My 11-year-old son Alex, without anyone suggesting it, donated $100 to the Against Malaria Foundation and so gave up the chance to buy 50 Hearthstone arena tickets.
As a pro Hearthstone player and effective altruist, nicely done! If your son is interested in a free lesson I'd be happy to help him improve his game as a reward for his generosity (though I haven't played arena in a while).
You did great Alex.
Have you thought about writing an article explaining why you choose to make the donation and ask on of the EA blogs to publish it? I think a lot of people would find such an article inspiring and share-worthy.
His response to your comment: "I don't know why I chose to donate, I just had an urge to." I then asked him why Against Malaria Foundation? "Because it was top rated on Givewell." I then asked him why Givewell. "Because you (James) said it was a good charity site."
The kid I volunteer with through Big Brothers, Big Sisters told me that they haven't self-harmed since we started hanging out. And they're looking into a STEM career, in large part because of my math tutoring!
Sure!
Basically, they have you fill out an extensive application, where you get to list everything from your interests to your preferred traits in the kid they match you with. They ask for a commitment of one year, meeting a few hours at a time, a few times a month. I preferred a kid older than nine.
They matched me with a thirteen-year-old girl, who had many of the same mental health problems I'd struggled with. We also both enjoyed crafts and anime. I met her, we clicked pretty well, and then we were all interviewed separately about whether we wanted to go through with the match. Me, her parents, and her.
There has been one problem, where her mom treated me more like a babysitter than her kid's friend. I asked BBBS for mediation, because it was making me and my Little Sister uncomfortable. They handled it beautifully and I haven't had problems since.
The first chapter of my MSc thesis was accepted to the ACM OOPS 2016 conference, and I submitted the camera-ready copy and registered for the conference. Now I just have to figure out travel and hotel arrangements and actually prepare the presentation for April!
A particular piece of code that I wrote for work (ie: under NDA) shipped to be burned into ROM in October, and the hardware with the ROM arrived this past month (December). I tested it, and it works 90% as-designed. I've submitted a patch adding extra error codes in case we ever get to ship again.
I don't remember if this happened in November or December, but I reinvented correlation explanation and had even made a nice visualization before I found out it was published last year.
LIkewise, I definitely shipped a patch for Venture sometime in the last month or two.
I helped Maia, Roger, Eileen, and David throw the Washington DC Secular Solstice. Really it was David and Eileen doing most of the work, though.
The epsilon-delta definition of continuity is annoyingly inelegant compared to the open-set condition.
I currently bench at least my lean body weight, and am building up to benching more than that.
During the latest two weeks I regularly exercised (with weights, about 15 minutes) every morning. I lost 4 kg, which I think is awesome considering it happened during Christmas season with tons of tasty food everywhere.
Wait... that doesn't make sense. Unless you're lifting truly extreme amounts of weight, or actually undereating quite a lot, you shouldn't lose 4kg in two weeks.
An error of measurement is always a possibility. Unfortunately, I can't travel back in time to measure my weight from before two weeks again.
To add more context, at this moment I am quite overweight (most that I've been at least in the recent ten years), because in recent months I had a lot of stress and almost no opportunity to exercise, plus an access to a lot of great food (I am really bad at resisting temptation: my only strategy for not overeating is "don't buy it"). Generally, my behavior depends a lot on my environment, and most of my self-control and self-improvement is based on strategically modifying my environment; and I had almost zero control over my environment until recently when we moved to a new flat. Now every morning I do sit-ups and five different exercises with a 10-kg dumbbell, most of them until I am too tired to continue. And half of the days my diet consisted of some joylent (about 10-20% of daily intake) and vegetable soup, and maybe a slice of bread.
I attribute this change to the "beginner's luck", which means that if you haven't been doing anything and you suddenly start working hard, you usually get some huge progress at the beginning and then it slows down. I expect that doing exactly the same thing for the next two weeks will have much smaller effects. (Unfortunately, this also makes the "error in measurement" hypothesis unfalsifiable.)
Anyway, I congratulate myself for the willpower to exercise regularly, regardless of whether the outcomes were measured correctly. That was an important hypothesis I needed to test experimentally -- whether my behavior will really change in the new environment, or whether I am just rationalizing my laziness.
And half of the days my diet consisted of some joylent (about 10-20% of daily intake) and vegetable soup, and maybe a slice of bread.
That does sound like radical undereating, unless "joylent" is a good deal more calorie intensive than I think it is.
I published an article in The Huffington Post promoting Givedirectly and effective giving, which was shared on social media over 2K times.
As I do twice a year, I gave blood. I usually time it to coincide with the beginning of December's celebrations.
I started a rationality-adjacent blog about applying math to life last year and a couple of weeks ago I achieved my first major goal for the blog: a place on Scott's blogroll which bumped my readership by around 10x.
You're the author of putanumonit?? I'd like to take this opportunity to say that your blog is amazing and I love it. Please write more soon!
Thanks!
I previously explored some of the ideas I write about on LessWrong, and on more than one occasion I was corrected here on dumb mistakes in math and reasoning that I made. I was hoping that the same would be true for Putanumonit, I even promise a small gift to anyone correcting a major mistake I made. That hasn't really happened yet. Either I'm becoming more careful in my writing, or I was spoiled by the high level of the commenters on LW :)
I won the Danish National Biology Olympiad semifinal (as 1/15), and thus I qualify for the final, where I will have the chance to be 1 of 4 Danes participating in the International Biology Olympiad.
I wish you luck! Some of the kids from where I work are likely to go there as the Ukrainian team.
When thinking about my resolutions for this year, I realized that saying that I am going to do something doesn't solve the problem, unless I have a serious reason to think I really will do it. This had a major impact on my willpower and the way I have been considering it for the past week. For instance, I write down my goals, the way to achieve them and how I will implement them in my life.
Besides that, I mostly didn't do anything important though. But I am confident this common sense knowledge will make my life better.
Yeah-- this is something that seems intuitive once you grasp it. But just because it's "common-sense" doesn't mean it's not useful. Writing things down and making a plan to get things done is a really effective way of achieving your goals!
Remember, however, that this isn't any kind of progress thread. Nor is it any kind of proposal thread. This thread is solely for people to talk about the awesome things they have done. Not "will do." Not "are working on." Have already done. This is to cultivate an environment of object level productivity rather than meta-productivity methods. For example:
So, what's the coolest thing you've done this month?
(Previous bragging thread)