Category Archives: Interesting

Americans believe in religion — but know little about it

WaPo book review for Stephen Prothero’s “RELIGIOUS LITERACY – What Every American Needs to Know — and Doesn’t”:

The United States is the most religious nation in the developed world, if religiosity is measured by belief in all things supernatural — from God and the Virgin Birth to the humbler workings of angels and demons. Americans are also the most religiously ignorant people in the Western world. Fewer than half of us can identify Genesis as the first book of the Bible, and only one third know that Jesus delivered the Sermon on the Mount.

A 2005 survey by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life found that nearly two-thirds of Americans endorse the simultaneous teaching of creationism and evolution in public schools. How can citizens know what creationism means, or make an informed decision about whether it belongs in classrooms, if fewer than half can identify Genesis? No doubt the same proportion of Americans think that Thomas Edison said, “Let there be light.”

Approximately 75 percent of adults, according to polls cited by Prothero, mistakenly believe the Bible teaches that “God helps those who help themselves.” More than 10 percent think that Noah’s wife was Joan of Arc. Only half can name even one of the four Gospels, and — a finding that will surprise many — evangelical Christians are only slightly more knowledgeable than their non-evangelical counterparts.

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Massachusetts Ranked #1: Perhaps Entrepreneurs Can Stay East After All

Wow – very interesting. From OnStartups.com:

I’ve come across some new information that causes me to reconsider this point of view. Business Week posted an article recently titled “Ranking The States For The New Economy”, which cites a recent study by the Kauffman Foundation, a well-known private foundation that promotes entrepreneurship. The study provides detailed rankings on how states in the U.S. are adapting to the challenges of a global, entrepreneurial, and knowledge-based economy. The study was previously conducted in 1999 and 2002.

I’ll jump to my punch-line first: In both 1999 and 2002, Massachusetts topped the list. This year, not only did Massachusetts top the list, but increased its lead over the other states.

A few things from the article and the study that I found interesting:

1. MA ranked #1 overall, and also ranked #1 in “workforce education”, a weighted measure of educational attainment of the workforce.

2. MA also ranked #1 in the “Hi-Tech Jobs” indicator defined as the jobs in electronics manufacturing, software, computer-related services, telecommunications and biomedical industries as a share of total employment.

3. MA had the fourth-highest increase in per-capita income.

4. Another surprise: #2 and #3 were New Jersey and Maryland. In case you’re wondering, California came in at #5.

5. California ranked #1 in “Inventor Patents”, defined as the number of independent inventory patents per 1,000 people.

6. The bottom two states that “didn’t adapt well to the new economy” were West Virginia and Mississippi.

7. Vermont (yes, Vermont!) ranked #1 in entrepreneurial activity. I found this surprising. The study states that this may be due to fewer traditional employment opportunities in rural areas. MA came in at #43 and CA at #9.

8. MA ranked #1 for the “Venture Capital” indicator (which I found surprising too).

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An Open Letter to Microsoft: Re-Release Windows XP

Maybe it’s already too late…

Dear Mr. Gates, Mr. Ballmer, and the many good folks at Microsoft Corp.,

It’s time to sober up on Windows Vista. This just isn’t working out, and your users are getting frustrated to the point where they’re souring on Windows altogether. In case you haven’t seen some of the more noteworthy blog posts on this topic. Or check out the recent bug reports regarding product activation and security flaws. This is all stuff I managed to dredge up that was written yesterday.

People are unhappy with Vista. Really unhappy. And though I know Microsoft has its own form of Steve Jobs’ reality distortion field, it certainly can’t keep you from seeing at least some of the sobering sales figures and the crush of disappointing reviews of Vista. I don’t want to dredge up all the reasons people are unhappy with Vista in this letter. I want to talk about what you ought to do stop a mass migration to Linux and the Mac.

