More Health Care info….

Wow, this health care stuff is complicated. Let’s check out some charts. Informational graphics by our politicians are designed to make it all clearer, right?

There’s an article pointing to some charts here….Ezra Klein – When Health-Care Reform Stops Being Polite and Starts Making Charts and over here…. Political Chart Wars: Health-Care Reform Obfuscated by Infographics.

They include this doozy:

WTF?

(yes, I hotlinked the images in this post, yes I’m against that, yes, I’ll fix that later.)

Hmm, charts by idiot politicians, maybe not a good idea…

I also have to admit, I was amused by the Democratic comeback:
??

So now that everyone’s had fun trying to make readers blind by putting bright colors on a dark grey bakground, maybe we should let an actual information/graphic designer give it a shot. This one’s called do not fuck with graphic designers.

Hey, something usable!

The letter below the image pretty much says how anyone in charge of presenting accurate and understandable information feels about that monster you see above. You can see the full pdf here and, OMG, it actually makes a bit of sense.

Now, if only any of them were indicative of a simple health care system….

With thanks to Joe Lanman on this thread of the IXDA discussion board.

Can Do

Via Scott McCloud on Twitter (and numerous others before him, by the looks of things) Can Do – And the Pursuit of Happiness Blog – NYTimes.com. An interesting comic (of sorts, the Times calls it an illustrated blog), in this particular case about Benjamin Franklin. The rest of the entries post once a month but I haven’t had a chance to read them yet. Worth checking out

Chroma-Hash

Check this puppy out:
Chroma-Hash Demo — just type in a username and two passwords… you’re not actually registering, it’s just to show behavior. Note the lack of a submit button.

Now, personally, I could care less about hiding a user’s password when they log into a site. I think it’s a waste. I’ve taken too many calls from people who swear they’re entering their passwords correctly when they either a) set them up incorrectly in the first place or b) screwed it up and don’t realize it. Masking passwords in the privacy of my own home or on my own secure computer in my office or whatever is a deterrent to registering and logging on. It’s not quite the waste of a two-factor password system set up as a series of questions, (I’m looking at you, every-goddamned-bank-in-the-country) but these are my personal biases. And if you’re in a situation where you are forced to access secure/personal accounts in an insecure environment (like, I’ll acknowledge, banking) they might not be quite the waste that they are on, say, a badly-drawn sporadically-updated comic/blog site.

All that being said, I doubt we’re going to get rid of the *****ing passwords (heh, literally) any time soon.

So Chroma-Hash struck me as an awesome way to give users a visual representation that their password is typed correctly or incorrectly.

Then it struck me that one of my favorite passwords is really ugly when hashed… and my immediate reflex was to change it to something prettier.

Thinking of registration, I’ve been to plenty of sites that have that little bar next to them that show how secure your password is. If this color doohicky could be tweaked to show more-secure passwords in colors that combine into generally-more-pleasing sets, it could also encourage the use of secure password combinations. And I don’t see any downside to that.

Health care – a round-up

This is mostly a link dump so I can come back and find these articles again if I need them.

And then there’s one of the most useful sites I’ve found on health care and politics so far, Politifact. These folks are taking those things you’re hearing on TV or reading in the paper and fact-checking them. Then, they post the results online with a grade ranging from “true” to “mostly true” to “half true” to “false” to “pants on fire”. They also occasionally check to see if a politician accused of flip-flopping on an issue did.

It’s a particularly good place to find information on who said what and whether it was true, because most of the news I learn about health care right now is third-hand (so-and-so on the radio/tv/whatever that congress said….) and that means that it’s getting blown out of proportion…. and when it’s a lie to begin with, well, it’s no wonder everyone is afraid and confused.

Probably more on this later, but for now I’m just trying to learn everything possible to find out what the hell’s really going on.

A roundup of weird shit. You know you love these.

OK, quick update on me:

Nighthawk had his annual check-for-thyroid-cancer low-iodine-diet dance all last week, so things were craziness. Lots of driving to and from Philly hospital appointments, baking, and cooking and… well… do you know anyone who needs a couple of pints of nuts and dried fruit?

Liable to make some scary scary fruitcake.

Anyway, the radiation scans came back normal so we might be out of the torture business (at least using the radioactive iodine testing method) for a damned long time, which makes me happy.

This week I work like crazy, or try to. Monday was all about catching up on everything that had happened while I was out half of last week, and today was an all-day seminar by Edward Tufte. The seminar might result in yet-another-redesign for the comic here, but not tonight. Besides, I’m pretty sure I need to write a plugin before I give that a good honest run.

This evening has been about Inbox Zero, which I’m not likely to succeed at because there are 327 messages on the cystic fibrosis support group account that I want to read to keep track of what the hell the federal government is doing with this whole healthcare thing.

Saturday we leave for vacation down in Virginia Beach. Faithful ideaphile basschica (and incredibly awesome sister) will be here watching the terror twins, and I will go worship Neptune until Nighthawk drags me kicking and screaming back into the car. This is also known as Thursday.

Update done. Now for the weird shit:

Via @chris71williams, a Shawn Tan short story on The Guardian.

Via Neil Gaiman, well, see for yourself.

The battle in Chez Gibson rages on about whether it’s better or worse than Leonard Nimoy’s Bilbo Baggins, which appears to have disappeared off the ‘net again. Damn. Anyway, it’s a sticky little tune.

That’s all for now….