Monday, May 31

Education Stocks Off After Comments From Hedge-Fund Manager - WSJ.com

Education Stocks Off After Comments From Hedge-Fund Manager - WSJ.com: "Eisman, citing high dropout and student-loan default rates at the schools, said 'In a sense, these companies are marketing machines masquerading as universities...

'Until recently, I thought that there would never again be an opportunity to be involved with an industry as socially destructive and morally bankrupt as the subprime mortgage industry. I was wrong. The for-profit education industry has proven equal to the task,' Eisman told the Ira Sohn Research Conference in New York City."

I just finished reading Michael Lewis' The Big Short which prominently features Eisman, and this sounds just like him.

Friday, May 28

Gamers more likely to experience sweet, lucid dreams -- Engadget

Gamers more likely to experience sweet, lucid dreams -- Engadget

What About DMSO?

What About DMSO?: "I have a two-pronged attack that I use to accelerate the healing process of the elbow tendinitis. First, I start ingesting 200 milligrams of the mineral Manganese every 3 hours for 3 days (72 hours). I learned about this mineral megadose trick from the late Vince Gironda, the 'Iron Guru.' Second, I use a special solvent called DMSO. DMSO (dimethyl sulfoxide) was discovered around 1866 but didn't get much interest until around a hundred years later when, in 1966, a chemist at the University of Oregon Medical School discovered its potential value."

Heated Argument on Rig Hours Before Blast - WSJ.com

Heated Argument on Rig Hours Before Blast - WSJ.com: "Mr. Harrell hasn't testified and declined repeated requests for comment. Donald Vidrine, listed on Transocean's documents as BP's 'company man' on April 20, couldn't be reached. Mr. Revette was among the 11 workers who were killed.

Mr. Vidrine was supposed to testify Thursday but dropped out, citing an undisclosed medical issue, according to a Coast Guard spokeswoman. Another top BP official who was scheduled to testify Thursday, Robert Kaluza, declined to do so, asserting his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, the Coast Guard spokeswoman said."

Heated Argument on Rig Hours Before Blast - WSJ.com

Heated Argument on Rig Hours Before Blast - WSJ.com: "Douglas H. Brown, Transocean's chief mechanic on the Deepwater Horizon rig, said key representatives from both companies had a 'skirmish' during an 11 a.m. meeting on April 20. Less than 11 hours later, the well had a blowout, an uncontrolled release of oil and gas, killing 11 workers."

How The U.S. Government Killed The Safest Car Ever Built

How The U.S. Government Killed The Safest Car Ever Built: "Friedman noted that only 13% of Americans were using seat belts in 1980"

Thursday, May 27

45365 :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews

45365 :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews: "Sidney still looks like a town, not a squatter's camp of fast food outlets."

Sex and the City 2 :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews

Sex and the City 2 :: rogerebert.com :: Reviews: "Some of these people make my skin crawl. The characters of 'Sex and the City 2' are flyweight bubbleheads living in a world which rarely requires three sentences in a row."

Mario Capecchi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mario Capecchi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: "Mario Capecchi was born in the Italian city of Verona in 1937. His father was Luciano Capecchi,[2] an Italian airman who would be later reported as missing in action while manning an anti-aircraft gun in the Western Desert Campaign,[3] His mother was Lucy Ramberg, an American-born[4] daughter of Impressionist painter Lucy Dodd Ramberg and German archaeologist Walter Ramberg. During World War II, his mother was sent to the Dachau concentration camp[4][5] as punishment for pamphleteering and belonging to an anti-Fascist group.[6] Prior to her arrest[2] she had made contingency plans by selling her belongings and giving the proceeds to a peasant family near Bolzano[3] to provide housing for her son. However, after one year,[7] the money was exhausted and the family was unable to care for him. At four-and-a-half years old he was left to fend for himself on the streets of northern Italy for the next four years,[3] living in various orphanages and roving through towns with groups of other homeless children.[7]
He almost died of malnutrition. His mother, meanwhile, had been freed from Dachau and began a year-long search for him. She finally found him in a hospital bed in Reggio Emilia,[3] ill with a fever and subsisting on a daily bowl of chicory coffee and bread crust. She took him to Rome, where he had his first bath in six years.[7]"

Special Issue of Computers and Composition on the Future of the Web (7/1/10) | cfp.english.upenn.edu

Special Issue of Computers and Composition on the Future of the Web (7/1/10) | cfp.english.upenn.edu: "1. In what ways will enhancements in portability or mobility change how students receive information and compose with computer technologies and what, if anything, should composition teachers do to accommodate or recognize such changes in reading and writing?
2. In what ways will the increasing individualization and customization of the Web, such as virtual worlds and personalized avatars, impact the teaching and learning of writing?
3. In what ways will improvements in global access to the Web change the nature of composing with computers?"
Mark Frauenfelder's Made by Hand.


I've been interested in DIY culture for most of my life and love Make magazine as well as the O'Reilly "Hacks" series. Like the author, I think I inherited these tendencies from my father, while growing up in California. I have a brother whose own experience has closely paralleled that of the author.

Mark Frauenfelder's "Made by Hand" gives his readers permission to make mistakes while exploring the world of DIY (Do It Yourself, as opposed to HAP, or Hire a Pro) culture. A resident of Tarzana then Studio City, both suburbs of Los Angeles, he would seem like an unlikely choice for urban hillbilly. Frauenfelder's claims to fame include starting the popular blog "Boing Boing." and appearing in the first Errol Morris Apple commercial.

