March 29, 2009

Discovered Today! 03/30/2009

  • tags: no_tag

    • Throughout my life, as I've walked down one street or another, either in my hometown or in the places I've traveled, I've looked into the windows of houses and imagined myself living there. I imagine the sun shining through these windows in a way that it doesn't in the house I now inhabit. I think about how, in these new places, I will become the self I have not yet managed to be. Thinking like this helps me stop thinking about the problems I face in my work and in my life. If only I could live in this brick house with the lovely side garden, in this clapboard house with the solarium, in this apartment overlooking Central Park, in this whitewashed cottage overlooking the Adriatic, then I could do what I haven't yet done: write a historical novel, knit a modular coat combining all the colors of the rainbow, bake a perfect artisan bread, listen to all Beethoven's late quartets, and finally, finally read all the writings of Proust. I never think about the people who currently live there, their joys and sorrows; I never think about what life is like for them or the challenges they face. I never recall I've felt pretty much the same wherever I've lived — the tiny apartment when I was in my twenties or the mock Tudor where I spent thirty-plus years.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

March 28, 2009

Discovered Today! 03/29/2009

  • Things You Never Knew had Names

    1. AGLET - The plain or ornamental covering on the end of a shoelace.
    2. ARMSAYE - The armhole in clothing.
    3. CHANKING - Spat-out food, such as rinds or pits.
    4. COLUMELLA NASI - The bottom part of the nose between the nostrils.
    5. DRAGÉES - Small beadlike pieces of candy, usually silver-coloured, used for decorating cookies, cakes and sundaes.
    6. FEAT - A dangling curl of hair.
    7. FERRULE - The metal band on a pencil that holds the eraser in place.
    8. HARP - The small metal hoop that supports a lampshade.
    9. HEMIDEMISEMIQUAVER - A 64th note. (A 32nd is a demisemiquaver, and a 16th note is a semiquaver.)
    10. JARNS,
    11. NITTLES,
    12. GRAWLIX,
    13. and QUIMP - Various squiggles used to denote cussing in comic books.
    14. KEEPER - The loop on a belt that keeps the end in place after it has passed through the buckle.
    15. KICK or PUNT - The indentation at the bottom of some wine bottles. It gives added strength to the bottle but lessens its holding capacity.
    16. LIRIPIPE - The long tail on a graduate's academic hood.
    17. MINIMUS - The little finger or toe.
    18. NEF - An ornamental stand in the shape of a ship.
    19. OBDORMITION - The numbness caused by pressure on a nerve; when a limb is 'asleep'.
    20. OCTOTHORPE - The symbol '#' on a telephone handset. Bell Labs' engineer Don Macpherson created the word in the 1960s by combining octo-, as in eight, with the name of one of his favourite athletes, 1912 Olympic decathlon champion Jim Thorpe.
    21. OPHRYON - The space between the eyebrows on a line with the top of the eye sockets.
    22. PEEN - The end of a hammer head opposite the striking face.
    23. PHOSPHENES - The lights you see when you close your eyes hard. Technically the luminous impressions are due to the excitation of the retina caused by pressure on the eyeball.
    24. PURLICUE - The space between the thumb and extended forefinger.
    25. RASCETA - Creases on the inside of the wrist.
    26. ROWEL - The revolving star on the back of a cowboy's spurs.
    27. SADDLE - The rounded part on the top of a mat

    tags: language


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March 26, 2009

Discovered Today! 03/27/2009

  • tags: wiki, resources

  • tags: survey, causes, development

  • tags: economics, chicago school, conservative

    • But Friedman was more than an academic. He was an advocate for, and popularizer of, a radical right-wing economic ideology.



      In today’s political and social reality, the University of Chicago’s establishment of a $200 million Milton Friedman Institute (in the building that has long housed the renowned Chicago Theological Seminary) will not be perceived as simply a sign of appreciation for a prominent former faculty member. Instead, by founding such an institution, the university signals that it is aligning itself with a reactionary political program supported by the wealthiest, greediest and most powerful people and institutions in this country. Friedman’s ideology caused enormous damage to the American middle class and to working families here and around the world. It is not an ideology that a great institution like the University of Chicago should be seeking to advance.


