January 2012
41 posts
6 tags
Jan 21st
68 notes
8 tags
Jan 21st
20 notes
3 tags
Jan 20th
1 note
5 tags
Jan 17th
11 notes
3 tags
Most depressing day of the year: Third Monday of... →
“Not sure if this research passes the peer-review process. British psychologist Cliff Arnall claims that, according to a complicated equation he devised in 2005, the third Monday in January is the most depressing day of the year. He calls it Blue Monday. We’re so blue, Arnall says, because of the weather, the Christmas holidays being over, and already-failed New Year’s resolutions, among...
Jan 17th
5 notes
4 tags
Jan 15th
7 notes
5 tags
Jan 14th
1,165 notes
6 tags
Jan 14th
2 notes
6 tags
Prayer in public schools an essential right –... →
“Apparently it’s ultra-super important for Christian kids to be able to pray at school but not so much for Muslim kids.”  Read more… (source: PoliticsUSA)
Jan 14th
5 notes
3 tags
Top 10 creepiest rooms in the new Scientology... →
“The Village Voice has obtained artist renderings of a new Scientology Super Power Building being built in Clearwater, Florida. Here are pictures of 10 of the weirdest rooms/machines there.”  Read more… (source: The Village Voice, via BuzzFeed)
Jan 14th
4 tags
Mathematician claims breakthrough in Sudoku puzzle →
A sudoku puzzle needs at least 17 clues to be solvable. “An Irish mathematician has used a complex algorithm and millions of hours of supercomputing time to solve an important open problem in the mathematics of Sudoku, the game popularized in Japan that involves filling in a 9X9 grid of squares with the numbers 1–9 according to certain rules. Gary McGuire of University College Dublin shows...
Jan 14th
34 notes
2 tags
Being left-handed puts your health (and paycheck)... →
“Surprisingly, some studies have suggested that only 10% of the world’s population is left-handed, and an even smaller percentage, 1%, is ambidextrous. But, all you creative left-handed rarities beware, seems that being a south paw isn’t good for you.”  Read more… (source: LimeLight)
Jan 14th
5 notes
6 tags
The Pope has chosen Android →
“God Almighty himself, through his appointed papal mouthpiece, has picked a winner. For this year’s celebration of Christ’s birth, Pope Benedict will remotely light a giant Christmas tree display attached to the side of a mountain, from 130 miles away…. But! Scandal! He’s doing it with the Lord’s fave new gadget, [a Sony Android tablet]!” ...
Jan 14th
4 notes
3 tags
Jan 14th
26 notes
8 tags
Jan 14th
11 notes
2 tags
Jan 14th
11 notes
3 tags
Having a narcissist for the holidays? →
“Your resident narcissist — that excessively self-centered, self-important admiration hog — is ready to fill your holiday stocking with complication, drama and disappointment. Yes, just like last year. My definition of a narcissist is someone who possesses excessive amounts of self-centeredness and an inflated sense of importance. When a narcissist is a part of an event, other guests may...
Jan 14th
3 notes
5 tags
On the destructive nature of narcissist CEOs →
From a recent study in Administrative Science Quarterly: “Highly narcissistic CEOs are much less responsive to recent objective measures of their performance than less narcissistic CEOs. They found the narcissists would continue to make lots of acquisitions at high premiums, even when their company hadn’t been doing well…” “Most interesting though, they found that...
Jan 14th
28 notes
4 tags
The possibility of alien life is now (almost)... →
“An international team of astronomers have reached the most definitive conclusion, one with profound implications: our galaxy contains a minimum of 100 billion planets. Of those, most are small planets like ours. Statistically, every star would have at least one planet. This means that the chances of life and habitable planets in our galaxy alone is overwhelmingly high. So high that...
Jan 14th
14 notes
6 tags
Microsoft files patent on monitoring employee work... →
“Question: would you work at a job that uses software to automatically track your work habits based on e-mails, phone calls and even video conferences? Someone at Microsoft thinks that’s a good enough idea to deserve a patent. The Microsoft patent filing — discovered by GeekWire— covers a computer system capable of not only monitoring the behavior of employees, but also assigning...
Jan 14th
15 notes
3 tags
Jan 14th
12 notes
5 tags
Do nice guys finish last? →
“Overall, across the first three studies, men who are one standard deviation below the mean on agreeableness earn an average of 18.31 percent ($9,772) more than men one standard deviation above the mean on agreeableness. Meanwhile, the “disagreeableness premium” for women was only 5.47 percent ($1,828). Thus, the income premium for disagreeableness is more than three times stronger for men...
Jan 14th
150 notes
5 tags
What was the first math problem that we needed a... →
“In the 1970s, a remarkable thing was done; a computer was used to solve a math problem. This, in and of itself, was not remarkable. The difference engine could do it. But this problem was the first one that would probably remain unsolved if it weren’t for computers. Find out about the Four-Color Theorem, and why it needed to be turned over to the machines.”  Read more… ...
Jan 14th
23 notes
3 tags
Jan 13th
16 notes
4 tags
Jan 11th
4 notes
6 tags
Jan 11th
5 notes
5 tags
The Atlantic profiles Super Deli Mart: ‘Postmodern... →
“Readers across America (and likely beyond) who check out The Atlantic‘s website today have the opportunity to read about West Seattle’s Super Deli Mart. The article by Christopher Solomon is headlined “A Postmodern Elks Club Serving Some of the World’s Best Beer” but talks about the 35th/Barton store as a community gathering place as well as a beverage retailer.”  Read more… ...