This is one of those recently popularized "experience" books, in which the author sets out to try something different, like living strictly according to the Old Testament or eating nothing but cheese for a year. Frauenfelder begins the book by describing a desire to escape urban malaise by moving to Raratonga, and quickly discovers the difference between being a tourist and a resident of a community. From that experience he discovered that his favorite part of the journey was "coconut day," when he would extract coconut meat with his daughters and cook it into scones or other goodies.

Upon his return to what passes for "civilization," Frauenfelder embarks on a 1.5 year program to emulate coconut day by slowing his life down through a series of DIY projects, including killing his front lawn, growing his own food, modding his high-end espresso machine, raising chickens, fermenting Kombucha, yogurt and sauerkraut, making musical instruments, raising bees and ultimately learning how to learn. Oh, and carving wooden spoons. I didn't think I could ever care about carving hardwood spoons, but by the end of the chapter I was ready to give it a shot.

The book is an extended invitation to become a physical hacker in the best sense (it saddens me that this term has been coopted by the press to mean "malicious computer intruder.") The preferred term is now "maker," which has more positive connotations but reminds me a little of Orson Scott Card's magical realism set in the nineteenth century. Accomplished tinkerers and hackers may not find anything new in here, as his descriptions of each adventure are more like extended blog entries that point to additional resources and provide profiles of some fascinating Makers, including William Gurstelle, author of "Backyard Ballistics" and other invitations to enjoyable danger, Forrest Mims, the author of the popular Radio Shack eletronics manuals, and the secretive Mr. Jalopy, car hacker extraordinaire. Each DIY luminary provides insights that slowly accrete, leaving us with a useful philosophy of Making stuff by the time we are done.

Frauenfelder ruminates on how consumer culture has infantilized us in order to sell us toilet paper and diapers. As an antidote, he provides examples of how to carve out time to engage in these projects (by abandoning television and working in small bursts, sometimes 20 minutes a day. I was disappointed to read that he had temporarily forsaken painting and drawing).

The best parts of the book for me were Frauenfelder's accounts of his own frequent mistakes. Often DIY texts are written by intimidating mechanical geniuses. Frauenfelder, on the other hand, messes up all the time while his wife, Carla, looks on disapprovingly. Sometimes the mistakes just don't matter, and sometimes they serve as a precursor to something serendipitously better, like a black widow-free yard (thanks to the chickens), amplified cigar box guitars or a PID-enhanced espresso machine.

The message of the book is that mistakes are part of learning, and that if you're not making mistakes then you've payed someone else to make them for you, and deprived yourself of something important in the process. Made by Hand is a good introduction to the DIY scene and will probably inspire you to try something yourself. If you are looking for detailed instructions for various projects, you're probably better off with back issues of Make magazine or contacting some of the fascinating people he profiles in this book, but if you're looking for inspiration, this is a good first stop on the road to Maker enlightenment.

An earlier reviewer complains that many of Mark's adventures are enabled by a healthy disposable income. Although at times I cringed at his willingness to buy solutions online (a $24.95 wood gouge, etc.) more often than not the author points out how he could have saved money by using an alternative, and provides plenty of examples of scrounging through wood piles and parts bins for cheap solutions. I also enjoyed the pop philosophy in the book, and didn't think that Mark was trying to elevate hobbies to the level of religion. It's unfortunate that, in our highly fragmented and specialized post-fordist world we even have to justify a foray into experimentation and eclecticism, but I found the theorizing enjoyable and useful, especially the sections on the origins of advertising, learning and unschooling.

This book is not so much about the specifics of each project as it is about giving you the permission and attitudes to be a Maker, especially if you're new to hacking your world.

Gartner's Interview with Thad Starner

Gartner's Interview with Thad Starner: "My interest in wearable computing was purely self-motivated. I was going to MIT as an undergraduate and spending – I guess back then it was only $20,000 a year, and now it's much more – quite a lot of money on my education … and I was discovering that I wasn't remembering any of it.

Either I could pay attention in class to what the lecturer was saying and get some intuition about what was going on, or I could spend all my effort on writing notes. But I could not do both. So if I spent time paying attention to the lecturer, I would remember it for about two hours and feel like I actually understood the material. But after two hours, I couldn't remember a thing. If I spent time writing it down, I got no intuition. I got the material down off the whiteboard, but it meant nothing to me. And my handwriting was so bad that I even lost that after two weeks. I couldn't read my own notes."

What tipped off the credit card company for fraud? | Ask MetaFilter

What tipped off the credit card company for fraud? | Ask MetaFilter: "So here's a TLDR answer to your question:
When you use that card you're being watched. Sometimes by a person, but most often by computers that analyze and store every purchase you make. Even if you don't know it you have a data trail, and that data trail has a signature to it. When something breaks that signature, and is surrounded by other suspicious details, it either get automatically handled by a computer, and will eventually be handled by a human. The testing charge was suspicious, but maybe by itself wouldn't have mattered. Followed by tools (easy to fence, so a pretty common flag charge) it's no question. Especially if it looked at your account and couldn't find strong previous history with either. So your account gets sent to a high priority queue, and some underpaid dude on the eastern seaboard looks at it, tags it as fraud, and calls you to confirm, maybe helping him make an extra 200 bones at the end of the month."

