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The perfect place to work

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I have always liked libraries, since I spend a whole summer in the British Library reading a massive ten volume translation of the Arabian Nights while at university. Having tried an office in Tribeca and appointing the cats as CTO and VP of marketing, working out of my apartment I am now basking in the marble and oak glory at desk 610 in the main reading room of the New York Public Library. Each desk space has an elegant bronze lamp and a brass plate with ethernet and power, where you can hook up your laptop and enjoy speedy Internet access for free. Adjacent Bryant park, one of Manhattan's best public spaces, also has very good free WiFi and Parisian style folding chairs on gravel paths.link » tags: [new_york] posted via Wists: permamark

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From F**ked company to F**ked Industry. 7 entire sectors that the Internet will nuke

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Following on from the acquisition of Skype by Ebay, this weeks Economist leads with a prediction that everyone would have laughed at if it had been in Mondo 2000 ten years ago: 'the rise of Skype and other VOIP services means nothing less than the death of the traditional telephone business established over a century ago… the death of the trillion dollar voice telephony market… it is now no longer a question whether VOIP will wipe out traditional telephony, but a question of how quickly it will do so' What other sectors are toast: 2. Retail banking – retail banks are crap, expensive, lazy and complacent. Why do I have to mail pieces of paper that look like 19th century parchment 3000 miles to deposit virtual money via a building with travertine floors and 20 foot ceilings? 3. Photography – The number of art schools in Britain reflects the requirement…

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Joe Suhayda – The man who predicted exactly what happened in New Orleans, but people didn’t listen

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This is from Time magazine: 'If a flood of Biblical proportions were to lay waste to New Orleans, Joe Suhayda has a good idea how it would happen. A Category 5 hurricane would come barreling out of the Gulf of Mexico. It would cause Lake Pontchartrain, north of New Orleans, to overflow, pouring down millions of gallons of water on the city. Then things would really get ugly. Evacuation routes would be blocked. Buildings would collapse. Chemicals and hazardous waste would dissolve, turning the floodwaters into a lethal soup. In the end, what was left of the city might not be worth saving. "There's concern it would essentially destroy New Orleans," says Suhayda.' Mark Schleifstein and John McQuaid quote Suhayda again, in a Weather Undergroud piece: "A catastrophic hurricane represents 10 or 15 atomic bombs in terms of the energy it releases…Think about it. New York lost two big buildings….

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Cloudbusting the coming global economic perfect storm

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A potential perfect storm is brewing, just like all weather forecasting it's not 100% certain how big the storm is going to be, but despite what some conservatives say the risk is too great to avoid, and despite what some liberals say a storm buster may be available. Global warming, Global energy supply and Globalization – the free flow of energy, its availability and its effects – are changing on a global level, combining to produce a real threat to our everyday lives. Oil supply problems and the switch of industrial economies away from industry to services based economies are linked. Current oil prices are largely due to increased demand rather than supply problems. Service based economies are doing well because they are outsourcing production to cheaper industrializing economies like China but in doing so they have created a rival with a growing appetite for oil. One problem with the…

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Richard Dawkins and Jerry Coyne demolish Intelligent Design

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Dawkins and Coyne point out the serious side to silly creationism – that even as religion it is bogus, because it is immoral. They say that the seemingly reasonable demand that both sides of an argument should be taught “would be the end of science education in America” One side, Intelligent Design has no supporting evidence other than pointing to a few gaps in another theory, evolution, which has hundreds of thousands of mutually corroborating pieces of evidence. The logic of allowing ID to be taught would justify the teaching of Holocaust denial for which there is no supporting evidence other than normal gaps in another version of events, which has hundreds of thousands of mutually corroborating pieces of evidence.

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The myth of First Mover Advantage

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As the tech. world awaits Apple’s announcement of an iTunes cellphone, Apple’s strapline is: “1,000 songs in your pocket changed everything,” reads the invitation. “Here we go again.” In 1999 I bought a hard-drive MP3 player that fitted 1000 songs in my pocket. In 2000 I had a Samsung cellphone with built-in MP3 player. The problem was that both these products had badly designed hardware, poor useability and bug ridden firmware. Today I have an iPod and it suits me fine, because it is well designed. In fact it suits me better than the first generation iPod I had, which looked better, but was less ergonomic. The design has improved. Which brings me to a line that was oft touted by VC’s during the dotcom bubble – ‘First Mover Advantage’. From the Ebay auction site, to Google search engine to Microsoft OS to Apple MP3 players, none of them suffered…

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Christian Exodus

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Christian Exodus is a weird new bunch of religious extremists whose idea is to turn South Carolina into something that sounds like Wahabist Saudi Arabia. The leader of the cult has a blog “ChristianExodus.org is coordinating the move of thousands of Christians to South Carolina for the express purpose of re-establishing Godly, constitutional government… The time has come for Christians to withdraw our consent from the current federal government and re-introduce the Christian principles once so predominant in America to a sovereign State like South Carolina.” Christian Exodus :: Come Out of Her, My People

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News roundup: Beauty and the Beast; from the Earth to the Moon to Mars

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[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:…

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Ping hype

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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…

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Sokal style challenge to place a hoax article on Intelligent Design in a national newspaper.

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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…

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Is Global Warming Fueling Katrina?

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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

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The Piano Man and why the web could be a medium that will propagate lies better than the truth.

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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…

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