This Week I Learned #9 – 13 August 2013

Articles

  1. A currency is anything that two people agree is a currency, a short but thought-provoking read.
  2. Are animals also getting fatter? The evidence is unclear, but as Alex Tabarrok points out, “this is intriguing and important research”.
  3. In the US, employment in print journalism is down, but the number of help wanted ads for journos is up since 2010.
  4. This book is being hailed as “a work of such importance that it should be compulsory reading at every level of the military”. Here is an interview with its author (reg’n required).
  5. “Likes” and other upvotes create a herding effect.
  6. Social media and the French language.
  7. Travelling the Rhine on a freight barge; the piece ends abruptly, but is still worth a glance.
  8. Forecasting elections based on tweets.
  9. The Prime Minister of Norway turns incognito as a cabbie. Incidentally, the passengers were recruited specially for the exercise, and were paid.

Pictures

  1. Colourful octopi made from recycled newspaper!
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This Week I Learned #8 – 7 August 2013

Articles

  1. The global economy is now distinctly Victorian,” a very interesting read.
  2. UPS to trial 3D printing in several stores.
  3. The moon affects our sleep patterns, even when we can’t see it.
  4. An interesting profile of Machiavelli. Amazon is selling the Kindle version of Tim Parks‘ very good, clear translation for just $2!
  5. An interview with the late George Mitchell, shale gas pioneer.
  6. The problem with this smart toilet is that it can be hacked: “Attackers could cause the unit to unexpectedly open/close the lid, [or] activate bidet or air-dry functions, causing discomfort or distress to user.”
  7. This app tries to solve the problem with hailing taxis.
  8. Jeff Bezos has bought the Washington Post, and the whole internet is talking about it. Here are three interesting takes.
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This Week I Learned #7 – 4 August 2013

Articles

  1. The cultural syncretism behind a Texan girl’s fifteenth birthday party – this one is a really fascinating read. (Free reg’n may be required.)
  2. Traffic lights, lift doors, and buttons that don’t work.
  3. Why do comment threads erupt into flame wars?
  4. Experts take high performance as evidence of high ability and do not sufficiently discount it by the ease with which that performance was achieved.”
  5. The New York Times and its $150M paywall.
  6. HG Wells, wargame designer.

Photos

  1. 50 gorgeous landscapes.
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This Week I Learned #6 — 31 July 2013

Articles

  1. The history of canned food, a lengthy but fascinating read.
  2. Mary Beard examines the extent to which Caligula deserves his bad reputation.
  3. A number of Chinese microbloggers are not impressed by the world’s (purported) future tallest building.
  4. … and Vladimir Putin’s opponents are not impressed by his fishing.
  5. A profile of “data guru” Nate Silver (free reg’n required).
  6. A look at several space-focused startups.
  7. [Finance & Economics] Adam Posen and Matt Yglesias argue against the cult of home ownership.
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This Week I Learned #5 – 28 July 2013

Articles:

  1. The Archbishop of Canterbury wants to create credit unions that will out-compete payday lenders — but the really interesting part is what happened when Italian monks tried doing the same 500 years ago.
  2. British cathedrals today face mounting challenges recruiting lay-clerks, the men of the choir…”
  3. Baby Prince George, Mum and Dad, and Buckingham Palace… all made out of Lego.
  4. The rise of paid content on the Internet.
  5. Could Google Glass be useful to surgeons? And will it be practical?
  6. The sizzling summer of 1976 caused permanent changes to British forests, new research suggests.”
  7. [Finance & Economics]  “Detroit… is an extreme example of a developed world problem – a smaller workforce trying to service debts and pay benefits promised at a time when the economy was more prosperous.” That column is well worth reading – and pondering.

Video:

  1. All you wanted to know about eating, shearing, and… uh, breeding alpacas.
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This Week I Learned #4 – 24 July 2013

This week (and hopefully, in future weeks) I’ll be trying something a bit different – I think I can dig up enough links to do this twice a week. So enjoy those below, and stay tuned for a second roundup on the weekend! 🙂

 

Articles:

  1. Sunken WW1 U-boats a bonanza for historians.
  2. Caterpillars climb over each other in order to move faster. (h/t Christoph Nahr)
  3. The caterpillars still probably can’t beat the world’s fastest lawnmower, which has a top speed of 130mph. Unfortunately, it can only mow at 15. Watch the video ad – it’s quite funny.
  4. “… a number of scientists say that — of all things — boredom is one of the biggest threats to a manned Mars mission, despite the thrill inherent in visiting another planet.”
  5. Wealth taxes: a future battleground. For a different (Australian) take on it, check out this article.
  6. The Space Shuttles Atlantis and Enterprise, two years after the end of the program.
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This Week I Learned #3 – 21 July 2013

Articles:

