Archive for the 'Monday Links' Category

Page 3 of 9

Monday Links: September 29th, 2008

What follows are a number of links completely unrelated to banks, stocks, bailouts, the Federal Treasury, and the Tampa Bay Devil Rays (see: news items that trouble and confuse me).  Instead, how about a nice dose of random:

  • The Macarthur Foundation announced the recipients of its annual Genius Awards last week.  One of the newly minted geniuses is an artist named Tara Donovan who creates art I think is brilliant, mainly from everyday objects at an enormous scale (tens of thousands of pencils, toothpicks, etc).  Check out a slideshow of her work on the NYT site.  [Hat Tip: Kottke].
  • It’s impossible to talk about China without acknowledging the sensitive political and human rights situation.  But, being a complete geek for all things related to space exploration, I still found this video of the first Chinese spacewalk (on their third manned flight) to be worth celebrating [Hat Tip: Gizmodo]:

<a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=gMxQEHfU6hM">http://youtube.com/watch?v=gMxQEHfU6hM</a>

  • Sam (who also pleaded for a more upbeat Monday Links…maybe not this week) drew my attention to this story in the comments of my last post.  Today the American Prospect blog picked it up with the appropriate title “Shame.“:

On Friday, two men attacked a Mosque in Dayton, Ohio, with some kind of chemical irritant. The victims were the Muslims worshiping peacefully inside, and the perpetrators have yet to be apprehended. Luckily, no one was seriously hurt, but this kind of bigotry is simply unacceptable and is symptomatic of the stigma surrounding American Muslims that surrounds our post-9/11 elections — see the ridiculous accusations that Barack Obama is a Muslim, and the political imperative he has to deny the charge as loudly as he can while defending Muslims as quietly as possible.

If you drink 2 cups of coffee a day, you will need 18 coffee trees devoted just to you. And it takes 5 years before a tree is fully mature and productive.

[The index] used a standard personality test that rates people based on the “big five” personality traits — extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, neuroticism and openness. The results? Highly conscientious states were a really mixed bag, including New Mexico, North Carolina, Utah and Florida. Super neurotic states included not only the obvious culprits — New York and New Jersey — but also Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas (the latter three possibly, the scientists surmise, because of the extremes of poverty found there).

  • I mentioned Alltop a few months ago; the topics have since expanded from 20 to 215+, so now might be a good time to check out the new design.
  • At times like these, we all need a little more Dr. Seuss in our lives.  Mental Floss obliges with Stories Behind 10 Dr. Seuss Stories.  My favorite Dr. Seuss tale is the Butter Battle Book, but here’s the tale behind Green Eggs and Ham:

Bennett Cerf, Dr. Seuss’ editor, bet him thaat he couldn’t write a book using 50 words or less. The Cat in the Hat was pretty simple, after all, and it used 225 words. Not one to back down from a challenge, Mr. Geisel started writing and came up with Green Eggs and Ham – which uses exactly 50 words. The 50 words, by the way, are: a, am, and, anywhere, are, be, boat, box, car, could, dark, do, eat, eggs, fox, goat, good, green, ham, here, house, I, if, in, let, like, may, me, mouse, not, on, or, rain, Sam, say, see, so, thank, that, the, them, there, they, train, tree, try, will, with, would, you.

Stay tuned.

Monday Links: September 22nd, 2008

Wow, it’s been a hectic week three weeks.  Apologies for my unforseen blogging hiatus.  Before we get to links, a few things have happened while I’ve been away:

  1. The economy imploded.  If you’re looking for an informative break-down of the subprime crisis, I recommend this chart from Wikipedia (thanks for the link, Hank).  If you think the economic crisis has a lot to do with deregulation and failures of the “free” market, AND you’re looking for a chuckle as your money disappears, I recommend this diagram from Indexed’s Jessica Hagy.
  2. New Facebook made it’s debut became mandatory for users.  As anyone with a Facebook account could have predicted, many users are FURIOUS and making their displeasure known through things like status updates, Facebook groups, profile changes, and posts of friends’ walls.  I’ve fortunately been able to follow this hot air fest though the intuitive interface and all-inclusive feed on the new Facebook.  Whoops.  Seriously, people: get a grip.  Want to whine about Facebook?  How about you focus your energies on combating these obnoxious “I heard someone has a crush on you!  Download this virus to find out who!” spam wall posts.
  3. Hell froze over The Rays made the playoffs, and my BoSox aren’t far behind (though I don’t think we stand a chance against the Angels).
  4. A desperately needed extension of tax credits for alternative energy production sits in the Senate after passing the House.

On to links!  Lots of them today to make up for ignoring you:

  • This Sunday’s NY Times Magazine featured an article on start-up Unigo: an open platform for students to review their colleges and for prospective students to read those reviews.  My alma mater’s admissions director is quoted in the article saying, essentially, ‘that’s cute’:

“I’ve got to be honest with you,” Christopher Gruber, a vice president who oversees admissions at Davidson College, told me. “I’m not spending a ton of time navigating those student-driven sites. It’s too much to manage. My sense is that the traditional big players, like Princeton Review, are the major sources for online information too, in part because those are the names that parents still recognize. Those are the names that are going to have greater panache, and so those are probably the ones that will be turned to. The ones that we supply information to are the ones that we spend the most time on, filling out surveys for them to make sure that that information is accurate.”

