Monday, 16 December 2013

Deadly conformity is killing our creativity. Let's mess about more

People's lives would be more fulfilling if they were given greater freedom in the workplace.

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/dec/14/conformity-killing-creativity-at-work?CMP=fb_gu

Bitcoin: Price v hype

Virtual currency Bitcoin has attracted increasing media attention over the past year. It's also soaring in value, with a single bitcoin surpassing $1,000 (£613) for the first time in November. So has the media hype driven the price hike?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-25332746 

How to Pack Like a Pro - Heathrow Airport Video

Heathrow Airport:
If you've ever had problems closing your suitcase, our video will show you just how to make the most out of every inch - so you can stop wrestling your case and start enjoy your trip!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIk8v__Osm8&desktop_uri=%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DLIk8v__Osm8&app=desktop 

How to pronounce Qunu and Mandela’s middle name

Mandela was born in the Eastern Cape, the homeland of many Xhosa speakers. Xhosa, pronounced KAW-suh (-k as in king, -aw as in law, -uh as "a" in sofa, stressed syllables shown in upper case) in English, is one of South Africa's 11 official languages and one of 28 languages spoken in the country.
Like Mandarin and Zulu, Xhosa is a tone language and the pitch of a syllable (high or low in the case of Xhosa) is used to differentiate the meaning of words, just as the consonant sounds -k and -s are used to differentiate the words "king" and "sing" in English.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-magazine-monitor-25356745 

Tuesday, 5 November 2013

The Japanese men who prefer virtual girlfriends to sex

Unless something happens to boost Japan's birth rate, its population will shrink by a third between now and 2060. One reason for the lack of babies is the emergence of a new breed of Japanese men, the otaku, who love manga, anime and computers - and sometimes show little interest in sex.

Friday, 18 October 2013

Chinese tourists detained in Paris over one-euro coins

Two Chinese tourists have been briefly held in France on suspicion of forgery after trying to settle their hotel bill with one-euro coins.
Police were called in after a hotel owner in Paris became suspicious about the two men, and 3,700 one-euro coins were then found in their room.
But the coins were not counterfeit.

Is 25 the new cut-off point for adulthood?

New guidance for psychologists will acknowledge that adolescence now effectively runs up until the age of 25 for the purposes of treating young people. So is this the new cut-off point for adulthood?
"The idea that suddenly at 18 you're an adult just doesn't quite ring true," says child psychologist Laverne Antrobus, who works at London's Tavistock Clinic.
"My experience of young people is that they still need quite a considerable amount of support and help beyond that age."
Child psychologists are being given a new directive which is that the age range they work with is increasing from 0-18 to 0-25. 

Say It Aint So: The Movement to Kill the Apostrophe

Today is the 10th annual National Punctuation Day, a high holiday on nerd calendars across these great United States. Its stated purpose is to be a celebration of underappreciated, misused marks like the semicolon and “the ever mysterious ellipsis.” But a better-known piece of punctuation has been getting some apocalyptic press and deserves attention on this day of celebration: the apostrophe.


MIT’s President: Better, More Affordable Colleges Start Online

Everyone would like a solution to the problem of rising college costs. While students worry that they cannot afford a college education, U.S. colleges and universities know they cannot really afford to educate them either. At a technology-intensive research university like the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, it now costs three times as much to educate an undergraduate as we receive in net tuition—that is, the tuition MIT receives after providing for financial aid. To push the research frontier and educate innovators in science and engineering demands costly instrumentation and unique facilities. Even for institutions with substantial endowments, subsidizing a deficit driven by these and other costs is, in the long run, unsustainable.


Behavior Blame Game: Why We Hate to Feel Guilty Read more: http://healthland.time.com/2013/10/03/blame-game-why-we-hate-to-feel-guilty/#ixzz2i5TCJw4k

When things go south and we’re to blame, we’re supposed to feel guilty. Right? Not necessarily.
It turns out that when we do something that causes negative consequences, we actually feel less responsible for our actions. Not only that, but we see the entire interaction differently than we would if our actions had yielded a more positive result.


Business Soon You Can Pay Employees at This Wisconsin Business to Snuggle With You

A new business is opening in Madison, Wisconsin that will allow customers to cuddle with employees for a small fee. It’s called Snuggle House, and it’s not a brothel, okay?
The soon-to-launch establishment has run into a number of snags in advance of its opening day, which was originally slated for Tuesday. According to ABC affiliate WKOW, the cuddle castle still needs to pass a fire inspection as well as file a business plan with the city.


Sleep 'cleans' the brain of toxins

The brain uses sleep to wash away the waste toxins built up during a hard day's thinking, researchers have shown.
The US team believe the "waste removal system" is one of the fundamental reasons for sleep.
Their study, in the journal Science, showed brain cells shrink during sleep to open up the gaps between neurons and allow fluid to wash the brain clean.

