Thursday, 22 December 2011

A Brief History of Eggnog

Eggnog really makes you wonder: How did humans first think chugging a spiced and spiked egg-yolk-and-milk mixture was a good idea? It’s a bit like Gaston from Beauty and the Beast: “Now that I’m grown, I eat five dozen eggs, so I’m roughly the size of a barge!” Yet despite its “love it or hate it” fame, eggnog has charmed drinkers for nearly a millennium.
While culinary historians debate its exact lineage, most agree eggnog originated from the early medieval Britain “posset,” a hot, milky, ale-like drink. By the 13th century, monks were known to drink a posset with eggs and figs. Milk, eggs, and sherry were foods of the wealthy, so eggnog was often used in toasts to prosperity and good health.

Sir Gus O’Donnell: The UK faces break-up

Britain's most senior civil servant Sir Gus O’Donnell has publicly questioned whether the United Kingdom will still exist in a few years’ time. 

Writing in The Telegraph, Sir Gus O’Donnell asks whether the Union can survive increasing pressure for Scottish independence.
Sir Gus, who is the head of more than 440,000 civil servants in England, Scotland and Wales, says the future of the Union is one of several “enormous challenges” facing the political establishment in the coming years.
The admission from such a senior non-political figure that the break-up of Britain is now a real possibility is likely to push the issue up the political agenda.
“Over the next few years there will be enormous challenges, such as whether to keep our kingdom united,” he warns officials and politicians. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/8971787/Sir-Gus-ODonnell-The-UK-faces-break-up.html 

 

Britons are happier than the French or Germans, say Cambridge academics

People in Britain are happier than the French and Germans, according to a study by Cambridge University psychiatrists. 

One in five people in Britain could be described as "flourishing", compared to 14 per cent in France.
Academics found that no country in Europe had a population of which more than half was happy. The most miserable countries were Russia and Portugal, where fewer than one in ten citizens were reported as "flourishing".

 

Monday, 19 December 2011

Warum Demokratie die Geisteswissenschaften braucht

Die US-Intellektuelle Martha Nussbaum sprach in Berlin. Sie sieht die Geisteswissenschaften in der Krise, wovon naturwissenschaftlich-technologische Fächer profitierten.

Sunday, 18 December 2011

Have a very messy Christmas, says Archbishop of Canterbury

Dr Rowan Williams said that many families start each Christmas season with good intentions, such as writing cards weeks in advance and arranging every detail of the turkey dinner.
But their preparations often descend into “the usual mess” and a “last-minute panic”, with the problems made worse this year in many homes by worries about how to pay for it all. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/topics/christmas/8959204/Have-a-very-messy-Christmas-says-Archbishop-of-Canterbury.html?utm_source=tmg&utm_medium=td_8959204&utm_campaign=christmas1712 

Christmas through the looking glass

During this grand finale of the annual consumer cycle, the Christmas shop windows are like a stage set laid out for the shopping public to perform on. By turns opulent, witty and innovative, they set the scene for the big winter spend; the more perfectly transporting the displays, the more likely it is that we will fulfil our role alongside them, buying into the glamour of luxury.
The design of the most spectacular windows famously starts a year in advance, with the teams accumulating folders of reference images and scouring eBay and flea markets for suitable props. The visual merchandising departments tend to see their Christmas windows as a kind of gift to the shopping public. Over the past half-century or so, they've become part of the Christmas tradition: not so much a chance to cram the windows with alluring merchandise as an opportunity to create a fantasy world so beguiling that shoppers will be charmed in through the doors.

Will BlackBerry survive 2012?

Troubled BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion has announced further delays to its new phones - now analysts and commentators are making their complaints ever more loudly.

 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/blackberry/8961589/Will-BlackBerry-survive-2012.html

How to make Heston's must-have Christmas pudding

It may have sold out for a second year at Waitrose, and be selling online for as much as £250, but fear not. There's another way to obtain Heston Blumenthal's Waitrose Hidden Orange Christmas Pudding - make it yourself. Rose Prince shows you how. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/topics/christmas/8155014/How-to-make-Hestons-must-have-Christmas-pudding.html 

Feeling under the weather? You've got Christmas Tree Syndrome

Don't be too quick to judge those who feel under the weather over the festive period – rather than seasonal overindulgence, it could be their Christmas tree making them ill.
The traditional centrepiece decoration has been blamed for triggering a range of health complaints, from wheezing and coughing to lethargy and insomnia.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/topics/christmas/8963438/Feeling-under-the-weather-Youve-got-Christmas-Tree-Syndrome.html 

Monday, 12 December 2011

The ChIndian Century

I saw the Indian hit movie 3 Idiots recently in an unusual location: a cineplex in Hong Kong. Very rarely do Bollywood flicks make the city's commercial circuit — the conventional wisdom holds that they do not appeal to local audiences. Yet my Sunday morning matinee was 80% filled, mostly with Chinese of all ages. Some took the movie at face value: the zany antics of Indian college kids. But the majority of viewers, it seemed to me, got the universal moral about breaking free from social straitjackets. They laughed when they were meant to, and didn't when they weren't. While the foreign 3 Idiots was a box-office monster, 1911, a China-backed war docudrama starring hometown celebrity Jackie Chan, bombed. Go figure: India 1, China 0.

Feasting On Europe


To hear the people of Iceland describe it, the wilderness area of Grimsstadir in the country's remote northeast is as serene a spot as you can hope to find on the planet. From its cluster of farms and guesthouses, you can watch the dazzling northern lights, drive to Europe's most powerful waterfall a short distance away and, according to the area's website, enjoy "big, beautiful crystal-clear skies and mountain vistas."
But something far less serene has played out in Grimsstadir in recent weeks: a battle over China's rising economic clout.

