indepndnt blog

July 4, 2007

Shopping Around for Cheaper Gas

Filed under: Current Events, Driving, Economics — Joe Carey @ 8:15 am

Awhile back it occurred to me that with gas prices as high as they are, it doesn’t seem to do any good to shop around for the cheapest price. I was taking a business calculus class at the time, so I set about to prove it mathematically.

First, I assigned the price of gas per gallon to the variable x. Then, for simplicity, I decided to study the amount of gas you can buy for $1.00 — because it’s usually very easy to calculate things involving the number 1. Expressed algebraically, the amount of gas you can buy for $1.00 is $1.00 over x, or f(x)=1/x. (Proof: if gas is $1/gallon, f(x)=1/1=1 gallon; if gas is $2/gallon, f(x)-1/2=half a gallon.)

Enter calculus; the first derivative of that simple function would tell us the instantaneous rate of change of how much gas you could buy for a dollar. In English, that would tell us at any given price how quickly the amount of gas you can buy is dropping as the price goes up. That first derivative is negative one over x squared, or f’(x)=-1/x^2. (Proof: The first derivative tells you the slope of a curve at a given point, so at x=1.4, 1/x=.714 and x’=-1/1.96=-0.51. We should be able to approximate 1/x at 1.5 by adding x’ times .1 to 1/x: -0.51*.1+.714 = .66. 1/1.5 = .66.)

The second derivative will tell us what the slope of the tangent line of the instantaneous rate of change of how much gas you can buy for a dollar is. Or, how big the rate of quantity loss at any given price. The second derivative is two over x cubed, or f”(x)=2/x^3. This is what I would call the significance of gas price differences.

That is what this graph is showing you (click on it for the full, clear version). As you can see, from $1.00 to $2.00 it was fairly important to choose the gas station with the lowest price. From $2.00 and especially $2.50 on up, it hardly matters any more which gas station you go to. Gas is too expensive for it to matter whether you buy gas for $2.799 or $2.699.

In conclusion, don’t waste your time going out of your way to find a cheap gas station any more. Your driving habits are now more significant to your gas budget than which gas station you stop at: you can save more money monitoring the way you move your feet.

[I wrote this January 6th, 2006 and posted it on another blog. It still seems relevant today.]

June 30, 2007

Welcome to the jungle.

Filed under: Career, Current Events — Joe Carey @ 9:23 am

Thursday night, I was putting up laundry and my wife was laying in bed, when all of a sudden we heard a gunshot. Followed by six or seven more gunshots. I was like, really? I haven’t heard gunshots in a long while. They’re not nearly as common here as they were in Oregon. Later when the cops came out, we found out there were bullet holes in a car parked on the street. The cop took pictures and picked up the shells, and left. No one was hurt, as far as I can tell. They towed the car the next day. I don’t know whose it was anyway. But after the cops left, I found another shell in my driveway. Whoever was shooting was directly in front of my house.  Scary.

I’ve updated my resume and have been posting it on job sites and sending it to potential employers.  Working at a restaurant just isn’t going to cut it much longer, what with twins on the way and everything.  I haven’t heard back from any employers, but a few recruiters have contacted me.  I’ve heard through events at school and whatnot that recruiters are really the way to get the good jobs in my field these days.  So, I’m glad they saw my resume and said “here’s someone I want in my portfolio to offer to my clients.” With any luck this will lead to gainful employment some time in July, or August at the latest.  Crossing my fingers!

I added a page on here for my resume, if you want to see it.  I wasn’t at all happy with Word’s html rendering of it, so I had to pretty much rewrite all of the html by hand.

Theme: Silver is the New Black. Blog at WordPress.com.

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