Continue reading…

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List of US "Generations"

c/o Boing Boing and Wikipedia:

Term Period
Puritan Generation 1588-1617
Puritan Awakening 1621–1649
Cavalier Generation
Glorious Generation
Enlightenment Generation
Awakening Generation
1618-1648
1648-1673
1674-1700
1701–1723
First Great Awakening 1727–1746
Liberty Generation
Republican Generation
Compromise Generation
1724–1741
1742–1766
1767–1791
Second Great Awakening 1790–1844
Transcendentalist Generation
Transcendental Generation
Gilded Generation
Progressive Generation
1789–1819
1792–1821
1822–1842
1843–1859
Third Great Awakening 1886–1908
Missionary Generation
Lost Generation
Interbellum Generation
G.I. Generation
Greatest Generation
1860–1882
1883–1900
1900–1910
1900–1924
1911–1924
Jazz Age 1918-1929
Beat Generation
Silent Generation
Baby Boomers
1914–1930
1925–1945
*1940s-1960s
Consciousness Revolution 1964–1984
Generation X
MTV Generation
Boomerang Generation
*1960s–1980s
1974–1985
1977–1986
Culture Wars 1980s–present
Generation Y
Internet Generation
New Silent Generation
*1970s–1990s
*1980s-1990s
*1990s or 2000s–?

Looks like I’m a Gen X‘er…

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32 Reasons Why Geeks are Severely Underpaid

From Tech Salary Negotiations – IT jobs

You’re good at what you do, maybe you’re an ace. So are you being paid what you’re worth? See how many of the 32 Salary Negotiation Rules you’re using.

Why are sales professionals still rewarded with the biggest pay packets? Are sales professionals better qualified or smarter than IT professionals? No, there’s no such thing as a sales degree. Do they work longer or harder? Of course not. So why then is IT not the best paid profession?

Two main reasons:

1. Sales brings home the bacon. So measuring their success is easy, and their impact on profit is immediate. Technology’s profit impact is neither immediate nor easy to measure. Geeks can’t do much about this – sorry.

2. Salespeople negotiate every day. So they either negotiate well, or they have skinny kids, and change career paths. Every year 1 in 3 leave the sales professional – a much higher churn than the IT industry. Geeks can’t afford not to play catchup here. The good news is that learning to negotiate well is not nearly as difficult as mastering a programming language.
We’ve watched salespeople out manoeuvre and out negotiate geeks in the opening hours of our training courses. In response we’ve put together this comprehensive IT salary negotiation article to help geeks close the gap.

Continue reading

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Light and Matter United

Fascinating article about physicist Lene Hau and her work, care of the Harvard Gazette web site:

Lene Hau has already shaken scientists’ beliefs about the nature of things. Albert Einstein and just about every other physicist insisted that light travels 186,000 miles a second in free space, and that it can’t be speeded-up or slowed down. But in 1998, Hau, for the first time in history, slowed light to 38 miles an hour, about the speed of rush-hour traffic.

Two years later, she brought light to a complete halt in a cloud of ultracold atoms. Next, she restarted the stalled light without changing any of its characteristics, and sent it on its way.

Now Mallinckrodt Professor of Physics and of Applied Physics, Hau has done it again. She and her team made a light pulse disappear from one cold cloud then retrieved it from another cloud nearby. In the process, light was converted into matter then back into light. For the first time in history, this gives science a way to control light with matter and vice versa.

It’s a thing that most scientists never thought was possible. Some colleagues had asked Hau, “Why try that experiment? It can’t be done.”

In the experiment, a light pulse was slowed to bicycle speed by beaming it into a cold cloud of atoms. The light made a “fingerprint” of itself in the atoms before the experimenters turned it off. Then Hau and her assistants guided that fingerprint into a second clump of cold atoms. And get this – the clumps were not touching and no light passed between them.

“The two atom clouds were separated and had never seen each other before,” Hau notes. They were eight-thousandths of an inch apart, a relatively huge distance on the scale of atoms.

The experimenters then nudged the second cloud of atoms with a laser beam, and the atomic imprint was revived as a light pulse. The revived light had all the characteristics present when it entered the first cloud of atomic matter, the same shape and wavelength. The restored light exited the cloud slowly then quickly sped up to its normal 186,000 miles a second.

