Sunday, November 29, 2009

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Itay Talgam teaches how to manage people, and he teaches it differently than anyone else!

-
Itay Talgam, a protege of leonard Bernstein, following a decade of Conducting, transformed himself into a consultant to some of the largest corporations in business.  He teaches how to manage people.

Here he explains to the TED Conference what he does & how he does it.



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Wednesday, November 18, 2009

The most retarded leopard seal pup in the world?

-

Off the coast of Antarctica,
a female leopard seal "adopted",
and attempted to feed,
the National Geographic photographer
who had come to
Antarctica to
photograph her!





Paul Nicklen describes his most amazing experience as a National Geographic photographer - coming face-to-face with one of Antarctica's most vicious predators.

-

Spanish gov't to guarantee legal right to broadband

-



Beginning in 2011, Spanish government to guarantee legal right to broadband


 Anywhere in the Country!

-

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

quantum physics is one thing, but a quantum sense of humor.....

-
This made me laugh... and think....
And that's a good thing.




-

Well, this is big news! But, it won't help cook the meals or clean the house.

-
The Beeb reports that, while the drug Flibanserin failed as an anti-depressant, it does have an interesting side-effect.  It's like a Viagra for the female libido.
-

Sunday, November 15, 2009

United Nations Censors Reception for Book

-
The United Nations-sponsored Internet Governance Forum (IGF) in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, was disrupted by UN officials who demanded removal of a poster advertising the book Access Controlled about freedom of speech on the internet.

The sound quality of these videos is sub-par, but they were shot live in the real world.



     "If we cannot discuss topics about Internet 
     censorship and surveillance policy at a forum
     about Internet governance then what is the 
     point of something like the IGF," said Ron 
     Deibert, director of the Citizen Lab at the
     University of Toronto's Munk Centre for
     International Studies and one of Open Net
     Initiative (ONI)'s principal investigators.

More video available here (sorry, no embed):
http://www.youtube.com/user/fikratube#p/a/u/0/axMpYddEomc


      "Deibert, one of the organizers of the reception,
        said he will file a complaint against the
        censorship of the event and send it to the
       United Nations Human Rights Commission."


Computer World has the story here:


"An anti-censorship group holding an event Sunday at the United Nations-sponsored Internet Governance Forum (IGF) in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, was disrupted by UN officials who demanded removal of a poster that mentioned Internet firewalls in China."
-

Thanks For Being an Honest and Responsible Citizen

-
You're standing on the balcony overlooking your back yard at home.  You notice a black garbage bag over there in the corner of your garden.  You investigate and find that it contains a shotgun & some ammunition.  You take all of this to the nearest police station and turn it in.


Here is how the police thanked former soldier Paul Clarke, age 27, for 'doing his duty' as a good citizen.
-

Beyond Security Theater

-
It has been said that  the difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between firefly and firefight.  (apologies to Mark Twain)

Bruce Schneier is an internationally recognized expert on security matters.  In his essay Beyond Security Theater, he discusses the very real differences between security and security theater.



Schneier recommends that we replace existing security theater with real security measures.  Security is harder work, and requires more steadfastness, than security theater -- BUT, the major difference is that while security theater makes some people feel more secure, real security actually makes all of us more secure.
-

Saturday, November 14, 2009

A Physics Paradox: Holes That Block Light

-

A Physics Paradox: Holes That Block Light


                                     No entry. A scanning electron
                                       microscope image of the gold film,
                                           which didn't let much light
                                                   through its holes.
                                                Credit: J. Braun et al 



By Karen Fox
ScienceNOW Daily News
13 November 2009

The way light moves, with its fixed speed and its ability to act like either a wave or a particle, often leads to some of the most curious paradoxes of physics. A new one has just been found: Make holes in a film of gold so thin that it's already semitransparent, and less light gets through.
-

MAtrix Ping Pong

-


-

Linus Torvalds & Jim Zemlin dicuss the Linux Operating System

-

A half hour video chat

Japan Linux Symposium Keynote:
Linus Torvalds & Jim Zemlin


In his brief introduction, Zemlin highlighted some key numbers that are a part of the Linux ecosystem.
2,700,000. Number of lines of code added to kernel in the last year according to the recently updated "Who Writes Linux" paper from the Linux Foundation
 
10,923. Numer of lines of code added to the Linux kernel every day. 
 