Romanticism And The Materiality Of Nature - Research and Read Books, Journals, Articles at Questia Online Library

Romanticism And The Materiality Of Nature - Research and Read Books, Journals, Articles at Questia Online Library: "In Romanticism and the Materiality of Nature, Onno Oerlemans embarks upon an ambitious project to re-situate Romantic poetry in the hard, physical reality of the material world. This study endeavors to place several of the Romantic poets, especially Wordsworth and Shelley, within the larger intellectual and material contexts of their period, attending not only to the social and cultural currents that shape poetic discourse, but also to the concrete physical substrate of poetic production: the very 'rocks, and stones, and trees' that form the literal and irreducible subject-matter of poetry (40)."

PickensPlan: China

PickensPlan: China: "Since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, China is aggressively seeking to secure oil resources for its growing economy. With their once lucrative oil contracts voided by the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, the Chinese have used lower oil prices during this global recession to embark on a resource grab of epic proportions. Maximizing the collective strength of China's banking institutions and the diplomatic resources of the Chinese government, China's state owned oil companies are positioning themselves to control a substantial amount of the oil produced in Africa, Asia and South America."

Wednesday, May 26

I just watched the last ten minutes again and now I want to watch it all the way through from the beginning. But that's 90 hours of my life, which, if I spent practicing a musical instrument or learning a language or flossing, would pay big benefits. But, to be honest, I'm not going to practice the guitar for 90 hours or I would have done it at some point over the last 25 years or so.
Wondering if I want to bite the bullet and learn to use the apple system imaging utility.

The Secret Cost of Using Facebook - Newsweek.com

The Secret Cost of Using Facebook - Newsweek.com: "Losing a few people won't hurt Facebook, which has more than 400 million registered members, most of them oblivious to the debate over privacy. In fact, I suspect Facebook will end up being to this decade what Microsoft was to the 1990s—an ever-more-powerful company with tentacles that reach into everything. I also suspect that whatever Facebook has done so far to invade our privacy, it's only the beginning. Which is why I'm considering deactivating my account. Facebook is a handy site, but I'm freaked by the idea that my information is in the hands of people I don't trust. That is too high a price to pay."

Sayonara, iPhone: Why I'm Switching to Android - Techtonic Shifts Blog - Newsweek.com

Sayonara, iPhone: Why I'm Switching to Android - Techtonic Shifts Blog - Newsweek.com: "Steve Jobs has created his own precious little walled garden. He's looking more and more like Howard Hughes, holed up in his penthouse, making sure he doesn't come in contact with any germs.

Now Google is saying, hey, nice garden, have fun sitting in it. By yourself.

As Google exec Vic Gundotra said when explaining why Google entered this market: 'If we did not act, we faced a draconian future where one man, one company, one carrier would be our future.'"

Sayonara, iPhone: Why I'm Switching to Android - Techtonic Shifts Blog - Newsweek.com

Sayonara, iPhone: Why I'm Switching to Android - Techtonic Shifts Blog - Newsweek.com: "The Android OS is already outselling iPhone OS in the United States. Now it's blowing past Apple in terms of the technology it's� delivering."

Tuesday, May 25

'Lost' finale recap, part one: And In The End... | TV Recap | EW.com

'Lost' finale recap, part one: And In The End... | TV Recap | EW.com: "It's funny that so many people cynically bitch about Lost not having ''a master plan'' — the Lost story is all about the folly of ''master plans.'' Anyone who has ever had a master plan on this show has failed catastrophically. Mother. Jacob. The Man In Black. Ben. Charles Widmore. Jack. Sawyer. The best we can do is live our lives with enlightened improvisation — to be so self-aware and fearless that we can live fully in the present and redeem our every moment and every human connection. Last night, Sawyer asked Jack if becoming island guardian made him feel any different. Jack thought about it and laughed and said, ''No. Not really.'' He was right. Jack was still every bit the fixer junkie he used to be before he took holy communion from Jacob. But as he moved into the final conflict of his life, Jack was able to apply the best parts of him to the crisis at hand, and minimize the influence of his worst parts. Which isn't to say he couldn't make mistakes — and didn't have more to learn. If there was something he had gained, it was this: grace for his own uniquely imperfect mess."

Biofunk - The Work of Kathleen Hayles | Scribd

Biofunk - The Work of Kathleen Hayles | Scribd: "She shows how the tradition of liberal humanism -- which creates subjectivity
based on the idea that you own your own body -- has gradually given way to a
model based on the human's role as information processor. She dubs this
emerging paradigm the 'computational universe.'
In the computational universe, the machine becomes the primary metaphor for
understanding the human. Hayles writes, 'The great cosmos itself is seen as a vast
computer and ... we are the programs it runs.' She points out that this hypothesis,
though often speculative and highly contested, even within scientific discourses,
has gathered enough cultural momentum to become a common vision of our
shared future."

Online Etymology Dictionary

Online Etymology Dictionary: "happy
mid-14c., 'lucky,' from hap 'chance, fortune;' sense of 'very glad' first recorded late 14c. Ousted O.E. eadig (from ead 'wealth, riches') and ges�lig, which has become silly. O.E. bli�e 'happy' survives as blithe. From Greek to Irish, a great majority of the European words for 'happy' at first meant 'lucky.' An exception is Welsh, where the word used first meant 'wise.' Used in World War II and after as a suffix (e.g. bomb-happy, flak-happy) expressing 'dazed or frazzled from stress.' Happy medium is from 1778. Happy as a clam (1630s) was originally happy as a clam in the mud at high tide, when it can't be dug up and eaten. Related: Happier; happiest."

