Victor, Parisian student, protesting the job contract that could have been in France: “It means that when I do get a job I will basically have to work as hard as I can to keep it.” Now that the French government has capitulated, I guess he won’t have to work hard any more. Lets get this in perspective, this was a law that suggested, after compromise, that you could be fired within your first year on your first job, providing there was a reason. – That’s all. This is not 19th century style worker exploitation, but stopping the contract will lead to it, because in a globalised economy the fact is that French jobs will now go somewhere where there is genuine exploitation. It was an attempt to help poor people get a start. And think how ridiculous this all sounds if you use being in a band as an…
Lubos Motl (a must read blogger) points out that climate change, is the new religion. First things first – climate change is very real and very worrying, if you look at the empirical data and spread of opinion amongst people studying it. It appears to be more truth than fiction – an idea bolstered by the amusing fact that the poster child (the inadmirable Crichton) of the ‘its fiction’ camp, is indeed noted for his science fiction. The problem is not that the truth is winning, its that its winning too easily and data is being amplified and distorted as it moves into the mainstream culture, and this does not help in the long term. What are the reasons for this? 1. Darwinism, is being distorted and muted by the negative feedback loop of people who want religious certainty and human primacy instead of evolutionary gradualism and primate-acy. Climate change…
This is Yum Brand's (owner of KFC's) satement on bird flu. Even if cooked chicken is safe, the coming chicken cull is going to make Zinger sandwiches cost more. Yum's share price has been pretty stable – time to short before bird migration.link » tags: [news] posted via Wists: permamark
The Food Timeline: food history reference & research service “Ever wonder what foods the Vikings ate when they set off to explore the new world? How Thomas Jefferson made his ice cream? What the pioneers cooked along the Oregon Trail? Who invented the potato chip…and why? Welcome to the Food Timeline.”
The Guardian reports on the case of a man who took 40,000 ecstasy tablets in 16 years, giving doctors a unique insight into the long term affects. Given that: 1. this man is still alive. 2. he was clearly an idiot to start with. 3. he’s a habitual user of several other narcotics. 4. taking that many aspirin would be very dangerous. Surprisingly, ecstasy would seem to be relatively safe. Guardian Unlimited | Special reports | The strange case of the man who took 40,000 ecstasy pills in nine years
A very good speech, on the things that matter. Perhaps the Democrats will get their sorry act together at last.
Watched Solaris again last night. So much better than the remake, Tarkovsky added something to SciFi that nobody has really done since – the contrast of the earth and nature to space. link » tags: [movies] posted via Wists: permamark
Its fairly odd that a design tweak like the New York Times’ website overhaul should be news, particularly since CNN did pretty much the same thing with less fuss a couple of weeks ago. And it took the times nearly a year! Nerertheless, something interesting is at work – first, sites are now ignoring smaller screens for the first time in years – 1024 pixels wide is becoming the standard. More importantly, by ignoring the low end they can also ignore large screens in a way that 800 pixel wide designs didn’t really cut it. They are bypassing the ridiculous ‘holy grail’ three column CSS layout that geeks with no graphic design sense use in favor of fixed column, paper-like designs used by web designers. Lastly, with RSS and Ajax, the notion of a page impression is gone – and yet that, rather than just impressions is what is often…
When architects steal terms like Post Modernism or Deconstruction from the, shrouded in bullshit, fringes of philosophy called ‘literary criticism’ and the like, what they really mean is: ‘new buildings with decoration’ or ‘buildings that look like they are falling apart’, respectively. That does not mean that the buildings aren’t beautiful – just that the justification is pointless and the understanding of other people’s field’s limited. Because of the nature of the scale and function of architecture, architects can pretend to be scientists when they are poor craftsmen and artists when they are bad engineers. Seed magazine has a new piece on innovations in architecture – its true that composite materials, intelligent skins and energy efficiency concerns have created a scientific edge in some styles, but the combination of the fact that you can pretty much build anything these days with the counter swing against minimalism means that by and…
Some great images of abandoned items, buildings and general industrial archaeology, tagged 'abandoned' on Wists.link » tags: [wists] posted via Wists: permamark
link » tags: [trivia] posted via Wists: permamark