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,2101883,00.html#ixzz1gJ64LLMI

Monday, 5 December 2011

The Beginning of the End for Facebook?

My friends at comScore shared with me that, in September 2011 in the U.S., the average number of minutes that each Facebook user spent on the site was 410. Last year, that month’s average was 287, signaling a 42% increase. Also during September 2011, Facebook commanded 14.7% of total U.S. consumer Internet-usage minutes, the most of any website. Given that the site is still on a growth trend, how could I be crazy enough to ask if it’s the beginning of the end for Facebook? Let’s explore.
One of the things you learn living in Silicon Valley your whole life is how fast things can change. Big companies can come and go in extremely short periods of time. Yahoo! was once what Google is today. MySpace was once what Facebook is today. Innovation happens everywhere and waits for no company.

The 9 Most Christmassy Towns in America

We take a look at the towns and cities that take this holiday very seriously, from the over-the-top light extravaganzas to the classic and quaint

4m children in UK do not own a single book, study finds

The latest report by the National Literacy Trust discloses that one in three does not have a book of their own.
The number has increased from seven years ago, the last time the poll was conducted, when it stood at one in 10 youngsters, meaning the number of children without books has triped.
The latest survey, which was based on a survey of 18,000 children aged between eight and 16, shows that boys are more likely to be without books than girls.
The researchers also found that children who are eligible for free school meals - a measure of poverty - are less likely to own a book than their more wealthy peers.
The findings show that children who own books are more likely to perform better at school. 
 

Gun Sales Shot Up on Black Friday

Gun shops rang in the holiday shopping season with a bang. Black Friday 2011 set the biggest one-day record of background check requests for hopeful gun buyers, eclipsing the previous record by 32%, according to the FBI. The agency saw 129,166 requests for the instant background checks required for all firearm buyers. The previous high was Black Friday 2008, which drew 97,848 requests.

Saturday, 3 December 2011

Margaret Thatcher: a figure of history and legend

It is cruel to depict a living human being in fallible old age, but the new film of Margaret Thatcher, starring Meryl Streep, lifts her above political controversy and turns her into a cultural icon. 

The best way to understand why a feature film about Margaret Thatcher might work is to imagine trying to make one about other 20th-century British prime ministers. How about Safety First (Stanley Baldwin), A Period of Silence (Clement Attlee), Crisis? What Crisis? (James Callaghan) or In No Small Measure (John Major)? It doesn’t do, does it? Even Tony Blair, already the subject of several films, invites a satire treatment, not a life story. There is a case, perhaps, for David Lloyd George. There is the towering subject of Winston Churchill. And then there is Margaret Thatcher. 

 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/starsandstories/8932995/Meryl-Streep-as-Margaret-Thatcher-a-figure-of-history-and-legend.html 

Why are US teenagers driving less?

American teenagers are taking to the road in fewer numbers than ever before. What's behind this trend and does it mean the end of the car as adolescent status symbol and rite of passage?
If Ferris Bueller had a day off now, would he spend it on Facebook?
Recent research suggests many young Americans prefer to spend their money and time chatting to their friends online, as opposed to the more traditional pastime of cruising around in cars.
For the high school students in films like Ferris Bueller's Day Off and American Graffiti, cars were the ultimate expression of individuality and personal freedom - just as they have been for generations of Americans.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-15847682

Toilet gaming technology targets urinal boredom

There is not much choice: stare blankly at the wall tiles, focus on shoes with face set in a grimace, or maybe whistle.
When men use a public urinal they are cruelly left in full view, with nothing to do as they answer nature's call.
Until now.

How can musicians keep playing despite amnesia?

Scientists are trying to understand how amnesiacs can lose all memory of their past life - and yet remember music. The answer may be that musical memories are stored in a special part of the brain.
When British conductor and musician Clive Wearing contracted a brain infection in 1985 he was left with a memory span of only 10 seconds.
The infection - herpes encephalitis - left him unable to recognise people he had seen or remember things that had been said just moments earlier.
But despite being acknowledged by doctors as having one of the most severe cases of amnesia ever, his musical ability and much of his musical memory was intact.

Ear stretching: Why is lobe 'gauging' growing in popularity?

Ear stretching goes back a long way.
But you don't have to visit a museum or travel to a remote-ish part of the world to see it because the practice has been adopted in many Western countries.
However, it is not so common that it goes unnoticed. Stretched piercings do tend to stick out like the proverbial sore thumb, particularly if the hole is substantial enough to hold a small object.
For many people, there is an "ouch" or an "eugh" factor when they see someone with a substantial ear lobe stretch but for those that have it done, it is a thing of beauty.

Sunday, 27 November 2011

Will Your Mall Be Tracking Your Cellphone Today?

Some shoppers looking for Black Friday deals will find a surprise waiting for them at the mall—sensors that track their every move.

Thursday, 24 November 2011

Black Friday Thursday: Will Shoppers Really Show Up at Stores on Thanksgiving Night?

One of the biggest stories to emerge this holiday shopping season is the expansion of Black Friday. In years past, retailers pushed the envelope by opening at 4 a.m., or even 3 a.m. the morning (if you want to call it that) after Thanksgiving. That’s just not cutting it this year, when many stores will open their doors to Black Friday shoppers at midnight, or, in the case of Walmart, at 10 p.m. on Thanksgiving night.
Toys R Us, which opened at 10 p.m. on Thanksgiving night of last year, decided it was necessary to open an hour earlier, at 9 p.m. on Turkey Day 2011. Most Toys R Us stores will remain open until 11 p.m. on Black Friday, making for a 26-hour shopping marathon.

