Thursday, April 09, 2009
O' Reilly Vs Letterman
Whoa...am I losing my mind or is Bill O'Reilly actually making sense. Here and here are his recent interviews with Dave Letterman. Listen to what he says in Part (2) of the interview!
Wednesday, April 08, 2009
Lagaan in the making?
Here's an article on the Afghan cricket team that is making good progress in the ICC qualifiers
"We never saw outside the camp. We just felt that everything else in the world would be the same. But I realised later that I led a very, very simple life. For a long time there was no electricity, computers, phones, facilities or anything. Very hard, very difficult. It was so hot. Sometimes it was nearly 50 degrees [Celsius] and we had no fans or air conditioning. So maybe that's why we are a little bit strong. When we see these kind of facilities, it's just so easy. Playing in these temperatures is easy"
"We never saw outside the camp. We just felt that everything else in the world would be the same. But I realised later that I led a very, very simple life. For a long time there was no electricity, computers, phones, facilities or anything. Very hard, very difficult. It was so hot. Sometimes it was nearly 50 degrees [Celsius] and we had no fans or air conditioning. So maybe that's why we are a little bit strong. When we see these kind of facilities, it's just so easy. Playing in these temperatures is easy"
Tuesday, April 07, 2009
Is the price right?
Here's a TED talk by Benjamin Wallace on how price of item has an influence on happiness.
While the talk was interesting and I strongly agree with the general theme of the discussion, I wasn't impressed with the research and the narrative. In fact, as is mentioned in its comments section, it is a little bit manipulative.
In any case, here are some things which apparently if you possess, consume or experience, you'll attain some form of short-term nirvana!
While the talk was interesting and I strongly agree with the general theme of the discussion, I wasn't impressed with the research and the narrative. In fact, as is mentioned in its comments section, it is a little bit manipulative.
In any case, here are some things which apparently if you possess, consume or experience, you'll attain some form of short-term nirvana!
- Kobe rib eye steak CUT, Los Angeles - $160
- Pasta with white truffles , Del Posto, Manhattan - $120
- Ty Warner Suite, Four seasons, Manhattan - $30,000/night
- Cor Soap, Plank, Boston - $120
- Jormos Jeans, 45 rpm, Japan - $800
- Per Me Olive Oil, Armando Manni, Italy - $33.50/4 ounces
- Five star golf clubs, Honma, Japan - $57,000
- Kopi Luwak coffee, Animal Coffee, Australia - $600/lb
- Neorest 600 toilet, Toto, Japan - $5,980
- Vividus bed, Hastens, Sweden - $64,950
- Veyron 16.4, Bugatti, Italy - $1,500,000
- 1947 Cheviot Blanc - Priceless (apparently)!
Sunday, April 05, 2009
Greed and Stupidity
Here's a very good article by David Brooks in the NY Times on two hypotheses that explain the causes and effects of the current crisis.
Here's the supporting article for the greed hypothesis and here's the supporting article for the stupidity hypothesis.The greed hypothesis is replete with facts while the stupidity hypothesis is bit more theoretical. I prefer the latter particularly from a conclusion viewpoint.
Following is an excerpt from the stupidity hypothesis.
"From the point of view of top management, the diversity of operations means that executives were managing assets and services with which they have little familiarity. This has led to the spread of pseudo-objectivity: the search for standardized measures of achievement across large and disparate organizations. Its implicit premises were these: that information which is numerically measurable is the only sort of knowledge necessary; that numerical data can substitute for other forms of inquiry; and that numerical acumen can substitute for practical knowledge about the underlying assets and services"
Numbers as a sole measure of performance...That sadly sounds very familiar!!
Here's the supporting article for the greed hypothesis and here's the supporting article for the stupidity hypothesis.The greed hypothesis is replete with facts while the stupidity hypothesis is bit more theoretical. I prefer the latter particularly from a conclusion viewpoint.
Following is an excerpt from the stupidity hypothesis.
"From the point of view of top management, the diversity of operations means that executives were managing assets and services with which they have little familiarity. This has led to the spread of pseudo-objectivity: the search for standardized measures of achievement across large and disparate organizations. Its implicit premises were these: that information which is numerically measurable is the only sort of knowledge necessary; that numerical data can substitute for other forms of inquiry; and that numerical acumen can substitute for practical knowledge about the underlying assets and services"
Numbers as a sole measure of performance...That sadly sounds very familiar!!
Friday, April 03, 2009
Thursday, April 02, 2009
Shizzle My Nizzle
Wednesday, April 01, 2009
Are you lucky?
Here's what Michael Shermer of Scientific American has to say about it.
"Wiseman gave subjects the "big five" personality scale, which measures "agreeableness," "conscientiousness," "extroversion," "neuroticism" and "openness." Although there were no differences between lucky and unlucky people on agreeableness and conscientiousness, Wiseman found significant differences for extroversion, neuroticism and openness."
Shermer makes a reference to Lou Gehrig. If you are like me and don't know who Lou Gehrig was, here's his wiki page! Pretty inspirational character!
"Wiseman gave subjects the "big five" personality scale, which measures "agreeableness," "conscientiousness," "extroversion," "neuroticism" and "openness." Although there were no differences between lucky and unlucky people on agreeableness and conscientiousness, Wiseman found significant differences for extroversion, neuroticism and openness."
Shermer makes a reference to Lou Gehrig. If you are like me and don't know who Lou Gehrig was, here's his wiki page! Pretty inspirational character!
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