5,547. Number of lines deleted every day.
 
1. There's only one Linus Torvalds, founder of Linux.
After his introduction, Zemlin sat down with Torvalds, who discussed the huge growth of Linux, how it came to be, and where it's going. 
-

Friday, November 13, 2009

-
From Gizmodo




The Eyewriter from Evan Roth on Vimeo.




Before disease took his ability to move, Tony Quan was an amazing graffiti artist. Now he is completely paralyzed, save for his eyes, and still an amazing artist. Seeing how he works left me with tear-streaked cheeks.

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First computer to sing - Daisy Bell --- Even Before the HAL9000

 -

Why Did the Dying, Evil HAL Computer Sing "Daisy" in 2001 a Space Odyssey?

 Remember that terrifying death-of-HAL scene from Stanley Kubrick's classic '2001: A Space Odyssey,' in which the evil computer drones its " childhood" lyrics to Daisy Bell?  



It turns out that 'Daisy Bell' was a nod to the IBM 7094, which, a team at Bell Labs programmed the first computer to sing in 1962. The popular tune from the late 19th century was chosen as part of a demonstration of speech synthesis which was previewed by Arthur C. Clarke, who also co-wrote the screenplay, paid a visit to a friend at Bell Labs where he was was treated to a performance by the IBM 7094, and later, inspired by what he'd seen, reproduced it in the dramatic death scene of HAL 9000.
-

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Announcing The Launch of 301 Works - A Short URL Archive

-
November 11, 2009

Announcing The Launch of 301 Works

Big news for little URLs today, as the Internet Archive announced that they will be taking the lead on 301works.org, an effort designed to add permanence and reliability to the operation of URL shorteners.

From the release:
The Internet Archive and founding companies announce today the launch of 301Works.org, a service to archive shortened Universal Resource Locators (URLs).  This will enable redirect services to incorporate these shortened URLs when a member company ceases business activities. 

The use of shortened URLs has grown dramatically due to the popularity of Twitter and similar micro-streaming services where posts are limited to a small number of characters.  Millions of shortened URLs are generated for users every day by a wide variety of companies.

But when a URL shortening service shuts down, the shortened URLs people put in their blogs, tweets, emails and web sites break.  Unless users have kept a record of each shortened URL and where it was supposed to redirect to, it’s not possible to fix them.
-

Microsoft Makes the Web a More Dangerous Place

-

Hotmail requires tracking cookies for logout

And where do you think you're going?

"Hotmail users are now unable to log out of their account if the browser they are using does not accept third party cookies.

"The move by Microsoft raises security concerns, particularly as PCs on corporate networks and in cybercafes and libraries are often set to reject cookies."

This NOT a matter of "What were they thinking?"  It IS a matter of "What!  Were they thinking?"

-

Google says. and Tells How, the Web Can Go Faster

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Use compression to make the web faster

Monday, November 09, 2009

Every day, more than 99 human years are wasted because of uncompressed content. Although support for compression is a standard feature of all modern browsers, there are still many cases in which users of these browsers do not receive compressed content. This wastes bandwidth and slows down users' interactions with web pages.
-

Clingstone: House on a Rock at Rhode Island

-
Clingstone, an unusual and such a vintage, 103-year-old mansion in Rhode Island’s Narragansett Bay, survives through the love and hard work of family and friends. 