Takeout’s Attempted Takeover of Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving has a long-standing tradition as the ultimate home-cooked holiday. But 14 million Americans are expected to dine out on Turkey Day, and another 16 million households will use ready-to-eat takeout foods for some or all of their “home-cooked” Thanksgiving dinner.
The cost of Thanksgiving dinner is rising: A traditional home-cooked feast for 10 costs just under $50, on average, up 13% compared to a year ago.
Dining out, of course, is even more expensive. Perhaps due to the sad state of the economy, fewer Americans are expected to eat the big meal at restaurants this year: Just 6% of the population (14 million people) will dine out on Thanksgiving, according to the Nation’s Restaurant Association, compared to 11% of Americans last year.

Black Friday 2011: Toys R Us, Target Thanksgiving hours spark protests

Black Friday shopping fever is close at hand, and several large retailers are attempting to get a leg up on the competition by opening on Thursday evening, much to the chagrin of some employees. As Bloomberg reported:
Anthony Hardwick says he resents working at Target Corp. on Thanksgiving and has garnered more than 37,000 signatures on an online protest petition.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/black-friday-2011-toys-r-us-target-thanksgiving-hours-spark-protests/2011/11/22/gIQAW2x4lN_story.html?tid=pm_business_pop 

Black Friday 2011: Chain stores opening earlier and offering deeper discounts than in the past

Every Black Friday, there’s a staring contest between retailers and shoppers over price. This year, the stores may have blinked first.
Chains such as Toys “R” Us Inc. and Gap Inc. are opening earlier and offering more markdowns than ever on the day after Thanksgiving, said Mary Delk, a director at Deloitte Consulting. The result may be higher sales and lower profits for retailers over the holiday season.

Manolo Blahnik: This is what I try to do, make women feel like princesses

He's the Canary Islands' most famous export who made London his home and became a worldwide household name and national treasure in the process. His own life story reads like a fairytale, so who better to inspire fashion writer and bestselling author, Camilla Morton's latest fairytale collaboration?

http://fashion.telegraph.co.uk/article/TMG8910678/Manolo-Blahnik-This-is-what-I-try-to-do-make-women-feel-like-princesses.html 

Shakespeare 'could help doctors become better'

Reading William Shakespeare could give physicians a fresh insight into the links between emotion and illness, a retired doctor and scholar believes.
Dr Kenneth Heaton says many doctors fail to connect psychological problems with physical symptoms - and argues the playwright could help them do it.
He listed dozens of examples in which Shakespeare described these phenomena in his works.
"They could learn to be better doctors by studying Shakespeare," he said.
While traditional medical school training never strays far from the science of diagnosis and treatment, there has been growing interest in recent years in including courses on health-related art, history or literature as part of the curriculum.
Dr Heaton, from North Somerset, who studied Shakespeare after retiring from his post as a gastroenterologist, believes that a broader perspective could make it easier to understand the viewpoint and needs of a patient, particularly in general practice. 

Do we still need travel agents to book our holidays?

Thomas Cook, the company that invented package holidays and which has been guiding and reassuring travellers for more than 150 years, is facing some serious head winds. Its long-serving chief executive resigned during the summer after the third profits warning of the year, and on Tuesday it announced that it is borrowing another £100 million to tide it over the difficult winter months. The news has sent shudders through an already nervous travel industry, and spasms of anxiety through anyone who has booked a Thomas Cook holiday.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/travelnews/8910460/Do-we-still-need-travel-agents-to-book-our-holidays.html 

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

Airlines Segregating Tots in ‘Baby Ghettos’ (To Some Other Passengers’ Delight)

What’s worse than getting stuck in the dreaded middle seat of a plane? Having to endure a crying baby in the midst of an already unpleasant flying experience.

'Terminator'-Style Contact Lens Projects Info Before Your Eyes

Those info-streaming retinal displays from the Terminator movies may be closer to fact than fantasy, according to researchers at the University of Washington and Aalto University, in Finland, who are developing a computerized contact lens that could be used to display data — like emails and text messages — right in front of your eyes.

Sunday, 13 November 2011

World's largest dating event sees 20,000 Chinese search for love

On a sunny day on the outskirts of Shanghai on Sunday, 20,000 hopeful, curious and in some cases desperate Chinese gathered for the world's largest dating event. 

But it would be misjudging the mood to say love was in the air.
Instead, in a business convention centre, a stream of pragmatic men and women briskly exchanged vital statistics and contact details.
Lonely hearts advertisements pinned on the wall gave a taste of the proceedings. "Reference: W004763, Name: Yao Qin, Height: 1.63m, Date of Birth: 07.1987," read one. "Lives in Shanghai, has a university degree, annual income 20,000 to 50,000 yuan." 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/8887090/Worlds-largest-dating-event-sees-20000-Chinese-search-for-love.html 

 

Thursday, 10 November 2011

'Occupy' is most commonly used word in English language media, claims study

Repeated references to the Occupy Movement, which inspired protests outside St Paul’s Cathedral in London and in other major world cities, helped push the word into first place, researchers said.
As a noun, the term was also extensively used when referring to the “occupation of Iraq” and “Occupied [Palestinian] Territory”, the Global Language Monitor (GLM), a media analysis company. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/8881273/Occupy-is-most-commonly-used-word-in-English-language-media-claims-study.html 

Monday, 7 November 2011

V is for what? The meaning of the mask

Ask any actor, a mask is powerful. While the purpose of realism in acting is to strip away the pretence and make the actor expose their soul, on their face, for real - a mask does the opposite. It creates instant power and tension. 

