Wednesday, December 31, 2008

An example of my work

Many of the patents I translate end up in the US Patent and Trademark Office.
Here is an example. Of course, my name is not anywhere to be found in the document. The translator is just that, the translator. The reward is getting paid for the job and perhaps a sense of pride in a job well done.
Here is how the patent gets created in Japan and then submitted in the US.
1. Inventor (engineer) writes a description of his/her creation.
2. The staff at legal firm writes up the patent in legalese.
3. The patent attorney reviews the patent and makes sure it satisfies all legal requirements.
4. The patent is sent to our company for translation.
5. The project manager assigns the job to a translator (me, in this case).
6. I translate the job while trying to avoid errors and omissions, and while ensuring that the translation conforms to USPTO (US Patent and Trademark Office) standards.
7. The translation is sent to a proofreader who checks my translation word-for-word.
8. I receive the job back from the proofreader and incorporate (or ignore) his/her comments into the translation.
9. The proofread translation is then send to an editor who double checks the English and makes sure the translation conforms to the clients preferences.
10. The edited translation is sent back to the client (the patent attorney) who then sends it to a law firm in New York, Washington D.C., or another large city.
11. The NY law firm finalizes the patent and submits it to the USPTO.
12. The USPTO reviews the patent and accepts it or rejects it based on various criteria.
13. A rejected patent is usually the fault of the engineer or the patent attorney, but on rare occasions the translator is at fault. (I have yet to be accused of a failed patent. It is something I dread, so I try to translate very carefully.)

"Dissappointment We Can Believe In!"

Obama vaguely promised change without specifying much about what change he intends.
That was by design of course. His supporters superimpose on Obama their own ideas of the change they believe Obama embodies. Obama can always truthfully say "I made no such promise." Take the following photo as an example.



The poster carrier obviously believes that Obama's change will include a major policy change toward Israel. I think this person will be disappointed.
It is inevitable that other groups having their own vision of 'change' will be disappointed. Obama cannot possibly give all groups of 'change believers' what they want. The motto should now be "Disappointment we can believe in!"

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Obama Exercise Good. Bush Exercise Bad

Three years ago Bush was criticized for being a health fanatic
Former Washington Post writer Jonathan Chait criticized Bush in an opinion piece for the Los Angeles Times headlined, “The (over)exercise of power.” President Bush ran 3 1/2 miles a day and espoused cross-training for a federal judge. Chait stateed: “Am I the only person who finds this disturbing?…What I mean is the fact that Bush has an obsession with exercise that borders on the creepy.”

Reuters journalist Caron Bohan wrote about the same themes in a piece on Bush’s two-hour, 17-mile bike ride with cycling champ Lance Armstrong in Crawford, Texas in 2005.

But Obama gets different treatment:
Eli Zaslow: “The sun glinted off chiseled pectorals sculpted during four weightlifting sessions each week, and a body toned by regular treadmill runs and basketball games.”
Also, "Obama has gone to the gym for about 90 minutes a day, for at least 48 days in a row.”
And “Gym Workouts Help Obama Carry the Weight of His Position.”

Marty Nesbitt: “He doesn’t think of it as something he has to do — it’s his time for himself, a chance for him to reflect. It’s his break. He feels better and more revved up after he gets in his workout.”

So let's see here, when Bush exercises, it's creepy.
When Obama exercises, it's reflection time or revving-time up.

As Michelle Malkin puts it:
"Fit Republican president = Selfish, indulgent, creepy fascist."
"Fit Democratic president = Disciplined, health-conscious Adonis role model."

Media bias anyone?

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Castro the Conservative

From Reuters

"I have arrived at the conclusion that one of our big problems is a lack of systemic demand," said Castro.

He expressed dissatisfaction with the system of subsidies for those who can work, but do not, saying government handouts discourage Cubans from being more productive.

Is Castro coming to the conclusion that so many in the US congress have ignored for decades?

Monday, December 22, 2008

Yet another bailout?

It appears that developers are next in line for a bailout.
Banks, maybe, automakers, no, but real estate developers? Absolutely no!
If the government bails out these guys out, then I am going to move to Mars and start my own new civilization.