Smart Strategies That Help Students Learn How to Learn

What’s the key to effective learning? One intriguing body of research suggests a rather riddle-like answer: It’s not just what you know. It’s what you know about what you know.
To put it in more straightforward terms, anytime a student learns, he or she has to bring in two kinds of prior knowledge: knowledge about the subject at hand (say, mathematics or history) and knowledge about how learning works. Parents and educators are pretty good at imparting the first kind of knowledge. We’re comfortable talking about concrete information: names, dates, numbers, facts. But the guidance we offer on the act of learning itself—the “metacognitive” aspects of learning—is more hit-or-miss, and it shows.
In our schools, “the emphasis is on what students need to learn, whereas little emphasis—if any—is placed on training students how they should go about learning the content and what skills will promote efficient studying to support robust learning,” writes John Dunlosky, professor of psychology at Kent State University in Ohio, in an article just published in American Educator. However, he continues, “teaching students how to learn is as important as teaching them content, because acquiring both the right learning strategies and background knowledge is important—if not essential—for promoting lifelong learning.”

Four Tips to Keep Students on Track When Using Devices in Class

Bringing technology into the classroom comes with a unique set of challenges, some of which could make classroom  management more difficult if teachers don’t think out strategies beforehand. It’s hard for teachers to keep students focused on their work when they’ve got the internet at their fingertips. Early adopters of one-to-one device programs discovered with trial and error what works and what doesn’t. Now those teachers have a lot to share with others. Liana Heitin’s Education Week article does a good job of spelling out the biggest challenges and the solutions teachers are using to deal with them.

What Can We Learn From the Global Effort Around Mobile Learning?

Closing the achievement gap and giving all students access to a world of learning online remains one of the strongest allures of education technology. In the U.S., that conversation is often centered on the newest shiny device, slickest software or free app, but internationally mobile technology is revolutionizing learning too, often without fancy gadgets. Recognizing the creative learning strategies being implemented in developing countries could help expand thinking in the U.S and inform the ongoing discussion about how to use technology to deepen learning.
“In developing countries, mobile has leap-frogged fixed-line connectivity,” said Steve Vosloo, a program specialist, in mobile learning at the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). “People who were never connected before have access.”
Africa is the fastest growing mobile market and the second largest after Asia. Vosloo says there are more mobile phone subscriptions than people in Africa, meaning some people have more than one. Many people in developing countries have only accessed the internet through a mobile phone and mobile connectivity far surpasses desktop connections.

Monday, 23 September 2013

iOS 7: readers tips on hidden iPhone and iPad features

Users of Apple's iPhone and iPad have sent us some of their tips on how to find fun and helpful hidden features in the new iOS 7 operating system.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/apple/iphone/10323318/iOS-7-readers-tips-on-hidden-iPhone-and-iPad-features.html 

Monday, 16 September 2013

#100Women: Join the BBC's new conversation

Women around the world have achieved extraordinary things during the past century. But despite major steps forward in securing political, cultural and social rights, women everywhere face steep challenges compared to their male counterparts.

How to Stop Wasting Time

It’s time to get real about how you waste time. These tips and tools can help you add more hours to your day.
Time is an entrepreneur’s most valuable asset. So how can you get more time in your day? You can’t buy, sell or trade it; you have to reclaim it.
In order to do that you need to identify how and when you’re wasting time. Let’s be real about this: everyone wastes some time during the day—we’re only human after all. The trick is to honestly evaluate your work habits. Only then can you use your time more efficiently.

The monotonous world of overused CV words

A survey suggests that the terms "hard-working", "team player" and "motivated" are so ubiquitous in CVs that they have become utterly meaningless. But what might you write instead, asks Finlo Rohrer.
It's not easy to write the covering letter that goes with CVs. You know it's going into a massive pile that will leave some poor recruiter dead-eyed in a supremely bored fugue. The sentiments you want to express are not just samey, they can even be counterproductive. Simply stating you're "creative" does seem rather to show the opposite.
Perhaps you should adopt the old journalistic adage of "show me, don't tell me". As an old journalism professor once said: "Don't start a sentence with 'interestingly…'. Let the reader be the judge of that." If having described a feat you have to say it is "spectacular" either a) you're not very good at describing feats or b) the feat really wasn't that spectacular. 

Blobfish Voted Ugliest Animal

And you can see why


http://newsfeed.time.com/2013/09/12/blobfish-voted-ugliest-animal/

Monday, 19 August 2013

The 4 Keys to Killer Customer Service

The secret to a loyal customer base is no secret at all: Great customer service will bring them back every time. Here’s what you need to know.
Whether it’s a bored demeanor, a dismissive look or just plain rude behavior, sloppy customer service spells disaster faster than just about any other business transgression. People complain about bad customer service with the same level of vitriol usually reserved for taxes and presidential elections.
But bad customer service is no joke. According to Micah Solomon, customer service consultant and author of  ”High-Tech, High-Touch Customer Service,” it can kill your reputation and devastate your bottom line. But here’s the thing: It can also spell opportunity for savvy business owners looking for a way to differentiate themselves from the competition.
We live in an age where a business can thrive or die based on how it understands and approaches customer engagement. In an article on Small Business Computing, Solomon says there are three groups of people who determine whether or not customers do business with you.


