Car sales in Italy have dropped back to their 1964 levels!
Author: neil
Reinventing Society In The Wake Of Big Data | Conversation | Edge
While on the subject of Big Data, from an earlier post, this interview with Alex Pentland is a riveting read. He explains what big data (or lots of data) really does for those who use it, at the expense of those who don’t really understand the implications of their book-face posting & zillions of interactions online.
The Fears, and a Thrill of Big Data – NYTimes.com
Put any two random words together, & they form new meaning these days.
Big Brother, Big Government, Big Everything.
Big Data, too.
Incentive to exercise?
Enemy of the State – & it’s not a movie
Weigh this.
A chap gets you to willingly share all your personal information, photos, friends list (at least those online), birthdays, location etc etc. He gets hailed as the best entrepreneur of the whatever period in history, multi-billion dollar valuations for his company. (Book-Face Zuckerberg)
Another lifts the lid on the criminal acts of a government who ostensibly commits murder of innocents in the name of democracy. He gets hounded by multiple governments, his own government denies any help to him, his news organisation is starved of payments, gets charged with sexual assault, & as finally gets labelled “Enemy of the state“. (Julian Assange/ Wikileaks).
Whither justice? Or is it a figment of our collective imagination?
How dependent are you on online banking?
As more and banks plod towards the Internet of Banking, (& the less of “currency” that we see & touch), we put too much of trust in the “big” organisations to keep “our money” safe. Trouble is, they either don’t know, or care to, or both.
6 American Banks were impacted by a Denial of Service attack last week, which meant their customers couldn’t get access to their accounts online or pay their bills.
Doctor Smartphone
As technology pervades every aspect of our lives (even if we don’t want it to), here’s an interesting perspective of how smartphones are taking over our “health checks”.
Your phone will soon be your new doctor — Tech News and Analysis:
Links Of The Week – 2009-09-30
Deutsche Telecom is getting its US subsidiary T-Mobile to sell 7200 towers to Crown Castle for $2.4b!
A fascinating documentary on “decision-making” from the BBC Horizon. Runs ~50 minutes. How spontaneous or rational are you? If you don’t have the time, go to 31:20 for how subliminal influences impact decisions.
What is a PhD, really? An illustrated example!
Here’s a step by step guide on how to make a sandwich if you don’t have arms. Inspirational!
A simple solution to the Apple maps vs Google maps fight. There is a difference between users, consumers & customers. Users use, consumers consume & customers pay!
Simon & Garfunkel at their Central Park Concert in 1980! or maybe you want to get a bass guitar lesson with Jaco Pastrious (if it catches your fancy).
A follow up story on Onion: It’s Iran’s official news agency that got duped this time round!
A picture of the largest umbrella in the world
Organ harvesting is in fashion, even when the donors may not necessarily be dead!
This story, No evidence of disease– an account of a disease that never was, sheds a different perspective!
Little blind fish -CPR
Things that go …. in the night
At about 2am last night, I awoke from deep sleep to a strange sound. I guess all sounds sound strange at 2am, but I’m not usually up at that hour to have any experience in the matter. It continued for what seemed like a long time, & then I realised what it was.. it was my wife, giggling away in her dream, well, it wasn’t giggling as much as peals of laughter. Pointing to our 18month old lying next to her, from deep in her sleep, she repeated “Rapunzel!” a couple of times, & then woke up, but the laughter continued, for a good 5 minutes after.
I shush’d her, trying my 2am brand of logic – “the neighbors might complain of an abusive husband, & the wife cries every night, & I hate to have to explain to the cops that this is how you laugh in your sleep. Shut up & go back to sleep”. It didn’t work, as I found out this morning. “Do you think I’m Mrs. M?” (the caretaker who’s lived with my wife’s family for over 4 decades, & is a bit slow in all matters of the mind, but then again, that is what my wife says!).
And this morning, reciting the happenings of the night to my 6 year old daughter brought forth fresh peals of laughter from the young lady. The toddler, evidently liking the sounds from his sister, added to the din.
I know what Heaven must sound like!
🙂