Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Joshua told me to write this down

I think we care more about our jobs than God does and He cares more about our hearts than we do.

-J

Monday, April 29, 2013

Friday, April 26, 2013

RTS

Oh, I get it. Economics is the study of Starcraft. "Because consumer goods satisfy our wants directly, any movement toward [more consumer goods] looks tempting. In producing more pizzas, society increases the satisfaction of its current wants. But there is a cost: More pizzas mean fewer industrial robots. This shift of resources to consumer goods catches up with society over time because the stock of capital goods expands more slowly, thereby reducing potential future production. By moving toward alternative [more consumer goods], society chooses “more now” at the expense of “much more later.”"

When you're starting up in Starcraft you don't have any soldiers to defend your base. There's no requirement to train any, you can just focus resources on developing your tech tree if you want to.

 

But what happens?  What always happens.  You get rushed by the Zerg player who picked the opposite end of the spectrum and focused all his resources on consumer goods (zerglings).




If you can outlast the rush in the beginning, you have a decided advantage tactically because of your capital goods (factories that produce giant tanks).  There's a time and place for either strategy, and there's no clear favorite guaranteed anything.  Still, it's hard not to draw an analogy with the quicker, easier dark side of the force.  As any veteran player will vouch for, a zerg rush done properly is not easy to execute.  It is, I would argue, easier than managing a long-term complex production line with many diverse elements.  It's also interesting to note that consistency rarely gets a statue built of it; certainly when compared to the number of statues celebrating passion.

-J

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

La la la la

La la la la... I lost my train of thought. I'm finding it very hard to focus lately. My focusamajig has atrophied. It's like trying to steer a shopping cart with a wobbly wheel. I sit down to read my economic textbook and run right into the canned string beans display. Gonna go read another page. Google says "The 2012 Median Income of US households was $45,018 per annum." We're pretty well above average I guess. Hard to feel that way. Of course the cost of living around here is above average as well. -J

Wednesday, April 10, 2013

It has been quite a while since I blogged. In that pwriod i have learned to typw without lookin at the keyboard. It's atesone. I am blogging instead of doing my homework which is to write something. How can I be such a procrastinator that I will avoid a thing by doing the exact same thing just with no productivity. Yeek.