 Henry Wood, the owner, runs the house like a camp where all skilled workers welcome. The Jamestown Boatyard hauls the family’s boats and floating dock and stores them each winter in return for a week’s use of the house in the summer.
-

How to sink pirates

-

How to sink pirates

Nov 12th 2009
From The Economist print edition

The decline of music piracy holds lessons for other industries


Illustration by Claudio Munoz

YOU open a window on your computer’s screen. You type in the name of a cheesy song from the 1980s. A list of results appears. You double-click on one of them, and within a few seconds the song is playing. This is what it was like to use Napster a decade ago; and it is also how Spotify, another free online-music service, works today. The difference? Napster was an illegal file-sharing service that was shut down by the courts. Spotify, by contrast, is an entirely legal, free service supported by advertising. This shows how much things have changed in the world of online music in the past decade. It also explains why online music piracy may at last be in decline.

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While Celebrating 40 Years of Sesame Street, A Sad Obituary

-
 From the Archive
Apr 5th 1997
From The Economist

From 1997: Jon Stone, who put laughter into learning, died on March 30th, aged 65


"ANYONE can play on the emotions of children. Jon Stone's gift was to teach them useful things while they were falling about with laughter or gripped by a story. What cunning tricks adults do play on children. But perhaps they are grateful later on. Millions of otherwise deprived children have learnt at least the rudiments of knowledge—how to count and spell—by watching “Sesame Street”, an American television show that Mr Stone helped to create. It doesn't sound much, numbers and letters, but unless you make a start you'll never become a brain surgeon. Many Americans who got to university were happy to acknowledge that they grew up on “Sesame Street”."

-

Oceanographers Develop "Swarms" of Robotic Ocean Explorers

 -
 



 In an effort to plug gaps in knowledge about key ocean processes, the National Science Foundation (NSF)'s division of ocean sciences has awarded nearly $1 million to scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, Calif. The Scripps marine scientists will develop a new breed of ocean-probing instruments:  Autonomous underwater explorers, or AUEs.
_

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Very Exciting Music!

-

Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela
Playing Mambo from " Westside Story " &
Danza Final (Malambo) from " Estancia "




-

A Jewish Mother in Your Cell Phone

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How nagging text messages can make you healthier and richer.


Newsweek reports that financial institutions (think savings accounts) and health care companies (think both clinical trials & simply taking your medicine when you should) are finding that text messages to mobile phones are very effective ways to get people to do what they should do & what they have self-identified that they want to do.

-

Looking at "Nothing", Astronomers Find Earliet Known Galaxies

-

The Hubble Ultra Deep Field in 3D




antimatter detected in lightning

-

Fermi telescope finds evidence that positrons,
not just electrons, are in storms on Earth

The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has detected gamma-ray flashes associated with terrestrial storms — and, surprisingly, some of those flashes have contained the  signature of antimatter.


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Tuesday, November 10, 2009

This Will be HUGE for Telemedicine & Rural Healthcare

-

November 9, 2009 12:45 PM PST

How your cell phone can diagnose disease





 















The hardware added to this cell phone costs around $10.
(Credit: Ozcan Research Group/UCLA)
 

"To picture the next-gen microscope, don't picture a microscope at all. Aydogan Ozcan, an assistant professor of electrical engineering and member of the California NanoSystems Institute at UCLA, is adapting cell phones to sample biological images.


"This is no iPhone app. Ozcan, who formed the company Microskia (on the heels of the UC Berkeley team that developed CellScope), has built a prototype whose cell phone camera sensor can detect a slide's contents at a cellular level--reading, for example, an increase in white blood cell count that might indicate a new infection or injury. That information can then be forwarded wirelessly to a lab or hospital."


-

A Voice of Reason From Within the Movie Industry

-

Rutger Hauer to Hollywood: Don't fear tech


The actor who played a murderous artificial life form in "Blade Runner", costarred in "Batman Begins", and "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind", in essence, tells the movie industry to learn from history instead of continually trying to stop history from happening.

-

Best Wishes Kareem

-

One of the greatest basketball players of all time, and an intensely private person, goes public about his health to educate others.


-

Happy Birthday Sesame Street

-

To some of us, it hardly seems like 40 years!

November 10, 1969 - first broadcast

Google is Updating its Search Engine

-

Google: Caffeine search is ready to go


Google is beginning to roll-out its new search algorithm first announced last August.  Initially, Caffeine will be in just one data center, but expect it to spread across all of Google's other data centers rather quickly.



