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Being "always on" is being always off, to something.

The Driver: My Dangerous Pursuit of Speed and Truth in the Outlaw Racing World
Topic: Games 11:45 am EST, Dec 22, 2007

If you liked the Wired story about Alexander Roy, you might like his book.

With his M5 armed with a myriad of radar detectors, laser jammers, and police scanners, and his trunk crammed with a variety of fake uniforms, the obsessively prepared Roy evades arrest at almost every turn, wreaking havoc on his fiercest rivals, and gaining the admiration of police forces around the globe.

LA Times has a review.

The Driver: My Dangerous Pursuit of Speed and Truth in the Outlaw Racing World


The Sweater Only a Mom (and Analyst) Could Love
Topic: Society 11:17 am EST, Dec 22, 2007

The problem with gifts is the expectation — the truth is that one good experience can ruin you for life. For me it was two years into my marriage. I had graduated from film school and was living without a job, writing every day (or at least saying I was) and being supported by my wife’s starting architect salary and a small stipend from her mom.

My birthday came, and the gift I wanted was to be shot in the back of the head while I slept — to be mercifully put out of my misery before I gained any more weight or finished the extremely depressing movie I was writing.

My wife handed me a large, very heavy flat box. Inside was a silver Zero Halliburton briefcase.

Now, if you missed the ’80s, let me explain what this was.

The Sweater Only a Mom (and Analyst) Could Love


Baby Einstein? Not so much.
Topic: Science 12:47 am EST, Dec 22, 2007

The antagonism between words and moving images seems to start early. In August, scientists at the University of Washington revealed that babies aged between eight and sixteen months know on average six to eight fewer words for every hour of baby DVDs and videos they watch daily.

Read the paper and the press release, as well as coverage in TIME.

Update: Full text of the paper, Associations between Media Viewing and Language Development in Children Under Age 2 Years, is freely available.

Baby Einstein? Not so much.


So Say We All | Battlestar Galactica Propaganda Posters
Topic: Arts 12:37 am EST, Dec 22, 2007

Join the battle against Cylon tyranny! Show your true colors and support the cause by displaying these posters in the common areas of your ship. Officially sanctioned by Fleet Operations, each poster contains critical messages from the Colonial Ministry of Information that will help recruit, inspire and inform your fellow Colonial citizens.

So Say We All | Battlestar Galactica Propaganda Posters


Cultural elite does not exist
Topic: Society 12:36 am EST, Dec 22, 2007

Which are you?

Univores

If you will go to the cinema, but not the theatre, you are a consumer of popular culture only. Two thirds of the population are in this category.

Omnivores

Will try anything on offer. Most have jobs that give them confidence, but could be from any social background.

Paucivores

People who consume a 'limited' range of cultural activities. Enjoy some form of music, film or television but not art galleries.

Inactives

These people access nothing at all – people who would never go into an art gallery or stop to examine a sculpture.

Cultural elite does not exist


Iraq Death Squads Get Better at Hiding Handiwork
Topic: Society 12:36 am EST, Dec 22, 2007

Another follow-up on George Packer's Kaleidoscopic War thread from last month.

There's no question that violence across Iraq has declined: in December 2006, approximately 3,000 Iraqi civilians were killed across the country; this November about 600 were. But the problem—and the reason no one from U.S. commander Gen. David Petraeus on down is declaring victory yet—is that those statistics do not tell the whole story. Body hunters like Sowadi, Baghdad residents and local gunmen all say that militias are making more of an effort to disguise their grisly handiwork—burying bodies in shallow graves, dumping them in city sewers. Robert Lamburne, director of forensic services at the British Embassy, has spoken to dozens of Iraqi policemen and examined bodies—relatively fresh—from one of several graves uncovered recently. His judgment: "There's less killing, but there's more concealment."

Iraq Death Squads Get Better at Hiding Handiwork


Iraqi Refugees Return, and Are Stranded
Topic: Society 10:30 pm EST, Dec 21, 2007

A follow-up on one issue highlighted in George Packer's Kaleidoscopic War thread from last month.

A small fraction of the millions of refugees who fled Iraq have come back. While the government trumpeted their return as proof of newfound security, migration experts said most of them were forced back by expired visas and depleted savings. Ms. Hashim, for one, pawned her wedding ring and gold jewelry to stay in Syria, but came back after her uncle’s visa application was denied.

The American military has expressed deep concerns about the Iraqi government’s ability to feed and house its returnees, or manage people who wish to reclaim their homes. It is widely feared that property disputes or efforts to return to newly homogenized neighborhoods could set off fresh waves of sectarian attacks.

Iraqi Refugees Return, and Are Stranded


The Way We Live Now: Our Decrepit Food Factories
Topic: Health and Wellness 10:15 pm EST, Dec 21, 2007

This is Michael Pollan:

We’re asking a lot of our bees. We’re asking a lot of our pigs too. That seems to be a hallmark of industrial agriculture: to maximize production and keep food as cheap as possible, it pushes natural systems and organisms to their limit, asking them to function as efficiently as machines. When the inevitable problems crop up — when bees or pigs remind us they are not machines — the system can be ingenious in finding “solutions,” whether in the form of antibiotics to keep pigs healthy or foreign bees to help pollinate the almonds. But this year’s solutions have a way of becoming next year’s problems. That is to say, they aren’t “sustainable.”

From this perspective, the story of Colony Collapse Disorder and the story of drug-resistant staph are the same story. Both are parables about the precariousness of monocultures. Whenever we try to rearrange natural systems along the lines of a machine or a factory, whether by raising too many pigs in one place or too many almond trees, whatever we may gain in industrial efficiency, we sacrifice in biological resilience. The question is not whether systems this brittle will break down, but when and how, and whether when they do, we’ll be prepared to treat the whole idea of sustainability as something more than a nice word.

The Way We Live Now: Our Decrepit Food Factories


The Rise of China and the Future of the West
Topic: International Relations 10:12 pm EST, Dec 21, 2007

China's rise will inevitably bring the United States' unipolar moment to an end. But that does not necessarily mean a violent power struggle or the overthrow of the Western system. The U.S.-led international order can remain dominant even while integrating a more powerful China -- but only if Washington sets about strengthening that liberal order now.

The Rise of China and the Future of the West


5 dangerous things you should let your kids do
Topic: Society 10:06 pm EST, Dec 21, 2007

Gever Tulley, founder of the Tinkering School, talks about our new wave of overprotected kids -- and spells out 5 (and really, he's got 6) dangerous things you should let your kids do. Allowing kids the freedom to explore, he says, will make them stronger and smarter and actually safer.

Here they are:

1. Play with fire.
2. Own a pocket knife.
3. Throw a spear.
4. Deconstruct appliances.
5. Break the DMCA.
Bonus. Drive a car.

This is from TED University, so it's not quite as flashy or polished as the talks from the TED Conference, but it makes the point.

5 dangerous things you should let your kids do


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