Monday, May 24

Abraham Lincoln's Annual Message to Congress -- Concluding Remarks

Abraham Lincoln's Annual Message to Congress -- Concluding Remarks: "The dogmas of the quiet past, are inadequate to the stormy present. The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise -- with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew, and act anew. We must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country."

Gesture-Based Computing Uses $1 Lycra Gloves | Gadget Lab | Wired.com

Gesture-Based Computing Uses $1 Lycra Gloves | Gadget Lab | Wired.com

Cheap gesture-based computing.

Sunday, May 23

‘Lost’ Watch: Embracing the White Light - ArtsBeat Blog - NYTimes.com

‘Lost’ Watch: Embracing the White Light - ArtsBeat Blog - NYTimes.com: "Well, it was better than the “Life on Mars” finale.

But you have to think that the gauzy, vaguely religious, more than a little mawkish ending of ‘Lost’ – “Touched by a Desmond” — will not sit well with a lot of the show’s fans. Many of them will have thought that things were going pretty well for the first two and a quarter hours of the final episode, as the producers treated them to a series of montaged moments in the sideways reality world, in which the main characters regained their memories of the island. But then came the ending, in which most of the main cast members gathered at a church for the big reveal:"

Thursday, May 20

Men in black are the white knights of the night

Men in black are the white knights of the night: "The men tripped the 27-year-old student, kicking him as he lay on the ground and grabbing his mobile phone and iPod.

What the assailants did not realise was that they were standing outside Ninja Senshi Ryu - western Sydney's ninja warrior school.

They also failed to notice a ninja, Nathan Smith, standing in the shadows outside the dojo. Mr Smith immediately alerted his sensei, or teacher."

digital digs: exposure and facebook as public utility

digital digs: exposure and facebook as public utility: "Your gut reaction might be to tell me that Facebook is not a utility. You’re wrong. People’s language reflects that people are depending on Facebook just like they depended on the Internet a decade ago. Facebook may not be at the scale of the Internet (or the Internet at the scale of electricity), but that doesn’t mean that it’s not angling to be a utility or quickly becoming one."
WRIT 1122: "So close to a perfect record
March 2nd, 2010 | Author: richard.colby
Shelby Trueax from the 2pm section brutally usurped the noon section’s dominance by writing the best assignment #4 �with her paper “Recycle Bicycle.” �The noon section came back strong on assignment #5 with Mali Darr’s “Self-RULE,” returning honor to her section. �That’s 4 points for noon, 1 point for 2pm, 0 points for 4pm. �Is the 4pm section the dark horse to win for assignment #6, or will noon and 2pm reign supreme?

Posted in Blog | No Comments �"

Wednesday, May 19

Games for Change (G4C) -- home

Games for Change (G4C) -- home: "Games for Change (G4C) is a non-profit which seeks to harness the extraordinary power of video games to address the most pressing issues of our day, including poverty, education, human rights, global conflict and climate change. G4C acts as a voice for the transformative power of games, bringing together organizations and individuals from the nonprofit sector, government, journalism, academia, industry and the arts, to grow the sector and provide a platform for the exchange of ideas and resources. Through this work, Games for Change promotes new kinds of games that engage contemporary social issues in meaningful ways to foster a more just, equitable and tolerant society."

Tuesday, May 18

A volcano of oil erupting

A volcano of oil erupting: "What we are seeing now could be small compared to what may yet unfold if things break apart, as they can do under such circumstances.� If this thing blew, it could be like the Yellowstone Caldera, except from below a mile of sea, with a 1/4-mile opening, with up to 150,000 psi of oil and natural gas behind it.

That would be an extinction event."

Monday, May 17

Why We Are Obsessed With the iPad | Gadget Lab | Wired.com

Why We Are Obsessed With the iPad | Gadget Lab | Wired.com: "It’s a subtle difference and, rationally speaking, it is irrelevant to the content that appears beneath the glass face of the LCD. You get exactly the same words and pictures (but not, of course, any Flash video or animations.) But it’s a profoundly different feeling for the human on this side of the glass. It makes the content feel more immediate, more real and more “in the world.”

Over time, that’s going to make profound changes to THE way web designers create and deploy their sites, to the way we think about “online content,” and to the way we think about computers."

Report: iPad May Be Cannibalizing iPods, Not Macs | Gadget Lab | Wired.com

Report: iPad May Be Cannibalizing iPods, Not Macs | Gadget Lab | Wired.com: "Apple’s hot-selling iPad poses no threat to its Macintosh computers, but it’s already chomping into iPod sales, a research report suggests.

NPD Group on Monday afternoon released figures revealing a 17-percent year-to-year decrease for April iPod sales. Meanwhile, Mac computers are seeing healthy growth, increasing 39 percent compared to last April."
Reconstructing Technoliteracy: a multiple literacies approach - E-Learning and Digital Media Volume 2 Number 3 (2005): "Much has been written that describes the history of the concept of 'technological literacy' and, more recently, a literature attempting to chart emancipatory technoliteracies has emerged over the last decade. Our article begins with a brief examination of the meanings that 'technology' and 'literacy' have received towards achieving insight into what sort of knowledge and skills 'technoliteracy' hails. We then summarize the broad trajectories of development in hegemonic programs of contemporary technoliteracy from their arguable origins as 'computer literacy' in the A Nation at Risk report of 1983 up to the present call for integration of technology across the curriculum and the standards-based approach of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 and 2004's US National Educational Technology Plan. In contradistinction, we reveal how this approach has been tacitly challenged at the global institutional level through the United Nations' Project 2000 , and theorize how this might link up with a democratic project of re-visioning education though multiple literacies. Finally, in closing, we think about what it will mean to reconstruct 'technoliteracy' broadly in this manner and conclude with a call for new critical pedagogies that can inform and be informed by the counterhegemonic idea of 'multiple technoliteracies'."