While they aren't changing the UI -- so things will continue to look the same -- expect to see quicker responses from your favorite search engine.
_

Using a 2x4 to get Facebook's attention

-

Hundreds of Facebook groups hijacked


Every group on FB has an administrator.  If/when the admin steps down, unless they replace themselves with a new admin, there's an open slot.


An organization called Control Your Info jumped into open slots on 100's of open slots -- in effect hijacking them.

Then  Control Your Info went public -- apparently benevolently.


Sometimes it takes a 2x4 up-aside-the-head to get someone's attention.  I suspect that FB will now change how admin's are administered.
_

Monday, November 9, 2009

People are Impersonating Your Friends and Trying to Steal Your Money

-

How low can online scammers go?

 This new scam pretends to be a Marine in Afghanistan.  The scammer writes, in part, ""When on a routine mission of search and destroy, we stumbled upon a concealed barrel with piles of weapon and ammunition, my men and I agreed that the money be shared, the sum of $900,000.00 (Nine hundred thousand dollars) now happens to be my share.""

If/when you get anything like this, forward it to the Federal Trade Commission [spam@uce.gov] and your state's Attorney General.  In Arizona, the AG's email for this stuff is [communityservices@azag.gov]

-





Vitamin D Can Make Your Home Safer

-
No, not the Vitamin.


Vitamin D is a Silicon Valley start-up that offers software to make your video cam or webcam become a sophisticated security device.

Ina Fried, of CNet News says, "The software, which works on either PCs or Macs, puts a yellow box around any human motion it detects and can be further refined to show only someone coming or going from a particular area--say entering or leaving through a particular door. The software is designed to work with any IP camera or even an inexpensive Web cam."


-

Didn't Anybody Engineer the Large Hadron Collider?

-

Bird drops baguette, halts Collider

The largest engineering project in the World -- and it was brought to a stop by a bird dropping and then nibbling a piece of bread?  Which takes me back to the title of this blog entry:  Didn't Anybody Engineer the Large Hadron Collider?

_

Happy Birthday Firefox!

-

Our favorite Browser was release (in Version 1.0) on November 9, 2004.

-

Sunday, November 8, 2009

and Now for Some Good News

-

Why crutches may soon be relics of the past

 


 -


If you are worried about Swine Flu....

-

You ain't seen nothin' yet!


Prepare to get excited about zoonotic and foreign animal diseases, such as Hendra virus & Nipah virus.  They are spread by such animals as bats & horses.


-

Mario Cuomo's Uphill Battle Against Intel

-


New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo, in his Anti-Trust case against computer chip-maker Intel, is reminiscent of Sisyphus' struggle with the rock.  The major difference being that this Anti-Trust case will - eventually - come to a conclusion.


CNet News Reports that Intel has continuously reduced prices in the face of competition.  I find it difficult to argue that this harms consumers.


 In that CNet item, several Professors of Anti-Trust law argue, more eloquently than I, that, in pursuing this case, Mr. Cuomo has a difficult job ahead.

-
-

Dave Rosenberg (no relation) over at CNet News reports what he headlines as

"Microsoft's weak cloud privacy position"



"Microsoft released on Thursday a new position paper, "Privacy in the Cloud Computing Era: A Microsoft Perspective," that includes information about the remote storage and processing of personal information."

Dave points out that, instead of establishing and managing a strong standard for your personal privacy information, Microsoft essentially says -- hey, it's all up to you.  It sounds to me like the data privacy equivalent of Microsoft washing its hands of the responsibility.

That somehow reminds me of Pontius Pilate.


-

Canalscape stirs world's interest

-

Phoenix is becoming a 'greener' city, and the World is paying attention.


The Arizona Republic says, "Canalscape is a serious-minded partnership among Arizona State University, Salt River Project, several Valley cities and other organizations dedicated to reintegrating the Valley's canals into the urban environment."

Greenbuild, the world's largest annual conference dedicated to environmentally conscious building design and construction, will be in Phoenix this week.




