Items of some interest:

These are my recent Pin​board​.in links:

Items of some interest:

These are my recent Pin​board​.in links:

Items of some interest:

These are my recent Pin​board​.in links:

  • Nicholas Rombes: Punk | berfrois

    “Most iron­i­cally, being based in the hope­lessly lost cul­tural void of Ann Arbor, a noto­ri­ous mecca for the last sur­viv­ing rem­nants of the pseudo-​​intellectual street peo­ple move­ment that said much and accom­plished little…”

    punk history-​​is-​​a-​​feature-​​not-​​a-​​bug cultural-​​dynamics ha-​​ha-​​only-​​semiserious
  • [1112.5309] POWERPLAY: Train­ing an Increas­ingly Gen­eral Prob­lem Solver by Con­tin­u­ally Search­ing for the Sim­plest Still Unsolv­able Problem

    An amus­ing col­lec­tion of what seem to be half-​​remembered ideas gleaned from his visit to the GPTP work­shop in Ann Arbor two years ago, pre­sented as his own inven­tions and with­out cita­tion or men­tion of the dozen peo­ple who actu­ally do this work. His keynote, as I remem­ber it, essen­tially revolved around him point­ing out how influ­en­tial his work should have been all along, if only we had both­ered to cite him as we should have done, because he thought up the core con­cepts of genetic pro­gram­ming well before any of us claimed we had. This is pretty much a camel’s-back straw for me. If there is a bet­ter argu­ment for com­pletely boy­cotting the cita­tion sys­tem and rely­ing on per­sonal asso­ci­a­tion and named schools rather than pub­li­ca­tion, I have not yet encoun­tered it. So remem­ber poor oppressed grad­u­ate and post­doc kids: when I cite your work by sim­ply nam­ing you per­son­ally, and not your advi­sor or your insti­tu­tion, and not even your pub­li­ca­tion or jour­nal but merely YOU PERSONALLY, it’s because you per­son­ally deserve the credit, not any of those other leeches. Got that?

    now-​​this-​​really-​​pisses-​​me-​​off-​​to-​​no-​​end
  • [1203.0856] Online Dis­crim­i­na­tive Dic­tio­nary Learn­ing for Image Clas­si­fi­ca­tion Based on Block-​​Coordinate Descent Method

    “Pre­vi­ous researches have demon­strated that the frame­work of dic­tio­nary learn­ing with sparse cod­ing, in which sig­nals are decom­posed as lin­ear com­bi­na­tions of a few atoms of a learned dic­tio­nary, is well adept to recon­struc­tion issues. This frame­work has also been used for dis­crim­i­na­tion tasks such as image clas­si­fi­ca­tion. To achieve bet­ter per­for­mances of clas­si­fi­ca­tion, experts develop sev­eral meth­ods to learn a dis­crim­i­na­tive dic­tio­nary in a super­vised man­ner. How­ever, another issue is that when the data become extremely large in scale, these meth­ods will be no longer effec­tive as they are all batch-​​oriented approaches. For this rea­son, we pro­pose a novel online algo­rithm for dis­crim­i­na­tive dic­tio­nary learn­ing, dubbed textbf{ODDL} in this paper. First, we intro­duce a lin­ear clas­si­fier into the con­ven­tional dic­tio­nary learn­ing for­mu­la­tion and derive a dis­crim­i­na­tive dic­tio­nary learn­ing prob­lem. Then, we exploit an online algo­rithm to solve the derived prob­lem. Unlike the most exist­ing approaches which update dic­tio­nary and clas­si­fier alter­nately via iter­a­tively solv­ing sub-​​problems, our approach directly explores them jointly. Mean­while, it can largely shorten the run­time for train­ing and is also par­tic­u­larly suit­able for large-​​scale clas­si­fi­ca­tion issues. To eval­u­ate the per­for­mance of the pro­posed ODDL approach in image recog­ni­tion, we con­duct some exper­i­ments on three well-​​known bench­marks, and the exper­i­men­tal results demon­strate ODDL is fairly promis­ing for image clas­si­fi­ca­tion tasks.”

    image-​​analysis image-​​segmentation algo­rithms nudge-​​targets
  • [1203.3271] The ther­mo­dy­nam­ics of prediction