Atty: Video Shows Police Fired Into Detroit Home - ABC News

Atty: Video Shows Police Fired Into Detroit Home - ABC News: "Geoffrey Fieger (FI-ger) said Monday that footage shot by the A&E crime-reality show 'The First 48' shows that police fired into the home at least once after lobbing a flash grenade through a window."

Girl who came to U.S. illegally can't get loans - San Bernardino County Sun

Girl who came to U.S. illegally can't get loans - San Bernardino County Sun: "'California has already dumped $100,000 in free education (on her),' said Robert Rector, a senior research fellow at the Washington, D.C.-based Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. 'If you want to be tough about it, you can ask for it to be repaid.'"

That's assuming, of course, that she won't make any future contributions to her community. The Heritage Foundation. I just want to hit them all in the face, if only in response to the sheer smugness of everything they ever say.

Emails, Computers Causing Literacy Problems For Workers

Emails, Computers Causing Literacy Problems For Workers: "The report found that the use of email or web-based communication had uncovered another layer of illiteracy, 'employees who have a reasonable level of literacy skill but are unable to complete some workplace tasks to the standard required.'

'This included tasks like using appropriate email language in communications between employees and external customers.

'Some employers reported that employees with high-level technical skills, such as engineers, were poor communicators within workplace settings.'

One-in-four businesses indicated they had concerns about the literacy and numeracy of apprentices and technicians that they were employing."

Werner Herzog, speaking at the British Film... | Old Hollywood

Werner Herzog, speaking at the British Film... | Old Hollywood: "[On the set of Fitzcarraldo], a lumberman was bitten by a snake while cutting a tree. This was the most dangerous snake of all. It only takes a few minutes before cardiac arrest occurs. He dropped the saw and thought about it for five seconds and then he grabbed his saw again and cut off his foot. It saved his life, because the camp and serum was 20 minutes away. When that happened, I knew Kinski would start raving with some trifling excuse, because now he was just a marginal figure."
Kevin Kelly wrote a really cool, rambling book called Out of Control. After a while the book was given a Creative Commons License, which allowed one of his fans to remix (re-edit) the book, emphasizing one of several threads in the original text. So cool.

Sunday, May 16

Study Hacks � Blog Archive � The Steve Martin Method: A Master Comedian's Advice for Becoming Famous

Study Hacks � Blog Archive � The Steve Martin Method: A Master Comedian's Advice for Becoming Famous: "It can be hard to ruthlessly whittle down your ambitions to a needle-thin point. But Martin is clear on this point: if you don’t saturate your life in a single quest, you’ll dilute your focus to a point where becoming outstanding becomes out of reach."

Well, These New Zuckerberg IMs Won't Help Facebook's Privacy Problems

A chat transcript that someone saved from Mark Zuckerberg and the early days of Facebook at Harvard.

Well, These New Zuckerberg IMs Won't Help Facebook's Privacy Problems: "Zuck: Yeah so if you ever need info about anyone at Harvard

Zuck: Just ask.

Zuck: I have over 4,000 emails, pictures, addresses, SNS

[Redacted Friend's Name]: What? How'd you manage that one?

Zuck: People just submitted it.

Zuck: I don't know why.

Zuck: They 'trust me'

Zuck: Dumb ***.
Brutal."

Saturday, May 15

Well, These New Zuckerberg IMs Won't Help Facebook's Privacy Problems

Well, These New Zuckerberg IMs Won't Help Facebook's Privacy Problems: "Zuck: Yeah so if you ever need info about anyone at Harvard

Zuck: Just ask.

Zuck: I have over 4,000 emails, pictures, addresses, SNS

[Redacted Friend's Name]: What? How'd you manage that one?

Zuck: People just submitted it.

Zuck: I don't know why.

Zuck: They 'trust me'

Zuck: Dumb ***.
Brutal."

Joshua 2

Joshua 2: "I know that the Lord hath given you the land, and that your terror is fallen upon us, and that all the inhabitants of the land faint because of you."

Wednesday, May 12

About New York - Creating a Network Like Facebook, Only Private - NYTimes.com

About New York - Creating a Network Like Facebook, Only Private - NYTimes.com: "A teacher and digital media researcher at N.Y.U., Finn Brunton, said that their project — which does not involve giant rounds of venture capital financing before anyone writes a line of code — reflected “a return of the classic geek means of production: pizza and ramen and guys sleeping under the desks because it is something that it is really exciting and challenging.”

And the demand for a social network that gives users control is strong, Mr. Brunton said. “Everyone I talk to about this says, ‘Oh my God, I’ve been waiting for someone to do something like that.’�”"

iAnnotate PDF for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad on the iTunes App Store

iAnnotate PDF for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad on the iTunes App Store: "I am a scientist, and I read and review dozens of journal articles each year - I love that I now am carrying my entire library of journals everywhere on the iPad in iAnnotate. iAnnotate is currently the only app that allows me to markup, comment, and highlight (along with copy/paste) PDF files, and it does those things quite well. The UI is a tad unintuitive, but there are hints that pop up the first time you use each tool. The mechanism for uploading files to the iPad is a bit cumbersome, but I expect that better syncing will be coming along shortly now that the iPad is on the street."

