Because you are getting older...much...faster than you are getting either faster or wiser. There must be some tools, preferably free or cheap, that will deal with your brain slowing down. Are you listening?
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Wait Wait Don't Tell Me
Frankly, you are surrounded by--there is no easy way to say this--too little intelligence and wit. In general, npr.org can help with the intelligence; Wait Wait Don't Tell Me can help with the wit. Fight against the general degradation of the spoken word.
You are not reading enough
This is dumbing you down horribly. You probably have a smart phone, but there is some evidence it is not making you smarter. Getting a Kindle reader would be a fine thing, but maybe all you need is to download the Kindle app. Much classic content is free; I have just started Dostoevsky's The Possessed.
Sheep Reaction Game
It doesn't get more brain-stemmish than this: Sheep Reaction Game I surprised myself by how poorly I was rated.
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
3d Marble Roll
Even though shoot-em-up, cage fighting games are not, and should not be, your thing, there may still be a need to preserve/improve some of the eye-hand skills they require. 3d Marble Roll is a benign, pacific, spacey kind of compromise. Did you have one of those wooden cubes through which you propelled a steel ball by manipulating two knobs, trying to steer the ball past holes in its path? Marble roll uses the iDevice's position sensing capabilities to improve on the knobs. And your memory will be tested: how did I fail last time? How have I succeeded before?
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Cryptic Crosswords
I have been doing these since the seventies: as they say, whatever doesn't kill you makes you stronger. Harper's Magazine pioneered them in the US, but the redoubtable classic is the Times of London. A cryptic gives you clues that are meant to confuse: you must parse them for a primary clue, which is a synonym, and a secondary, which might be a pun, a hidden word, an anagram, another meaning, a homonym, etc. What am I talking about? Here is one from the latest edition of The Nation magazine: "Cerf edited article within The Nation (6)." I miss the 10x10 cryptics The New Yorker published for a few years many years ago: here is their guide to solving cryptics: Guide to Solving Cryptics. The Nation's cryptics are fairly accessible and manageable, and printed on their inimitable cheap stock--and The Nation might be a good read for those in whom Fox News has instilled brain death. There are many other cryptics available online.
Monday, December 5, 2011
Khan Academy
I have fallen behind in the Stanford AI course--more detail and mathematical rigor than I want or need--I was thinking more along the lines of Nova. But Khan Academy was one precursor for the idea of smart online teaching to large numbers of people: the founder asks, Why shouldn't it be free? More than a thousand lectures, many on math topics, all narrated by the tireless founder.
Saturday, December 3, 2011
Flash Fabrica
Do not be intimidated by the Chinese characters on the site. Feel free to poke around among the sometimes goofy offerings, but do not miss the circles (click them in increasing order of the numbers that have briefly flashed in them), the colored shapes (which one is different), and the simple math equations (does + - x or / make the statement true).
Friday, December 2, 2011
Swimming: It may or may not be for you
Swimming is kind of a zen thing: everything happens slowly and one moment tends to resemble another. But it is friendly to your joints. Do not make the mistake of thinking there is no technique to it. Both total immersion.net and swimsmooth.com can help you.
Thursday, December 1, 2011
Zentomino
Plays well with altered states of mind. User interface even better than TanZen. I love a game about which you can use phrases like "tiling the plane." Presently free.
Friday, November 18, 2011
TanZen
Twitch, shoot-em-up, violent games are not good for you, in my opinion, at any age. Quiet, serene, beautiful games that make you think and conceptualize in different ways are always good. TanZen is one such game. If I were still teaching math, I would incorporate it into my curriculum. There is no need to have an iDevice: anyone can make the shapes out of cardboard. TanZen is another game, like Unblock Me, that are good for spatial reasoning: NB, those who may know someone trying to get into dental school.
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Games for the Brain
Another site with some good stuff for the brain. Try "Mastermind" on it: http://www.gamesforthebrain.com/game/mastermind/. It might spark a taste for art history, as well as your memory.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Bicycling
Well, you really need to do something, don't you? And you may have tried running, and it may not have not agreed with your weight/knees. The scenery goes by much faster when you are cycling. Multiplied blood flow should help your brain. Wear a helmet and be sensible.
Concentration
What was I talking about? Oh...yes. I used to play versions of this memory matching game with my daughter, now pursuing a PhD in chemistry. There is probably a huge number of varieties available; I kind of like Moosentration, which provides many options and trash talks you, too.
Master Mind
A hundred years ago, I taught middle school. The difficulties were probably no different than they are today: attention span, peer pressure, etc. I used a variety of games to promote attention and learning. One of them, 3d tic tac toe, seems a bit simple-minded today. Another, backgammon, is a game with so many "states" that it is a triumph of artificial intelligence that it has been modeled. Master Mind in its simplest form is a board game with colorful plastic pegs. That game required an opponent who set the hidden code. It is a trivial task for a computer program to be your opponent. This incarnation is a fairly hefty $5 for an iDevice, but it has quite an elegant user interface. You have options to choose any number between 3 colors (fairly trivial) and 8 colors (it may make you tear your hair out.) The game tracks your history and gives you a rating.
Arts & Letters Daily
You may be turned off by even the Washington Post and New York Times recounts of quotidian events (they may not be to blame, based on the inane stuff they have to cover.) Aldaily.com is a compendium of what remains of the life of the mind, such as it is, in such places as newyorker.com and nybooks.com, with really good synopses to help you to know what to click.
Unblock Me
It is a little late to be telling you this, but you may have heard anyway that Stanford is offering a class on artificial intelligence free on the web to tens of thousands, including me. It is being conducted in a very rigorous, detailed way. One thing I find interesting about it is that it addresses sliding block problems, which date back to the plastic things you fooled around with as a child, trying to get the blocks to go from 1 to 15 in order. Unblock Me will make you smarter, forcing you to start with your end in mind, in a highly visual way. Available on iDevices; I don't know about elsewhere. A lot of challenge for free.
Have to start somewhere: Kenken
I have in the last decade tutored college grads, or those soon to be, who were preparing for the GMAT, the test to get into graduate business programs. These people, many of whom had gone to fairly prestigious schools as undergrads, were often unable to factor numbers, multiply single digits in their heads, or reduce fractions without moving their lips and staring off into space. Kenken is quite an entrancing game that can strengthen all those skills, and logic as well. It is available daily in the New York Times online (but you will have to limit your visits to 20 a month or pay a subscription), kenken.com for free (recommended), and there is a decent app for iDevices (fairly inexpensive.)
Here we go
You may be of a certain age, and you find that your mental chops are not what they once were. You forget things, misplace things, pause...interminably...in the middle of a sentence. Or you may have children, or grandchildren, who are not even as sharp as you are. You find that you, and they, have less and less ability to focus on even the most simple-minded subjects. This blog will be a work in progress, and will focus on things that can make you sharper--print, games, media, even...TV. You do not have to go gentle into that good night.
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