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

March 8, 2009

Discovered Today! 03/09/2009

  • tags: cheever

    • My life is very different from what he describes. There is almost no point where our emotions and affairs correspond. I am most deeply and continuously involved in the love of my wife and children. It is my passion to present to my children the opportunity of life. That this love, this passion, has not reformed my nature is well known. But there is some wonderful seriousness to the business of living, and one is not exempted by being a poet.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

March 3, 2009

Discovered Today! 03/04/2009

  • tags: cheever, authors

  • tags: video, authors, cheever, updike

  • Op-Ed Columnist
    The Ecstasy and the Agony
    Barry Blitt

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    Article Tools Sponsored By
    By FRANK RICH
    Published: February 28, 2009

    BARACK OBAMA must savor the moment while he can. It may never get better than this.
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    Transcript: President Obama’s Address to Congress (February 24, 2009)
    Transcript: The Republican Response by Gov. Bobby Jindal (February 24, 2009)
    Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times

    Frank Rich
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    As he stood before Congress on Tuesday night, the new president was armed with new job approval percentages in the 60s. After his speech, the numbers hit the stratosphere: CBS News found that support for his economic plans spiked from 63 percent to 80. Had more viewers hung on for the Republican response from Bobby Jindal, the unintentionally farcical governor of Louisiana, Obama might have aced a near-perfect score.

    His address was riveting because it delivered on the vision he had promised a battered populace during the campaign: Government must step in boldly when free markets run amok and when national crises fester unaddressed for decades. For all the echoes of F.D.R.’s first fireside chat, he also evoked his own memorably adult speech on race. Once again he walked us through a lucid step-by-step mini-lecture on “how we arrived” at an impasse that’s threatening America’s ability to move forward.

    Obama’s race speech may have saved his campaign. His first Congressional address won’t rescue the economy. But it brings him to a significant early crossroads in his presidency — one full of perils as well as great opportunities. To get the full political picture, look beyond Obama’s popularity in last week’s polls to the two groups of Americans who

    tags: op-ed, politics, republicans


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

March 1, 2009

Discovered Today! 03/02/2009

  • tags: no_tag

    • What makes an Oxford Dictionary?


      People find dictionary-making fascinating. The 250th anniversary last year of Samuel Johnson's Dictionary was widely celebrated, and the recent BBC television series Balderdash and Piffle had a huge response to its call to viewers to help track down elusive word and phrase origins. But how are dictionaries written today? And how do you know that what is included in a dictionary is accurate and up to date?



      Oxford English Corpus - language research based on real evidence


      Oxford Dictionaries are continually monitoring and researching how language is evolving. The Oxford English Corpus is central to the process and to Oxford's £35 million research programme - the largest language research programme in the world.



      What is a corpus?


      A corpus is a collection of texts of written (or spoken) language presented in electronic form. It provides the evidence of how language is used in real situations, from which lexicographers can write accurate and meaningful dictionary entries. The Oxford English Corpus is at the heart of dictionary-making in Oxford in the 21st century and ensures that we can track and record the very latest developments in language today. By analysing the corpus and using special software, we can see words in context and find out how new words and senses are emerging, as well as spotting other trends in usage, spelling, world English, and so on.

  • tags: aggregator, books

  • tags: literature, best, books, book, review

  • tags: journalism, philosophy, language, opinion, literature

  • tags: gtd, software, applications

  • tags: white papers, business, communication, management

  • Why Do CEOs (Still) Love Ayn Rand?
    by Kim Girard

    Tags: Ingersoll-Rand, Alan Greenspan, Objectivist, Kent, Entrepreneurship...
    How did a Russian-born novelist become such an influential “thought leader” for American CEOs, entrepreneurs, and MBAs — and even Alan Greenspan? Consider the message behind Ayn Rand best sellers The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged, which speaks to anyone with ambition and a big ego: The gifted should do what’s in their self-interest. If you have a sharp mind, it is your moral responsibility to make yourself happy. The weak are not your problem. “I am for an absolute laissez-faire, free, unregulated economy,” Rand told CBS interviewer Mike Wallace in 1959. “If you separate the government from economics, if you do not regulate production and trade, you will have peaceful cooperation, harmony, and justice among men.”