The Heart Scan Blog

The Heart Scan Blog: "2) Choose and prepare foods with lower AGE content. Food content of AGEs is a major determinant of blood AGE levels. Fats and meats are the primary dietary source of AGEs, particularly if cooked at high temperature (broiling, frying). While this does not mean that meats and fats need to be avoided, it can mean that limiting serving size of meats and fats, while being selective in how they are prepared, are important. This can mean cutting your meats in thinner slices or smaller pieces to permit faster cooking, eating rare when possible (not poultry, of course), avoiding cooking with sauces that contain sugar (which enhances AGE formation). Is this an argument in favor of sashimi?

Minimizing exposure to AGEs, endogenous or exogenous, has the potential to slow the aging process, or at least to lessen the likelihood of many of the phenomena of aging."

High on Fidelity � American Scientist

High on Fidelity -- American Scientist: "Almost a decade ago, Thomas Insel, Director of the Center for Behavioral Neuroscience at Emory University, and colleagues at the National Institute of Mental Health and the University of Maryland implicated vasopressin and oxytocin in controlling the preference for particular partners in both male and female prairie voles. These investigators found that giving a male vasopressin causes it to stay with its mate, whereas blocking this hormone prevents a pair-bond from forming. The scientists saw similar effects in female prairie voles, with oxytocin determining the extent of pair-bonding. In contrast, the administration of these substances had no influence on social interactions in the promiscuous montane voles. Surprisingly, vasopressin and oxytocin are naturally found at similar levels in both prairie and montane voles."

Tuesday, May 11

The iPad, the Kindle, and the future of books : The New Yorker

The iPad, the Kindle, and the future of books : The New Yorker: "David Rosenthal, the publisher of Simon & Schuster, says that his company is racing “to embed audio and video and other value-added features in e-books. It could be an author discussing his book, or a clip from a movie that touches on the book’s topic.” The other major publishers are working on similar projects, experimenting with music, video from news clips, and animation. Publishers hope that consumers will be willing to pay more for the added features. The iPad, Rosenthal says, “has opened up the possibility that we are no longer dealing with a static book. You have tremendous possibilities.”"

So glad that the book industry is just now discovering standalone multimedia, something Voyager was putting out twenty years ago.

Bowie Golden Years : Playboy September 1976

Bowie Golden Years : Playboy September 1976: "Bowie ate his words of farewell even more spectacularly. Last November, he arranged an interview by satellite from his Los Angeles home with England's most popular talk-show host Russel Harty to explain that he had a new album of double-fisted rock and roll, 'Station To Station.' What's more, Bowie rambled on, he would soon embarking on a six-month worldwide concert blitz. The government of Spain, meanwhile, demanded emergency use of the satellite to tell the world that Generalissimo Franco had died, Bowie, always the bad boy, refused to give it up."

English 2010 � Metaphor by Metaphor

English 2010 � Metaphor by Metaphor

Steve Gibson's 2010 blog

Video: Reality TV, the iPhone & the Future of Technology — Why It’s All a Game

Video: Reality TV, the iPhone & the Future of Technology — Why It’s All a Game

This is the better excerpt.

DICE 2010: "Design Outside the Box" Presentation Videos - G4tv.com

DICE 2010: "Design Outside the Box" Presentation Videos - G4tv.com

Jesse Schell.

Facebook's Gone Rogue; It's Time for an Open Alternative | MetaFilter

Facebook's Gone Rogue; It's Time for an Open Alternative | MetaFilter

How the Old, the Young and Everyone in Between Uses Social Networks - eMarketer

How the Old, the Young and Everyone in Between Uses Social Networks - eMarketer

The Benefits of Facebook "Friends:" Social Capital and College Students' Use of Online Social Network Sites

The Benefits of Facebook "Friends:" Social Capital and College Students' Use of Online Social Network Sites

How to Be a Radical Homemaker at Welcome to Bunch!

How to Be a Radical Homemaker at Welcome to Bunch!

Monday, May 10

The iPad, the Kindle, and the future of books : The New Yorker

The iPad, the Kindle, and the future of books : The New Yorker: "Traditionally, publishers have sold books to stores, with the wholesale price for hardcovers set at fifty per cent of the cover price. Authors are paid royalties at a rate of about fifteen per cent of the cover price. A simplified version of a publisher’s costs might run as follows. On a new, twenty-six-dollar hardcover, the publisher typically receives thirteen dollars. Authors are paid royalties at a rate of about fifteen per cent of the cover price; this accounts for $3.90. Perhaps $1.80 goes to the costs of paper, printing, and binding, a dollar to marketing, and $1.70 to distribution. The remaining $4.60 must pay for rent, editors, a sales force, and any write-offs of unearned author advances. Bookstores return about thirty-five per cent of the hardcovers they buy, and publishers write off the cost of producing those books. Profit margins are slim .*"

Sunday, May 9

The Life of Game: Why I Live In Japan - tim rogers - Kotaku

The Life of Game: Why I Live In Japan - tim rogers - Kotaku: "Maybe the far-future Nintendo Vitality Sensor will keep a running tally of exactly how many brain cells you have left. Maybe, at the end of the day, all of us die by sneezing.