-

In wake of attack, military asks: Who cares for the caregivers?

-

For years, we've heard how the military is stretched thin -- with reduced recruitment numbers and multiple recurring deployments.


Now we are learning that the very people put in place to care for these over-streched & over-stressed troops are also over-streched & over-stressed.

So, now the big question:   Who cares for the caregivers?
_

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Is History Repeating Itself ... Yet Again?

The opposition takes to the streets again

On the 30th anniversary of the Irani (who changed the word to Iranian?) revolution, The Economist reports on the current unrest in that critically important Middle-Eastern country:



"THIRTY years ago, the world was mesmerised by pictures of 52 blindfolded Americans being taken hostage in their embassy in Tehran by Iranian students. This week’s anniversary provided more gripping scenes, as Iranians used the official celebration of that event to take to the streets once again, this time to protest against their own government and their country’s controversial president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, whose re-election in June they still hotly dispute."
.

RIP - Russ Ackoff

In praise of the ideas of Russ Ackoff


One of the authors of  “Introduction to Operations Research”, Russ Ackoff, who passed away on October 29th, was one of the most influential management gurus of the 20th century.

His ideas and thoughts on systematic thinking remain, and IMHO, will continue to remain, at the forefront  of management theory & effective practice.
.

Growing More Food & Fiber

Artificial satellites are helping farmers boost crop yields

 

The Economist reports that, "FOR farmers, working out the optimal amount of seed, fertiliser, pesticide and water to scatter on a field can make, or break, the subsequent harvest. Regular laboratory analyses of soil and plant samples from various parts of the field can help—but such expertise is costly, and often unavailable. A new and cheaper method of doing this analysis, though, is now on offer. Precise prescriptions for growing crops can be obtained quickly, and less expensively, by measuring electromagnetic radiation reflected from farmland. The data are collected by orbiting satellites."

 

Telemedicine institute trains doctors, helps patients in remote areas


If you live in rural Arizona, and you need specialized medical care, it is either impossible to find, extremely expensive to get, and/or very time consuming to get to.


That's changing, and that's a good thing.


The University of Arizona College of Medicine’s Arizona Telemedicine Program thru the T-Health Institute is beginning to reach all parts of the state. 


Presently, the only stumbling block is the lack of ubiquitous broadband.  Once that is in place, three positive changes can fall into place:  Telehealth, eLearning and rural economic development.

.

Ballet Arizona is Gliding on 'Swan Lake'


Last night, we saw Ballet Arizona's new production of Swan Lake.


It was 'World Class' spectacular!





I believe that covers the subject.  

If you want more details, check out Richard Nilsen's review in the Republic.  He has some terrific profiles of the dancers.  Natalia & Astrit are two of my personal favorites.


.

Chocolate rich in flavanols may protect the skin from UV

(PhysOrg.com) -- A new study has discovered for the first time that dark chocolate rich in flavanols may provide significant protection from the harmful effects of ultraviolet light.






 Gotta love this evidence based health care!   ;-)

Friday, November 6, 2009

Amphibious Car


I so want one of these too!



More evidence that chocolate is a health food


My, what a delicious finding!


J Intern Med. 2009 Sep;266(3):248-57.

Chocolate consumption and mortality following a first acute myocardial infarction: the Stockholm Heart Epidemiology Program.

 

 CONCLUSIONS: Chocolate consumption was associated with lower cardiac mortality in a dose dependent manner in patients free of diabetes surviving their first AMI.

The Plane of the Future, Fits in Your Garage


I so want one of these!



Today, November 6th is a birthday



Pat Tillman (1976–2004)



Thursday, November 5, 2009

A is for anniversary!

‘Sesame Street’ celebrates the big 4-0

 We all remember Cookie Monster, Count von Count (I had forgotten his last name), Big Bird, Bob, Maria, Mr. Hooper and everybody.

I even remember some educators being nervous about the "competition"! Well, the early childhood education seems to have helped, and that's a good thing.