    tags: objectivism, authors, free markets

  • tags: 2666, literature, books, discussion guide

    • To call 2666 ambitious is to understate its scale. Comprising five almost autonomous books, the novel is a chronicle of the 20th century, unafraid to confront its more gruesome turns in its sweep across history. The binding link, insofar as there is one, is the Mexican border town of Santa Teresa, modeled on Ciudad Juárez, where for the better part of the 1990s there were hundreds of brutal murders, with the bodies of young women turning up in dumps and deserts at the city’s margin.
    • Bolaño was a heroin addict in his youth and died of chronic hepatitis, caused by Hepatitis C, with which he was infected as a result of sharing needles during his "mainlining" days. He had suffered from liver failure and was on a transplant list.
    • A key episode in Bolaño's life, mentioned in different forms in several of his works, occurred in 1973, when he left Mexico for Chile to "help build the revolution." After Augusto Pinochet's coup against Salvador Allende, Bolaño was arrested on suspicion of being a terrorist and spent eight days in custody
    • n the 1970s, Bolaño became a Trotskyist and a founding member of infrarrealismo, a minor poetic movement. Although deep down he always felt like a poet, in the vein of his beloved Nicanor Parra, his reputation ultimately rests on his novels, novellas and short story collections.
    • Make no mistake, 2666 is a work of huge importance ... a complex literary experience, in which the author seeks to set down his nightmares while he feels time running out. Bolano inspires passion, even when his material, his era, and his volume seem overwhelming. This could only be published in a single volume, and it can only be read as one.

      El Mundo

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

January 29, 2009

Discovered Today! 01/30/2009

  • tags: tv

  • tags: vi.sualize.us, images

  • tags: quotes

    • "[Childhood] is so unlike adulthood, when we become more intentional, dwelling on the particular, having cashed in the clear gold of contemplation for the paper money of dictionary definitions, gaining in life experience what we lose in the deep lustre of looking."
  • John Updike shaped the minutia of life into some kind of grand narrative. Arcing baseballs and neon signs for cooking fat weighed equally on his scale, along with the Tappan Zee Bridge, stars and evolution. When I first read his stories, he was a relief to overwhelming teenage existentialism. Updike knew how to explain being a boy, falling in love, staring at neon lights.

    Only upon reading that he had died did I realise why the coloured squares over the East River have made so much sense to me since I moved here several months ago.

    On a November Tuesday, the kind of blowy day that gives you earache, the sign was set in place by eighteen men, the youngest of whom would some day be an internationally known film actor. At three-thirty, an hour and a half before they were supposed to quit, they knocked off and dispersed, because the goddamn job was done. Thus the Spry sign (thus the river, the trees, thus babies and sleep) came to be.

    Above its winking, the small cities had disappeared. The black of the river was as wide as that of the sky. Reflections sunk in it existed dimly, minutely wrinkled, below the surface. The Spry sign occupied the night with no company beyond the also uncreated but illegible stars.


    ~ "Toward Evening", John Updike (1956)

    tags: updike, quotes

    • John Updike shaped the minutia of life into some kind of grand narrative. Arcing baseballs and neon signs for cooking fat weighed equally on his scale, along with the Tappan Zee Bridge, stars and evolution. When I first read his stories, he was a relief to overwhelming teenage existentialism. Updike knew how to explain being a boy, falling in love, staring at neon lights. 

      Only upon reading that he had died did I realise why the coloured squares over the East River have made so much sense to me since I moved here several months ago. 

      On a November Tuesday, the kind of blowy day that gives you earache, the sign was set in place by eighteen men, the youngest of whom would some day be an internationally known film actor. At three-thirty, an hour and a half before they were supposed to quit, they knocked off and dispersed, because the goddamn job was done. Thus the Spry sign (thus the river, the trees, thus babies and sleep) came to be. 

      Above its winking, the small cities had disappeared. The black of the river was as wide as that of the sky. Reflections sunk in it existed dimly, minutely wrinkled, below the surface. The Spry sign occupied the night with no company beyond the also uncreated but illegible stars.

      ~ "Toward Evening", John Updike (1956)
      • So much a writer in kinship with John Cheever - post by jillianm

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

January 27, 2009

Discovered Today! 01/28/2009

  • tags: no_tag

    • A good design is one that appropriately answers a requirement, or meets a stated need. Good design also concerns the anticipation of what people may want. Of course, values come into play here and wants may range from the apparently trivial to fundamental needs. Good design might also concern the skilful use of technology, such as materials or manufacturing techniques. It might also imply the exploitation of knowledge, for example information on human size or human perception so as to make a product easier to use.


