...needs to be widely distributed:
(Coyote, who is all about public service, here)
Saturday, June 19, 2010
The excitement of chess
This xkcd comic turned out to be inspirational.

I sort of wanted to try it, too, but some went further than just wanting.

I sort of wanted to try it, too, but some went further than just wanting.
Quote of the Day
"The referee's should have been wearing pink in the match where the German striker was given two yellows."
- An Australian co-gamer
- An Australian co-gamer
Sunday, June 13, 2010
My goal this week....
...is to use the word "invidious" in a sentence without sounding like an utter plonker.
Saturday, June 12, 2010
I'd love to know the story behind this....
Texts from last night is supposedly a collection of odd text messages people have received. Not all that different, except for tech level, from Overheard In New York.
Sometimes one of these brief excerpts really leaves you wondering about the story behind it. This one, for example:
My best guess is that she has had relationships with friends of her brother's.
Sometimes one of these brief excerpts really leaves you wondering about the story behind it. This one, for example:
My vagina has become a graveyard for my brother's friendships
My best guess is that she has had relationships with friends of her brother's.
Hating BP "before it was cool"
Katherine Mangu-Ward gloats a bit here, about an article she wrote in 2006:
I've never been a big fan of finding scapegoats, but in this case it seems like there was some definite negligence involved. Of course, we'd all like to think this isn't a necessary cost of our need for energy....
For an example of a company apparently trying to single-handedly save the planet through expensive public relations alone, one needn't look farther than the corporate darling of serious environmentalists and greenish consumers alike: BP
BP is first among many companies that have opted to do their environmental penance in the glare of the spotlight. British Petroleum (recently rechristened BP, following KFC's model in removing unsavory words from its brand name) has been much ballyhooed for its commitment to the environment. Most of the ballyhooing is being done by BP itself.
A gas and oil company with $225 billion in revenue, BP is part of an industry that will keep environmental advocacy groups in business for as long at it exists. Yet these days BP is styling itself "Beyond Petroleum" and declaring that it's "thinking outside the barrel." BP's Environmental Team has crafted an elaborate advertising campaign and rebranding effort, recently expanded to the Web. Its goal: to convince the world that a company that sucks dead dinosaurs out of the earth, turns them into gasoline, and delivers that gas to SUVs can also be environmentally friendly enough to use a green and yellow sunburst (or is it a flower?) as its logo....
One might be forgiven for wondering how BP is managing to take in hundreds of billions in oil and gas revenue, apparently in its spare time.
I've never been a big fan of finding scapegoats, but in this case it seems like there was some definite negligence involved. Of course, we'd all like to think this isn't a necessary cost of our need for energy....
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Gladiator graveyard
Pretty cool, a burial found in York appears to be of at least 80 gladiators, all young men with especially well developed right arms in good condition, not counting the decapitation and lion bites.
HT Archeaoblog, which in another post sets the record for blogging about the earliest shoes. As they point out, even the Manolo puts his foot in on that one!
HT Archeaoblog, which in another post sets the record for blogging about the earliest shoes. As they point out, even the Manolo puts his foot in on that one!
Wednesday, June 09, 2010
Smile - people will wonder what you're up to....
...or apparently, they'll at least figure you're not trying to start a fight. Maybe that's why The Virginian emphasized you have to "smile when you say that."
The little quiz linked to in the link is short and kind of fun - i got 14 out of 20, for the record.
The little quiz linked to in the link is short and kind of fun - i got 14 out of 20, for the record.
Personality of the week: builder and book burner
Chinese emperor Qin Shi Huang
Started the (first version of the) great wall and destroyed (almost all) the literature.
Started the (first version of the) great wall and destroyed (almost all) the literature.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
Quote of the day
"You cannot stand what I've become
you much prefer the gentleman I was before -
I was so easy to defeat, I was so easy to control,
I didn't even know there was a war...."
- Leonard Cohen
you much prefer the gentleman I was before -
I was so easy to defeat, I was so easy to control,
I didn't even know there was a war...."
- Leonard Cohen
Sunday, May 23, 2010
As much as I hate to tolerate assault....
I'll deal with it somehow....
A new study purports to show that exposure to beautiful women is bad for men's health. By some strange circumstance, I am still alive today. This is anectodal counter-evidence at best, but I must agree with the source that this study is suspect. The criticisms are not only funny but right on the mark.
Hat tip Skepchiks.
Hat tip Skepchiks.
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Quote of the day
(in response to "I thought you were honest")
"That's a common misperception. I just hate people."
- Alice from Dilbert
"That's a common misperception. I just hate people."
- Alice from Dilbert
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Not a cause I support.....
...but it IS kind of funny.
I guess putting some kind of boundary to vandalism seems almost worthy, unless you are a chicken concerned about being misunderstood.
I guess putting some kind of boundary to vandalism seems almost worthy, unless you are a chicken concerned about being misunderstood.
Trivia of the day
Maltese is the only semitic language normally written in a Latin alphabet.
- Language Log
- Language Log
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Is it just how submissive the little dears are, then?
I am generally open minded, but for the longest time I have believed that the two areas in which women were simply inferior to men were weightlifting and chess. I concluded the latter back in my chess playing days when I was perusing the ratings tables in Chess Life & Review. If I had been a woman, my rating would have placed me in the top ten women in the United States. As a man, I wasn't even in the top thousand. That doesn't mean NO women could beat me, but it does suggest amazingly few...and there were many men in the "no woman could beat me" category. Yes, I'm sure that women are not encouraged to play chess as much as men are (not that a "nerd" reputation is all THAT prized even among men), but the difference just seemed SO extreme there had to be some sort of biological factor.
Now I see this study. In short: no. Now I'm not saying this study (42 pairs of various skill levels) completely dispels my notion - how many of those pairs were tournament level players? - but it certainly weakens my case...and it would provide another explanatory mechanism if women just like to lose (to a guy - the women apparently played harder if they THOUGHT they were playing against another woman).
Any of you girls want to help me out lifting this heavy package?
Now I see this study. In short: no. Now I'm not saying this study (42 pairs of various skill levels) completely dispels my notion - how many of those pairs were tournament level players? - but it certainly weakens my case...and it would provide another explanatory mechanism if women just like to lose (to a guy - the women apparently played harder if they THOUGHT they were playing against another woman).
Any of you girls want to help me out lifting this heavy package?
Saturday, May 15, 2010
OK, I understand....
Courtesy of Marginal Revolution, which also points out that California is the seventh most risky debtor in the world (Venezuela, Argentina, Pakistan, Greece, Ukraine and the Emirate of Dubai are even worse), explains the mathematics of CDOs so YOU can understand it, and how to give somebody crabs.
Thursday, May 13, 2010
The man who mooned Spitzer
I've linked to Coyote before, but never realized that the crowning accomplishment of his life actually occurred back in his student days, and while he continues to soar it is too much to hope he could ever reach those heights again: mooning Spitzer.
(the link also has mild relevance to the Supreme Court nomination)
(the link also has mild relevance to the Supreme Court nomination)
Planetary news
Despite losing one of its stripes, Jupiter will remain a planet.
Even if Pluto gained one, it still wouldn't be.
Even if Pluto gained one, it still wouldn't be.
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