Blog

  • Sociological Reasons

    Andrew Gelman quote via Tyler Cowen via The Monkey Cage

    We originally wrote this article in Word, but then we converted it to Latex to make it look more like science.

  • Volcanic Billikens

    Well, the Billikens bombed in Atlantic City in the A-10 Tourney. They hoped for an NIT bid, but didn’t get it. Now as I await the announcement of the College Basketball Invitational teams, I share some Google trends.

    In anticipating the NIT announcements, someone started a thread on Billikens.com titled NIT Selection Show. Google picked up this thread for its search engine, and for most of the day, it was the 3rd item that came up when you searched for NIT Selection Show. Well, the Billikens.com servers paid for that tonight. Here is a Google trend graph for “NIT Selection Show”

    So as thousands of college basketball fans whose bubbles had burst googled NIT Selection Show, many came across Billikens.com.  Before tonight, the most users that had been on the message board at one time was about 230.  Tonight, we reached 437.  Even on an upgraded server plan, we crashed a bunch.

    The really interesting thing is to see the spike in people who searched for “College Basketball Invitational”.  The NIT selection show ended at 9:30, and it seems people frantically hunted after then for another bubble to ride.

    My guess is the x-axis is Pacific time.  So as soon as the NIT Selection Show ended, Google got swarmed with CBI seekers.

    Google called the above trends volcanic.  The below is a preliminary graph of Billikens.com traffic tonight….Does sort of look like a Volcano.

    Sorry if these Billikens.com posts are boring.  The site has just been pretty interesting to me in the past month.  Now, lets make the Billikens 2010 CBI Champions.

    Update: SLU, GW, and Princeton all made the CBI.  The final four could legitimately include each of those schools.

  • billiken_roy still has some sway

    The Billikens have been on a little tear recently. They have won eight of their last ten. With that, Billikens.com started receiving more and more visitors. In about a weeks time, traffic increased by about 150%. This put some strain on my server, so I upgraded. Likely for next year, as the Billikids grow up, I will need to further upgrade, which substantially increase hosting costs.

    For those of you that don’t know, Billikens.com is funded entirely through donations. The site has no ads or subscription fees. So the generosity of the users is what pays the bills. We have had a fundraiser every two or three years since 2003.

    To pay for upcoming server costs, I started a fundraiser a couple of weeks ago. In the first week about $140 rolled in. In the next week, another $25 rolled in.

    billiken_roy, a longtime poster and friend, thought this was outrageous and posted the following this morning

    those of you that havent donated to the cause should be ashamed of yourself. $170 as of today? that is all that we have sent. i would assume most are at least sending $25 or more which would mean about 6 or 7 people are all that has donated thus far? if i was steve i would post a list of the donators to at least give some recognition to the few that have the decency to enable all to enjoy this site.

    I saw this and I went to lunch. I came back, checked my email, and there were seven new donations. By the end of the day, there were eight more. And this does not include those who said they put checks in the mail. $430 hit my inbox today.

    Billikens.com has been a tremendous hobby. There have been times in which I have thought of giving it up. There have been other amusing moments. I have been running a site devoted to SLU basketball since I was 12. It will be quite strange when I don’t. Regardless, days like today will always impress me.

    Now lets see how many Billikens.com users read SteveRogers.info.

    For a fun tid bit, in the last month Billikens.com received more traffic from (each) the US, Canada, Australia, Spain, and Ireland than SteveRogers.info did altogether. China came up just short.

  • Also from Victoria Johnson

  • CoolStreetNames.com

    Last time I was in DC, my friend Vicky told me about how part of her job is to work with a database of street names. In her day to day work, she finds interesting ones like the one below.


    View Larger Map

    She emails and GChats these to friends. I suggested she make a blog about it. I offered to set her up with a domain name, CoolStreetNames.com, and she has started posting some her finds. Below is my favorite so far. When driving around here: Do not pass Go. Do not collect $200.


    View Larger Map

  • Baby Picture

    No. Not a baby picture of Steve. Nor did this Steve have a baby. Another Steve did. And one of the baby pictures is pretty tremendous. Another grad student here, Steve Snell, is the father of a cowboy, Abraham.

