Monday, March 23, 2009

Little used word shortcut keys

As per email request

These aren't a template thing, available in any microsoft word doc (i wittled a list down to ones i actually use and eliminated obv ones like bold/underline)

I don't have all these memorized, but Ryan Burke got me started on them when he claimed you could cut cards faster without a mouse by learning shortcuts (I believe false, but he is adamant)

 All Caps                      CTRL+SHIFT+A

App Maximize ALT+F10
App Restore ALT+F5
Apply List Bullet CTRL+SHIFT+L
Auto Format ALT+CTRL+K
Center Para CTRL+E
Change Case SHIFT+F3
Close or Exit ALT+F4
Close Pane ALT+SHIFT+C
Column Break CTRL+SHIFT+ENTER
Copy Format CTRL+SHIFT+C
Date Field ALT+SHIFT+D
Doc Close CTRL+W or CTRL+F4
Doc Maximize CTRL+F10
Doc Move CTRL+F7
Doc Restore CTRL+F5
Doc Size CTRL+F8
Doc Split ALT+CTRL+S
Double Underline CTRL+SHIFT+D
End of Column ALT+PAGE DOWN
Font Size Select CTRL+SHIFT+P
Footnote Now ALT+CTRL+F
Go Back SHIFT+F5 or ALT+CTRL+Z
Grow Font One Point CTRL+]
Hanging Indent CTRL+T
Header Footer Link ALT+SHIFT+R
Hyperlink CTRL+K
Indent CTRL+M
Justify Para CTRL+J
Left Para CTRL+L
Line Down DOWN
Macro ALT+F8
New CTRL+N
Next Cell TAB
Next Field F11 or ALT+F1
Normal ALT+CTRL+N
Normal Style CTRL+SHIFT+N or ALT+SHIFT+CLEAR (NUM 5)
Open CTRL+O or CTRL+F12 or ALT+CTRL+F2
Open or Close Up Para CTRL+0
Other Pane F6 or SHIFT+F6
Outline ALT+CTRL+O
Outline Collapse ALT+SHIFT+- or ALT+SHIFT+NUM -
Outline Demote ALT+SHIFT+RIGHT
Outline Expand ALT+SHIFT+=
Outline Expand ALT+SHIFT+NUM +
Outline Move Down ALT+SHIFT+DOWN
Outline Move Up ALT+SHIFT+UP
Outline Promote ALT+SHIFT+LEFT
Outline Show First Line ALT+SHIFT+L
Page Break CTRL+ENTER
Para Down CTRL+DOWN
Para Down Extend CTRL+SHIFT+DOWN
Para Up CTRL+UP
Para Up Extend CTRL+SHIFT+UP
Paste Format CTRL+SHIFT+V
Prev Cell SHIFT+TAB
Prev Field SHIFT+F11 or ALT+SHIFT+F1
Prev Object ALT+UP
Print CTRL+P or CTRL+SHIFT+F12
Print Preview CTRL+F2 or ALT+CTRL+I
Redo ALT+SHIFT+BACKSPACE
Redo or Repeat CTRL+Y or F4 or ALT+ENTER
Replace CTRL+H
Reset Char CTRL+SPACE or CTRL+SHIFT+Z
Reset Para CTRL+Q
Revision Marks Toggle CTRL+SHIFT+E
Right Para CTRL+R
Save CTRL+S or SHIFT+F12 or ALT+SHIFT+F2
Save As F12
Select All CTRL+A or CTRL+CLEAR (NUM 5) or CTRL+NUM 5
Show All Headings ALT+SHIFT+A
Show Heading1 ALT+SHIFT+1
Show Heading2 ALT+SHIFT+2
Shrink Font CTRL+SHIFT+,
Shrink Font One Point CTRL+[
Small Caps CTRL+SHIFT+K
Start of Document CTRL+HOME
Start of Line HOME
Style CTRL+SHIFT+S
Subscript CTRL+=
Superscript CTRL+SHIFT+=
Time Field ALT+SHIFT+T
Undo CTRL+Z or ALT+BACKSPACE
Update Auto Format ALT+CTRL+U
Update Fields F9 or ALT+SHIFT+U
Update Source CTRL+SHIFT+F7
VBCode ALT+F11
Web Go Back ALT+LEFT
Web Go Forward ALT+RIGHT
Word Left CTRL+LEFT
Word Left Extend CTRL+SHIFT+LEFT
Word Right CTRL+RIGHT
Word Right Extend CTRL+SHIFT+RIGHT
Word Underline CTRL+SHIFT+W

Friday, March 20, 2009

New Razer Mamba

Yes please.