    “A sys­tem respond­ing to a sto­chas­tic dri­ving sig­nal can be inter­preted as com­put­ing, by means of its dynam­ics, an (implicit) model of the envi­ron­men­tal vari­ables. The system’s state retains infor­ma­tion about past envi­ron­men­tal fluc­tu­a­tions, and a frac­tion of this infor­ma­tion is pre­dic­tive of future ones. The remain­ing non­pre­dic­tive infor­ma­tion reflects model com­plex­ity that does not improve pre­dic­tive power, and rep­re­sents the inef­fec­tive­ness of the model. We expose the fun­da­men­tal equiv­a­lence between this model inef­fi­ciency and ther­mo­dy­namic inef­fi­ciency, mea­sured by the energy dis­si­pated dur­ing the inter­ac­tion between sys­tem and envi­ron­ment. Our results hold arbi­trar­ily far from ther­mo­dy­namic equi­lib­rium and are applic­a­ble to a wide range of sys­tems, includ­ing bio­mol­e­c­u­lar machines. They high­light a pro­found con­nec­tion between the effec­tive use of infor­ma­tion and effi­cient ther­mo­dy­namic oper­a­tion: any sys­tem con­structed to keep mem­ory about its envi­ron­ment and to oper­ate ener­get­i­cally effi­ciently has to be predictive.”

    mod­el­ing philosophy-​​of-​​science information-​​theory physics ther­mo­dy­nam­ics talking-​​about-​​a-​​model-​​is-​​a-​​model pragmatism-it-ain’t
  • [1203.3434] On the Impact of Infor­ma­tion Tech­nolo­gies on Soci­ety: an His­tor­i­cal Per­spec­tive through the Game of Chess

    “The game of chess as always been viewed as an iconic rep­re­sen­ta­tion of intel­lec­tual prowess. Since the very begin­ning of com­puter sci­ence, the chal­lenge of being able to pro­gram a com­puter capa­ble of play­ing chess and beat­ing humans has been alive and used both as a mark to mea­sure hardware/​software pro­gresses and as an ongo­ing pro­gram­ming chal­lenge lead­ing to numer­ous dis­cov­er­ies. In the early days of com­puter sci­ence it was a topic for spe­cial­ists. But as com­put­ers were democ­ra­tized, and the strength of chess engines began to increase, chess play­ers started to appro­pri­ate to them­selves these new tools. We show how these inter­ac­tions between the world of chess and infor­ma­tion tech­nolo­gies have been her­ald of broader social impacts of infor­ma­tion tech­nolo­gies. The game of chess, and more broadly the world of chess (chess play­ers, lit­er­a­ture, com­puter soft­wares and web­sites ded­i­cated to chess, etc.), turns out to be a sur­pris­ingly and par­tic­u­larly sharp indi­ca­tor of the changes induced in our every­day life by the infor­ma­tion tech­nolo­gies. More­over, in the same way that chess is a mod­eliza­tion of war that cap­tures the raw fea­tures of strate­gic think­ing, chess world can be seen as small soci­ety mak­ing the study of the infor­ma­tion tech­nolo­gies impact eas­ier to ana­lyze and to grasp.”

    touch­stones his­tory algo­rithms history-​​of-​​science computer-​​science
  • Share Books | berfrois

    “Libraries are a recog­ni­tion that schol­ar­ship and cul­ture are more than the busi­ness of cre­at­ing and con­sum­ing. They are a human con­ver­sa­tion, and libraries pro­vide com­mon ground where that con­ver­sa­tion can take place and be remem­bered. By tak­ing aim at the right for the pub­lic to main­tain this con­ver­sa­tion and its mem­ory, pub­lish­ers have shown us what we have to lose. It’s time we resisted the out­sourc­ing of our com­mon her­itage by occu­py­ing the library.”

    Occupy libraries intellectual-​​property open-​​access public-​​policy activism
  • [1112.3307] Poly­tope Codes Against Adver­saries in Networks

    “Net­work cod­ing is stud­ied when an adver­sary con­trols a sub­set of nodes in the net­work of lim­ited quan­tity but unknown loca­tion. This prob­lem is shown to be more dif­fi­cult than when the adver­sary con­trols a given num­ber of edges in the net­work, in that lin­ear codes are insuf­fi­cient. To solve the node prob­lem, the class of Poly­tope Codes is intro­duced. Poly­tope Codes are con­stant com­po­si­tion codes oper­at­ing over bounded poly­topes in inte­ger vec­tor fields. The poly­tope struc­ture cre­ates addi­tional com­plex­ity, but it induces prop­er­ties on mar­ginal dis­tri­b­u­tions of code vec­tors so that validi­ties of code­words can be checked by inter­nal nodes of the net­work. It is shown that Poly­tope Codes achieve a cut-​​set bound for a class of pla­nar net­works. It is also shown that this cut-​​set bound is not always tight, and a tighter bound is given for an exam­ple network.”

