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The Feed - The Man Who Dared to Question Ethanol - NYTimes.com |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
9:22 pm EDT, Jul 12, 2008 |
IT wasn’t too long ago that a loose coalition of anti-ethanol forces was bemoaning the futility of its fight. After failing to block huge new ethanol mandates in the Senate last December, Jay Truitt, until recently the chief lobbyist for the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, complained about the “fervor” and “spirituality” that surrounded ethanol on Capitol Hill. “You can’t get anyone to consider that there is a consequence to these actions,” he said, adding, “We think there will be a day when people ask, ‘Why in the world did we do this?’ ”
The Feed - The Man Who Dared to Question Ethanol - NYTimes.com |
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Economic View - What if the Candidates Pandered to Economists? - News Analysis - NYTimes.com |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
9:19 pm EDT, Jul 12, 2008 |
IN the months to come, John McCain and Barack Obama will be vying for the support of various voting blocs. It is safe to say, however, that one group won’t get much attention: economists. The American Economic Association represents only a small fraction of 1 percent of the electorate. In every election season, we economists expect to be largely ignored, and, unlike many of our other forecasts, that one often turns out to be right. But suppose it were otherwise. Imagine that those running for office tailored their economic positions to attract the experts in the field. What would it take to put the nation’s economists solidly behind a candidate?
Economic View - What if the Candidates Pandered to Economists? - News Analysis - NYTimes.com |
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Why New TLDs Don't Matter |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
4:25 pm EDT, Jul 11, 2008 |
Lost amid the furor about ICANN's rule change that may (or may not) lead to a flood of TLDs is the uncomfortable fact that almost without exception, the new TLDs created since 2000 have been utter failures. Other than perhaps .cat and .mobi, they've missed their estimates of the number of registrations by orders of magnitude, and they haven't gotten mindshare in the target community. So what went wrong? Users stopped caring about TLDs.
Why New TLDs Don't Matter |
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An Astonishing Collaboration |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
4:20 pm EDT, Jul 11, 2008 |
It was an interesting discussion, with lots of disagreement, but ever-growing consensus. After evaluating several options, one approach was clear—and, I must admit, somewhat embarrassing to Paul. DJB was right. All those years ago, Dan J. Bernstein was right: Source Port Randomization should be standard on every name server in production use. There is a fantastic quote that guides a lot of the work I do: Luck is the residue of design. Dan Bernstein is a notably lucky programmer, and that's no accident. The professor lives and breathes systems engineering in a way that my hackish code aspires to one day experience. DJB got "lucky" here—he ended up defending himself against an attack he almost certainly never encountered. Such is the mark of excellent design. Excellent design protects you against things you don't have any information about. And so we are deploying this excellent design to provide no information.
An Astonishing Collaboration |
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American Energy Policy, Asleep at the Spigot |
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Topic: Politics and Law |
4:51 pm EDT, Jul 10, 2008 |
“We can see how you can get to $100,” he says. “At $140, I just don’t know how to explain it. We’re surprised.” For the rest of the country, the feeling is more like shock. As gasoline prices climb beyond $4 a gallon, Americans are rethinking what they drive and how and where they live. Entire industries are reeling — airlines and automakers most prominent among them — and gas prices have emerged as an important issue in the presidential campaign. Even as politicians heatedly debate opening new regions to drilling, corralling energy speculators, or starting an Apollo-like effort to find renewable energy supplies, analysts say the real source of the problem is closer to home. In fact, it’s parked in our driveways.
From the archive: Every now and then I meet someone in Manhattan who has never driven a car. Some confess it sheepishly, and some announce it proudly. For some it is just a practical matter of fact, the equivalent of not keeping a horse on West 87th Street or Avenue A. Still, I used to wonder at such people, but more and more I wonder at myself. Driving is the cultural anomaly of our moment. Someone from the past, I think, would marvel at how much time we spend in cars and how our geographic consciousness is defined by how far we can get in a few hours’ drive and still feel as if we’re close to home. Someone from the future, I’m sure, will marvel at our blindness and at the hole we have driven ourselves into, for we are completely committed to an unsustainable technology.