      To be involved in designing, then, means to be involved with using skills (e.g. researching, making, testing), using knowledge (e.g. about things, people, principles), using abilities (e.g. time planning, management), and using sensitivities (e.g. to values, context, markets). It is notoriously difficult to take this further and attempt to define a formula for a process which will lead to successful design. Having said this, in Section 3 I shall present some models of the design process as others have seen it. I hope that you will view these critically and be able to see the strengths and weaknesses of each.

  • tags: no_tag

    • The term design can be, and indeed is, used to describe the creative output
  • tags: MIT, political science, courses

    • Introduction to Political Thought




      Spring 2004










      Thomas Hobbes. Leviathan. London: Andrew Crooke, 1651.





      Thomas Hobbes. Leviathan. London: Andrew Crooke, 1651. Holmes Collection. (Image courtesy of the U.S. Library of Congress.)











      Course Highlights







      This course features a full set of lecture notes and links to downloadable readings.











      Course Description







      This course examines major texts in the history of political thought and the questions they raise about the design of the political and social order. It considers the ways in which thinkers have responded to the particular political problems of their day, and the ways in which they contribute to a broader conversation about human goods and needs, justice, democracy, and the proper relationship of the individual to the state. One aim will be to understand the strengths and weaknesses of various regimes and philosophical approaches in order to gain a critical perspective on our own. Thinkers include Plato, Aristotle, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Marx, and Tocqueville.








  • tags: useable quotes

    • How is it possible to amputate a part of oneself? How can one learn to see again without the assisting gaze of the other, which had become so much a part of oneself that it was no longer noticeable?
    • How is it possible to amputate a part of oneself? How can one learn to see again without the assisting gaze of the other, which had become so much a part of oneself that it was no longer noticeable?

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

January 26, 2009

Discovered Today! 01/27/2009


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

January 25, 2009

Discovered Today! 01/26/2009


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

January 19, 2009

January 14, 2009

Discovered Today! 01/15/2009

  • tags: reference, humanities, research, books, literature

  • tags: readastimeallows, clients, freelance, advertising, imported

  • Could This Be Your All-in-One Social Network?
    Written by Marshall Kirkpatrick / January 13, 2009 1:01 PM / 20 Comments
    « Prior Post

    Pic CC by Flickr user BohPhotoLong time innovator Marc Canter has made a proposal for a system to let users integrate all their social networks from around the web into one central dashboard. He calls it the DiSO Dashboard.

    So far it's just a vision, albeit a pretty specific one, but we expect to see something like this on the market very soon. Is it what you want? Now is a good time to share your thoughts on the subject.

    tags: readwriteweb, social networks

  • tags: wiki, notebook, productivity, free, software

  • tags: music, radio, web2.0, webradio, audio

  • tags: websites, useful, cool, web, tools

  • A journey into the heart of the enemy
    Exiled Iraqi writer Najem Wali travelled to Israel to uncover some uncomfortable truths about the Arab leaders

    tags: israel, iraq, essay, politics, travel essay

  • Radovan Karadzic and his grandchildren\nKaradzic has been caught, but the war is not over yet for the heirs of Yugoslavia's war criminals.

    tags: war crimes, croatia, bosnia, serbian, karadzic, journalism

  • Life after bankruptcy
    The age of privatisation is over. Politics not the market is responsible for promoting the common good. Philosopher Jürgen Habermas talks to Thomas Assheuer about the necessity of an international world order.

    Die Zeit: Herr Habermas, the international financial system has collapsed and a global economic crisis is looming. What do you find most worrying about this?