    cryp­tog­ra­phy pri­vacy algo­rithms nudge-​​targets network-​​theory com­mu­ni­ca­tion
  • [1203.3353] Solv­ing Struc­ture with Sparse, Randomly-​​Oriented X-​​ray Data

    “Single-​​particle imag­ing exper­i­ments of bio­mol­e­cules at x-​​ray free-​​electron lasers (XFELs) require pro­cess­ing of hun­dreds of thou­sands (or more) of images that con­tain very few x-​​rays. Each low-​​flux image of the dif­frac­tion pat­tern is pro­duced by a sin­gle, ran­domly ori­ented par­ti­cle, such as a pro­tein. We demon­strate the fea­si­bil­ity of col­lect­ing data at these extremes, aver­ag­ing only 2.5 pho­tons per frame, where it seems doubt­ful there could be infor­ma­tion about the state of rota­tion, let alone the image con­trast. This is accom­plished with an expec­ta­tion max­i­miza­tion algo­rithm that processes the low-​​flux data in aggre­gate, and with­out any prior knowl­edge of the object or its ori­en­ta­tion. The ver­sa­til­ity of the method promises, more gen­er­ally, to rede­fine what mea­sure­ment sce­nar­ios can pro­vide use­ful sig­nal in the high-​​noise regime.”

    structural-​​biology image-​​analysis crys­tal­log­ra­phy algo­rithms inverse-​​problems nudge-​​targets sta­tis­tics
  • [1203.3203] An effi­cient algo­rithm for gen­er­at­ing AoA networks

    “The activ­i­ties, in project sched­ul­ing, can be rep­re­sented graph­i­cally in two dif­fer­ent ways, by either assign­ing the activ­i­ties to the nodes ‘AoN’ directed acyclic graph (dag) or to the arcs ‘AoA dag’. In this paper, a new algo­rithm is pro­posed for gen­er­at­ing, for a given project sched­ul­ing prob­lem, an Activity-​​on-​​Arc dag start­ing from the Activity-​​on-​​Node dag using the con­cepts of line graphs of graphs.”

    sched­ul­ing operations-​​research algo­rithms graph-​​theory
  • [1203.3341] A Com­par­i­son of Multi-​​Parametric Pro­gram­ming, Mixed-​​Integer Pro­gram­ming, Gra­di­ent Descent Based, and the Embed­ding Approach on Four Pub­lished Hybrid Opti­mal Con­trol Examples

    “…Com­mon mis­con­cep­tions regard­ing the embed­ding approach are addressed includ­ing whether or not it results in an aver­age value con­trol model (no), is nec­es­sary to “tweak” the algo­rithm to get bang-​​bang solu­tions (no), requires infi­nite switch­ing (no), has real-​​time capa­bil­ity (yes), or reduc­tion to a clas­si­cal non­lin­ear opti­miza­tion prob­lem (a desir­able yes).”

    control-​​theory operations-​​research algo­rithms numerical-​​methods philosophy-​​of-​​engineering design-​​patterns nudge-​​targets
  • [1203.3270] Extrac­tion of Facial Fea­ture Points Using Cumu­la­tive Histogram

    “This paper pro­poses a novel adap­tive algo­rithm to extract facial fea­ture points auto­mat­i­cally such as eye­brows cor­ners, eyes cor­ners, nos­trils, nose tip, and mouth cor­ners in frontal view faces, which is based on cumu­la­tive his­togram approach by vary­ing dif­fer­ent thresh­old val­ues. At first, the method adopts the Viola-​​Jones face detec­tor to detect the loca­tion of face and also crops the face region in an image. From the con­cept of the human face struc­ture, the six rel­e­vant regions such as right eye­brow, left eye­brow, right eye, left eye, nose, and mouth areas are cropped in a face image. Then the his­togram of each cropped rel­e­vant region is com­puted and its cumu­la­tive his­togram value is employed by vary­ing dif­fer­ent thresh­old val­ues to cre­ate a new fil­ter­ing image in an adap­tive way. The con­nected com­po­nent of inter­ested area for each rel­e­vant fil­ter­ing image is indi­cated our respec­tive fea­ture region. A sim­ple lin­ear search algo­rithm for eye­brows, eyes and mouth fil­ter­ing images and con­tour algo­rithm for nose fil­ter­ing image are applied to extract our desired cor­ner points auto­mat­i­cally. The method was tested on a large BioID frontal face data­base in dif­fer­ent illu­mi­na­tions, expres­sions and light­ing con­di­tions and the exper­i­men­tal results have achieved aver­age suc­cess rates of 95.27%.”