V for Vendetta masks: Who's behind them?

The sinister Guy Fawkes mask made famous by the film V for Vendetta has become an emblem for anti-establishment protest groups. Who's behind them?

Tintin: a homage to Hergé that is too adventurous

The new Tintin film is visually dazzling, but dazzle is not always the highest virtue in film-making, writes Charles Moore.

This review is late because I had not intended to write it at all. One look at the publicity stills for Steven Spielberg’s computer-animated film version of Hergé’s creation had convinced me that I would hate it. The film renderings of the characters looked like grotesque parodies of human beings, rather than the peaceful, beautifully drawn cartoons of the master. Research among fellow Tintin-lovers showed that this reaction was widely shared.
Our son, however, who is a much more learned Tintinologist than I, took a different view. Although the film was “far from perfect”, he said, it was “fully in the spirit of the original” and clearly composed by people who loved it: I should go. So, in order to prove that I am not in the 47 per cent of the adult population who regard the young as rude and frightening, I put on my 3D glasses, and went.

 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/charlesmoore/8873503/Tintin-a-homage-to-Herge-that-is-too-adventurous.html

Leonardo da Vinci: Painter at the Court of Milan, National Gallery in London: review

The Leonardo da Vinci exhibition opening this week is a great coup for the National Gallery, which has managed to gather under one roof the most stunning portraiture and sacred art by the world’s original Renaissance Man, writes Richard Dorment. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/art/leonardo-da-vinci/8870754/Leonardo-da-Vinci-Painter-at-the-Court-of-Milan-National-Gallery-in-London-review.html 

Smartphone scams: Owners warned over malware apps

A national computer security campaign is urging smartphone users to do more to protect themselves from unwittingly downloading malware applications.
Get Safe Online says that there has been an increase in smartphone malware as the market has grown.
Criminals are typically creating Trojan copies of reputable apps and tricking users into installing them.
Once on the phone, the app can secretly generate cash for criminals through premium rate text messages.
Get Safe Online, a joint initiative between the government, police and industry, said it was concerned that users of smartphones, such as Android devices, were not taking steps to protect their devices.

Anonymous und Guy Fawkes

Guy Fawkes wollte das englische Parlament in die Luft sprengen, den König töten. Er war ein katholischer Terrorist. Vier Jahrhunderte später wurde eine weiße Maske mit seinem Antlitz zum Symbol der Web-Guerilla Anonymous. Eine Markengeschichte.

Zehn Tipps gegen Perfektionismus

Perfektionisten setzen sich und ihre Umwelt unter Druck. Dabei sind Menschen, die Fehler machen, beruflich erfolgreicher. Wir zeigen zehn Tipps für Imperfektion.

 http://mobil.zeit.de/karriere/beruf/2011-09/tipps-gegen-perfektionismus

Monday, 24 October 2011

Ms., 40 Years On

With Ms. magazine about to celebrate its 40th anniversary in December (its first issue was a supplement to New York magazine), this seems a good time to tip Lingua Franca’s collective hat to the magazine’s and its allies’ remarkable success in deliberately insinuating a new word—Ms.—into the language. To appreciate the difficulty of that, consider the hundreds of unsuccessful attempts to come up with a gender-neutral third-person pronoun that Dennis Baron has tracked at his invaluable Web site.
One of the few other successes I can think of along this line is homophobic, which the OED reports as first being used in a general context in 1975. The word deftly psychologizes hostility toward homosexuals as springing from fear of them. Well played. However, Ms. is a bit more impressive in that, unlike homophobic, it was offered as a substitute for two already well-established words, Miss and Mrs.

A Silicon Valley School That Doesn’t Compute

LOS ALTOS, Calif. — The chief technology officer of eBay sends his children to a nine-classroom school here. So do employees of Silicon Valley giants like Google, Apple, Yahoo and Hewlett-Packard. 
But the school’s chief teaching tools are anything but high-tech: pens and paper, knitting needles and, occasionally, mud. Not a computer to be found. No screens at all. They are not allowed in the classroom, and the school even frowns on their use at home.
Schools nationwide have rushed to supply their classrooms with computers, and many policy makers say it is foolish to do otherwise. But the contrarian point of view can be found at the epicenter of the tech economy, where some parents and educators have a message: computers and schools don’t mix.

Some Supermarkets Shunning Ben & Jerry's 'Schweddy Balls'

“No one can resist my Schweddy Balls!”  Sorry, Ben & Jerry's, but apparently some people can.
A rather suggestive Saturday Night Live sketch from 1998 features baker Pete Schweddy, played by Alec Baldwin, proclaiming the undeniable appeal of his Schweddy Balls creation on NPR.
Ben & Jerry's has come out with their own limited-edition ice cream flavor, calling it an “ode” to the classic sketch that “you won't be able to resist.”  The flavor is described as Fair Trade vanilla ice cream with a hint of rum, “loaded with fudge covered rum and milk chocolate malt balls.”
That sounds pretty delicious, right?  However, the ice cream's name is a little too provocative for certain grocery store chains and the American Family Association affiliate group One Million Moms.  The Mississippi group has been vocal about their disdain for the flavor, calling for a boycott  because of its “vulgar” title.