Living room TV is 'making a comeback', says Ofcom

UK families are more likely to watch TV together now than they have been in over a decade, according to a study.
Communications regulator Ofcom said 91% of adults watched their main TV set once a week - up from 88% in 2002 - but their attention may be distracted.
It said the popularity of smartphones and tablets was taking teens out of bedrooms back into family rooms.
Most family members now multi-tasked while sitting in front of the TV, the survey of 3,700 over 16s found.
Far from technology pulling family time apart, it said, the huge growth in mobile was actually having the opposite effect. Family members are being brought together just as they were in the 1950s when a TV was likely to be a home's only screen.

Why did offices become like the home?

While the idea of working from home has failed to kill the office, workplaces have started to look much more like homes, says Lucy Kellaway.
The other day I got into the office early to find a young colleague noisily munching his way through a bowl of Fruit 'n Fibre at his desk. Just behind him his dry cleaning was hanging on the coat stand, and on the back of his chair was a damp towel.
"Doesn't he have a home?" I thought. 

Selfish traits not favoured by evolution, study shows

Evolution does not favour selfish people, according to new research.
This challenges a previous theory which suggested it was preferable to put yourself first.
Instead, it pays to be co-operative, shown in a model of "the prisoner's dilemma", a scenario of game theory - the study of strategic decision-making.
Published in Nature Communications, the team says their work shows that exhibiting only selfish traits would have made us become extinct.
Game theory involves devising "games" to simulate situations of conflict or co-operation. It allows researchers to unravel complex decision-making strategies and to establish why certain types of behaviour among individuals emerge.

You're probably more racist and sexist than you think

Not surprisingly, we tend to hear the most about bigotry and prejudice when it surfaces explicitly: see Oprah Winfrey's recent experience in a high-end Swiss boutique, for example, or the New York police department's stop-and-frisk policies, ruled racially discriminatory by a judge this week. But the truth is that much prejudice – perhaps most of it – flourishes below the level of conscious thought. Which means, alarmingly, that it's entirely possible to hold strong beliefs that point in one direction while demonstrating behaviour that points in the other. The classic (if controversial) demonstration of this is Harvard's Project Implicit, made famous in Malcolm Gladwell's book Blink. You can take the test here: whatever your race, there's a strong chance you'll take a split second longer to associate positive concepts with black faces than white ones.

Two-Faced Facebook: We Like It, but It Doesn’t Make Us Happy

The more we use Facebook, the worse we feel.
That’s what social psychologists at the University of Michigan report after tracking how 82 young adults used their Facebook accounts over a two-week period. When the participants started the study, they rated how satisfied they were with their lives. During the following two weeks, the researchers texted them at two-hour intervals five times a day to ask about how they felt about themselves, as well as how much time they had spent on Facebook since the last time they were texted. The more time people spent on Facebook during a single two-hour period, the worse they reported feeling.


Friday, 16 August 2013

Oxford Experience 2014

The Oxford Experience

The Oxford Experience is a very special summer school that is run by the University of Oxford's Department of Continuing Education.
The summer school is held each year in Christ Church, the largest and one of the most beautiful of the Oxford colleges. Participants live in the college and meals are taken in the mediaeval college hall (this is the hall that featured in the Harry Potter films).
The Oxford Experience runs for five weeks and covers a very wide range of subjects. Each week offers a different choice of topics, and you can enrol for one or more weeks. In addition to expert tuition, the Oxford Experience offers a number of other interesting activities. For example, you can tour Oxford and the University colleges, or visit local historic stately homes, or learn to play croquet on the lawns of the Master's Garden.
Visit our Website for more information: www.oxfordexperience.info

Back to School: Off to Oxford with a MacBook Air

In late July, I had the great privilege of attending a special course about the history of British scientists at Christ Church in Oxford, U.K.
Going to Oxford to study has always been on my bucket list, so when this opportunity came up, I jumped at it. As one who has chronicled the PC industry from its birth and tracked the tech market since 1977, I was pretty much on top of the modern day scientists and inventors that drove our current tech revolution. However, when I was in college, my history and engineering classes paid only lip service to the pioneers in physics, computing and natural philosophy who did a lot of the research and experiments in these fields from 1720 through the early 1920s or thereabout, which laid much of the groundwork for a lot of the technology we have today.


10 Ways We Get Smarter As We Age

As we age, the brain‘s processing speed begins to slow, and memory may sometimes slip. But there are other ways that our mental powers grow as we get older. In the current issue of the journal Psychological Science, researchers report that older people (over 65) showed less variability in their cognitive performance across 100 days of testing than did younger people aged 20 to 31. The older adults’ greater consistency “is due to learned strategies to solve the task, a constantly high motivation level, as well as a balanced daily routine and stable mood,” notes one of the scientists, Florian Schmiedek of the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Germany. A colleague of Schmiedek’s, Axel Börsch-Supan, adds that his research shows that older workers are more productive and reliable, and less likely to make serious errors, than are their younger colleagues.