Monday, December 15, 2008

I am a hopeless geek

I am sorry. I couldn't help myself. I had to follow the International Overclocking competition.
In this competition, teams compete to make a computer compute at fast as they can make them compute. They use leading edge technology, top-of-the-line components, liquid-cooled and even liquid nitrogen-cooled configurations. Here are the results:

Final results (USA wins!):

Benchmark USA Taiwan Germany France Italy
SuperPi 1.5 1M 8,078 8,157 8,093 7,987 7,985
SuperPi 1.5 32M 7 min 49,969 s 7 min 52,516 s 7 min 40,953 s 7 min 24,990 s 7 min 40.984 s
wPrime 1.55 32M 5,188 5,422 5,219 5,756 5,297
wPrime 1.55 1024M 160,937 170,375 165,872 186,982 165,11
PiFast 4.1 17,56 17,86 17,44 17,29 17,36
AquaMark 2003 253814 251703 319212 238929 233043
3DMark 01 71010 71591 72764 71545 71821
3DMark 03 79794 75002 76105 69865 76188
3DMark 05 36762 35893 36586 35733 37070
3DMark 06 26733 25483 24194 22318 25143

Benchmark/Scores USA Taiwan Germany France Italy
SuperPi 1.5 1M 10 20 30 60 100
SuperPi 1.5 32M 10 20 60 100 30
wPrime 1.55 32M 100 20 60 10 30
wPrime 1.55 1024M 100 10 30 20 60
PiFast 4.1 10 20 30 100 60
AquaMark 2003 60 10 100 30 20
3DMark 01 30 100 0 0 60
3DMark 03 30 100 60 0 20
3DMark 05 100 60 0 0 30
3DMark 06 100 60 0 0 30
TOTAL SCORE 550 420 370 320 440
RANKING 1st 3rd 4th 5th 2nd

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Arson


Sarah Palin's church (Wasila Bible Church) was set ablaze yesterday. Investigators don't know if this is related to her Vice Presidential candidacy, but the trend of church arson fires has spread from the south (where it was usually black churches that were the target) to the west and now into Alaska. A few LDS chapels have had some suspicious fires and some less than suspicious break-ins and offensive grafetti painted on the walls. There is no evidence of a large organization directing these crimes, but one is left to wonder about the type of person who would do such things.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Unwaving single party dominance

In some states, single party dominance continues for many decades.
In Utah, Republicans have run things for a long time, much to the chagrin of Democrats who see the state not moving in the direction they desire. However, the one thing that can be said is that Utah has been free from major criminal scandals and that the state has a balanced budget (which many states cannot claim). There are silly legislators (Chris Buttars) and local city officials (former Eagle Mountain mayor) who say and do stupid things. That is probably unavoidable no matter where you go. On the other hand, there are other states and cities that have had single party dominance for decades, and the rule tends to be that such governments fall into fiscal or even criminal disarray. The obvious glaring example of that is Chicago, and Illinois in general. Governor
Blagojevich's criminal abuse of government power is merely an example of the Chicago political machine that has operated virtually unchecked for decades. Gov. Blago was simply careless in his activities. While Obama likely does not have anything to do with this particular scandal, it is a reminder of the cesspool from which his career sprang. His list of unsavory associates continues to grow. Obama may be clean in legal terms, but he knows the game that is played in Chicago. He twice finagled to get his opponents removed from an electrion ballot, a minor thing in comparison with what normally goes on in Chicago. After all, it was Richard Dally's political machine that invented the voting strategy "Vote early and often." Also, the media coverage of this scandal has been a prime example of media bias. You can still see entire articles and news pieces that do not mention Blago's party, but are quick to point out that the previous governor (Ryan) is a Republican (in jail) - in the very same article!

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Monday, December 1, 2008

The irony of it all



This man, Imran Khan, is starring in the Bollywood movie "The President is Coming,"
a comedy about six 20+ year olds trying to win the right to shake President Bush's hand. The movie premiered in Mumbai on the evening of Nov. 26. Imran Khan posed for paparazzi wearing a T-shirt with Mr. Bush's face between the words "International Terrorist." Mr. Khan is a member of India's Muslim minority, but it seems he was unaware that at that very moment moment a few blocks away, 10 20+ year old Muslim extremists were just starting a three-day killing spree.
The irony drips in red.