Posts Tagged With: Links

links for 2010-11-01

  • "Uncertainty allows mothers to select for their children the father who would be best for them. The point is that paternity was ambiguous and it was effectively up to the mother to name her child’s father, or not… Many men have, of course, ended up raising children who were not genetically their own, but really, does it matter…in making paternity conditional on a test rather than the say-so of the mother, it has removed from women a powerful instrument of choice." - is she serious? the choice to sleep around with whoever you want and foist the child on your unwitting husband?
  • we show that punitive house demolitions (those targeting Palestinian suicide terrorists and terror operatives) cause an immediate, significant decrease in the number of suicide attacks. The effect dissipates over time and by geographic distance.  In contrast, we observe that precautionary house demolitions (demolitions justified by the location of the house but not related to the identity or any action of the house’s owner) cause a significant increase in the number of suicide terror attacks.  The results are consistent with the view that selective violence is an effective tool to combat terrorist groups, whereas indiscriminate violence backfires.
  • lots of common design patterns
  • facebook is unhappy medium between highly private, public conversations: Because Facebook has chosen to emphasize growth over monetization these past few years, they have de-prioritized close, meaningful connections over broadly relevant ones with a larger group of friends.  While this will help them get to a billion users faster, and increase their share of brand spend on advertising (where Facebook is really killing it these days), it may create vulnerability to another social network player who focuses on a more tightly-defined social graph with only a few, specific & meaningful Intimate relationships. Intimate relationships that might just monetize more powerfully with 3 close friends, than they do with 300 acquaintances. Better be careful, Zuck. maybe there's a reason Facebook should care more about Intimacy & Privacy that has absolutely nothing to do with government regulation, and everything to do with simply making more Meaning... not to mention more Money, as well.  
  • breathe out before taking a shot, immediately start chewing a savory hors d'oeuvre, then breathe out

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links for 2010-10-31

  • not many people have ever seen a trick for testing divisibility by 7. Here’s the trick. Remove the last digit from the number, double it, and subtract it from the first part of the number. Do this repeatedly until you get something you recognize as being divisible by 7 or not.
  • Any word you have to hunt for in a thesaurus is the wrong word. There are no exceptions to this rule. You think you might have misspelled a word? O.K., so here is your choice: either look it up in the dictionary, thereby making sure you have it right - and breaking your train of thought and the writer's trance in the bargain - or just spell it phonetically and correct it later.

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links for 2010-10-30

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links for 2010-10-29

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links for 2010-10-27

  • Stop checking shoes, taking out laptops etc
  • In the comments: "A last example: there are a couple dozen movies that accounted for a massive amount of error on the Netflix Prize (~15% of the remaining IIRC). Although it was termed the Napoleon Dynamite problem, the #1 movie for aggregate error in that data set was What Women Want. When the goal is the best customer experience, you could remove those items, stop recommending them to new users or just warn customers."
  • National Public Radio’s flagship news programs, Morning Edition and All Things Considered, featuring news and commentary alongside in-depth reports and stories that can stretch over twenty minutes—are the second- and third-most-popular radio programs in the country, each drawing about 13 million unique listeners in the course of the week. These NPR shows have far larger audiences than the news on cable television; indeed, all four television broadcast networks combined only draw twice as large an audience for their evening newscasts.
  • really cool, also lets you know how incapable your brain is of processing the size of things

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links for 2010-10-25

  • Many Japanese chefs, especially in the Kansai region, say they never courted this attention. Even a single Michelin star can be seen as a curse by the Japanese: Their restaurants are for their customers. Why cook for a room full of strangers? Even worse: crass foreigners.
  • The study concludes with the conjecture that people may find it particularly painful to be unhappy in a happy place, so that the decision to commit suicide is influenced by relative comparisons.
  • Providing enough power to every seat on an airplane would require heavy equipment.
  • The big lesson of Digg may be simply this: if someone offers you a ridiculous amount of money for a company that wasn’t that hard to build, don’t think twice. Take the money and run.
  • How to develop a software product using version control, helpful
  • to contact in the future
  • This isn’t Farmville vs Dancing with the Stars.  This is about the best alternative to boredom. If Google , Apple and their competitors can find simple games that are compelling to tens of millions of people and create a unique experience on your HDTV, they have a chance to start pulling people away from watching shows on TV.  You could actually see the number of hours spent watching TV decline materially.
  • Holy shit - GUI app lets you sit on open wireless networks, intercepts cookies, lets you instantly log in as the wireless user to Twitter, Facebook, Flickr Google accounts. Never ever ever ever open anything on an open wireless connection again, until they start using HTTPS and SSL for every connection
  • excellent observation - "My plans rarely work (unless they are boringly simple), but serendipity has been good to me, so over time I've tried to make the most of that. My theory of serendipity is still evolving, but from what I've seen, it's better to think in terms of "allowing" serendipity rather than "seeking" it or "creating" it. Opportunity is all around us, but we have beliefs and habits that block it."
  • But psychologists who study status and power in social settings — and a growing number are — have found that human beings, in surprising ways, actually seem to thrive on a sense of social hierarchy, and rely on it. In certain settings, having a clear hierarchy makes us more comfortable, more productive, and happier, even when our own place in it is an inferior one. In one intriguing finding, NBA basketball teams on which large salary differentials separate the stars from the utility players actually play better and more selflessly than their more egalitarian rivals. “Status is such an important regulating force on people’s behavior, hierarchy solves so many problems of conflict and coordination in groups,” says Adam Galinsky, a psychologist at Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management who did the research on social hierarchies on basketball teams. “In order to perform effectively, you often need to have some pattern of deference.”
  • Become a hermit, celebrate your individuality, associate with some higher truth
  • good introduction to fonts - covers helvetica, times new roman, gill sans, psychology behind different fonts, difference between serif & sans serif

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links for 2010-10-22

  • covers baumeister's 6 steps to suicide. informative, disturbing
  • " we compare infants born to mothers living near toll plazas to infants born to mothers living near busy roadways but away from toll plazas with the idea that mothers living away from toll plazas did not experience significant reductions in local traffic congestion. We also examine differences in the health of infants born to the same mother, but who differ in terms of whether or not they were “exposed” to E-ZPass. We find that reductions in traffic congestion generated by E-ZPass reduced the incidence of prematurity and low birth weight among mothers within 2km of a toll plaza by 6.7-9.1% and 8.5-11.3% respectively, with larger effects for African-Americans, smokers, and those very close to toll plazas."

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links for 2010-10-21

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links for 2010-10-20

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links for 2010-10-19

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