Monday, 17 December 2012
12 Letters That Didn’t Make the Alphabet
You know the alphabet. It’s one of the first things you’re taught in school. But did you know that they’re not teaching you all of the alphabet? There are quite a few letters we tossed aside as our language grew, and you probably never even knew they existed.
Thursday, 13 December 2012
London buses to offer NFC contactless card payments
London buses are to start accepting contactless payments from Thursday.
Passengers on the city's 8,500 vehicles will be able to buy
tickets by swiping a credit, debit or charge card by an NFC (near field
communication) reader.
Transport for London follows Stagecoach which began installing NFC equipment on its buses in 2009.
TfL also operates the Oyster smartcard scheme which uses an earlier RFID (radio-frequency identification) technology.
The buses' Oyster card readers have been upgraded to be compatible with both types,
Smartphones that can mimic contactless cards should also work with the equipment.
The 50 Coolest New Businesses In America
Year after year, cities across America continue to surprise us with new, innovative, and downright awesome businesses.
This year we've already brought you the coolest new businesses in Philadelphia, Chicago, and San Francisco,
and now we've gone nationwide, finding the hottest restaurants,
boutiques, startups, and everything in between across the U.S.
There's a corner store with a bike-through window, a mobile shop that
sells vintage clothing from a 1960s trailer, America's first pizza
museum, and a Chinese restaurant that serves dumplings that look like
Pac-Man characters.
Some of the businesses are based in brick and mortar stores, while
others—like food trucks and mobile shops—sell their wares on wheels.
We've also included several online-only businesses.
From San Francisco to New York (and everywhere in between), we've
found the coolest new businesses in America that opened or expanded
within the last year and a half. Email MNisen@businessinsider.com if we
left off your favorite.
Friday, 7 December 2012
What's the loveliest word in the English language?
It was the linguist JR Firth who, in 1930, coined the term phonoaesthetics to refer to the study of how words sound. I came across it recently when, 26 years later than most, I heard Marlow ask in Dennis Potter's The Singing Detective: "What's the loveliest word in the English language,
officer? In the sound it makes in the mouth? In the shape it makes in
the page? E-L-B-O-W." (And yes, for anyone else who didn't know, it is
where the band got its name.)
The film Donnie Darko offers a
tip of its hat, too, in the lines of Drew Barrymore's character,
teacher Karen Pomeroy: "This famous linguist once said that of all the
phrases in the English language, of all the endless combinations of
words in all of history, 'cellar door' is the most beautiful." The
famous linguist was none other than JRR Tolkien, and he made the claim in his 1955 lecture English and Welsh.
There's also Robert Beard's The 100 Most Beautiful Words in English.
Although you're unlikely to agree with them all, Beard's list does help
make some phonetic links: the B and L common to bungalow, elbow and one
of my favourites, for example. Long vowels and liquid sounds such as L
and R have been considered particularly beautiful since the ancient
Greeks, but I'd love to know where B fits in.
So, in no
particular order, here are five that for me illustrate Tolkien's
description of the phonetic pleasure of words as "simpler,
deeper-rooted, and yet more immediate" than any practical or structural
understanding of their sense.
10 Buzzwords to Take Off Your LinkedIn Profile
More than 50 million people have joined the ranks of the social-media site LinkedIn since the networking hub released its list of overused buzzwords last
year. Yet the lessons appear to still be lost on many of the site’s 187
million members, who are still sullying their online profiles with
generic, less-than-compelling descriptors.
One of the best ways to recognize a word that’s not up to par is to consider the minimum ability it promises. Take analytical, one of only two new words to make the top 10 this year, ousting the equally unhelpful dynamic. Whereas dynamic promised potential employers that you would produce motion of some kind, analytical merely
tells them that you will examine things closely and determine essential
features. If the job entails finding the 10 differences between two
cartoons depicting farm animals, you’re their guy.
Kommunikationspause Daimler löscht auf Wunsch Mails seiner Mitarbeiter
E-Mail ist für viele Angestellte längst kein willkommenes Kommunikationswerkzeug mehr, sondern eine ständige Belastung.
Bei Daimler will man dem nun abhelfen, zumindest im Urlaub - wer will,
kann dort künftig alle E-Mails löschen lassen, die während seiner
Abwesenheit ankommen.
http://www.spiegel.de/netzwelt/web/daimler-loescht-e-mails-im-urlaub-a-868960.html
Kulturausflug nach Yorkshire: Kunst zwischen Kötteln
Bei dem Wort Yorkshire denken viele unweigerlich an den gleichnamigen
Terrier. Andere erinnern sich an den kaum minder bekannten Pudding, jene
englische Sättigungsbeilage zum Sonntagsbraten. Die Grafschaft im Osten
Englands steht auch für unberührte Natur, liebliche Hügel und
unendliche Weiten. Was die wenigsten aber wissen: Yorkshire hat auch
Kulturfreunden ganz Besonderes zu bieten.
Going digital: The new look of business cards
The business card isn’t dead. It’s just evolving.
A cottage
industry of startups has sprung up around the slow but steady
transformation of the business card from something you keep in your
wallet to something you keep in your smartphone.
With more and
more people carrying tiny computers in their pockets, the limitations of
the traditional cards are glaring. Perhaps the most obvious is the
decidedly static nature of paper-based cards.
South Korean men get the make-up habit
South Korean men have a
particular kind of image - hard-drinking, hard-working and prepared to
fight bravely for their country. But now major cosmetics companies are
seeing a different side to Korean manhood - a growing interest in
skincare products, and even foundation.
Two years of compulsory military service and centuries of
Confucian culture have left many South Korean men with a deeply
traditional sense of gender - something young Korean women often
complain about these days.
So their new appetite for skincare and make-up comes as a slight surprise.
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/64522000/jpg/_64522745_cukes_think624.jpg