Google Dashboard Lists Account Info to Calm Privacy Critics

Google Dashboard Lists Account Info
to Calm Privacy Critics 

 Google is responding to privacy advocates by providing a 'Dashboard' where you can view & manage your personal info that Google has collected.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Speaking of Sharks....

The Headington Shark Sculpture

 How would you like to come home and see a shark diving headlong into your roof?



Well, if you live at 2 New High Street, Headington, Oxford, England, that's what you see every day!

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Conservative Commentator Stephen Colbert's Publicity Stunts

Colbert's many publicity stunts are well known.  




But now he's sliding even farther along that path -- sponsoring the U.S. speedskating team!

"Weird Al" Yankovic - One of the all-time greats!

Yankovic still 'Weird' after all these years

By Todd Leopold, CNN
October 30, 2009 4:04 p.m. EDT
Click to play
'Weird Al' treatment an 'homage'
 
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Accordion-playing "Weird Al" Yankovic has been making music for more than 30 years
  • What's usually a novelty -- song parodies -- has become art, career for musician
  • New double-CD set celebrates career, including hits "Eat It," "Like a Surgeon"
(CNN) -- In the 1980s, it was easy to dismiss the accordion-toting "Weird Al" Yankovic as a one-joke wonder.
Sure, the joke was funny. Those song parodies, such as "Eat It" or "I Lost on Jeopardy"? Clever, as were the note-perfect videos for them that played constantly on MTV. (Occasionally, Yankovic would take over the channel, rechristening it "AlTV.")

Where is Papa Hemingway when we need him?

The Snows of Kilimanjaro: For How Much Longer?

Shrinking rapidly ... and likely to be lost

Photo of the ice fields atop Tanzania's Mount Kilimanjaro at sunset.
The ice fields atop Tanzania's Mount Kilimanjaro glow golden in the last of the afternoon sun.
Credit and Larger Version

November 2, 2009

The iconic snows of Kilimanjaro still exist--but for how long?
The remaining ice fields atop famed Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania could be gone within two decades and perhaps even sooner, based on the latest survey of the ice fields remaining on the mountain.

These predictions, published this week in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), are among the latest dramatic physical evidence of global climate change.

This is Cosmic!

VERITAS Discovers Very High Energy Gamma Rays from the Starburst Galaxy M82

Gamma-ray source identified for the first time, leading to better understanding of the early universe

Image of M82 released by the Hubble Heritage project.
Image of M82 released by the Hubble Heritage project.
Credit and Larger Version

November 2, 2009

The VERITAS (Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array System) collaboration, an international team of astronomers from the United States, Canada, United Kingdom and Ireland, has discovered very high energy (VHE) gamma rays emitted by the starburst galaxy M82 (the Cigar Galaxy). The observed gamma rays have energies more than a trillion times higher than the energy of visible light, and are the highest energy photons ever detected from a galaxy undergoing large amounts of star formation. The discovery was made from data taken over a two-year long observing campaign.

This is the first example of a very-high-energy gamma-ray source associated with a starburst galaxy, and its discovery provides fundamental insight into the origin of cosmic rays," said Rene Ong, a professor of physics at the University of California, Los Angeles, and the spokesperson for the VERITAS collaboration.

go chase red balloons -- for $40,000

DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, is putting your social networking and Internet skills to the test in this $40,000 contest celebrating the 40th anniversary of the internet.

Monday, November 2, 2009

232,000 military officers’ Social Security numbers are available to anyone with an Internet connection

Stars and Stripes reports that 232,000 military officers’ Social Security numbers are available to anyone with an Internet connection



In an October 2008 letter to the Defense Department and the Federal Trade Commission, Public.Resource.org detailed its discovery of roughly 232,000 military officers’ Social Security numbers in government and commercial databases, available to anyone with an Internet connection.

If you are free today, thank Shaun Wylie for what he did in WWII

Shaun Wylie obituary

One  of the code-breakers at Blechley Park who broke the code of the Nazi's Enigma Machine.

