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


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

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

    * comments (454)
    * Sign In to E-Mail
    * Print
    * ShareClose
    o Linkedin
    o Digg
    o Facebook
    o Mixx
    o My Space
    o Yahoo! Buzz
    o Permalink
    o

    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.
    Skip to next paragraph
    Go to Columnist Page »
    Related
    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
    Readers' Comments

    Readers shared their thoughts on this article.

    * Read All Comments (454) »

    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.