    image-​​segmentation image-​​analysis face-​​recognition algo­rithms nudge-​​targets
  • [1203.3284] Effi­cient Enu­mer­a­tion of the Directed Binary Per­fect Phy­lo­ge­nies from Incom­plete Data

    “We study a character-​​based phy­logeny recon­struc­tion prob­lem when an incom­plete set of data is given. More specif­i­cally, we con­sider the sit­u­a­tion under the directed per­fect phy­logeny assump­tion with binary char­ac­ters in which for some species the states of some char­ac­ters are miss­ing. Our main object is to give an effi­cient algo­rithm to enu­mer­ate (or list) all per­fect phy­lo­ge­nies that can be obtained when the miss­ing entries are com­pleted. While a sim­ple branch-​​and-​​bound algo­rithm (B&B) shows a the­o­ret­i­cally good per­for­mance, we pro­pose another approach based on a zero-​​suppressed binary deci­sion dia­gram (ZDD). Exper­i­men­tal results on ran­domly gen­er­ated data exhibit that the ZDD approach out­per­forms B&B. We also prove that count­ing the num­ber of phy­lo­ge­netic trees con­sis­tent with a given data is #P-​​complete, thus pro­vid­ing an evi­dence that an effi­cient ran­dom sam­pling seems hard.”

    phy­lo­ge­net­ics inverse-​​problems genet­ics algo­rithms sta­tis­tics nudge-​​targets
  • [1203.0879] Design­ing and using prior knowl­edge for phase retrieval

    “In this work we develop an algo­rithm for sig­nal recon­struc­tion from the mag­ni­tude of its Fourier trans­form in a sit­u­a­tion where some (non-​​zero) parts of the sought sig­nal are known. Although our method does not assume that the known part com­prises the bound­ary of the sought sig­nal, this is often the case in microscopy: a spec­i­men is placed inside a known mask, which can be thought of as a known light source that sur­rounds the unknown sig­nal. There­fore, in the past, sev­eral algo­rithms were sug­gested that solve the phase retrieval prob­lem assum­ing known bound­ary val­ues. Unlike our method, these meth­ods do rely on the fact that the known part is on the bound­ary. Besides the recon­struc­tion method we give an expla­na­tion of the phe­nom­ena observed in pre­vi­ous work: the recon­struc­tion is much faster when there is more energy con­cen­trated in the known part. Quite sur­pris­ingly, this can be explained using our pre­vi­ous results on phase retrieval with approx­i­mately known Fourier phase.”

    image-​​analysis image-​​processing learn­ing inverse-​​problems algo­rithms nudge-​​targets
  • [1203.3415] A New Approach to Count Pat­tern Motifs Using Com­bi­na­to­r­ial Techniches

    “We pro­posed two new exact algo­rithms to detect net­work motifs of size 3 and 4. Con­sid­er­ing that motifs need to count the iso­mor­phic pat­terns in the orig­i­nal graph $G(V,E)$ and in a set of ran­dom­ized graphs, the fol­low­ing com­plex­i­ties con­cern about count iso­mor­phic pat­terns in a sin­gle graph. Let $m=|E|$ and let $a(G)$ be the arboric­ity of $G$. Assume $|E|geq|V|$. We describe a $O(a(G)m)$ time com­plex­ity algo­rithm to count iso­mor­phic pat­terns of size 3. The com­plex­ity is a $O({msqrt{m}})$ in the worst graph. The sec­ond algo­rithm is a $O(m^2)$ com­plex­ity algo­rithm to count iso­mor­phic pat­terns of size 4. The final result was expres­sive faster when com­pared with other imple­mented algorithms.”

    network-​​theory graph-​​theory algo­rithms nudge-​​targets

Items of some interest…

These are my recent Pin​board​.in links:

  • Nelson’s Weblog: tech /​ foss4g-​​2011-​​trip-​​report

    “…The rest of this post is a link dump of some of the peo­ple and things I saw at the con­fer­ence. I’m no “cura­tor,” just a typ­ist, sorry for the lack of organization.”

    geo software-​​development map­ping resources
  • main — katt83project

    col­lec­tion of scripts and other tools in sup­port of the Dis­trib­uted Proof­read­ers workflow