Upstairs, later, Bob was taking a break from genius game development to look at his Facebook. He'd just added some people he used to know a long time ago. 'This is making me sad,' he said. 'Why?' 'Because I know I'm not going to see these people again for a long, long time.' Later, in the bathtub on this surprisingly frigid, gray, rainy Sunday morning in April, I thought about pretty much the exact opposite thing."

Friday, May 7

Motivation!
Nick Yee:

Abstract An empirical model of player motivations in online games provides the foundation to
understanding and assessing how players differ from one another and how motivations of play relate to age, gender, usage patterns and in-game behaviors. In the current study, a factor analytic approach was used to create an empirical model of player motivations. The analysis revealed 10 motivation subcomponents that grouped into 3 overarching components (Achievement, Social, and Immersion). Relationships between motivations and demographic variables (age, gender, and usage patterns) are also presented.
Richard A. Bartle: Players Who Suit MUDs: "Four approaches to playing MUDs are identified and described. These approaches may arise from the inter-relationship of two dimensions of playing style: action versus interaction, and world-oriented versus player-oriented. An account of the dynamics of player populations is given in terms of these dimensions, with particular attention to how to promote balance or equilibrium. This analysis also offers an explanation for the labelling of MUDs as being either 'social' or 'gamelike'."
Gamasutra - News - GDC: McGonigal: Game Developers Will Shape the Future of our World: "“I think game developers have some of the most reason to be optimistic out of anyone on the planet,” says McGonigal. She proses that about 1 in 2000 people have a chance of altering their own future.

“That’s based on the concept of having 3 million game designers, developers, hackers, and counting. I have determined that game platforms are the best thing we will have in terms of determining the future.”"

Apple upsets educators with Scratch Viewer app removal | Touch Reviews

Apple upsets educators with Scratch Viewer app removal | Touch Reviews

Steve Jobs is kind of the evil twin of Seymour Papert.

Scratch Forums / Apple hurt me right in the heart

Scratch Forums / Apple hurt me right in the heart: "Apple has just removed the Scratch player for the iPhone/iTouch! Why you ask? Because they hate us. When I asked andresmh(via Twitter), he replied 'Scratch kinda lets anyone create an iPhone app and it seems like they want to decide who can and who cannot do that'. Basically, Apple hates us."

Another reason to either not get an Ipad or jailbreak it.

AlterNet: How Glenn Beck Re-Invented Himself as a Crying Conservative

AlterNet: How Glenn Beck Re-Invented Himself as a Crying Conservative: "Secular liberals watch Beck’s cheap theatrics and see unmanly, dishonest, and possibly insane behavior. Mormons and like-minded evangelicals, especially Pentecostals, see familiar signposts associated with masculinity, sincerity, and even authority."

AlterNet: How Glenn Beck Re-Invented Himself as a Crying Conservative

AlterNet: How Glenn Beck Re-Invented Himself as a Crying Conservative: "“On talk radio in the 1980s and 1990s, ” writes Susan Douglas, a media historian at the University of Michigan, “masculinity was constructed as a fusion of traditionally ‘male’ and ‘female’ traits. Boys were supposed to be boys, meaning white, heterosexual boys, but they were also gender poachers, recuperating masculinity at the end of the century by infusing it with the need to chat, the need to confess insecurities, the need to be hysterical and overwrought about politics, the need to make the personal political.”"

AlterNet: How Glenn Beck Re-Invented Himself as a Crying Conservative

AlterNet: How Glenn Beck Re-Invented Himself as a Crying Conservative: "As Beck knows very well, being hammered relentlessly has its uses. When SNL finally did come after Beck, he was thrilled. Heavy attacks by liberals only publicize and reinforce Beck’s faux vulnerability among the only people who matter to his business: conservatives who hate liberals."

Thursday, May 6

New U.S. Push to Regulate Internet Access - WSJ.com

New U.S. Push to Regulate Internet Access - WSJ.com: "Breaking a deadlock within his agency, Mr. Genachowski is expected Thursday to outline his plan for regulating broadband lines. He wants to adopt 'net neutrality' rules that require Internet providers like Comcast Corp. and AT&T Inc. to treat all traffic equally, and not to slow or block access to websites."

If Mario Was Designed in 2010 – Zack Hiwiller

If Mario Was Designed in 2010 – Zack Hiwiller

News: Who Really Failed? - Inside Higher Ed

News: Who Really Failed? - Inside Higher Ed: "'The class in question is an entry-level biology class for non-science majors, and, at mid-term, more than 90 percent of the students in Dr. Homberger's class were failing or had dropped the class. The extreme nature of the grading raised a concern, and we felt it was important to take some action to ensure that our students receive a rigorous, but fair, education. Professor Homberger is not being penalized in any way; her salary has not been decreased nor has any aspect of her appointment been changed.'"

News: Who Really Failed? - Inside Higher Ed

News: Who Really Failed? - Inside Higher Ed: "The biology professor at Louisiana State University at Baton Rouge gives brief quizzes at the beginning of every class, to assure attendance and to make sure students are doing the reading. On her tests, she doesn't use a curve, as she believes that students must achieve mastery of the subject matter, not just achieve more mastery than the worst students in the course. For multiple choice questions, she gives 10 possible answers, not the expected 4, as she doesn't want students to get very far with guessing."