Continue reading…

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Guitar Hero comes to the Wii!

I came very close to buying a Playstation II, just so I could play Guitar Hero. Looks like there’s no need, as it’s coming out for the Wii.

From The Tanooki:

That’s right, during Activision’s conference call on Wednesday, CEO Mike Griffith stated that Guitar Hero will be making it’s way to the Wii:

“The key difference in our strategy versus the prior cycle, is that in addition to full support on Sony and Microsoft platforms, we will aggressively target the Nintendo platforms consistent with our multi-platform strategy and Nintendo’s expected growth. In fiscal 2008, we will double our offerings on the DS and the Wii, including Spider-Man, Shrek, Transformers, and Guitar Hero.”

No other details were given during the 60+ minute conference call. Since the announcement was given by the President of Activision, I think the chances are high for an official press release in the future.

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Kevin Smith talks about Superman

Very entertaining video of Kevin Smith discussing his bizarre experience writing a script for “Superman Lives”.

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Bacteria Cause Sea to Smell Good

From LiveScience:

A trip to the beach means sand between your toes, salt water in your mouth and that aromatic sea air in your nose. But what gives the ocean air that delightful and distinctive smell? Scientists have not known the full story until now.

The smell comes from a gas produced by genes recently identified by researchers in ocean-dwelling bacteria.

Scientists had long known that bacteria could be found consuming decay products and producing a gas called dimethyl sulfide, or DMS, in places where plankton and marine plants such as seaweed were dying. This pungent gas is what gives ocean air “sort of a fishy, tangy smell,” said study author Andrew Johnston of the University of East Anglia.

But while “it was known that quite a lot of bacteria could [produce DMS], no one had thought to ask how,” Johnston told LiveScience.

So that’s exactly what he and his colleagues set out to do.

The team took samples of mud from the salt marshes along Britain’s coast, and isolated a new strain of bacteria. After sequencing its genes and comparing the genetic structure to other known bacteria, they were able to identify the gene involved in the mechanism that converts the plants’ decay products, called DMSP, into DMS.

The mechanism responsible “was absolutely not what anyone expected,” Johnston said. The study’s findings are detailed in the Feb. 2 issue of the journal Science.

Scientists had thought that a simple enzyme would be used to break down the DMSP into DMS, but the process turned out to be more complicated as the DMSP proved tougher to breakdown than suspected.

As with many other processes, the bacteria are cleverly conservative: the mechanism stays off until decaying plankton are around. But when a plankton bloom in the ocean is, for example, killed off by a viral attack, the bacteria rush in to reap the benefit.

“The bacteria will only switch on the genes to break down DMSP if the DMSP is around,” Johnston said.

Johnston and his team were also able to clone the gene and transfer it to bacteria that lacked it, including E. coli, giving the bacteria the ability to produce DMS gas.

This mechanism is neither the only way, nor the primary way, that bacteria break down the estimated 1 billion tons of DMSP in the ocean, Johnston said, but it is important nonetheless as DMS releases over the open ocean influences cloud formation, which can influence Earth’s climate.

Some seabirds rely on DMS as a homing scent to find food. On one occasion during their field research, Johnston and his team opened a bottle filled with the DMS-producing bacteria only to be bombarded by hungry seabirds..

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Suspicious packages part of Turner Broadcasting marketing campaign

Oh lordy, Turner’s marketing team is stoopid:

Turner Broadcasting acknowledged late this afternoon that the suspicious packages that ignited fears of bombs across Boston today were magnetic lights that were part of an outdoor marketing campaign for an adult cartoon.

Turner was promoting Adult Swim’s animated television show “Aqua Teen Hunger Force” in Boston and nine other cities, according to a statement e-mailed by Shirley Powell, a company spokeswoman.

“Parent company Turner Broadcasting is in contact with local and federal law enforcement on the exact locations of the billboards,” the state an e-mail statement said. “We regret that they were mistakenly thought to pose any danger.”

Additional mages are available here.

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