    Distributed-​​Proofreaders script­ing toolkit
  • Presto Chango | Futil­ity Closet

    “It will be observed that this square when turned upside down is still magic.”

    mathematical-​​recreations amus­ing nudge-​​targets
  • Ruth Kinna on Guy Aldred | berfrois

    “Guy Aldred is an obscure but impor­tant fig­ure in the his­tory of social­ist thought. He some­times crops up in his­to­ries of British social­ism, syn­di­cal­ist and labour organ­i­sa­tion, but rarely in dis­cus­sions of social­ist the­ory. His uncom­pro­mis­ing com­mit­ment to activism per­haps explains this neglect: as Aldred him­self argued in a com­men­tary on British anar­chism, ide­olo­gies are too often shaped by the philo­soph­i­cal reflec­tions of edu­cated elites, leav­ing the thoughts of work­ing class auto­di­dacts who spend a life­time stand­ing on street cor­ners, pro­pa­gan­dis­ing, ignored. Per­haps, too, his evan­gel­i­cal roots make his work an acquired taste: Aldred writes with moral cer­tainty and con­vic­tion that leaves lit­tle room for debate. Most bio­graph­i­cal accounts sug­gest that he was not an easy man to get along with and though he did not lack organ­i­sa­tional skill, he found co-​​operation dif­fi­cult. The plea­sure he took in the pun of his name – ‘the man they all dread’ – was indica­tive of the prob­lem. Yet Aldred’s ideas are com­pelling and the judge­ments he made in his early life were con­sis­tently rev­o­lu­tion­ary, lib­er­tar­ian, anar­chis­tic and usu­ally good. Aldred cam­paigned against mar­riage and for birth con­trol in sup­port of women’s lib­er­a­tion before the First World War; he encour­aged con­sci­en­tious objec­tion in both world con­flicts and pub­li­cised the vin­dic­tive abuse that COs suf­fered for tak­ing their stance. In all his early writ­ings, he ele­vated the strug­gles of com­mon peo­ple – from reli­gious non-​​conformists to con­victs. Draw­ing on the reports of his com­rades, Ethel Mac­Don­ald (1909−1960) and Jane (Jenny) Patrick (1884−1971), he sup­ported the 1936 anar­chist rev­o­lu­tion in Spain [1] and until his later life, he con­sis­tently opposed the dog­ma­tism of ortho­dox Marx­ism, whether it was expressed in the the­o­ret­i­cal pieties of the Euro­pean social demo­c­ra­tic move­ment or, after the Russ­ian Rev­o­lu­tion, in the cold, phys­i­cal bru­tal­ity of the Stal­in­ist regime. The pas­sion with which he advanced these causes cap­tures the spirit of an opti­mistic, utopian, roman­tic cur­rent of social­ism whose hopes and ideals, squeezed by social democ­racy on one side and state social­ism on the other, were ulti­mately dis­ap­pointed but which remain inspiring.”

    anar­chism his­tory biog­ra­phy social­ism

Items of some interest…

These are my recent Pin​board​.in links:

  • Recount­ing the Dead — NYTimes​.com

    “So what? Above a cer­tain count, do the num­bers even mat­ter? Well, yes. The dif­fer­ence between the two esti­mates is large enough to change the way we look at the war. The new esti­mate sug­gests that more men died as a result of the Civil War than from all other Amer­i­can wars com­bined. Approx­i­mately 1 in 10 white men of mil­i­tary age in 1860 died from the con­flict, a sub­stan­tial increase from the 1 in 13 implied by the tra­di­tional esti­mate. The death toll is also one of our most impor­tant mea­sures of the war’s social and eco­nomic costs. A higher death toll, for exam­ple, implies that more women were wid­owed and more chil­dren were orphaned as a result of the war than has long been sus­pected. In other words, the war touched more lives and com­mu­ni­ties more deeply than we thought, and thus shaped the course of the ensu­ing decades of Amer­i­can his­tory in ways we have not yet fully grasped. True, the war was ter­ri­ble in either case. But just how ter­ri­ble, and just how exten­sive its con­se­quences, can only be known when we have a bet­ter count of the Civil War dead.”

    his­tory Civil-​​War morbidity-​​and-​​mortality count­ing
  • Sci­en­tific Amer­i­can Blog Network