Jan 11th
5 tags
Jan 11th
52 notes
3 tags
Is today's society too self-centered?  →
“According to [Jean] Twenge, narcissistic personality disorder originated with the assumption that ‘if you have a high self-image, then you are more likely to help people and less likely to hurt people. But this is not true. In actuality, people who are narcissistic tend to be more aggressive and less likely to help others.’ In her research, she found narcissism to be more...
Jan 11th
1 note
5 tags
Jan 11th
7 notes
7 tags
Does fast food cause brain damage? →
“Burgers and fries might not only be bad for your heart and waistline — they could also hamstring your brain’s ability to help you shed pounds. A high-fat diet can actually re-program the structure of the brain, new research conducted on rodents suggests.”  Read more… (source: The Week)
Jan 11th
13 notes
10 tags
Boycott SOPA: There'a an [Android] app for that! →
“Armchair activists now have a tool that can transport their SOPA protestations into the real world: Boycott SOPA, an Android app that scans barcodes and tells you whether an object’s manufacturer/publisher is a supporter of the much maligned Stop Online Piracy Act.”  Read more… (source: ExtremeTech)
Jan 11th
7 notes
3 tags
Life's extremes: Atheists vs. believers →
“A minority of that population takes its religion very seriously. These individuals’ behaviors and attitudes are largely influenced by what is perceived to conform to their faiths’ dogmas. On the opposite end, another, smaller percentage of the population thinks that religion is absolute hooey.”  Read more… (sourec: Live Science)
Jan 11th
5 notes
5 tags
“We are the 25%” – Chrome overtakes Firefox as the... →
“They must be celebrating at the Plex now. Statcounter released their report for last month and for the first time Chrome overtook Fireofox to become the second popular browser world wide.”  Read more… (source: StatCounter, via Chrome Story)
Jan 11th
13 notes
7 tags
New algorithm can predict red-light runners →
“Researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology have found a way to figure out when you’re likely to blow through that red light you’re fast approaching in your car.  By analyzing a vehicle’s speed, deceleration, and proximity to the stoplight, the new algorithm can predict which cars will violate the most basic of traffic laws: red means stop.” ...
Jan 11th
17 notes
4 tags
The psychology of nakedness →
“Do people’s mental capacities fundamentally change when they remove a sweater? This seems absurd: How could removing a piece of clothing change one’s capacity for acting or feeling? In six studies, however, we show that taking off a sweater—or otherwise revealing flesh—can significantly change the way a mind is perceived. In this article, we suggest that the kind of mind ascribed to...
Jan 11th
20 notes
12 tags
Rep. Lamar Smith: Idiot of the day!
Rep. Lamar Smith, the chief sponsor of the ‘Stop Online Piracy Act’ (SOPA), has dismissed the opposition to SOPA as illegitimate and of minor importance. WTF? Have you been paying attention at all to who opposes this bill? AOL, Boing Boing, Creative Commons, Daily Kos, Disqus, Bay, Etsy, Facebook, foursquare, Google, Grooveshark, Hype Machine, Kickstarter, Kaspersky, LinkedIn,...
Jan 7th
3 notes
7 tags
Programmers shred Pentagon’s paper puzzle... →
“A team of California computer programmers has conquered the Pentagon’s latest civilian research challenge. The military’s way-out research arm, Darpa, today announced that the team of three, called “All Your Shreds Belong To Us,” had scooped up the $50,000 prize. To do it, they’d required 33 days and 600 man hours, all to re-assemble five shredded documents.”  Read more… ...
Jan 2nd
21 notes
5 tags
Google+ reunites lost waterlogged camera, owner →
“Social networking and a bit of amateur sleuthing have reunited a Canadian firefighter with the camera he accidentally dropped to the bottom of the sea during a family vacation more than a year ago.”  Read more… (source: CNET News)
Jan 2nd
3 tags
Why natural leaders are too self-obsessed to be... →
“Their swaggering arrogance and natural authority can make it seem like they were born to lead. But, though dominant individuals frequently make it to the top of the career ladder, their self-obsession often makes them the worst bosses, a study has shown.”  Read more… (source: Daily Mail)
Jan 2nd
6 notes
3 tags
Jan 2nd
1 note
December 2011
22 posts
4 tags
Dec 30th
7 notes
3 tags
Dec 29th
9 notes
3 tags
Dec 27th
8 notes
5 tags
(via uberhumor)
Dec 22nd
1 note
9 tags
RIAA and Homeland Security caught downloading... →
“If there’s one organization known for its crusade against online piracy, it’s the RIAA. Nevertheless, even in the RIAA’s headquarters several people use BitTorrent to download pirated music, movies, TV-shows and software. And they are in good company. The Department of Homeland Security – known for seizing pirate domain names – also harbors hundreds of BitTorrent pirates.” ...
Dec 18th
16 notes
8 tags
“Owners of dogs will have noticed that, if you provide them with food and water...”
–   —Christopher Hitchens (source: The Portable Atheist: Essential Readings for the Nonbeliever by Christopher Hitchens, via The Daily Beast)
Dec 17th
2 notes
3 tags
Dec 15th
8 notes
5 tags
Dec 13th
11 notes
5 tags
Dec 12th
7 notes