Theodicius

Good. Evil. Bratwurst.

On the Folly of Personality Tests

Filed under: Books— arlen@ 8:49 am

I always view personality tests with a jaundiced eye. They remind me of the story of the college professor who told his students he would like to write their horoscope for them: he took their information and the next time class met, he handed out the workups he’d done for each of them. He asked the class how many thought he’d been very accurate and captured them well: every student raised their hand. Then he asked if one of them would read what he’d given them out loud. The entire class broke out laughing as they realized he’d written the exact same text for each one of them.

Learned Optimism by Martin Seligman contains a test, intended to show you how optimistic or pessimistic you are. It gives you 48 questions, which you then score in 6 categories, and then use those category scores to calculate three other scores.

I took the test, and saw my scores fall all over the place, ranging from wildly optimistic to extremely pessimistic. I’m both average and very pessimistic in the permanence categories, while I am both very optimistic and very pessimistic in the pervasiveness categories, and have moderately high or average self-esteem, depending upon which score you accept there. I score as moderately hopeful yet on the subtotals I score as both moderately optimistic and extremely pessimistic (I’d have to more than double that subtotal to even get out of the “Great Pessimism” category). And the total score shows me as very pessimistic.

Does that mean I’m a complex person, filled with contradictions, or rather that the test is flawed?

As a whole, the book is good, but the question nags me: Do we really need 300+ pages just to say Vince Lombardi was right?

“Whether you think you can, or think you can’t, you’re probably right.”

Testing and PHP

Filed under: Technology— arlen@ 10:14 am

Was talking to folks from a local agency (which shall remain nameless, but has initials) the other day, and the conversation came to development practices. I asked what kind of automated testing they were doing, and was met by a series of blank stares; their testing procedure amounted to “load it up in a browser and see what it looks like.”

At this point I probably had trouble keeping the incredulity off my own face. Now, I’ll admit I came to the automated testing party late, and pretty much only because Rails makes it so easy to get started in it. But, having finally made it to the party, I went off in search of automated PHP testing tools. I found PHPUnit, and dove right in.

And I gained a little sympathy for PHP testers. Continue reading

Mixed Emotions

Filed under: General,Politics,Technology— arlen@ 9:06 pm

OK, not all that mixed, but still….

Fannie Mae hit a little trouble recently with a contractor. I’m glad they caught him in time. But…
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CSS and the meaning in presentation

Filed under: General,Web Design— arlen@ 12:51 am

There was a time when I was fully in agreement with Eric Meyer on the naming of classes. It made sense to me to create CSS class names based on the structure of the document. In fact, it was the only way that made sense to me.

So what changed? Me, I guess. I can’t say if I’m coming late to maturity or experience, or if I’m just getting lazy in my old age. But Edward Tufte, among others, has caused me to doubt this once-firmly ensconced principal.
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The Patience Problem

Filed under: General,Politics— arlen@ 1:45 pm

The election is over. The campaign was the easy part. Gary Kasparov’s new editorial, though, underscores the biggest problem our freshly-minted President will have to face.

It’s not the economy, or the war, or terrorism, or taxes, or the deficit; these all look simple when compared with the real problem. The shortage of patience.
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