In early September, after Unigo offered Davidson and the other 266 colleges a two-week preview of the site — “because we don’t want them to feel ambushed,” [Unigo founder] Goldman explained — Gruber confirmed that the letter from Goldman was sitting on his desk but said he hadn’t yet found the time to visit the site itself. If he does, he will see reviews, photos and videos by roughly 230 current Davidson students (one-eighth of its entire student body) already posted there.

I know and respect the folks in the admissions office at Davidson.  They do a great job with a small staff.  But this is foolish to the point that it’s downright irresponsible.  Just like social networks, there will certainly be a number of “student-driven” sites like Unigo that pop up.  Some will fail (Friendster), while others will explode in popularity and influence (Facebook, MySpace, etc).  To categorically write-off the value of peer-to-peer marketing online is to assume that Davidson can jump into the ‘Princeton Review 2.0′ world when it damn well pleases…when a victorious, influential site has emerged.  Unfortunately, the web doesn’t work that way.  Some of Davidson’s peer institutions will almost certainly beat us to the punch and effectively engage the non-”traditional big players,” putting Davidson in a place years (months?) from now where it scores well in traditional measures (Princeton Review, US News and World Report) while ignoring the very sites that most prospective students frequent. [Thanks for the tip, Jeff and Jane]

Microsoft has fallen into a trap that befalls many large companies in search of cred, buzz or respect. They’ve decided to buy some via advertising[...] [T]hey have Apple envy  [...]

When was  the last time you met an Apple employee who was truly passionate about the products she made or sold? My guess is this happened the last time you went to an Apple store. When was the last time you had a similar experience with a Microsoft employee?

If you talk to Google employees, odds are that they are totally engaged and on a mission to change the way people interact with the internet and with information. Talk to a Microsoft person and they will be happy to talk about reliability or standards they set or the way to engage the bureaucracy of the organization.

  • Speaking of Microsoft, EcoGeek reports that big man Bill Gates shares my geek love for algae as a biofuel stock:

Sapphire Energy, which hopes to create fuel for cars from algae, is undergoing series B financing, and Gates and several other large investment companies brought up Sapphire’s total invested capital to $100 M.

When [the proposal] came out on September 9, I think you might have looked at it and said “well, this sounds good, but perhaps it’s a bit too expensive.” But put in the perspective of a $700 billion bailout, the idea of spending $100 billion over two years to ensure that the ordinary people who are getting stuck with the bill for Wall Street’s screw-ups don’t all lose their jobs is small change.

  • Instead of making assumptions on imperfect information, I wish more voters would use this tool to figure out how their taxes would change under President Obama or McCain.  [Hat tip: Ezra Klein].
  • Blog friend Rachel Will [apparently] Blog for Food Haterade as she thrashes childhood icons Babar and Paddington Bear (not to mention my personal favorite Corduroy…you WOULDN’T!!).  This seems about as courageous as threatening Canada or bashing Scientologists.  I’m looking forward to future posts on why the following are lame/ugly/stupid: Alf (he’s pretty on the inside…), puppies, the single grey duckling waddling behind the rest, dandelions and/or clover, lemonade stands, bicycles, hot chocolate with little marshmallows, France, and Saturdays.
  • Last, but certainly not least, here’s LeBron James getting spanked in a game of HORSE with an amateur:

<a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=AKX6jd540ro">http://youtube.com/watch?v=AKX6jd540ro</a>

That’s all for now, but (once again) I promise to be a better blogger this week.

Monday Links: September 15th, 2008

It has fallen to me this week, dear readers, to feed you your weekly supply of links.  Boy, do I have a list for you.  So let it be written, so let it be done.

  • If you’re craving more regular linkage, let me point you to a great new source I’ve discovered.  The New York Times started the Ideas blog a while back, which serves up a handful of links each day to interesting sites, reports, and other resources.  Highly recommended, check it out.
  • Avast, me hearties!  This Friday the 19th of Septembarrrrr be Intarrrnational Talk Like a Pirate Day!  Cast off your land lubber ways and smartly muster yourself up a pint o’ grog with your maties to celarrrrbrate!  If you can’t summon up mad skills like these, the site above reminds us of the ubiquity of the well-placed Arrrrr!:

“Arrr!” can mean, variously, “yes,” “I agree,” “I’m happy,” “I’m enjoying this beer,” “My team is going to win it all,” “I saw that television show, it sucked!” and “That was a clever remark you or I just made.”