Sunday, 23 October 2011

Watch Your Mouth: The Protest Food of Occupy Wall Street

Occupy Wall Street is entering its fourth week of protesting corporate greed from New York City’s Zuccotti Park. Last week, the movement’s ranks swelled above 10,000. That’s a lot of mouths to feed. From the start, Occupy Wall Street’s Food Committee has taken on the logistical challenge of feeding its ever-growing participants by calling for donations, encouraging newcomers to bring food to share, and extolling the virtues of the quick and portable peanut butter sandwich. But the movement has yet to find its signature dish.
The history of countercultural movements can be told through their stomachs.

http://www.good.is/post/watch-your-mouth-the-protest-food-of-occupy-wall-street/ 

Will Walmart Shoppers Buy Ethically-Branded Products?

When Project 7 started up in 2008, it launched an ethical branding strategy familiar to Whole Foods shoppers everywhere: Simply chewing a piece of Project 7 gum, popping a Project 7 breath mint, or downing a bottle of Project 7 water would help fund nonprofits that "Feed the Hungry," "Save the Earth," and "Heal the Sick." Soon after it released its charity-minded line, Project 7 landed in that king of crunchy retail outlets. This fall, Project 7 made its way to more unexpected shelves: Walmart's.

http://www.good.is/post/will-walmart-shoppers-buy-ethically-branded-products/

Jay-Z and Warren Buffett Team Up to Teach Kids Financial Literacy

One is worth $39 billion, while the other has a comparatively meager $450 million but significantly more street cred with young people. So Warren Buffett and Jay-Z are teaming up to teach kids about financial literacy. Buffett's animated series Secret Millionaires Club is set to move from the web to television this month, and an animated Jay-Z is the guest star for the first episode on October 23.

Americans Don't Care About Climate Change—And That's OK

“Whatever happened to global warming?” wonders Elisabeth Rosenthal in this week’s New York Times Sunday Review. Apparently Americans don't regard climate change as a pressing issue anymore. In 2006, 79 percent of us believed that the planet is warming. Today it’s just 59 percent. Meanwhile, An Inconvenient Truth has been largely forgotten, and Rick Perry insists the science "is still not settled."

It's Tintin Time!

In the beginning, there was the word, and the word was Tintin. Steven Spielberg didn't know what it meant. "Raiders of the Lost Ark had just opened overseas," he says, "and all through the French reviews, which I couldn't read, there was a smattering of Tintin everywhere. I didn't understand what Tintin meant in French, or what that was referring to."

What Your Supermarket Knows About You

The global financial crisis of 2009 hit consumers hard. Two years later, and they’re still reeling. Spending is down across the board, and even the more affluent are watching their pennies. In this fearful climate, retailers are applying ever more scientific and psychological tactics to lure them back. This was made clear to me on a memorable day in 2010 when I visited the laboratory outside of Chicago of one of the world’s largest consumer goods manufacturers.

Friday, 21 October 2011

Shopping by phone at South Korea's virtual grocery

Online shopping is nothing new, especially in plugged-in South Korea. But one company says it's going further. It's testing out a virtual supermarket in a public place.
At Seolleung underground station in Seoul, there's a row of brightly lit billboards along the platform, with hundreds of pictures of food and drink - everything from fruit and milk to instant noodles and pet food. 

Is reading on the loo bad for you?

Filthy habit or blameless bliss? A public health study by Ron Shaoul lifts the lid on toilet reading once and for all.

Thursday, 20 October 2011

Is the US Declaration of Independence illegal?

In Philadelphia, American and British lawyers have debated the legality of America's founding documents.
On Tuesday night, while Republican candidates in Nevada were debating such American issues as nuclear waste disposal and the immigration status of Mitt Romney's gardener, American and British lawyers in Philadelphia were taking on a far more fundamental topic.
Namely, just what did Thomas Jefferson think he was doing?
Some background: during the hot and sweltering summer of 1776, members of the second Continental Congress travelled to Philadelphia to discuss their frustration with royal rule.
By 4 July, America's founding fathers approved a simple document penned by Jefferson that enumerated their grievances and announced themselves a sovereign nation.

Start Quote

When a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security”
The Declaration of Independence
Called the Declaration of Independence, it was a blow for freedom, a call to war, and the founding of a new empire.
It was also totally illegitimate and illegal.



Sunday, 16 October 2011

Is Occupy Wall Street bad for the American Dream?

Conservative groups responding to Occupy Wall Street argue that hard work, not protests, will bring people out of poverty. Is that true?
As the Occupy Wall Street movement has grown, more and more Americans are stepping up to share their stories and air their grievances.
But not everyone is angry at Wall Street. Conservative reaction to the movement has resulted in counter-protests and new memes, like conservative columnist Erick Erickson's new site, We Are The 53%.
The site is a reaction to We Are The 99 Percent, a website that allows citizens to upload photos of themselves holding a sign with their story - such as too much student debt, trouble getting a job, or no health insurance.
Contributors claim they stand in opposition to the 1% of Americans who control the majority of the country's wealth, as well as the big business and government systems they say allowed the economy to flounder.