Friday, 5 July 2013

Ferrari puts brakes on staff emails

Luxury carmaker limits employees' ability to send group emails in attempt to encourage people to 'talk more and write less'
 It makes some of the fastest cars on the planet, but the Italian manufacturer Ferrari is concerned that the indiscriminate use of emails in the office is slowing down its employees.
So, in a move likely to spark fresh debate about the intricacies of workplace netiquette, the company – one of Italy's leading luxury brands – has decided to clamp down on the number of group emails sent and remind staff that, as tiresome as it may be, they should perhaps "talk to each other more and write less".

Wednesday, 3 July 2013

English rude word enters German language

Germany's standard dictionary has included a vulgar English term, used by Chancellor Angela Merkel among others, as an acceptable German word.
Duden, the equivalent of the Oxford English Dictionary in the UK, said it was reflecting the common use of the word "shitstorm" among Germans.
The word, which is used in German to denote a public outcry, seems to have caught on during the eurozone crisis.
German language experts voted it "Anglicism of the year" in 2012.
One of them, Michael Mann, explained in a report by the Local newspaper, that the English word conveyed a "new kind of protest... clearly different in kind and degree from what could be expected in the past in response to a statement or action".
In the past there have been controversies over German usage of words like "download", "job-hopping" or "eye-catcher", the BBC's Steve Evans reports from Berlin.
The new word has crept into the language, imported by people who heard its use primarily in American English, he says.
It is used by the highest and lowest in the land and when Chancellor Merkel used it at a public meeting, nobody batted an eyelid, our correspondent adds.

Tuesday, 2 July 2013

Sir Ken Robinson: How to Escape Education’s Death Valley

The ever eloquent Sir Ken Robinson contends in this TED Talk that the culture of American education contradicts three principles that make human life thrive: diversity, curiosity and creativity. Humans naturally embody those qualities, but school has become a system based on conformity and testing, qualities that don’t use the natural learning tendencies inherent within every child.
He makes an argument for individualizing learning, but also for valuing teachers and thinking of their professional development as an investment in children and the future.

From World of Warcraft to Weight Loss: How Virtual Reality Can Change Behavior

Most studies involving video games and avatars have been connected with weight gain, but seeing our virtual selves could also melt pounds away — if the avatar adopts the right healthy habits.
The appeal of virtual-reality games lies in their power to simulate realities that we create ourselves — from the mundane familiarity of our own existence to the stimulating excitement of a fantasy world where anything goes. And the appeal of simulated worlds is driving researchers to investigate how these virtual experiences are changing or shaping our behaviors. Does connecting with a virtual version of yourself alter your perception of who you are and what you are capable of doing? And if that’s the case, could such virtual realities become a new tool for influencing social behaviors like relationships, or even lifestyle choices such as exercising, smoking or eating?


Monday, 1 July 2013

The Oxford English Dictionary and its chief word detective

Oxford English Dictionary Chief Editor John Simpson is to retire after 37 years at the famous reference work. Here he writes of a life hunting for the evidence behind the birth of words.
Historical dictionaries are not just about definitions.
Every word or phrase has a story, and the historical lexicographer has to tease this story out from whatever documentation can be found. That is one of the pleasures of working on the Oxford English Dictionary. 

Career Strategies You Probably Hate Your Job — But You Don’t Have To

Seventy percent of U.S. employees are either “not engaged” or “actively disengaged” at work, according to Gallup’s 2013 State of the American Workplace report. Put more simply, most of us hate our jobs. But there are ways to make work more than just a place to count down the seconds until you’re back home again.


Peter Attia: Is the obesity crisis hiding a bigger problem?

As a young surgeon, Peter Attia felt contempt for his obese patient with diabetes. She was overweight, he thought, and thus responsible for the fact that she needed a foot amputation. But years later, Attia received an unpleasant medical surprise that led him to wonder: is our understanding right? Could the precursors to diabetes cause obesity, and not the other way around? A look at how assumptions may be leading us to wage the wrong medical war.


Warning: Cover Up Your Webcam When Not in Use

The BBC has uncovered an entire industry centering on the buying and selling of access to compromised webcams, especially those owned by women.
Childnet International, a non-profit working to keep kids safe on the Internet, has issued a stern warning to computer owners today: Hackers can take over webcams without your knowledge, so keep them covered up when not in use.
Once your computer is infected by a Trojan virus – often acquired by visiting the wrong website or by opening malicious email attachments – criminals can control your webcam without your knowledge. These types of hackings are rapidly becoming big business: The BBC has uncovered an entire industry centering on the buying and selling of access to compromised webcams, especially those owned by women.
Ultimately, your best protection against such a hacking is to make sure your computer is running up to date anti-virus software. But there are other computer safety precautions you can take as well. “Pointing your webcam at a wall or covering it up can be good practice,” explains Childnet Chief Executive Will Gardner. He also recommends shutting laptop lids when they’re not in use, as cameras are often found immediately above laptop screens.
Independent computer security experts are urging people not to panic over the report, but otherwise confirm that there’s no harm in a little bit of added security to protect your privacy. “The idea of sticking a piece of paper over your webcam is reasonably common among the more paranoid members of the hacker community,” said Josh White, a researcher at the Oxford Internet Institute, to the BBC. “But it’s not necessarily paranoid. It’s useful to be aware.”
This article was written by Fox Van Allen and originally appeared on Techlicious.


