information must use space - I assume that information stored as memories in the brain take up space to form neural connections, and patterns of interconnectedness.

In a computer it matters how we arrange data in the circuits that the computer consists of. This is called 'structuring data' - and this is fundamental to why we build databases the way we build them, the computer gives us the power to physically rearrange the data like a food processor physically rearranges food, only precisely and with complete control.


in - form - ation = FORMING of a awareness (in the mind) of some thing (in-form-ing) noteworthy (note-ice).

Note
Origin:
1175–1225; (noun) Middle English (< Old French ) < Medieval Latin nota sign for musical tone, Latin: mark, sign, lettering; (v.) Middle English noten < Old French noter to mark < Latin notāre, derivative of the noun

Notice
Origin:
1400–50; late Middle English < Middle French < Latin nōtitia a knowing, a being known, derivative of nōtus known ( see notify)

Synonyms:
1. memorandum, minute. 3. commentary, annotation. See remark. 9. bill. 10. repute, celebrity, fame, renown, name. 25. register, record. 29. see, spot, remark. 31. mention.

Know
Origin:
before 900; Middle English knowen, knawen, Old English gecnāwan; cognate with Old High German -cnāhan, Old Norse knā to know how, be able to; akin to Latin ( g ) nōvī, Greek gignṓskein. See gnostic, can1

Cognition

THE POINT IS TO TRANSFER THE DATA TO INFORM THE BRAIN. THE DATA TAKES UP SPACE AND IS ARRANGED IN SPACE ON THE COMPUTER'S CIRCUITS AND DISKS AND THEN AFTER TRANSFER IT TAKES UP SPACE IN THE BRAIN.

THE DATABASE MANAGES THE COMPUTERS INFORMATION STORAGE SPACE

Sunday, 23 March 2008

emotional blurrs and states

ok, so let me start with a disclaimer, I don't really believe in emotional states. I think the concept of separate emotional stages or states is a product of the process of description [de/script/ion], labels must describe a thing, things must be discrete, thus descriptions necessarily 'shatter' what can be continuous, complex, synergistic, capricious processes into chains of abstract fixed units.


awww. interupted thought.
-- note -- the problem of being a compulsive ruminant is that when the anxiety level drops you often can't continue the thought...

Friday, 14 March 2008

elevators and stairs

do more people die falling down stairs than using elevators. I mean proportionally, which is statistically safer?

I find elevators, or lifts as they used to be called, pretty scarey sometimes, I mean it takes a lot of effort to control my OCD spikes in a lift.

Maybe it's just that dying in a lift accident is more vivid, and the 'Obsessive' part of OCD likes that, gets it juiced up.

(p.s. for those who don't know Obsession in OCD is not the repetitive actions, they're compulsions, Obsessions are disturbing intrusive thoughts that raise the anxiety level so high the sufferer performs Compulsions in the belief that the compulsions help. Obsessions of these kind come from the greek meaning similar to 'O-Besiege-Ans' to be besieged by disturbing thoughts.)

Monday, 11 February 2008

What to do when you have been diagnosed as a compulsive ruminant?

What to do when you have been diagnosed as a compulsive ruminant?

Maybe you are thinking about something important or interesting, maybe you are thinking about something to lower your anxiety level, maybe your thinking helps you, maybe it just means you are avoiding the practical problems in your life. This is the dilemma of the diagnosed with pure-o type Obsessive Compulsive Disorder. Presented here are the accounts of some ruminations, on various subjects from global social and environmental chaos, to the pure abstract relativity of the lambda calculus. One day you'll believe me when I say it's all connected, until then I'll just keep thinking about how to explain it.