Being slightly poorer might actually enrich our lives


I was one of the luckier ones. My BlackBerry never actually collapsed in The Great Global Catastrophe last week – it just staggered a bit. But I was, nevertheless, absolutely furious. Not at the service disruption, which was a minor irritation, but because the public relations fiasco might push my favourite electronic device into extinction. And then I would be forced into buying one of those over-hyped, over-priced toys which the newly canonised Saint Steven of Apple had convinced people that they wanted.
The relentless pressure to upgrade, to keep up with the latest state-of-the-art innovations, may be at its most obvious and ruthless in the electronic gadget business. But that competitiveness (and the brilliant manipulation of public perceptions that it involves) is just a function of a wider cultural change: people could not be persuaded or bullied into buying things they did not know they needed if they were not quite so rich. (Or if society didn’t offer them so many simulacrums of personal wealth in the form of easy credit.) 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financialcrisis/8829120/Being-slightly-poorer-might-actually-enrich-our-lives.html 

Occupy Wall Street protests stepped up around the world

Protests against corporate greed and cutbacks have stepped up across America as protesters in London inspired by the "Occupy Wall Street" movement continued their demonstration through the night. 

Thousands of anti-capitalist protesters returned to New York's Times Square on Saturday, buoyed by a global day of demonstrations in support of their month-long campaign against corporate greed.
In Chicago, more than 2,000 people marched from the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago to Grant Park before setting up tents. Police said they arrested more than 200 protesters who refused to leave this morning.
The Occupy Wall Street movement has been gathering steam over the past month, culminating with the global day of action yesterday.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financialcrisis/8829838/Occupy-Wall-Street-protests-stepped-up-around-the-world.html 

 

Mystery condition makes woman age 50 years in just a few days

Vietnamese woman Nguyen Thi Phuong now looks like a septugenarian after the rapid aging affliction took hold following an allergic reaction to seafood.
Her sad story began in 2008, when her youthful beauty began to fade over the course of just a few days, leaving her with sagging, wrinkled skin all over her face and body.
Until now she has been forced to wear a mask in public to hide her appearance from prying eyes, but now doctors are attempting to establish what caused her sudden and horrifying aging.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/8826277/Mystery-condition-makes-woman-age-50-years-in-just-a-few-days.html 

These days, we all need a housewife to hand

The British housewife is on the way out - and more's the pity. 

The British housewife is fast disappearing, it emerged last week: in a survey of 2,000 women who gave up paid work to look after their families, two thirds rejected the label outright, saying that it had “negative connotations” or was even “insulting”. They preferred the title “stay-at-home mother”, which they felt hinted less strongly at domestic drudgery.
The shift is rather telling. If the ancient word “housewife” suggested a person defined chiefly by her place in the home and marriage to her husband, then “stay-at-home mother” abandons the word “wife” altogether: it junks the husband in favour of the children. “Listen, honey,” it whispers. “The sofa cushions might be plumped, and the casserole is bubbling, but it’s not really for you, it’s for them. Now, could you pop on a wash and take the rubbish out?”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/family/8829161/These-days-we-all-need-a-housewife-to-hand.html 

Frost and snow to hit Britain as October heatwave comes to abrupt end

Temperatures peaked at an unseasonably high 18.3C (64.94F) in Gravesend, Kent, on Saturday, but temperatures are set to drop in the coming days.
Andy Ratcliffe, a forecaster at MeteoGroup, the weather division of the Press Association, said: ''A cold front will start across Scotland and Northern Ireland tomorrow, giving some heavy outbursts of rain, which will turn to snow over the mountains in Scotland.
''The rain will spread further south into northern England and Wales by the end of tomorrow.''
Winds of up to 65 miles per hour are expected across north-western England, Scotland and Northern Ireland, and the odd rumble of thunder is possible.

Monday, 10 October 2011

One more time: Can we please have Canadian arts on Canadian TV, please?

Why do I vote? You didn’t ask, but I’ll tell you anyway.
I vote because I care about where I live. When I came to this country decades ago I was well pleased with where I had landed, pleased enough to feel tied to it in the best possible way. That meant never taking it for granted. So I vote because I care about the neighbourhood, the city, the province and the country where I live and work. 

Interview with John Doyle, Author of The World is a Ball

John Doyle’s book The World is a Ball: The Joy, Madness, and the Meaning of Soccer is an account of one man’s travels around the world following soccer.  The journey begins in 2002 and takes readers through European qualifying and World Cup matches.  Doyle not only gives a recap of the contests, but he also puts the reader in the stadium to experience the emotion and pageantry that goes along with international soccer. In this interview, Doyle, who also writes for The Globe and Mail, discusses the book, his travels around the world, and soccer. 

Grilled Chicken, That Temperamental Star

THE sauce will not behave. 
It is supposed to drip twice, on cue, from the bottom right-hand corner of a forkful of tortellini — first as the fork is lifted above the plate and, second, after the fork pauses briefly in the air and starts to rise again.
Two drips. A sequence that lasts a second and a half, tops.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/09/business/in-food-commercials-flying-doughnuts-and-big-budgets.html?_r=1

Sunday, 9 October 2011

Elizabeth Eckford and Hazel Bryan: the story behind the photograph that shamed America

One was trying to go to school; the other didn’t want her there. Together, Elizabeth Eckford and Hazel Bryan starred in one of the most memorable photographs of the Civil Rights era. But their story had only just begun. 