    Jürgen Habermas: What worries me most is the scandalous social injustice that the most vulnerable social groups will have to bear the brunt of the socialised costs for the market failure. The mass of those who, in any case, are not among the winners of globalisation now have to pick up the tab for the impacts of a predictable dysfunction of the financial system on the real economy. Unlike the shareholders, they will not pay in money values but in the hard currency of their daily existence. Viewed in global terms, this avenging fate is also afflicting the economically weakest countries. That's the political scandal. Yet pointing the finger at scapegoats strikes me as hypocritical. The speculators, too, were acting consistently within the established legal framework according to the socially recognised logic of profit maximisation. Politics turns itself into a laughing stock when it resorts to moralising instead of relying upon the enforceable law of the democratic legislator. Politics, and not capitalism, is responsible for promoting the common good.

    tags: economics, finance, international finance, philosophy

  • It's time Kundera talked
    A dementi is not enough. Milan Kundera should come out with his version of the story, because Iva Militka and Miroslav Dvoracek deserve the truth.

    tags: authors, scandal, kundera, czech republic

    • The eighty-year old Miroslav Dvoracek will probably die without knowing who betrayed him to the Czech police back in 1950, condemning him to 14 years hard labour in a uranium mine. The 79-year old Iva Militka who, in the same year told her then boyfriend and later husband, Miroslav Dlask, about Dvoracek's visit to her student hall of residence, will probably never know whether it was her husband who subsequently went to the police with this information, or his friend Milan Kundera, or indeed both. She will only know that her school friend Miroslav Dvoracek spent the rest of his life believing that she had betrayed him. This is not just about Kundera, this is about Iva Militka and Miroslav Dvoracek.
    • The only person who might be able to explain what happened is Milan Kundera. And it's high time he did so. He rebuffed Adam Hradilek's article, describing it as "pure lies", a mere dementi. But he has not said a word about the events at the time or about Miroslav Dlask. And Havel, Dalos, Schneider, Reza and Rusdie et al. have not asked him to. They are not interested in who denounced Dvoracek. In their defence of Kundera, Dvoracek and Militka play at most a marginal role.

      Instead they are telling historians to treat the whole affair with kid gloves and to review it in the light of its time. But how we should assess Kundera's actions in 1950, whether he deserves criticism or whether his work needs re-reading, is secondary. First we have to know whether on 14 March 1950, Milan Kundera informed the police about Dvoracek's visit to Militka, or not.
  • tags: lrb, gaza, israel, war, politics, palestine

    • If Gaza falls . . .


      Sara Roy

      Israel’s siege of Gaza began on 5 November, the day after an Israeli attack inside the strip, no doubt designed finally to undermine the truce between Israel and Hamas established last June. Although both sides had violated the agreement before, this incursion was on a different scale. Hamas responded by firing rockets into Israel and the violence has not abated since then. Israel’s siege has two fundamental goals. One is to ensure that the Palestinians there are seen merely as a humanitarian problem, beggars who have no political identity and therefore can have no political claims. The second is to foist Gaza onto Egypt. That is why the Israelis tolerate the hundreds of tunnels between Gaza and Egypt around which an informal but increasingly regulated commercial sector has begun to form. The overwhelming majority of Gazans are impoverished and officially 49.1 per cent are unemployed. In fact the prospect of steady employment is rapidly disappearing for the majority of the population.

  • tags: doctors, pharmaceuticals, drugs, prescription drugs

    • Drug Companies & Doctors: A Story of Corruption


      By Marcia Angell






      Side Effects: A Prosecutor, a Whistleblower, and a Bestselling Antidepressant on Trial


      by Alison Bass


      Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 260 pp., $24.95



      Our Daily Meds: How the Pharmaceutical Companies Transformed Themselves into Slick Marketing Machines and Hooked the Nation on Prescription Drugs


      by Melody Petersen


      Sarah Crichton/Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 432 pp., $26.00



      Shyness: How Normal Behavior Became a Sickness


      by Christopher Lane


      Yale University Press, 263 pp., $27.50; $18.00 (paper)



      Recently Senator Charles Grassley, ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, has been looking into financial ties between the pharmaceutical industry and the academic physicians who largely determine the market value of prescription drugs. He hasn't had to look very hard.


      Take the case of Dr. Joseph L. Biederman, professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and chief of pediatric psychopharmacology at Harvard's Massachusetts General Hospital. Thanks largely to him, children as young as two years old are now being diagnosed with bipolar disorder and treated with a cocktail of powerful drugs, many of which were not approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for that purpose and none of which were approved for children below ten years of age.