Err, D'oh.

Working on Speech Improvement Alone pt 1

"You said you can improve your speaking without needing a coach around, what kind of things would you do to do that?"

Three things can be improved on most easily in terms of delivering a good speech, in order

1. Clarity
2. Efficiency
3. Speed

I put speed last even though when I debated I probably would of put it first. Having judged for a few years now I will say the following is true
-most people go faster then they are capable of doing clearly
-most people go faster than they are capable of doing smoothly (no stuttering, awkward pauses etc)
-many debaters don't utilize 90% of the arguments they made in previous speeches in their rebuttals, making them a large waste of time.


Clarity- How do you improve this. A few things

1. Transition words- making sure you consistently use numbers or emphasis /transition words (and, next, additionally, sub points) to clearly mark when you move from one argument to another. Many people are relatively clear but don't properly differentiate when one card ends and another begins, so judges have no idea a new card has started until they hear a date or something similar. This is a really easy way to add clarity to your speech- not in the sense of less mumbling, but in terms of organizational clarity.

2. Use emphasis- either changes in how loud you are speaking, changing your rate of delivery etc. Use this on key points not just in pieces of evidence, but on arguments that you think are particularly important. Some people take this too far- telling people to quadruple star an argument etc. That can be an effective technique, but if you have to say "I'm emphasizing this" instead of just emphasizing it then there is a problem. One thing to think about is that there is a fine line between emphasizing and flagging- emphasizing is making something that is more important stand out, flagging is needlessly drawing attention to something. You emphasize that the qualifications of your uniqueness evidence are better, you flag sever perms as a voting issue. Generally if something needs to be flagged it is of a quality such that if its dropped you will barely win on it, thus you want to make it very obvious so that when it is dropped a judge will have no choice but to vote on it. This is generally not a great way to try and win debates.

Working on emphasis is somewhat tricky in that before you can emphasize, you need to know what arguments are important enough to warrant emphasis. However, the techniques you would use are somewhat universal. Some techniques

1. Practice reading evidence and working hard to differentiate tags from the card before them, bold text in the evidence etc.
2. Practice reading un numbered theory blocks and trying to add your own mental numbering/ sub pointing during the speech
3. Practice speed transtions- these are the trickiest. You have probably seen someone who reads tags very slowly, then as soon as they get to the card speed sup into an incoherent mess. A speed transition should not be so dramatic, it should be like 5% max. When you end a card and go onto the next one, slow down 5% for the beginning such as "Next, economic decline causes nuclear war" and then speed back up. This requires yout to have a clear baseline speed obviously.


Annunciation- many people when they speak fast tend to blur words together. Instead of saying "Nineteen Ninety Nine" they end up saying something that sounds like "na-nye". This is obviously terrible. However, since people understand the gist of what they are saying, people rarely object/yell clear. You should make sure you are fully pronouncing and annonciating every syllable you are speaking. You should be saying the same things when you talk slowly as when you talk fast, the only thing that should be changing is the rate of delivery. Drills you have probably done at camp like over annunciating or pen in mouth are to try and get you to overemphasize things so that when you go faster the baseline level of annunciation is coming through. If you do these drills, and then go to give a speech and revert right back to your old habits you aren't getting the point.