On her first morning of school, September 4 1957, Elizabeth Eckford’s primary concern was looking nice. Her mother had done her hair the night before; an elaborate two-hour ritual, with a hot iron and a hotter stove, of straightening and curling. Then there were her clothes. People in black Little Rock knew that the Eckford girls were expert seamstresses; practically everything they wore they made themselves, and not from the basic patterns of McCall’s but from the more complicated ones in Vogue. It was a practice borne of tradition, pride, and necessity: homemade was cheaper, and it spared black children the humiliation of having to ask to try things on in the segregated department stores downtown.
In the fall of 1957, Elizabeth was among the nine black students who had enlisted, then been selected, to enter Little Rock Central High School. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/8813134/Elizabeth-Eckford-and-Hazel-Bryan-the-story-behind-the-photograph-that-shamed-America.html 

New Auto Technology Can Tell When You're 'Driving While Drowsy'

In the age of multilingual GPS devices, driver seat massages and cruise control navigation, it was only a matter of time before manufacturers developed drowsy driver alerts.
That's right – technology to tell you when you're in danger in nodding off behind the wheel, bringing you back to full attention through dashboard icons and warning alarms.

Are Debit Card Fees Meant to Get Consumers to Use Credit Cards More?

Why are Bank of America and other financial institutions charging new monthly fees for debit card usage? The move has predictably caused a backlash, and the net result may be that fewer customers will keep using debit cards at all. Could that be the point?

Saturday, 8 October 2011

Why the Washington Establishment is Heeding Occupy Wall Street

The running critique of the Occupy Wall Street protests is that they have too many bongo drums and not enough message coherence. But that hasn’t stopped Washington’s elite–Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and President Barack Obama–from all hearing the same, singular message loud and clear.
“I think people are quite unhappy with the state of the economy and what’s happening,” Bernanke said at a Wednesday hearing on Capitol Hill. “They blame, with some justification, the problems in the financial sector for getting us into this mess, and they’re dissatisfied with the policy response here in Washington. And at some level, I can’t blame them.”

Twitter Breaks Tweets per Second Record In Response to Steve Jobs' Death

The sad news of Steve Jobs' death quickly passed around the internet after it broke on Wednesday, with millions taking to social media to share the story as well as their memories of the man and his legacy. Perhaps unsurprisingly, what resulted was the largest online reaction to any event in recent history, according to new figures just released.
Jobs' death resulted in around 10,000 tweets per second immediately following the news;

Read more: http://techland.time.com/2011/10/07/twitter-breaks-tweets-per-second-record-in-response-to-steve-jobs-death/#ixzz1aCnpJIO4

Tom Stevenson: Finding the next Apple may well be impossible for investors

Maybe it's pushing it to call it a JFK moment. But the airline flying me back from a trip to the Middle East on Thursday considered the death of Steve Jobs significant enough to flash it up on the seat-back screen I was watching.

I guess I'm likely to remember that I was directly above Baghdad when I learnt that the founder of Apple had died.
It was appropriate that I should hear about Jobs's untimely death on a commercial flight because the remarkable success of Apple is a counterpoint to the idea that world-changing inventions can often make poor investments

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/tom-stevenson/8814608/Tom-Stevenson-Finding-the-next-Apple-may-well-be-impossible-for-investors.html 

Thursday, 6 October 2011

Swedish poet Transtroemer wins Nobel Literature Prize

Swedish poet Tomas Transtroemer has been awarded the 2011 Nobel Prize for Literature.
The Royal Swedish Academy named him the recipient "because, through his condensed, translucent images, he gives us fresh access to reality".
The 80-year-old is the 108th recipient of the prestigious prize, given last year to Peruvian Mario Vargas Llosa.
Presented by the Nobel Foundation, the award - only given to living writers - is worth 10 million kronor (£944,246).
A trained psychologist, Transtroemer suffered a stroke in 1990 that affected his ability to talk.

Tributes flood in for Steve Jobs

World and business leaders pay tribute to Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, who has died at the age of 56 from pancreatic cancer.
US President Barack Obama and Russian counterpart Dmitry Medvedev said Mr Jobs had changed the world.
Microsoft's Bill Gates said it had been "an insanely great honour" to work with him. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg remembered his "mentor and friend".
The Twitter microblog site struggled to cope with the traffic of tributes.
Apple itself said Mr Jobs had been "the source of countless innovations that enrich and improve all of our lives" and had made the world "immeasurably better".

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-15202484

Tuesday, 27 September 2011

AB01 - Top ten machines developed by Dyson

2006 Dyson launches, the Dyson Airblade™ hand dryer. It is the fastest, most hygienic hand dryer: drying hands in just ten seconds

Facebook criticised for 'tracking' logged-out users

The controversy was sparked by Nik Cubrilovic, an Australian technology entrepreneur, who found that even after he logged out of the social network, it delivered “cookies” to his web browser that could be used to track visits to other websites.
Cookies are small text files used by websites to store user preferences and the contents of online shopping carts, among other functions.
When users log out of websites cookies are often deleted, but Mr Cubrilovic found that Facebook only altered them, while continuing to store data such as his account ID.This unique identifier could be used to track logged-out users when they visit other websites that have integrated Facebook functions, such as the “Like” button, he said.
“Logging out of Facebook only de-authorizes your browser from the web application, a number of cookies (including your account number) are still sent along to all requests to facebook.com,” Mr Cubrilovic said in a widely-shared blog posting.
“The only solution is to delete every Facebook cookie in your browser, or to use a separate browser for Facebook interactions.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/facebook/8789942/Facebook-criticised-for-tracking-logged-out-users.html 

Amazon to launch iPad tablet rival

Amazon is set unveil a colour, touchscreen update to its popular Kindle e-reader on Wednesday, and many analysts reckon it may sell 5million of units before Christmas.
The rumoured launch is hotly anticipated because Amazon already sells digital books, films and music, and as such is better placed than traditional hardware manufacturers to challenge Apple’s iPad tablet. Amazon is likely to use a heavily adapted version of Google’s Android platform.
The Kindle could sell for approximately half the price of an iPad, although the first models are likely to use a 7” screen rather than the iPad’s 10”. An event has been scheduled in New York on Wednesday evening.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/amazon/8789587/Amazon-to-launch-iPad-tablet-rival.html 

Monday, 26 September 2011

Goodbye, geek chic: Will glasses soon be history?

