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Sunday, June 24, 2007, link

Updates 2:52 a.m., link

Good Evening,

I've enjoyed myself in California for the last couple of months. Aside from working, I've hiked, cycled, and met many interesting people (many of whom I work with).

Here's me and Pooi Yee near the top of the Pinnacles National Monument:


And here's a shot taken at Castle Rock National Park:


There are other pictures in my albums for the Pinnacles National Monument and Castle Rock National Park.

In other news, I plan to start working on a project of my own in the near future. I plan on emulating some of the features in the uC++ programming language in Python. I'll post the results on my projects page when I actually do something.

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Comments on SiCKO 2:52 a.m., link

I saw a sneak-preview of Michael Moore's new movie SiCKO last week. A gentleman I work with was kind enough to give me a ticket. SiCKO juxtaposes private American Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) with the public health-care systems that exist in Canada, Cuba, England, and France. Moore begins by conducting case studies of several disenfranchised HMO customers. Somewheres in the movie he illustrates how President Nixon endorsed the apparently corrupt HMOs.

I am sceptical about the representativeness of Moore's portrayal of health care around the world. I cannot comment on the veracity of Moore's claims about health care in the United States, Cuba, or the European countries that he discusses. However, I posit that he equivocally portrays health care in Canada. Moore's movie omitted the following:
With the exception of these omissions, Moore's portrayal of Canada's health-care system appears accurate (e.g., short waiting times in emergency rooms).

Now -- with scant evidence -- I claim that the movie's scenes shot in the Cuban hospital were almost certainly orchestrated by some political propagandist. I am utterly unconvinced that foreigners would command the attention of several doctors and the use of expensive medical-imaging equipment immediately after arriving at a hospital. Cuba is a poor nation (GDP per capita: $3 900 [1]), hence expensive equipment is rare. Even in a rich nation such as Canada (GDP per capita: $32 614 [2]), patrons of public health-care systems can wait months before undergoing expensive diagnostic tests. Thus some Cuban politico must have arranged for the Americans to receive the attention.

I encourage the reader to see the movie for herself. Too lazy to do more research, I want to hear what people who have first-hand experience with the any of the health-care systems discussed in the movie have to say. I am also interested in reading any objective literature on the matter.

[1] "Cuba", http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuba, Accessed June 24, 2007.
[2] "Canada", http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada, Accessed June 24, 2007.

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Tuesday, April 10, 2007, link

Almost Done 10:03 a.m., link

School has nearly finished: four exams to go! I attended the class-representative meeting a couple of weeks ago. I would have posted a picture of the festivities, but I wasn't the photographer (i.e., despite having the pictures on my hard drive, I won't post them without asking the photographer for permission). Instead, I'll post a stand-in. Note that the following picture was taken nearly one year earlier. Nevertheless, the setting is correct.



That was difficult. Uploading the image, that is. I had to do it twice. After the first upload, I realized that I had set the alignment option incorrectly. I'd like to know how to change the alignment of an image already embedded in the text. I suppose I could click on the "Edit Html" tab I see above this composition, but I lacked such ingenuity a moment ago.

I might continue to use this software.

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