Tuesday, May 4

Undo Restart Restore � Blog Archive � Some useful Inform 7 extensions

Undo Restart Restore � Blog Archive � Some useful Inform 7 extensions: "Epistemology by Eric Eve

By far the most useful extension I’ve yet found. The first thing I do every time I start a new project is including this extension because it will almost certainly be used.
Epistemology adds two properties to every thing in the game: seen/unseen and familiar/unfamiliar. Every object starts as unseen and when the player encounters things (is in the same room or looks in the container where the object is) they automatically change to being seen. The familiar/unfamiliar property is what the author can toggle when needed if the player character already knows about something or learns about it during the game. The author can test whether a thing is either seen or familiar by checking if it’s known or unknown."

Home : Inform

Home : Inform

As of 4/18, a new build of I7 is out.

Monday, May 3

Bullies Target Obese Kids on Yahoo! Health

Bullies Target Obese Kids on Yahoo! Health: "New research suggests that just being overweight increases the risk of being bullied. And factors that usually play a role in the risk of being bullied, such as gender, race and family income levels, don't seem to matter if you're overweight -- being overweight or obese trumps all those other factors when it comes to aggressive behavior from other children."

tongodeon: Fructose

tongodeon: Fructose: "Children and Regulation
Kids are at greatest risk because so many kids' foods and drinks are loaded with sucrose and HFCS. It's not just that the more sugar you expose children to, the more they crave it later - the more sugar a pregnant woman consumes, the more gets across the placenta and causes developmental programming and adiposity (extra fat) before the baby is even born. Beer and soda are metabolically equivalent - 150 calories, 90 of which are metabolized by the liver. Giving your kid a can of coke is just like giving your kid a Budweiser - same dosing, same mechanism, same reason. 'Fructose is ethanol without the buzz.'

The FDA ought to control fructose, because fructose is a toxin. It has toxic effects in the liver, but not immediately - after 1000 meals, not just 1 meal. The FDA doesn't do this because of political and economic pressure - food is one of America's primary exports, corn especially, and we can't have the FDA saying that our food is toxic. The government is unlikely to do anything, so it's up to us to make ourselves aware of this."

tongodeon: Fructose

tongodeon: Fructose: "What To Do About It
If you want to stay healthy, get rid of all sugared liquids. Drink only water and milk. Eat carbohydrates with fiber, and wait 20 minutes before you eat a second portion, to get the satiety signal. 'Buy' your screen time with an equal amount of physical activity. If you go out and play for 30 minutes you can watch TV for 30 minutes. In his clinic, these measures work - BMI z-scores steadily decrease from baseline over 30 months. Multivariate linear regression analysis shows that the one thing that prevents this from working is sugared beverage consumption. The more sugared beverages his patients drink, the less well the lifestyle interventions work."

For High-Fructose Corn Syrup, Sweet Talk Gets Harder - NYTimes.com

For High-Fructose Corn Syrup, Sweet Talk Gets Harder - NYTimes.com: "Working with the ad agency DDB and a team at Ogilvy Public Relations, the Corn Refiners Association has plowed more than $30 million over the last two years into an ad campaign called “Sweet Surprise” that highlights what it says are vague and unsubstantiated opinions."

Back to the Hugos: Stand on Zanzibar by John Brunner | Sam Jordison | Books | guardian.co.uk

Back to the Hugos: Stand on Zanzibar by John Brunner | Sam Jordison | Books | guardian.co.uk: "Apparently when Brunner was young it was thought that if everybody in the world were to stand shoulder-to-shoulder they would take up an area the size of the Isle of Wight. Looking at population growth figures, Brunner postulated that by 2010 the same trick would necessitate an island the size of Zanzibar. Hence the title. He also suggests that the resultant over-crowding would necessitate severe eugenic controls – and all the social problems that you might expect when a large percentage of the population are forcibly prevented from breeding, everybody else is limited in the number of offspring they can produce and nobody can have a house of their own because there isn't enough room."

Little-Known Disorder Can Take a Toll on Learning - Well Blog - NYTimes.com

Little-Known Disorder Can Take a Toll on Learning - Well Blog - NYTimes.com: "The symptoms of A.P.D. — trouble paying attention and following directions, low academic performance, behavior problems and poor reading and vocabulary — are often mistaken for attention problems or even autism."

The Talents of a Middle-Aged Brain - Well Blog - NYTimes.com

The Talents of a Middle-Aged Brain - Well Blog - NYTimes.com: "So what kinds of things does a middle-aged brain do better than a younger brain?

A.
Inductive reasoning and problem solving — the logical use of your brain and actually getting to solutions. We get the gist of an argument better. We’re better at sizing up a situation and reaching a creative solution. They found social expertise peaks in middle age. That’s basically sorting out the world: are you a good guy or a bad guy? Harvard has studied how people make financial judgments. It peaks, and we get the best at it in middle age."

Op-Ed Contributor - Now Don’t Hear This - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Contributor - Now Don’t Hear This - NYTimes.com: "The scale of our noise problem isn’t in doubt. In recent years rigorous studies on the health consequences of noise have indicated that noise elevates heart rate, blood pressure, vasoconstriction and stress hormone levels, and increases risk for heart attacks. These reports prove that even when we’ve become mentally habituated to noise, the damage it does to our physiologies continues unchecked.

Studies done on sleeping subjects show that signs of stress surge in response to noise like air traffic even when people don’t wake. Moderate noise from white-noise machines, air-conditioners and background television, for example, can still undermine children’s language acquisition. Warnings about playing Walkmans and iPods too loudly have been around for years, but some experts now believe that even at reasonable volumes a direct sound-feed into the ears for hours on end may degrade our hearing."