    ‘While Adam Smith may be known as the philoso­pher who first pro­moted the idea that “greed is good,” his ear­lier work sug­gests we are not con­demned to exploit oth­ers for the ben­e­fit of a few. In his book The The­ory of Moral Sen­ti­ments, writ­ten in 1759, Smith pro­posed that sym­pa­thy for the plight of those who suf­fer is an inher­ent part of human nature. “When we see one man oppressed or injured by another,” he wrote, “the sym­pa­thy which we feel with the dis­tress of the suf­ferer seems to serve only to ani­mate our fellow-​​feeling with his resent­ment against the offender.” With the cur­rent occu­pa­tion of Wall Street and the inter­na­tional con­dem­na­tion of an eco­nomic model that would take advan­tage of those most in need, we are wit­ness­ing Smith’s pre­dic­tion in action. It is only when the real­ity of people’s suf­fer­ing is hid­den that greed is allowed to dic­tate pol­icy. While our cur­rent sys­tem has cho­sen the greed of the few over the needs of the many, the intel­lec­tual founder of mod­ern cap­i­tal­ism sug­gests it doesn’t need to be this way. “When we think of the anguish of the suf­fer­ers, we take part with them more earnestly against their oppressors.”’

    eco­nom­ics economic-​​crisis com­plex­ol­ogy cultural-​​dynamics
  • Guyot’s spec­i­man sheet | The Collation

    “So who was respon­si­ble and when is it from? Since the sheet is nei­ther signed nor dated, we can only make this asser­tion thanks to the sleuthing done by ear­lier schol­ars, most impor­tantly by John Drey­fus for his col­lec­tion of type spec­i­men fac­sim­i­les, and the source of much of the infor­ma­tion I give here.1 This sheet can be con­nected to its type caster thanks to the detailed records kept by the Dutch printer Christophe Plan­tin and the remark­able longevity of his press, now the home of the Plantin-​​Moretus Museum. Plantin’s 1575 inven­tory of fonts includes the dou­ble pica italic type­face shown on this sheet (it’s the largest size of the italic face, on the right-​​hand col­umn), with a note on the fac­ing page iden­ti­fy­ing it as “Ascen­don­ica Cur­sive de Guiot.” François Guyot was a type caster in Antwerp who worked from the 1540s until his death in 1570, and who was the main caster for Plan­tin from 1555 onwards; he also seems to have worked briefly for John Day in London.”

    nanohis­tory typog­ra­phy type-​​design early-​​modern
  • Thought You Should See This — Dis­rupt­ing the Con­fer­ence Business

    In other words, a stan­dard Open Space: “Essen­tially, it’ll be Wur­man and 100 of his pals (and as he so elo­quently put it, “I know fuck­ing every­body”) talk­ing about a par­tic­u­lar topic for a cer­tain amount of time. The “intel­lec­tual jazz” will be filmed in black and white, and then later released as an inter­ac­tive app. ”I’m ter­ri­fied,” said a coy Wur­man, look­ing absolutely noth­ing of the sort. ”I don’t know if I can pull it off.” And while a gath­er­ing of 100 big­wigs in some ways sounds like the worst kind of elit­ist hor­ror show, I actu­ally found myself root­ing for him. I mean, the world needs con­trar­i­ans, and Wur­man sure is one of them.”

    con­fer­ence non-​​fake-​​Wurman TED meet­ing ideas
  • nth­most » Blog Archive » Why The Inter­state Bat­tery War­ranty is Worthless

    “We Can’t Afford to Just Be Con­sumers Any­more In the clas­si­cal model of eco­nom­ics, a self-​​interested con­sumer like Josh would read­ily accept Interstate’s offer, see­ing no down­side. But Josh is part of a new class of con­sumers who under­stand the idea of “vot­ing with your dol­lar”, and it goes well beyond which brand of toi­let paper you bring to the check­out line. There are sev­eral imme­di­ate down­sides to the “res­o­lu­tion” Inter­state brought to the table: Fire­stone would be rewarded for their ridicu­lous 2-​​hour-​​minimum pol­icy to change the bat­tery. Inter­state would con­tinue to be unable to enforce their war­ranty. The cus­tomer (Josh) would have no rea­son to believe he’d be able to get a new bat­tery in the future with­out all of the non­sense implied by the res­o­lu­tion — namely, pay­ing for the 2 hours of labor him­self and then secur­ing reim­burse­ment from Inter­state. Josh looked at the options and decided not to enable the ven­dors in their bul­ly­ing of Inter­state, and not to encour­age Inter­state to bend over for them. And he real­ized his time in chas­ing down his due was worth more than the value of the prod­uct in question.”

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