      Legally, physicians may use drugs that have already been approved for a particular purpose for any other purpose they choose, but such use should be based on good published scientific evidence. That seems not to be the case here. Biederman's own studies of the drugs he advocates to treat childhood bipolar disorder were, as The New York Times summarized the opinions of its expert sources, "so small and loosely designed that they were largely inconclusive."[1]

  • Hushed Into Silence
    Rushdie's critics lost the battle - The Satanic Verses continues to be published. But they won the war. The argument at the heart of the anti-Rushdie case - that it is morally unacceptable to cause offence to other cultures - is now widely accepted. .........
    Kenan Malik
    | e-mail | one page format | feedback: send - read |

    The Satanic Verses was, Salman Rushdie said in an interview before publication, a novel about 'migration, metamorphosis, divided selves, love, death'. It was also a satire on Islam, 'a serious attempt', in his words, 'to write about religion and revelation from the point of view of a secular person'. For some that was unacceptable, turning the novel into 'an inferior piece of hate literature' as the British Muslim philosopher Shabbir Akhtar put it.

    Within a month The Satanic Verses had been banned in Rushdie's native India, after protests from Islamic radicals. By the end of the year, protestors had burnt a copy of the novel on the streets of Bolton, in northern England. And then on 14 February 1989 came the event that transformed the Rushdie affair - the Ayatollah Khomeini, issued his fatwa. 'I inform all zealous Muslims of the world', proclaimed Iran's spiritual leader, 'that the author of the book entitled The Satanic Verses - which has been compiled, printed and published in opposition to Islam, the Prophet and the Qur'an - and all those involved in its publication who were aware of its contents are sentenced to death.'

    Thanks to the fatwa, the Rushdie affair became the most important free speech controversy of modern times. It also became a watershed in our attitudes to freedom of expression. Rushdie's critics lost the battle - The Satanic Verses continues to be published. But they won the war. The argument at the heart of the anti-Rushdie case - that it is morally unacceptable to cause offence to other cultures - is now widely accepted.

    tags: rushdie, india, politics, literature

  • tags: no_tag

    • Side B believes that though nothing can ever excuse or justify terrorism, it exists in a particular time, place and political context, and to refuse to see that will only aggravate the problem and put more and more people in harm's way. Which is a crime in itself.
    • Why is India inviting the United States to meddle clumsily in our complicated affairs? A superpower never has allies, only agents.
  • ESSAY: TERROR IN MUMBAI
    9 Is Not 11
    (And November isn't September) .........
    Arundhati Roy

    tags: mumbai, arundhati roy, essay, india, politics, political theory

    • We've forfeited the rights to our own tragedies. As the carnage in Mumbai raged on, day after horrible day, our 24-hour news channels informed us that we were watching "India's 9/11". And like actors in a Bollywood rip-off of an old Hollywood film, we're expected to play our parts and say our lines, even though we know it's all been said and done before.
    • They were mowed down in a busy railway station and a public hospital. The terrorists did not distinguish between poor and rich. They killed both with equal cold-bloodedness. The Indian media, however, was transfixed by the rising tide of horror that breached the glittering barricades of India Shining
    • and spread its stench in the marbled lobbies and crystal ballrooms of two incredibly luxurious hotels and a small Jewish centre. We're told one of these hotels is an icon of the city of Mumbai. That's absolutely true. It's an icon of the easy, obscene injustice that ordinary Indians endure every day. On a day when the newspapers were full of moving obituaries by beautiful people about the hotel rooms they had stayed in, the gourmet restaurants they loved (ironically, one was called Kandahar), and the staff who served them, a small box on the top left-hand corner in the inner pages of a national newspaper (sponsored by a pizza company I think) said 'Hungry, kya?' (Hungry eh?). It then, with the best of intentions I'm sure, informed its readers that on the international hunger index, India ranked below Sudan and Somalia. But of course this isn't that war. That one's still being fought in the Dalit bastis of our villages, on the banks of the Narmada and the Koel Karo rivers; in the rubber estate in Chengara; in the villages of Nandigram, Singur, Lalgarh in West Bengal; in Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Orissa; and the slums and shantytowns of our gigantic cities. That war isn't on TV. Yet. So maybe, like everyone else, we should deal with the one that is.
    • There is a fierce, unforgiving fault line that runs through the contemporary discourse on terrorism. On one side (let's call it Side A) are those who see terrorism, especially 'Islamist' terrorism, as a hateful, insane scourge that spins on its own axis, in its own orbit and has nothing to do with the world around it, nothing to do with history, geography or economics. Therefore, Side A says, to try and place it in a political context, or even try to understand it, amounts to justifying it and is a crime in itself.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