D’awww: Buttercup the Duck Gets a 3D-Printed Foot

Born with a backwards left foot, Buttercup the Duck turns to 3D printing for a replacement.

This duck is named Buttercup. He was born with a backwards left foot.
Buttercup lives in Arlington, Tennessee at the Feathered Angels Waterfowl Sanctuary, where owner Mike Garey decided not only to amputate Buttercup’s foot (Garey says it would be too painful and prone to infections), but also to design a replacement foot as well.
Garey used Buttercup’s sister Minnie’s left foot as the basis for the design of Buttercup’s new foot, which he modeled using 3D software. Once the artificial mold was designed, Garey sent the design to a 3D-printing company called NovaCopy, who printed out and donated a three-dimensional mold of the foot.
That mold was used to create and test various silicone feet for Buttercup to try out on his non-footed leg. As CNET reports, “Buttercup, currently walking around on his stump, is due to get his new foot very soon, with the final design arriving in the next two weeks.”

Can we make ourselves happier?

Can we make ourselves happier? According to studies from all over the globe collated by the World Happiness Database in Rotterdam, we can. But the path to happiness may not be where we are looking for it.
Professor Ruut Veenhoven, Director of the Database and Emeritus professor of social conditions for human happiness at the Erasmus University in Rotterdam, says his own study found a slight negative correlation between the number of times people in a study spontaneously mentioned "goals" and their happiness.
"Though it is generally assumed that you need goals to lead a happy life, evidence is mixed. The reason seems to be that unhappy people are more aware of their goals, because they seek to change their life for the better."
But perhaps the most intriguing finding from an array of studies on file at the database is the lack of correlation between seeing meaning in life and being happy. 

The Happiness of Pursuit

If you're an American and you're not having fun, it just might be your own fault. Our long national expedition is entering its 238th year, and from the start, it was clear that this would be a bracing place to live. There would be plenty of food, plenty of land, plenty of minerals in the mountains and timber in the wilderness. You might have to work hard, but you'd have a grand time doing it.







Who’s Happy Around the World?


Monday, 24 June 2013

What’s Europe Got Against Google? France Threatens Fines Over Privacy

With Google already trying to contain the damage to its reputation from the National Security Agency (NSA) leaks, it now risks another dent to its image, as European privacy officials threaten to fine the company for sucking up vast amounts of user information without explaining the purpose.
On Thursday, French officials gave Google three months to explain how long it stores the information it gathers through Gmail, YouTube and other services, and to explain why it is collecting it. If Google fails to comply, which looks possible, it could face fines in France of up to about $400,000. “We realized that they are collecting a huge amount of data on each of us, and most people know nothing about this,” Isabelle Falque-Pierrotin, president of France’s National Commission on Computing and Freedom, told TIME on Thursday. “It is time for action.”


Paris is beating London in charm offensive to lure wealthy Chinese shoppers

For one fleeting instant, an expression of intense exasperation flickered across the face of the immaculately groomed sales assistant in a chic Parisian department store as the Chinese tourists jostled and gestured at watches costing several thousand euros apiece.
Then she bit her lip and smiled. The Chinese visitors counting out wads of euros and engaged in what the Paris authorities call "fervent shopping" neither noticed nor seemed to care. They had cash, lots of it, burning holes in their pockets and, with visits to the Louvre and Versailles beckoning, not much time to spend it on the luxury goods and logos they were seeking.

Stay in a university residence

Enjoy great value for money in historic locations including London, Oxford and Cambridge

http://www.guardiandestinations.co.uk/university-residencies

The Anglo Invasion: France Debates Teaching Courses in English

When I opted to send my child to an all-French school, rather than one of the expat-heavy ones catering to Americans in Paris like us, I braced myself for some complications. And indeed, three years on, much baffles me, like assignments that requires one to memorize Breton librettos or the work of 19th century poet Paul Verlaine — all before the age of 7. But now, with first grade winding down, one baffling aspect of French education has jumped the school wall and into politics, as President François Hollande’s government takes on a contentious issue: how to persuade — or even allow — the French to speak more English, while preserving their own cherished language.


Monday, 17 June 2013

Rindfleischetikettierungs-überwachungsaufgaben-übertragungsgesetz

Sad news from Germany: the British Telegraph reported this week that the Germans are decommissioning what seems to have been the language’s longest word, the little mouthful that is the title of my post today.
The term, which the Telegraph translates as “law delegating beef label monitoring,” apparently arose during the 1990s in response to bovine spongiform encephalopathy. Spawned by a crisis, the R-word may now be the first linguistic fatality attributable to mad cow disease.
It is perhaps too easy to giggle at the agglutinative property of German nouns. It’s one of the ways the German language works, as if word components came with Velcro tabs. For decades, this feature of the language was a gold mine to Anglophone comedy writers, for whom German sounded funny and funny in a particular way (and for historical as well as linguistic reasons). While that form of humor has largely faded, the mystery of these giant linguistic fauna endures. They can perplex and repel, but they are not without interest.
So to their defense: As ours is the world of IMs and tweets, I come to praise long words, not to bury them.