Also: In 1947, when Kerouac began his travels, there were three million miles of intercity roads in the United States and thirty-eight million registered vehicles. When “On the Road” came out, there was roughly the same amount of highway, but there were thirty million more cars and trucks. And the construction of the federal highway system, which had been planned since 1944, was under way. The interstates changed the phenomenology of driving. Kerouac’s original plan, in 1947, was to hitchhike across the country on Route 6, which begins at the tip of Cape Cod. Today, although there is a sign in Provincetown that reads “Bishop, CA., 3205 miles,” few people would dream of taking that road even as far as Rhode Island. They would get on the inter-state. And they wouldn’t think of getting there fast, either. For although there are about a million more miles of road in the United States today than there were in 1947 (there are also two more states), two hundred million more vehicles are registered to drive on them.
American Energy Policy, Asleep at the Spigot |
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Protocol Buffers - Google Code |
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Topic: Technology |
4:38 pm EDT, Jul 10, 2008 |
Protocol buffers are Google's language-neutral, platform-neutral, extensible mechanism for serializing structured data – think XML, but smaller, faster, and simpler. You define how you want your data to be structured once, then you can use special generated source code to easily write and read your structured data to and from a variety of data streams and using a variety of languages – Java, C++, or Python.
Protocol Buffers - Google Code |
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Europe Reconsiders Biofuel Goal - NYTimes.com |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
7:14 pm EDT, Jul 7, 2008 |
European Union legislators on Monday proposed ratcheting back an ambitious goal to raise Europe’s use of biofuels, signaling a significant retrenchment.
This is good news -- corn ethanol is assinine. We need to be throwing those resources at cellulosic ethanol research instead! Europe Reconsiders Biofuel Goal - NYTimes.com |
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Judge Rejects Bush’s View on Wiretaps - NYTimes.com |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
4:07 pm EDT, Jul 3, 2008 |
A federal judge in California said Wednesday that the wiretapping law established by Congress was the “exclusive” means for the president to eavesdrop on Americans, and he rejected the government’s claim that the president’s constitutional authority as commander in chief trumped that law.
Judge Rejects Bush’s View on Wiretaps - NYTimes.com |
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'Shroom' Study Reveals Benefits : Discovery News : Discovery Channel |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
2:24 pm EDT, Jul 1, 2008 |
Scientists reported Tuesday that when they surveyed volunteers 14 months after they took a psychedelic drug as part of a research project, most said they were still feeling and behaving better because of the experience. Two-thirds of them also said the drug had produced one of the five most spiritually significant experiences they'd ever had. The drug, psilocybin, is found in so-called "magic mushrooms." It's illegal, but it has been used in religious ceremonies for centuries.
'Shroom' Study Reveals Benefits : Discovery News : Discovery Channel |
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Idea Lab - The Worm Turns - Curing Diseases With Parasites? - Idea Lab - NYTimes.com |
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Topic: Miscellaneous |
7:48 pm EDT, Jun 29, 2008 |
Comparison of the prevalence of I.B.D. and surveys of worm-infestation rates revealed a telling pattern. About 10 years after improved hygiene and deworming efforts reduced worms in a given population, I.B.D. rates jumped. Weinstock had his hypothesis: after a long coevolution, the human immune system came to depend on the worms for proper functioning. When cleaner conditions and new medicines evicted the worms from our bodies, the immune system went out of kilter. “Hygiene has made our lives better,” says Weinstock, now at Tufts University. “But in the process of eliminating exposure to the 10 or 20 things that can make us sick, we’re also eliminating exposure to things that make us well.”
Idea Lab - The Worm Turns - Curing Diseases With Parasites? - Idea Lab - NYTimes.com |
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