  • Lee LeFever at CommonCraft writes about his experience with Amazon Fresh, the experimental grocery delivery service that the commerce giant is beta testing in its Seattle home market.  You can elect to have your groceries delivered in the middle of the night or during the day, all in temperature-controlled, reusable containers.  As if that wasn’t enough, through a service called Amazon Now, you can even have items from Amazon.com’s vast commercial inventory included in your order.  Get your eggs and a digital camera in the same box, same day, no delivery fees if your order is over $25.  Madness.
  • Also via Common Craft: comedy.
  • Link dealer extraordinaire Jason Kottke points us to this MythBusters nugget showing how sulfur hexafluoride has the opposite effect on your voice that helium does.  It is hilarious, and probably giving a lot of people Halloween ideas.

<a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=d-XbjFn3aqE">http://youtube.com/watch?v=d-XbjFn3aqE</a>

  • During the company’s 10th anniversary celebration, high profile Googlers are presenting their views on the future of the Internet via the official blog.  They’re really intriguing and worth a read, especially Marissa Mayer’s take on the future of search.  You can find the rest here.
  • Anyone else as confused as Arrington, Taylor and I are about Microsoft’s strategy with its new ads?  OK, they make me chuckle and make Bill Gates seem a degree more human.  But it doesn’t talk about the products.  At all.  Rumor has it that later commercials will get into this, and the two released so far are supposed to warm us up to the company.  We’ll see if it works, I guess…
  • Fasten your seatbelts, social networking conservatives: Facebook’s getting ready to pull the big lever.
  • I’ve started drinking a bottle of Honest Tea every afternoon (I really like the Moroccan Mint Green variety), and this little tid-bit from Lifehacker makes me feel good about it.
  • Clive Thompson reports that scientists used Google Earth to determine that cows align themselves with magnetic north.  Will this have an impact on barn construction, and would such bovine feng shui improve the quality of their milk?  Stay tuned, cow lovers!

That is all.  Happy mid-September, and stay tuned for posts from both of us (shocker!) this week.

Monday Links: September 8th, 2008

Alrighty.  After a weeklong hiatus, I’m back with a fury and a bunch of links for your viewing pleasure:

[A modern grid] would be expensive to build — $60 billion they say. At the same time, that’s six months worth of Iraq spending [...] You hear a lot of talk about “green jobs” and it sometimes seems disingenuous [...] But the jobs associated with upgrading the electrical grid would obviously have to be done in the United States and the green element is extremely real.

  • Here’s an incredible story, via Mental Floss, of the first woman to ROW from California to Hawaii.  Think about that for a second [pause]…that’s right, quite a distance to row.  Have a gander at the boat she used, then take in the blog and podcasts she updated as she went.  Impressive all around.
  • Leave it to the Mythbusters to use an 1,100-barrel paintball gun to paint the Mona Lisa in less than a second [via Gizmodo]:

<a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=fKK933KK6Gg">http://youtube.com/watch?v=fKK933KK6Gg</a>

  • After slamming a recent crop of start up companies for their lame websites, tech blogger Robert Scoble praises “the ‘gold standard’ of recent start ups” in the online space.  Since I think our audience here ranges from the tech-obsessed early adopter set (your dashing authors) to the folks who we’ve introduced to the blogosphere via this site, I’m curious to see if you’ve heard of (or, better yet, use) any of the companies Scoble lists.  My list is after the jump…:

Continue reading ‘Monday Links: September 8th, 2008′

Monday Links: August 25th, 2008

  • Hey folks–sorry for the light blogging lately.  Deadlines at work and fun weekend trips combine for precious little bloggin’ time.  Thanks to everybody in NYC for a terrific visit this weekend…always good to see you all, and I enjoyed exploring a bit more of the big city.

A few links:

  • Consider this a Tropophilia bleg (blog+beg=you get the idea): if you’ve studied abroad, head over to our friend Henry’s site and rate your program: Rate Your Study Abroad.com.  They’re starting to build the database of programsfor the first time, and they would really appreciate a few minutes of your time.
  • Thanks to Jack for sending along what he called “the clearest and most scientifically sound explanation of electric cars I’ve ever seen.”  The whole thing is brief and worth reading, as it provides an answer to the question I’ve heard often:

If the electricity used to charge up an electric car is created by burning fossil fuels, is it better to stick with a gas-powered car with good fuel economy?

  • Apparently 80% of Facebook users have rejected the new site design in favor of the old layout…that is, while they still can: Facebook plans to make the new version mandatory in September.  Are you using the old layout or the new?
  • For all of you New York folks, here’s a great Google Maps mash-up site that plots out safe biking routes between any two points.  I’m incredibly jealous, and I would love an easy bike route-generator for my neighborhood.  Jarred, could you get on that please? [Hat Tip: TechCrunch]

Just two years ago, the modern age of YouTube/Web Video Politics began:

On 8.11.06, Sen. George Allen, a shoo-in for reelection and early favorite for the GOP 08 pres nomination, called Web Campaign video tracker S.R. Sidarth “Macaca”.

On 8.14.08, the Webb campaign, unable to get TV stations to take the video and run with the story, posted it on the new video service, YouTube, which as of then was not on anyone’s political radar.

The rest is history.

Here’s the moment that started it all:

<a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=9G7gq7GQ71c">http://youtube.com/watch?v=9G7gq7GQ71c</a>

More new stuff to come this week, but that’s all for now.