Why Privacy Matters Even if You Have 'Nothing to Hide'

When the government gathers or analyzes personal information, many people say they're not worried. "I've got nothing to hide," they declare. "Only if you're doing something wrong should you worry, and then you don't deserve to keep it private."
The nothing-to-hide argument pervades discussions about privacy. The data-security expert Bruce Schneier calls it the "most common retort against privacy advocates." The legal scholar Geoffrey Stone refers to it as an "all-too-common refrain." In its most compelling form, it is an argument that the privacy interest is generally minimal, thus making the contest with security concerns a foreordained victory for security.

Sunday, 16 June 2013

eat your words The Etymology of the Word 'Yogurt'

Food words have some seriously gnarly roots, but follow them far back enough, and you can see culinary history all tangled up in a few short syllables. Welcome to Eat Your Words

Yogurt has become such a ubiquitous part of American breakfast-and-healthy-snack culture that it's been naturalized as a plain English word. Like zucchini or pita, it's completed the journey from utterly alien loan-word to humdrum noun, one that we can throw around without the italics of foreignness or "according to locals" scare quotes.

But "yogurt" began in Turkish, as yoghurt (there go the italics!). The Turkish word itself comes from an Old Turkish root, yog, meaning something like "condense" or "intensify," which is pretty much what happens to milk when you let it curdle into yogurt. Makes sense! And the actual dish has been around for thousands of years--not surprising for something as simple as "old warm milk"--and was popular in ancient Egypt, Rome, and Greece (where they called it oxygala, "acid milk").
 

You Can Now Get A 3D Printed Action Figure Of Yourself, And The Detail Is Incredible

3D printing color figures of yourself is threatening to become a trend—in Japan last year designers PARTY opened a temporary 3D printing photo booth in a Tokyo gallery where people could turn up, get scanned, and walk away with a mini-figurine of themselves.
And now, following on from that, comes Twinkind who are offering a similar service, but these guys are based in Germany.

Lego People Are Angrier Than Ever

Life in Legoland used to be so simple – smiling doctors helped cheerful patients, contented petrol pump operators filled the tanks of satisfied drivers and classrooms of ecstatic children were taught by beaming teachers.
But then life became more complicated. Anger, puzzlement and confusion started to set in – the beatific existence of the Lego figurine was over.

British citizenship test 'like bad pub quiz'

The British citizenship test taken by 150,000 people every year has the intellectual rigour of a "bad pub quiz", a report suggests.
Thom Brooks of Durham University criticised the inclusion of "trivial" facts such as the age of Big Ben and the date on which the country's first curry house was established.
Most people in the UK would struggle with such questions, he added.
But the government said it had "stripped out mundane information".
The Life In The UK test must be passed to qualify for indefinite leave to remain in the country.
But Dr Brooks, a US immigrant who sat and passed the test in Newcastle upon Tyne in 2009, becoming a British citizen in 2011, said it was "unfit for purpose".

To tip or not to tip... or should it be banned?

A New York restaurant has banned tipping to spare customers the bother, while some restaurants in other US cities have already replaced the gratuity with a fixed optional service charge. So is the discretionary tip falling out of favour in the land where it's king?
A young man and woman are sitting in a restaurant in New York, enjoying their second date.
The man pays the waiter the bill and heads to the bathroom while the woman gathers her things.
"How much did he tip?" she asks the waiter. He tells her.
When the man comes back to the table, there is an angry exchange and she says she doesn't want to see him again.
A tip of 8.5% brought that romance to a premature end.

Thursday, 13 June 2013

Living in the mountains can change the way you speak

Living at high altitudes can change the way people speak and may help to explain why different languages have evolved around the world.  

Scientists have found that languages that use "ejective" consonants – rapid bursts of air exhaled while making a sound – tend to be spoken at higher altitudes.

Ejective consonants are not used in the English language, but may be easier to produce in thin mountain air, the researchers believe.
It is some of the first evidence for how geography can influence the sounds produced in a language.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/10117037/Living-in-the-mountains-can-change-the-way-you-speak.html 

 

Monday, 10 June 2013

Boundless Informant: the NSA's secret tool to track global surveillance data

The National Security Agency has developed a powerful tool for recording and analysing where its intelligence comes from, raising questions about its repeated assurances to Congress that it cannot keep track of all the surveillance it performs on American communications.
The Guardian has acquired top-secret documents about the NSA datamining tool, called Boundless Informant, that details and even maps by country the voluminous amount of information it collects from computer and telephone networks.
The focus of the internal NSA tool is on counting and categorizing the records of communications, known as metadata, rather than the content of an email or instant message. 