January 13, 2009

Discovered Today! 01/14/2009


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

January 11, 2009

Discovered Today! 01/12/2009

  • tags: software, photoshop, tools, webdesign

  • Amazing way to view Flickr Photos

    tags: flickr, visualization, photos, flash, photography, tag

  • tags: flickr

  • tags: flickr

  • tags: flickr

  • tags: flickr

  • tags: flickr, tools, web2.0

  • Many Ways to Plug In to Tech Savings

    tags: technology, tips, money saving ideas

  • Nutritionist and author Jonny Bowden has created several lists of healthful foods people should be eating but aren't. But some of his favorites, like purslane, guava and goji berries, aren't always available at regular grocery stores. I asked Dr. Bowden, author of "The 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth," to update his list with some favorite foods that are easy to find but don't always find their way into our shopping carts. Here's his advice.\n\n 1. Beets: Think of beets as red spinach, Dr. Bowden said, because they are a rich source of folate as well as natural red pigments that may be cancer fighters.\n How to eat: Fresh, raw and grated to make a salad. Heating decreases the antioxidant power.\n 2. Cabbage: Loaded with nutrients like sulforaphane, a chemical said to boost cancer-fighting enzymes.\n How to eat: Asian-style slaw or as a crunchy topping on burgers and sandwiches.\n 3. Swiss chard: A leafy green vegetable packed with carotenoids that protect aging eyes.\n How to eat it: Chop and saute in olive oil.\n 4. Cinnamon: May help control blood sugar and cholesterol.\n How to eat it: Sprinkle on coffee or oatmeal.\n 5. Pomegranate juice: Appears to lower blood pressure and loaded with antioxidants.\n How to eat: Just drink it.\n 6. Dried plums: Okay, so they are really prunes, but they are packed with antioxidants.\n How to eat: Wrapped in prosciutto and baked.\n 7. Pumpkin seeds: The most nutritious part of the pumpkin and packed with magnesium; high levels of the mineral are associated with lower risk for early death.\n How to eat: Roasted as a snack, or sprinkled on salad.\n 8. Sardines: Dr. Bowden calls them "health food in a can." They are high in omega-3's, contain virtually no mercury and are loaded with calcium. They also contain iron, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium, zinc, copper and manganese as well as a full complement of B vitamins.\n How to eat: Choose sardines packed in olive or sardine oil. Eat plain, mixed with salad, on toast, or mashed

    tags: health, foods

    • The 11 Best Foods You Aren’t Eating
  • tags: calvinism, religious collection

    • Reducing God to a projection of our own wishes trivializes divine sovereignty and fails to explain how both good and evil have a place in the divine plan. “There are plenty of comfortable people who can say, ‘God’s on my side,’ ” Harris says. “But they couldn’t turn around and say, ‘God gave me cancer.
    • Calvinism is a theology predicated on paradox: God has predestined every human being’s actions, yet we are still to blame for our sins; we are totally depraved, yet held to the impossible standard of divine law. These teachings do not jibe with Enlightenment ideas about human capacity, yet they have appealed to a wide range of modern intellectuals, especially those who stressed the dangers of human hubris in the wake of World War I.
    • Moreover, the Bible tells him that to seek salvation by self-righteous clean living is to behave like a Pharisee.
  • tags: microsoft, labs, innovation, photos


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January 9, 2009

Discovered Today! 01/10/2009

  • when the plague receded in the face of far more effective HIV treatments in the mid-'90s and gay men and women were able to catch their breath and reflect, the question of what a more integrated gay culture might actually mean reemerged. For a while, it arrived in a vacuum. Most of the older male generation was dead or exhausted; and so it was only natural, perhaps, that the next generation of leaders tended to be lesbian--running the major gay political groups and magazines. Lesbians also pioneered a new baby boom, with more lesbian couples adopting or having children. HIV-positive gay men developed different strategies for living suddenly posthumous lives. Some retreated into quiet relationships; others quit jobs or changed their careers completely; others chose the escapism of what became known as "the circuit," a series of rave parties around the country and the world where fears could be lost on the drug-enhanced dance floor; others still became lost in a suicidal vortex of crystal meth, Internet hook-ups, and sex addiction. HIV-negative men, many of whom had lost husbands and friends, were not so different. In some ways, the toll was greater. They had survived disaster with their health intact. But, unlike their HIV-positive friends, the threat of contracting the disease still existed while they battled survivors' guilt. The plague was over but not over; and, as they saw men with HIV celebrate survival, some even felt shut out of a new sub-sub-culture, suspended between fear and triumph but unable to experience either fully.