Tavi Gevinson, 15-year-old fashion blogger, recently launched her online magazine, Rookie. Making the press rounds, she looked typically cool with her Cleopatra eye makeup and thrift-store shifts, but something was different: no eyeglasses. Asked where her trademark round rims had gone, she said, “I was tired of them.”

The next big tech revolution? The global brain

Get ready for the global brain. That was the grand finale of a presentation on the next generation of the Internet I heard last week from Yuri Milner. Group of Eight leaders had a preview of Mr. Milner’s predictions a few months earlier, when he was among the technology savants invited to brief the world’s most powerful politicians in Deauville, France.

Is it too early to be Christmas shopping?

Summer is still fresh in the memory, and yet Christmas shopping in the US and the UK is already under way. But is September just too soon?
Leaving the warm Virginia sunshine outside and walking into the bulk-buy Costco store in Pentagon City, it's easy to spot the Christmas aisles.
They're the ones that twinkle from the starry lights on the trees or, to be more precise, the Pre-Lit, Easy-Shape Christmas Trees, which are yours for $259.99 (£165).
Follow the stars and you're confronted by row upon row of wrapping paper, decorative ribbons and hand-painted Nativity sets. And even flameless, LED candles.
The scene is one that warms many hearts in December, when the advent calendar is being demolished. But in September?

 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-14956224

Saturday, 24 September 2011

Britische Universitäten Was dem Tourismus nicht nützt, ist entbehrlich

Was sich nicht auszahlt, hat kein Existenzrecht: Die englische Wissenschaftspolitik bringt die Universitäten auf Rentabilitätskurs und treibt die Geisteswissenschaften an die Kioske.

Ekelhaft und schmachvoll sei das Vorgehen der englischen Koalitionsregierung, so zürnt die Royal Historical Society (RHS) ob der politisch herbeigeführten Schwindsucht der akademischen Autonomie. Die britischen Geisteswissenschaftler werden gerade Zeugen davon, wie die Parolen der Konservativen und Liberaldemokraten ihrer Forschungsagenda oktroyiert werden: So soll der Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) - die Regierungsbehörde, die geisteswissenschaftliche Forschung unterstützt - fortan einen Großteil der von ihr jährlich verteilten rund 100 Millionen Pfund jenen Institutionen zukommen lassen, die an Regierungsslogans wie der „Big Society“ oder einem anderen der insgesamt sechs Schwerpunkte forschen.

http://www.faz.net/artikel/C31399/britische-universitaeten-was-dem-tourismus-nicht-nuetzt-ist-entbehrlich-30337901.html

Thursday, 22 September 2011

TalkTalk tops UK complaints list

TalkTalk is the most complained about provider of broadband and phone services, according to the latest data from industry regulator Ofcom.
From April to June, it topped the list of angry customer correspondence, while Virgin Media attracted fewest complaints.
However, Ofcom noted that TalkTalk had got better since its last report.

Pope admits Church contains 'bad fish' on Germany visit

The Pope said on the flight from Rome that he understood why some people – especially sex abuse victims and their loved ones – might say "this is no longer my Church".
But he urged Catholics to see the Church was made of both good and bad, and was struggling to right the wrongs committed in its ranks.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/religion/the-pope/8781169/Pope-admits-Church-contains-bad-fish-on-Germany-visit.html 

Wednesday, 21 September 2011

Economy enters 'dangerous phase'

The global economy has entered a "dangerous new phase" of sharply lower growth, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
The organisation warned that continuing political and economic woes in the US and eurozone could force them back into recession.
The IMF says the prognosis for economies in the developed world is "weak and bumpy expansion"

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-14984087

Measuring Metros: Are These the World's Best Cities for Visitors?

How do you take the measure of a city? Is it statistical, like population? Environmental? Everyone wants a pleasant climate. Or it could be sociological – low crime rates and plenty of cultural happenings, to name a few, help improve standard of living. But Travel + Leisure magazine is concerned with only one facet of a city: visitor value.

For Love or Real Estate: The Cost of Getting Divorced in China

In China, nothing quite kills the romance like the threat of losing real estate. Last month, the country's Supreme Court rolled out a new interpretation of China's Marriage Law that changes the way property disputes are handled after a divorce. Since then, couples across China have been thinking more seriously about tying the knot: in the southwest city of Chongqing alone, marriage registrations fell by 30% in the weeks after the changes were made.
 
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2094016,00.html

Tuesday, 20 September 2011

David Attenborough joins campaign against creationism in schools

Sir David Attenborough has weighed into a campaign calling for creationism to be banned from the school science curriculum and for evolution to be taught more widely in schools.

The naturalist joined three Nobel laureates, the atheist Richard Dawkins and other leading scientists in calling on the government to tackle the "threat" of creationism.
Gordon Brown's government issued guidance to all schools that the subject should not be taught to pupils, but neither they nor the coalition government enshrined the recommendation in law.
In a statement on a new campaign website, the 30 scientists and campaign groups including the British Science Association demanded creationism and "intelligent design" be banned outright.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationnews/8769353/David-Attenborough-joins-campaign-against-creationism-in-schools.html