Gegen die NSA ist Gegenwehr kaum möglich

Ein Überwachungssystem wie Prism lässt sich zumindest zum Teil austricksen. Aber wer einmal in Verdacht der Geheimdienste gerät, ist chancenlos, sagen Experten.
Die NSA interessiert sich brennend für deutsche Internetnutzer. Das jedenfalls geht aus Daten des Analysewerkzeugs Boundless Informant des US-Geheimdienstes hervor, die der Guardian veröffentlicht hat. Demnach fragt die NSA in keinem europäischen Land mehr Nutzerdaten ab als in Deutschland. Warum das so ist, schreibt der Guardian nicht. Für viele dürfte eine andere Frage eh wichtiger sein: Wie können sie verhindern, ins Raster der US-Behörde zu geraten?
Es gibt darauf mehrere Antworten. Die erste lautet: Boykott. Wer Microsoft, Apple, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, PalTalk, AOL, Skype und YouTube nicht nutzt, wird vom Prism-System nicht direkt erfasst. 

Tuesday, 14 May 2013

British say the French are the most arrogant people in Europe - and the French agree

But a few eyebrows will be raised by an authoritative new survey’s findings that the French agree they are the continent’s most arrogant people and that the Greeks rate themselves as the most trustworthy.
The Washington DC-based Pew Research Centre polled more than 7,600 people in eight European countries about their attitudes towards the EU, their governments and their neighbours.
The findings throw up intriguing insights into new national stereotypes in the wake of the Eurozone crisis, which has seen Germany take a leading role in imposing unpopular austerity measures on the struggling economies of southern Europe.
Everyone, including the British, agreed that the Germans were the most trustworthy people in the EU, apart from the Greeks, who awarded themselves that accolade.
The traditional antagonism between the UK and France is reflected in the survey, with Britons judging their neighbours over the Channel to be the least trustworthy and the most arrogant.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/eu/10055933/British-say-the-French-are-the-most-arrogant-people-in-Europe-and-the-French-agree.html 

"Stags Hens & Bunnies, Blackpool"

Junggesellenabschiede in Blackpool: "Das ist die Kultur der Arbeiterklasse"

Artikel:

http://www.spiegel.de/panorama/dougie-wallace-fotografiert-in-blackpool-ausufernde-junggesellenabschiede-a-899581.html#ref=rss

Link zu Fotos:

http://dougiewallace.com/356061/stags-hens-bunnies-blackpool/

 

Monday, 6 May 2013

Working gun made with 3D printer

The world's first gun made with 3D printer technology has been successfully fired in the US.
The controversial group which created the firearm, Defense Distributed, plans to make the blueprints available online.
The group has spent a year trying to create the firearm, which was successfully tested on Saturday at a firing range south of Austin, Texas.
Anti-gun campaigners have criticised the project.
Europe's law enforcement agency said it was monitoring developments.

The Oxford English Dictionary and its chief word detective

Historical dictionaries are not just about definitions.
Every word or phrase has a story, and the historical lexicographer has to tease this story out from whatever documentation can be found. That is one of the pleasures of working on the Oxford English Dictionary.
Pom
An enduring myth is that the word pom (as in whinging pom and other more colourful expressions) is an acronym from either "Prisoner of His Majesty" or even "Permit of Migration", for the original convicts or settlers who sailed from Britain to Australia.
The first recorded use of pom comes from 1912, which is quite - but not unnaturally - early for an acronym.
There is no historical documentation to support these myths (rather like the disproved theory that posh derives from tickets for the upmarket cabins on the old P&O liners - port out, starboard home). Instead the etymology is apparently more circuitous. 

Monday, 29 April 2013

I'd be all thumbs with a non-qwerty keyboard

What's got two thumbs and can type 65 words a minute? This guy! Researchers have designed a new keyboard layout for tablets and smartphones which leaves eight of the standard finger complement hanging, rearranging the letters so that they can be speedily prodded at by the helpfully opposable thumbs of the user.





Police-speak: An appreciation

The police have always had their own language. But their often-mocked manner of speaking to the public displays a streak of comic genius, says Charles Nevin.
As we tweet, text, abbreviate and generally truncate our way through this frantic life, it's good to know that there is at least one small area of public discourse where a relish for orotundity and a delight in stately sarcasm still flourish. I refer, of course, to those upstanding upholders of order, our police.






Sunday, 28 April 2013

TED Talk: Ken Robinson says schools kill creativity

Sir Ken Robinson makes an entertaining and profoundly moving case for creating an education system that nurtures (rather than undermines) creativity.
Creativity expert Sir Ken Robinson challenges the way we're educating our children. He champions a radical rethink of our school systems, to cultivate creativity and acknowledge multiple types of intelligence.
http://www.ted.com/talks/ken_robinson_says_schools_kill_creativity.html

Monday, 22 April 2013

Toddlers becoming so addicted to iPads they require therapy

Children as young as four are becoming so addicted to smartphones and iPads that they require psychological treatment. 