  1. A lengthy and fascinating interview with the former head of the CIA and NSA.
  2. Nadia Popova, Hero of the Soviet Union, a woman who flew 852 combat missions during World War 2, died on 8 July. Here is her beautiful obituary (free reg’n may be required). For more on Senior Lieutenant Popova and her colleagues, I would refer you to this book, a compilation of interviews with the survivors decades after the war.
  3. A Chinese museum has been forced to close after claims that its 40,000-strong collection of supposedly ancient relics was almost entirely composed of fakes.
  4. A day in the life of a maternity nurse in Beijing.
  5. A trip through the jungle, to what – on paper – is slated to become the biggest port in Asia
  6. Superstar economics vs the long tail (free reg’n required).
  7. Are we safer now? (free reg’n required)
  8. Go freelance and work harder. But will you work better?
  9. George Orwell didn’t just write about politics and liberty; he also wrote about how to make a good cup of tea.

Video:

  1. Ecological exchange: why Australian gum trees have taken off in Kenya.
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This Week I Learned #2 – 14 July 2013

Articles:

  1. This is AWESOME: Seattle’s “Books on Bikes” program will see 11 librarians cycle around, each pulling a trailer of books.
  2. Air travel a la Somalia.
  3. Youtube’s “studio” in LA, and what it says about Google’s ambitions.
  4. Fascinating and a little scary: what metadata can reveal about you.
  5. Social networking a la Cicero.
  6. We now have high-resolution, 3D scans of the human brain. (Hat tip to Christoph Nahr)
  7. “Our peers’ income does indeed reduce our own life-satisfaction. But only among the over-45s. Among younger people, higher peers’ income is associated with greater happiness.”

Video:

  1. Algae, pharmaceutical supplements, and biofuel in Western Australia.
  2. Senior-citizen bloggers in Germany.
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This Week I Learned #1 – 7 July 2013

This is an inaugural roundup of interesting articles, videos, and links that I’ve seen over the last few weeks. Going forward, I’m going to try to do this every week. You can also follow me on Twitter to see these links as they come in. Enjoy!

  1. In the US, only 29% of undergraduates are “traditional students” (young, full time, studying four-year degrees).
  2. Given an incentive, mice can distinguish different styles of art (I believe free registration may be required).
  3. How fungi carry messages between plants (free registration may be required).
  4. “Is your iPhone turning you into a wimp?” Misleading headline, but fascinating research.
  5. A sad, effective piece on escapees from North Korea.
  6. A look at the lives of Mongolians as their country develops, and as economics push it closer to China.
  7. An introduction to Japan’s economic woes, and the steps its authorities are taking to extricate their country.
  8. One of those steps is a weaker yen, and while that helps Japan’s exporters, it hurts a bath house and a natto (fermented soybean) manufacturer.
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Book log: April/May 2013

To Conquer the Air: The Wright Brothers and the Great Race for Flight, by James Tobin. A narrative history of the early pioneers of heavier-than-air flight, particularly the Wright Brothers and Samuel Langley. Not as memorable as it could have been, but I still found it worthwhile, though perhaps not for the reason one might expect. Looking back after several months, my main recollection is the book’s insight into the creative/entrepreneurial process. Getting one’s own hands dirty matters! So do patience, determination, hard work, and the lesson that it is better to start on a shoestring budget and scale up (as the Wrights did) than to require extensive funding (as Langley, the director of the Smithsonian, did).

 

All Quiet on the Western Front, by Erich Maria Remarque; translated by Arthur Wesley Wheen. This is one of those titles that is deservedly a classic. Short (304 pages in print, per Amazon) and effective, it conveys (a) the horror of the First World War, (b) the way it shattered the hopes of a generation, and (c) the incomprehension and alienation that can divide those who’ve seen war, and those who have not. Even its lighter moments are tinged with sadness, as we know it won’t be long before its protagonists return to the trenches. A book that should, perhaps, be read by every voter – and every policymaker.

 

A Pioneer in Yokohama: A Dutchman’s Adventures in the New Treaty Port, by C. T. Assendelft de Coningh; translated by Martha Chaiklin. An extract from the memoirs of a man who lived in Japan first for three months in 1851, and then during one of the most pivotal and intriguing periods in that country’s history: the years from 1859 to 1861, after she forcibly opened her doors to the West. I cannot praise it highly enough: witty, evocative, and fluidly translated, it is a must-read for anyone interested in the subject. (And interestingly, many of the issues that confronted the author – such as fear of terrorism, the difficulty of finding somewhere to stay in a frontier boom town, and life amongst the adventurers who flock to frontier boom towns – sound very familiar in 2013!)

 

The Rise and Fall of the British Empire, by Lawrence James. Despite this book’s vast size (720 pages in print, per Amazon), it’s really an overview of its equally vast subject: the British Empire from 1600 to the present day, 1993.  But what a splendid overview it is, extending beyond the visible part of empire (lines on a map, marching armies) to the attitudes and institutions that underpinned it. Sharply written, and occasionally leavened with bone-dry wit, I found it both readable and fascinating. Another recommended read.

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