It's like high knees in football. I used to hate the crap out of running drills, being a lineman I never saw the point. High knees is where you run and lift your knees artificially high, ideally hitting yourself in the chest with each step. The point is that if you are a running back, and you move your legs very high up and down when you run, it is harder to grab your legs and tackle you. So if you do high knees in practice, then run normally in a game- you aren't getting the benefit. The point is to change the way you are doing things when you run by exagerating the effect in practie, and then finding a middle ground between what you do normally and what you are doing in practice. So do these annunciation drills, and then try and use the same technique when giving actual speeches.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Card Cutting Tips- Tech

A few people have asked me about the tech I use to cut cards recently, so out of laziness I will put it all here and just refer them to it.

1. Speak and type- For this I use a program called Dragon Naturally Speaking . I first bought a version of this as a junior in high school just before the Twins won their last world series. When I first got it it was rough- lots of mistakes, had to talk very slowly etc. Now it is pretty money. I don't speak debate fast into it, but I type at around 80 words per minute last time I consulted Mavis Beacon and I can go faster than that with this. It also works pretty slick- if I alt+tab into gchat you can keep talking and it will fill in the text there. Highly recommended. You can teach it new words like "disadvantage" that never show up in word, you do have to train it for a little while on your voice though- the most extensive I think took me like 45 minutes of reading out loud. I like it esp for doing overviews/theory blocks that are a lot of text because Dragon + wireless headset= don't have to be at your computer ftw.

2. Mouse- I started with one of those microsoft mice with 2 extra buttons but they are sort of clunky/not very precise. Now I use the Razer Diamondback that you can regularly find on sale on amazon for like 35 bones (I think it was like 120 the first time I bought one 6 years ago, I have bought 6 since then because I broke them etc (although I have 3 in use now)). I would suggest if you are going to travel with it to get a mouse case instead of just sticking it in your backpack (the first one I bought came with one, alas no more) because once you first get it it is SO SMOOTH to use and after some poor handling it will still work but the smoothness will be gone. I also have the death adder which I bought because it was new fangled and the blue went with the lighting scheme on my desktop/keyboard/toothbrush/blue tooth headset which were all blue. I like somethings about it better but overall not worth the money I think and the diamondback is probably more durable for sure.

So the buttons- it has technically 4 extra buttons that a regular mouse doesn't have, but I also reporgram the middle scrollwheel "click" to be something other than fast scroll which is the default. Razer mice come with thier own software that works way better than the microsoft mouse software imo. You can adjust scroll speed, click speed everything in one pop up window along with programing the buttons. So basically you have these 5 buttons to work with so like on my template underlined card text is F3, so that is one mouse button. Then I made a paste special macro which is hotkeyed to ctrl+F3 so I hit ctrl with left hand, mouse button which does F3 with right hand. So each button has a key, and then the template has controls for that key, ctrl + that key, and alt + that key, so each botton does 3 things total, for 15 hotkeys on the mouse. That + dragon and I never really need to type much of anything.

I also have a keyboard for my desktop with extra buttons, the Razer Tarantula , generally I programmed these buttons to do general thins like cut and paste, undo/redo etc. that usually take a few buttons but now can be done with 1!! I also made a few of them more complex little macros like past special + eliminate hard returns + format as small card text which could of taken 4's of seconds and upwards of 9 buttons to push before hand. Most of these improvements are trivial, but if you spend 5+ hours a day cutting cards, over the course of a year you will have a lot more free time.

3. Scanner/scan software- I have tried just about every scanning software out there (my brother in law works basically as a archiver/document scanner for a major bank so I have even played around with sort of "industrial strength" programs) and for my money omni page slays everyone. There are programs that are more accurate- but they generally take a lot longer- and in my experience the recent omni page makes maybe 1 or 2 mistakes every 10 pages or so (my senior year it never even made mistakes on chinese characters). A lot of people hate it for some reason but I think they are stupid. Generally when I scan I don't do it a page at a time, i scan a lot of pages into a .pdf- then right click on it and omni page gives me the option to convert the whole thing to a word doc. Now, while this takes longer than doing the pieces individually, I dont have to be at the computer while it does its mojo. So after I get 2-300 pages of scanned text I go eat dinner or whatever while omni page doe sits magic. Then I come back and go find the parts I need. I alwasy skip the corrections phase because I will just manually correct any errors in the parts i need since the odds are low that there will be very many. If you are strapped for cash microsoft office comes with an OCR program as well that is dec.