Study: File sharers spend more money on music

Study: File sharers spend more money on music

  Chris Matyszczyk over at C|Net News reports that the latest research shows that people who share files over the internet buy 75% more music than do other people.

The MPAA, who, for years, have been suing their customers (for uh... sharing music over the internet) must be livid!  As in, How dare those music pirates be honest money paying customers!  And what about those members of Congress who want to make file sharing a Capital offense?

High-Energy Batteries Coming to Market

High-Energy Batteries Coming to Market

Rechargeable zinc-air batteries can store three times the energy of a lithium-ion battery.

And they don't burst into flames either!

You think you're so smart - Here's why you might be

Brain Imaging and IQ
 
 This 10 minute (okay, it's really 9:30) video from MIT's Technology Review tells how brain imaging is helping us to understand how intelligence works within the brain.

Consumer Reports Weighs in on Net Neutrality


What a shock!  Consumers Union, Publisher of Consumer Reports, has weighed in (via it's www.hearusnow.org website) in favor of consumers.


They say that consumers should have unrestricted access to lawful Web sites and that online businesses should be able to compete freely.

They don't want ISP's to be able to slow down -- or block -- your access to websites you want to visit on the 'net.

Sunday, November 1, 2009

What you don't know about QR codes, why you should, and why you will

Welcome to QR codes in
Cultuurpark Westergasfabriek

 

Luchtfoto Westergasfabriek 1927
Seek the QR codes and discover the story behind the buildings and the park

How does it work?

A QR-code gives you information you can scan with the camera of your mobile phone.

Innovation in Open Networks - Creative Commons, the Next Layer of Openness

Joi Ito has written a fascinating article about Creative Commons for the online magazineWhat Matters.

TED Talks -- Bjarke Ingels: 3 warp-speed architecture tales


Theory meets pragmatism meets optimism


Danish architect Bjarke Ingels blew me away with these examples of his very creative architecture!

How running a business is like K-12 education

When I saw this item in The Economist, I was struck by the similarities between how effective "mass customization" can be in business and how effective  "massively individualized" K-12 education can be with elearning.

TED Talks -- Itay Talgam: Lead like the great conductors

This is one of the finest discussions of management I have ever heard.


Unfortunately, I doubt if enough managers will understand it.


I've had a couple of managers who managed this way.


I had one particularly extreme example of a manager who did not.

TED Talks -- Juan Enriquez wants to grow energy

If you want energy independence, watch this.


Bioenergy is oil, coal, gas and other hydrocarbons.  Stop thinking of them as chemical products.  They are biological products.  They are the result of biologically transforming Sunlight into usable forms of energy.

TED Talks -- Rachel Armstrong: Architecture that repairs itself?

Venice, Italy is sinking. To save it, Rachel Armstrong says we need to outgrow architecture made of inert materials and, well, make architecture that grows itself. She proposes a not-quite-alive material that does its own repairs and sequesters carbon, too.

Charter for Compassion

In February 2008, Karen Armstrong won the TED Prize and called for the creation of a Charter for Compassion to bring together people of different religions and moral codes in a powerful common cause. The Charter launches November 12, accompanied by thousands of self-organized events, services and sermons. 

To help prepare the way, today on TED.com we offer six talks from six perspectives. Be ready for a surprise. Compassion is not the soft, fuzzy notion you might expect. Indeed, it might just be the best idea humanity’s ever had.

Hallowe'en Partygoers beat armed robber in skeleton mask

It's Hallowe'en.  You're in your apartment.  A guy in a costume comes in.  You think it's a joke.  He draws a gun and points it at you.  You run out to the courtyard, where there's a party going on.  The perp chases you out to the courtyard.  He threatens the partygoers.  He attempts to rob them too.

Then things get really fuzzy for him!  Somebody grabs a baseball bat.  Somebody else grabs a 2x4.  The perp gets clobbered.  Then, as he makes a run for it, he drops 2 guns.  He escapes in a car.

The cops find him collapsed in a nearby parking lot.  They arrest him.  They send him to the hospital with life-threatening injuries.

If  he survives the clobbering, he will face multiple felony charges.