    Source

  • DC Trip

    As I await for code to run, thought I would post something.  Just a rundown of a good week, so maybe not be the most interesting.  But my blog, my rules.

    Right now Princeton in is on “intersession.”  Basically the week between first and second semester (yes, second semester hasn’t started yet).  SLU played at GW this week, so I decided to make a midweek trip to DC.

    I went down Tuesday morning.  Got to DC.  I never really had favorite DC restaurants, so to have a meal I missed, I went to a hot dog vendor I always used to go to and had a half smoke with cheese and hot sauce.  Ate in Marvin Center (GW’s version of a student union) and headed over to the political science department.

    There I got to see Sarah (GW Adviser) and a few other professors.  It was simply nice to sit down and catch up a little, and I received a little advice about how to handle academic things.  I don’t know if it is because they are from the same department, but advice was similar regarding a variable I wasn’t weighing as much.   GW’s professors have always been good to me (there is one I think that doesn’t like me much, but I concede it is deserved as I was stubborn when in their class).  In a sign of good meetings, things ran over and I was a little late getting to my old work at the DLCC.

    At the DLCC, Matt (communications director and now the manager of DLCCWeb) and I went downstairs to a bar and got a couple of beers.  We talked DLCCWeb, DLCC, and updates in life.  There were positives and of course some negatives.  However once again in a sign of a good conversation, we ran long.  So I didn’t get to catch up with others at the DLCC.

    I then met a Princeton friend, Jeff.  We grabbed a beer and then dinner in Gallery Place.  We talked some shop, but the conversation was dominated by just life conversation.  Sometimes in the academic world, it is hard to get away from inside baseball.  I wish Jeff was still at Princeton, but he is happy in DC.  It again was good to catch up a bit.  We walked to GW to get my car, I dropped him off at his car, and then I finally made it to Nathan and Jessica’s (I went to GW with Jessie, and Nathan and I were roommates my last year in DC).  Nathan played some video games and Jessie studied Milton for her oral exam tomorrow as we caught up.

    The next morning, I went back to the DLCC to see the people I missed.  There I was introduced to the new DLCC Field Director, and she told me about a conference the next day that tied together campaign and academic politics.  Basically a number of presentations of experiments done by campaigns.  They invited me to come, and I said I would think about it.

    I then had lunch with Jessie at Fuddruckers, talking about school, friends weddings, etc.  Then downed a few pitchers with Nathan before heading to SLU v. GW.  I was in GW gear, but instincts sometimes take over.  I went to a SLU Alumni reception where I got to see my old friend Greg from Billikens.com.  We had a few drinks, talked basketball, work, Billikens.com.  The university president of SLU, Father Biondi, was there who I met for the first time.  I won a hat and got a cup that changes colors.

    SLU played a good game for about 36 minutes, then pretty much blew it.  Greg and I sat down behind the bench with the Father right behind us.  SLU lost in overtime after being ahead by about 13 points.  The team is young, but it was a disappointing loss for them.  However it was fun to be back in the Smith Center.

    The next day I went to the conference at the AFL-CIO.  It was well done, and it generated a few research ideas.  One of the things I worry about by being away from DC is that some of my best research ideas come from professional politics conversations.  So I hope to keep as many ties to the beltway as I can.  Not only to maintain friendships, but to maintain a grasp on what is going on in elections and campaigns.  It was amusing though, since one of the presenters was someone who I knew from Princeton.  It was just a complete blending of the two sides of politics in my life.

    By staying an extra day, that gave me the opportunity to have dinner with Vicky and her gentleman, who are a happy couple.  I also learned Vicky has the power to rename streets in the database Google Maps pulls from, which I find to be kinda awesome.

    I swung back to Jessie and Nathan’s, where we all procrastinated a bit.  I headed back to Princeton that night.

    Overall it was a pretty nice trip.  While I didn’t see as many GW folk as I would like, it was a week full of  college friends, SLU Basketball, Academia, and professional politics. Probably one of my best trips back to DC.