This is my new favourite thing, and hence important enough to post about while honeymooning.
Author: YJ Soon
To protect your personal interests
HSBC’s [login page](https://www.hsbc.com.sg/1/2/!ut/p/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLN443MfYHSZnFm8Ybm-pHmsUbxpv6eECEDOIdESJB-gW5oRHljoqKACcsjaA!?__menuType=__REGISTRATION&__Destination=HUB_IDV_CUSTOMER_MIGRATION&__IWLang=en&__IWCountry=US&__registrationType=PIB-Registration):
“To protect your personal interests, repeated incorrect submissions of your Password or Security Code will disable your access to Internet Banking.â€
Clearly, my _‘personal interests’_ include:
* Calling to reset my password
* Yelling at customer service reps, then feeling guilty because it’s not their fault
* Allowing other people to easily lock me out of my account if they know my user ID, or if they’re annoyed enough at having been locked out that they write a script to guess all possible user IDs and then proceed to lock them out to prove a point not that I’m doing that right now really
* Being generally annoyed as fuck
Idiots.
“Please don’t learn to code”
Jeff Atwood went and set fire to the Internet a couple of days ago:
The “everyone should learn to code” movement isn’t just wrong because it falsely equates coding with essential life skills like reading, writing, and math. I wish. It is wrong in so many other ways.
This point feels a little stretched to me. I’m not sure where Atwood is getting these “coding is as important as reading/writing/math” vibes from, but why isn’t there a place for coding in schools beyond the core curriculum? Put another way: why exclude Computer Science / programming from that seemingly arbitrary list of auxiliary subjects that we make our schoolchildren learn over their 12 years of pre-university education?
The general populace (and its political leadership) could probably benefit most of all from a basic understanding of how computers, and the Internet, work. Being able to get around on the Internet is becoming a basic life skill, and we should be worried about fixing that first and most of all, before we start jumping all the way into code.
This part makes perfect sense. However, what he proposes here doesn’t have to be at the exclusion of teaching more people programming, yes?
Here’s a response, by Zed Shaw of [Learn Code The Hard Way](http://learncodethehardway.org/):
I wonder if he’s going to tell his kids they shouldn’t learn to code when they want to become just like Daddy? Probably not. He’ll gleefully run over and show them how to code and tell them it’s so much fun and that they should all do it and it’s the best thing ever! But, of course, _your_ kids shouldn’t learn to code, and you shouldn’t, and your friends shouldn’t, just Jeff and his kids should.
I do think Shaw’s taking a bit far when he cites resentment as Atwood’s motivation for telling people not to learn how to code, but then, running a (very good, supposedly) programming education website could do that to your perspective. Both articles make good points, but I’d recommend Shaw’s to anyone feeling a bit deflated after reading Atwood’s.
Drawings: That’s Not Beef, and Angry Mushroom
Made with [Paper](http://www.fiftythree.com/paper). I also just bought [Procreate](http://savage.si/), which is supposed to be great once you get over the giggle-inducing name (_”Hey! Look at me! I’m procreating on my iPad!”_), but all those brushes and options are a bit of a turn-off now. Hmm.
The day I lost a child on the Tube
From the Teacher Network Blog on The Guardian:
Twenty years ago our blogger lost one of his pupils on the London Underground and didn’t even report the incident to the child’s mother or his headteacher… fast forward to the present day and it’s a very different story
A little old in Internet-time, but I just got around to reading it, and it’s a fun read with a very insightful conclusion that’s not “OMG look at kids and parents nowadays ughhhh”.
When I first read the title, though, I thought it was “the day I lost a child on YouTube”. THE HORROR
New Yorker on Stanford and Silicon Valley
A long, detailed piece on Stanford’s history, its ties with the valley, and some interesting remarks by former president Gerhard Casper challenging some of Hennessy’s decisions. OLD CODGER FUZZIE VS. OLD CODGER (with boring textbook) TECHIE FIGHT
Paper drawings: Green Goblin, Iron Man
A couple more. Waiting for my new styluses (styli? steezes?) to arrive before I continue sketching, since the wife has commandeered mine for Draw Something.
On the second drawing: man, Kirby crackle is _tough_ to do on Paper.
Vim adventures
An interactive web game to help you become familiar with Vim commands. Very nicely done!
I found it a little frustrating to get through because I know the basics, but the player is made to “unlock” commands such as w and b. Worse, the first “maze” you navigate with hjkl encourages you to mash those buttons (can’t put a number in front to repeat commands). That said, though, very fun and great production values. “YIPPEE”, as they say.
What Malaysia thinks of 50 Cent
Source: Someone else’s Facebook account, copied from [this forum](http://forum.lowyat.net/topic/2314554).
C’est la Z: Anyone can cook
Mike Zamansky on the recent spate of online programming education offerings, specifically the more “vocational” ones such as Codecademy:
‘The premise seems to be that anyone can code and that everyone should code. I’ve been thinking about this for a while and I keep coming back to the question, “what’s the endgame?”‘
This post articulates the fear I’ve been having about trying to make programming more accessible to everyone: to what end? For users, is there any value in this knowledge? (Conversely, though, what’s the value in learning basic science and humanities for “users”, i.e. people existing in the physical world and society?)