    tags: culture, gay, 90s

    • when the plague receded in the face of far more effective HIV treatments in the mid-'90s and gay men and women were able to catch their breath and reflect, the question of what a more integrated gay culture might actually mean reemerged. For a while, it arrived in a vacuum. Most of the older male generation was dead or exhausted; and so it was only natural, perhaps, that the next generation of leaders tended to be lesbian--running the major gay political groups and magazines. Lesbians also pioneered a new baby boom, with more lesbian couples adopting or having children. HIV-positive gay men developed different strategies for living suddenly posthumous lives. Some retreated into quiet relationships; others quit jobs or changed their careers completely; others chose the escapism of what became known as "the circuit," a series of rave parties around the country and the world where fears could be lost on the drug-enhanced dance floor; others still became lost in a suicidal vortex of crystal meth, Internet hook-ups, and sex addiction. HIV-negative men, many of whom had lost husbands and friends, were not so different. In some ways, the toll was greater. They had survived disaster with their health intact. But, unlike their HIV-positive friends, the threat of contracting the disease still existed while they battled survivors' guilt. The plague was over but not over; and, as they saw men with HIV celebrate survival, some even felt shut out of a new sub-sub-culture, suspended between fear and triumph but unable to experience either fully.
  • tags: ebooks, ebook, download, books, book

  • tags: ebooks, ebook, download, e-books, knowledge


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

January 6, 2009

Discovered Today! 01/07/2009

  • tags: unitedwayforsyth, boardofdirector, nchrc

  • tags: lists, music, books, year-end

  • tags: gladwell, success

    • Andrew Carnegie, whose personal history was the defining self-made-man narrative of the nineteenth century, insisted that there was an advantage to being "cradled, nursed and reared in the stimulating school of poverty." According to Carnegie, "It is not from the sons of the millionaire or the noble that the world receives its teachers, its martyrs, its inventors, its statesmen, its poets, or even its men of affairs. It is from the cottage of the poor that all these spring."
    • Today, that interpretation has been reversed. Success is seen as a matter of capitalizing on socioeconomic advantage, not compensating for disadvantage. The mechanisms of social mobility—scholarships, affirmative action, housing vouchers, Head Start—all involve attempts to convert the poor from chronic outsiders to insiders, to rescue them from what is assumed to be a hopeless state. Nowadays, we don't learn from poverty, we escape from poverty, and a book like Ellis's history of Goldman Sachs is an almost perfect case study of how we have come to believe social mobility operates. Six hundred pages of Ellis's book are devoted to the modern-day Goldman, the firm that symbolized the golden era of Wall Street. From the boom years of the nineteen-eighties through the great banking bubble of the past decade, Goldman brought impeccably credentialled members of the cognitive and socioeconomic élite to Wall Street, where they conjured up fantastically complex deals and made enormous fortunes.
  • tags: gladwell, outliers, book

    • What is Outliers about?




      1. What is an outlier?


      "Outlier" is a scientific term to describe things or phenomena that lie outside normal experience. In the summer, in Paris, we expect most days to be somewhere between warm and very hot. But imagine if you had a day in the middle of August where the temperature fell below freezing. That day would be outlier. And while we have a very good understanding of why summer days in Paris are warm or hot, we know a good deal less about why a summer day in Paris might be freezing cold. In this book I'm interested in people who are outliers—in men and women who, for one reason or another, are so accomplished and so extraordinary and so outside of ordinary experience that they are as puzzling to the rest of us as a cold day in August.

  • tags: fiction, updike, short stories

  • tags: TED, gladwell, video, writer, knowledge, ted.com

    • Malcolm Gladwell searches for the counterintuitive in what we all take to be the mundane: cookies, sneakers, pasta sauce. A New Yorker staff writer since 1996, he visits obscure laboratories and infomercial set kitchens as often as the hangouts of freelance cool-hunters -- a sort of pop-R&D gumshoe -- and for that has become a star lecturer and bestselling author.
  • tags: design, color


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.