Experts have warned that parents who allow babies and toddlers to access tablet computers for several hours a day are in danger of causing “dangerous” long term effects.
The youngest known patient being treated in the UK is a four-year-old girl from the South East.
Her parents enrolled her for compulsive behaviour therapy after she became increasingly “distressed and inconsolable” when the iPad was taken away from her.
Her use of the device had escalated over the course of a year and she had become addicted to using it up for to four hours a day.
Dr Richard Graham, who launched the UK’s first technology addiction programme three years ago, said he believed there were many more addicts of her age. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/10008707/Toddlers-becoming-so-addicted-to-iPads-they-require-therapy.html 

 

The peril of 'showrooming'

Have you ever seen something you wanted in a shop, tried it, checked the price online on your smartphone, found it was cheaper, and walked out? Welcome to the world of "showrooming".
"The staff at Jessops would like to thank you for shopping with Amazon" read the sign in a shop window shortly after the British camera chain went into administration.
It was a dry reaction to a growing problem for "bricks and mortar"-focused retailers. Showrooming is said to have exacerbated the decline of high-profile brands like Comet.
Gadget stores, bookshops and the cosmetics industry are all losing sales to showroomers, but solutions have proved hard to find.
Kelly Buckle, 23, of Birmingham, sometimes spends more than £200 in a single shopping trip - but never actually gets as far as the checkout.
"I can go in and smell a perfume and then find it online for £30 less," she says. 


First Printed Book in America Expected to Fetch Up to $30M in Auction

A copy of the Bay Psalm Book, the first printed book in the land that would eventually become the United States of America, will head to auction in late November where it is expected to fetch anywhere between $15 million to $30 million.


Monday, 15 April 2013

50 Must-Have iPad Apps

Fifty must-have apps, from A to Z: Here’s a list of essentials every iPad owner should consider. Each entry features alternative options to check out, too, for well over 150 apps in all. Did we miss something? Tell us about the apps you can’t live without in the comments section below.


Thursday, 11 April 2013

Was wollen Sie von Sheryl Sandberg wissen?

Frauen verhindern ihren Aufstieg selbst, schreibt die Facebook-Managerin in ihrem Buch. Ist sie die Stimme einer neuen Frauenbewegung? Wir stellen ihr Leserfragen.
 
Als Sheryl Sandberg vom US-Magazin Forbes zur fünftmächtigsten Frau der Welt gleich nach Angela Merkel und Hillary Clinton gewählt wurde, fühlte sie sich bloßgestellt. Wie eine Hochstaplerin sei sie sich vorgekommen, schreibt die Facebook-Managerin in ihrem Buch Lean in – Frauen und der Wille zum Erfolg.
Unter dem Hashtag #leanin sind Kommentare zum Buch auf Twitter zu finden. Am kommenden Donnerstag wird Sandberg bei der ZEIT-Konferenz Frauen in Führungspositionen in Hamburg zu Gast sein. Wir werden der Managerin ausgewählte Leserfragen in einem Videointerview stellen. Unter #leanin können Sie Fragen vorschlagen.


Wednesday, 10 April 2013

6 Points to Make in Your Self Evaluation

When preparing for an annual review, you'll want to compose a self evaluation that includes both your strong points and areas in need of improvement. This exercise is meant to help you evaluate your strong suits, as well as identify areas in need of improvement. To devise such a document, you'll need to include certain key points that will help you come up with an overall performance improvement strategy. 

Viewpoint: Why do tech neologisms make people angry?

The bewildering stream of new words to describe technology and its uses makes many people angry, but there's much to celebrate, writes Tom Chatfield.
From agriculture to automobiles to autocorrect, new things have always required new words - and new words have always aroused strong feelings.
In the 16th Century, neologisms "smelling too much of the Latin" - as the poet Richard Willes put it - were frowned upon by many.
Willes's objects of contempt included portentous, antiques, despicable, obsequious, homicide, destructive and prodigious, all of which he labelled "ink-horn terms" - a word itself now vanished from common usage, meaning an inkwell made out of horn.

Monday, 8 April 2013

Margaret Thatcher Milchräuberin, Falkland-Kriegerin und Gewerkschaftsschreck

Innen- wie außenpolitisch war Margaret Thatcher eine Hardlinerin, die keine Angst vor Konflikten hatte. 1982 führte sie ihr Land in den Falklandkrieg gegen Argentinien, innenpolitisch legte sie sich vor allem mit den bis dahin äußerst einflussreichen britischen Gewerkschaften an. So umstritten sie war, als erste Regierungschefin in London prägte sie ihr Land nachhaltig. Konservative Politiker verehren noch heute ihre Politik des Thatcherismus. Margaret Thatcher starb im Alter von 87 Jahren an den Folgen eines Schlaganfalls.

Margaret Thatcher: Portrait of the Iron Lady

Margaret Thatcher died April 8, 2013 from a stroke. She was 87. She had been the longest serving British Prime Minister of the 20th century. She set off a profound reversal in national fortunes that became known as Thatcherism — transforming her country's politics such that for Labour to come back to power, the erstwhile Socialists had to adopt a much more centrist stance, hence Tony Blair's "New Labour." What Margaret Thatcher began is also rightly referred to as the Thatcher Revolution because the leader of the Conservative Party was a radical ideologue whose policies turned British society upside down — and still cause heated if not vitriolic arguments. In recognition of her 11-1/2 years in office and her immense achievements, historians will inevitably rank her alongside Winston Churchill as the greatest of this century's British Prime Ministers.