Implications of the Elimination of Broker Discretionary Voting

The SEC recently voted (3-2) to eliminate broker discretionary voting in director elections for meetings held on or after January 1, 2010. Previously, brokers were permitted to vote uninstructed shares in uncontested director elections, which were classified as "routine" under NYSE Rule 452. The rule change, which was adopted as proposed, could make it more difficult for directors to be elected under a majority voting standard.

NASA's Long Term Goals for Manned Spaceflight

NASA needs to specifically articulate its long term goals for manned space flight to the American people! We need to know where we're going, why we're going, and how much its going to cost to get there. And we also need to know what kind of a space transportation and habitat infrastructure is going to be required in order to achieve those goals.

The Science of Negative Results

While on vacation in California, I was having a discussion with my wife (an atmospheric scientist), and a friend (an archaeologist). I am a Developmental Geneticist. So we were three scientists from three very disparate fields. I have been a scientist for 20 years. My wife for much shorter time and my friend for much, much longer. So we come at it from different chronological perspectives. And one thing we each have encountered is the huge lack in science of the reporting of negative results.

Steny Hoyer in Stitches over Unread Bills

The House Democrats walked a fine line recently when they rammed through the cap and trade bill at the end of June, after transparency had been promised from this administration. The bill clocked in at just over 1,000 pages and a three hundred page amendment was dropped in at around 3am on the day of the final vote. It did not go unnoticed.

Lighten Up by Jill Dupleix

For the true grub-loving gastronome, the most fatal by-product of enjoying our food has to be weight gain. Monsieur and I are no different, loving our food as we do and engaged in a constant battle of taste versus calorific content. It was therefore serendipitous to catch a tweet from Quadrille Books, asking for bloggers to review Lighten Up by Jill Dupleix.

A Desperate Party Turns to Jeb?

President Obama has been in office for six months, and speculation about his 2012 Republican challenger has been going on for just as long. But with star Republicans abruptly resigning or hiking the Appalachian Trail to Argentina, there just aren't that many left to speculate about. I guess this explains the bizarre flurry of recent attention paid to Jeb Bush.

Wolfram Alpha, Unemployment, and the Future of Data

Wolfram Alpha is devoting enormous resources to the problem of data and computation on the web. As described in a fascinating article in Technology Review, Wolfram's vision is to curate all the world's data. Not just find and link to it, but have a human think about how best to report it and how to connect it to relevant calculation and visualization techniques.

The Arms Export Control Reform Talisman

The Intelligence Authorization Act for FY 2010 requires that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) conduct a study of the efficacy of export control laws and regulations. Judging from the Committee Report that accompanies the bill, HR 2701, it seems as if the request may have come from commercial satellite companies, and possibly some pockets in the government, that have long argued that "U.S. restrictions on the sale of commercial imagery are beginning to inhibit their growth and their competitiveness in foreign markets, especially as foreign imagery satellites improve and foreign reliance on U.S. systems diminishes."

The Purpose of Sex in Humans?

It's easy to believe the natural purpose of sex is reproduction. Offspring, after all, are the single most spectacular result of sex. Many of us seem bedazzled by that fact. Consequently, some of us seem to have got the notion the natural purpose of sex is reproduction and that sex without the possibility of reproduction is at best selfish indulgence and at worse perversion.

Micro-Blogging in China

During recent turmoil in Xinjiang, China again revealed the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) ability to stonewall Internet access regionally, and block sites such as Twitter nationally. However, with the growth of domestic copy-cat micro-blogging services such as Fanfou, TaoTao, Jiwai, Komoo, Zuosa, and Digu, China's government may be losing their cat and mouse game with connected denizens.