[This will be a new feature, if I can be bothered, a highly subjective news roundup with links to a few topical stories that have a different take on things or are quote worthy.] Beauty: Smart (apparently), good looking, eighty year old packs bags after losing all her money in gambling town: Miss America leaves Atlantic city “The 84-year-old Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, New Jersey, which attracts the smartest and most beautiful women in America” and the Beast: Not so smart, not so pretty, 30 something loses some of her money in conservative town: Anne Coulter gets canned by Arizona paper because conservatives don’t like her “Many readers find her shrill, bombastic, and mean-spirited. And those are the words used by readers who identified themselves as conservatives” From (below) the Earth: Hollister Freelance asks what goes on in mind of an oil man who doesn’t believe in geology:…
Ben Trott, is clever and reasonable – and his piece on ping servers is a welcome antidote to idiots like me banging on about ping servers. I also think that for the larger publishers/providers, making an easily accessible update stream, as Sixapart are doing, is the right way forward. But this doesn't work for the multitude of individual sites. Secondly, Ben says: "Google and other search engines seem to do pretty well in keeping their indexes current, even though they don't receive any pings. And they're indexing billions of web sites, while there are only tens of millions of weblogs." Google don't allow search by date, except for news. With news search, they don't spider and index in the same way they do for ordinary websites, they harvest thousands of sites, not millions and they have to scrape headlines. Why should news or weblog search be architecturally different from ordinary…
In 1996, Physics professor, Alan Sokal tried to see if “a leading journal of cultural studies would publish an article liberally salted with nonsense if (a) it sounded good and (b) it flattered the editors’ ideological preconceptions?” It did. Here is a challenge – I think it would be fairly easy for a life-science professor to write a deliberately nonsensical hoax article in defense of Intelligent Design and get it published in the Sunday Times (UK or US!) – then publish a dissection of it elsewhere, in the manner of Sokal. Every time I come back to the UK and pick up the Sunday Times (UK) it gets worse but this week’s Bryan Appleyard piece was an absolute classic. The setup is now common – place Intelligent Design as a balance to Darwinism and assume that by being somewhere in the middle you are being balanced and reasonable, then lecture…
Time magazine asks the question which is surely on some people's minds. Has Katrina got anything to do with global warming? The reality is probably not. But given that: 1. global warming is a reality; 2. that its early effects will not be sudden catastrophic failure of the environment but freak storms; 3. and that people clearly won't give a shit until its too late; – the responsible thing to do is to pretend that the Katrina storm has everything to do with global warming.link » tags: [global] [warming] posted via Wists: permamark
It is often taken as a given that the web is benign – that it allows the truth to emerge from an army of fact checkers. But what if, there was an inherent tendency for it to spread infectious and dangerous ideas. From conspiracy theory discussion groups to the spread of Islamic extremist ideas via the web, there is evidence that this may be the case. Remember the mysterious 'Piano Man' – found on a seashore, unable to speak, no identity, autistic genius who communicated only through his virtuoso piano skills? It was a story that reverberated around the blogosphere, in particular – could the power of the web unravel the mystery? Well, it seems that the truth is he could speak, was not autistic, could only play one note on the piano, and his identity has been revealed. The real explanation followed Occam's razor, being the most simple and…
There is definitely a tendency for certain people to despise wealth and consumption itself rather than its effects. There is no word for this that I know of, schadenfreude is close but not quite right- lets say armenfreude (poorhappy). The armenfreude are the people that like it when everyone can't drive fast cars and buy fancy goods, not really because it will damage the environment and squander resources, but because they possess that dour puritan streak that runs through Anglo-Saxon culture secretly wanting to pee on people's parades. This is the kick-off for Steven Levitt's attack on Peter Maas' piece on peak oil – that one should be skeptical of doomsayers – indeed. But then Levitt's single explanation of why peak oil is not a problem is that everything will be OK because markets are self correcting. I am no economist, but this looks like horseshit to me, it sounds…
Jeff Jarvis reports on the fact that Google are selling: 14,159,265 shares (the value of pi being 3.14159265…) There's a pun there somewhere – pi in the sky? After Om Malik's excellent piece on Google buying dark fiber, I wonder if their pie in the sky plan really is to fill it with ad supported free wireless. This would really make sense, pulling the rug from under Microsoft's feet by making the battle for the home page at a lower level than the desktop – Internet access itself.link » tags: [news] posted via Wists: permamark
The Olympics is obsessed with its identity and making money out of its brand. Except that its identity is entirely schizophrenic it can’t decide whether it is capitalist or socialist, and as such bears the hallmarks of party member vs citizens syndrome. Wannabe diplomat IOC members fly around the world drinking and eating indigenous food samplers and trampolining on 5 star hotel beds, to test them for Olympic springiness standards. Competitors sweat it out on the track and field and 2 star Olympic village barracks, to fight for a single gold coin to dangle round their neck. Words banned by the Olympics for brand infringement: Olympic motto: Citius, Altius, Fortius/Faster, Higher, Stronger, games, medals, gold, silver, bronze, 2012, sponsor, summer Words that could be posted by Bloggers to mess up search engine results: Shittius, Citius, Altius, Fortius, Faster, Higher, Stronger, more drugs, games, tired, old fashioned, medals, gold, embezzlement, silver,…
Genealogy is the second biggest hobby in the US after fishing, in terms of money spent. The size of this market and its rapid increase due to online Genealogy (like the startup I worked on before Moreover, Origins.net) has stimulated the use of mitochondrial and Y-chromosome tests to create family histories. What has long been suspected is now being shown – that a real number percentage of people's fathers are not who they think. This latest test (which is based on paternity claims data and therefore is high) suggests an incredible 4 percent. Even conservative estimates of illegitimacy rates suggest that if you trace your roots back over 100 years (not unusual for a genealogist), your family tree is probably inaccurate. link » tags: [news] [genealogy] posted via Wists: permamark
If Darwinian life was triggered by a huge influx of free energy, then perhaps the Darwinian system of the free flow of capital, through trade and subsequent free flow of ideas was also fueled by the ultimate flexible, portable energy source – oil. If one plotted the number of books written per year against energy consumption there would surely be a correlation. We are now at a stage where the flow of ideas across the ether as bits and bytes uses far less energy than physically moving things. Like the intangible, ideas based, industry of marketing that drives the sales of Nike sneakers in the US that are physically made in South East Asia, the buck for this non scarcity based economics currently stops in a traditional manufacturing economy based upon scarcity. I wonder if the change to 'services' based economies are enough to produce growth without oil, growth of…
Theories of life tend to involve a spark – a lightning flash that provides the trigger for self replicating molecules. This theory provides a bigger bang – that life originated near meteor craters. I have a hunch that what matters is not so much the chemical details of meteor impact sites, but the fact that these impacts create a disruption that creates a system of thermodynamic non-equilibrium. In other words they provide a sudden increase in free energy or negentropy that dissipates unevenly through the formation of systems that feed off negative entropy – life.link » tags: [entropy] posted via Wists: permamark
We've added a discussion group to RSSPing.comlink » tags: [rssping] posted via Wists: permamark