There have been many famines throughout history. However, until the era of modern large scale transportation there was never the possibility of universal famine. But now with supertankers and huge container ships it becomes possible to move enormous quantities of food at very little cost per calorie of food, therefore, now it is a question of who has the money to purchase the food who will get to eat it rather than the local person who farmed the food.
I already knew Wolfram|Alpha could do some cool astronomy calculations, like comparing the escape velocities of the Galilean moons. A recent W|A blog post also pointed out that you can calculate the next lunar eclipse.
An article in Time magazine today continues the coverage of the sorry private security situation at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul. With all the on-going and pained debate about getting more civilian help and State personnel on reconstruction teams around Afghanistan, it's a sad statement about State that they can't even fill their security jobs at the Embassy properly and that this is not a new conundrum for them. Private security is State's Achilles' heel.
I try to get my windows professionally cleaned a few times a year
and each time it is a real pain. The cleaners won't give you an idea
of the price until they come out and see your house and the prices
seem to vary so greatly that I've felt the need to have several
companies come out and give an estimate.
The web site for ESPN spiked a blog post today by acclaimed baseball writer Rob Neyer in which he appeared to call for Orange County Register sports columnist Mark Whicker be fired for his widely criticized column making light of Jaycee Dugard's 17 years of captivity at the hands of a sexual predator.
WHO reports that as of 15 June 2009, 76 countries have officially reported 35, 928 cases of influenza A(H1N1) infection, including 163 deaths. These numbers can be used to calculate a case fatality ratio (CFR) of 0.45%. Is this number an accurate indication of the lethality of influenza?
We've all heard it said, so many times now that it's practically a cliche in its own right: Hollywood is out of ideas. It seems like nothing being made these days is original; it's just a steady stream of adaptations, homages, sequels (I'm looking at you, Tron) and remakes. And it's that last category that seems to be growing increasingly out of hand.
As a kid growing up in the 1950s and early '60s I was obsessed with electricity and radio. I studied electronics and RF transmission and reception, was a ham radio operator, and put an inordinate amount of time into studying how antennas worked and electromagnetic waves propagated.
The new associate recruitment market is broken. But small changes are not going to address its underlying problems. The market needs a structural fix. The market failures associated with decentralized clearing cause three problems. Law firms have to recruit based on limited information, early recruitments make the labor market inflexible, and summer internships lose meaning.
The New York Times recently ran an article about the Conficker worm, which first appeared in November of last year. Conficker, which attacks Microsoft Windows systems, has proved to be elusive and difficult to deal with, despite the efforts of a task force made up of security people from industry, academia, and government.