One thing- if I have a .pdf that was clearly originally a word doc I will use the OCR in adobe acrobat professional which I think is better in this one instance- for some reason it always has 0 errors whereas omni page will occasionally have some, and you can modify the .pdf to be cut and pasteable that way (this is only for pdfs that dont let you cut and paste the text obviously).

Befriend the tech people who work at your school- odds are no one ever pays them any attention and they are pretty smart. just like befriending librarians this can pay dividends- they can oftentimes get you free software the school already has on mass education licenses etc. I find out about most new things by explaining to people like that what i'm doing and then they tell me some new way to do it better.

4. Scanner-don't think you can beat the canon lide series for cheapness/portability. They fit in a backpack, dont have thier own poer source just get it from USB, and are pretty fast/accurate. The sound they make drives some people crazy (ak) but I generally think if it bothers you that much you are probably a baby. You can get them for as cheap as 40 on amazon and the more expensive ones don't really make much of a difference for debate as they usually just have improved color/photo options which you won't use. I have had a few of them, have the 200 right now. The only reason I would get something else is if you have the cash to shell out for a feeder/faster scanner.

5. Recording sound- Audacity is a free program to record/edit sound. Great for recording speeches/lectures. Works substantially better than expensive programs like Camtasia. An external mic will also greatly improve this.

Let me add this- to those of you who plan on recording debates- the microphone is 20X more important than the camera. I frequently see people with 800 dollar camcorders with no external mics who then set up the camera 25 feet away from the debaters and think "great, another recording of an awesome debate that will be worthless because the sound is going to suck". You have all probably seen youtube videos of somethign of debates where the speech sounded garbled, odds are the debater wasnt that unclear (ok maybe they were) but the recording of sound with a standard handy cam blows. Scower AV forums before making your purchase, or just know that RODE makes probably the best mic for this purpose. Also- no one really cares about the video for these things- so recording in 1080p is probably unnecessary and just makes it difficult to share the files. If you have a program like adobe premiere that lets you independently chose the quality of sound and video downplay video and emphasize sound obvi. The mic will eliminate the need for a lot of that though.

Good Articles 3-11-09

Trying to clear out google reader after weeks of neglect

How The Recession Helps The Environment

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Pov K

Richard Chin: Slumdog Millionaire: Debate Poverty not "Poverty Porn"

In her recent UK Times piece, Alice Miles calls Slumdog Millionaire "Poverty Porn" and yesterday guests on NPR's Talk of the Nation discussed whether these types of films exploit, distort or glorify the poorest people on the planet.

Apparently, tours of Mumbai slums are experiencing a boon since Slumdog Millionaire won eight Academy Awards -- more evidence that this film created an emotional connection between Western audiences and the characters it depicts.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Windows Power Toys

I have to use XP on my school laptop, which I hate. But I just found some gadgets that allow more customization and thought I would pass it along- you can get them here http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/Downloads/powertoys/Xppowertoys.mspx

The one I found most useful is desktop management which will allow you to have multiple desktops like you were a person working in the 21st century. Unfortunately no cool compiz cube effects, but at least now I dont have 6,000 windows open all the time.

Anyone having other knowledge of how to make xp not suck please comment.

Monday, March 2, 2009

List of currently run Obama disads-Updates 3-2

If you know of others please add them in the comments


-stimulus- impacts steel, economy, green energy projects, highways, air force readiness
-health care good/bad
-card check
-Panama FTA
-Cuba Embargo
-China Bashing
-Iraq withdrawal- fast/slow
-Mortgage reform
-New banking bailout
-Start 3
-CTBT
-Middle East
-Law of the Sea
-Cap and Trade/Climate
-Entitlement reform
-Nanotech
-Equal pay
-Stem cells
-immigration reform
-north korea 6 party talks

OTEC

coming to SF http://www.engadget.com/2009/03/02/san-francisco-submits-permit-app-for-wave-power-project/