A bucket of interesting links...
Mar. 25th, 2009 12:57 pmBecause you don't spend enough reading online, here are a bunch of tasty links:
- Why does the long-tail online actually reduce diversity across the overall population?
- On the biological underpinnings of morality
- Checklists save lives. They're right up there with Science.
- The Recession is highly regionalized.
- Flying cars! No, really, Flying Cars!
- Today is not a good day to be a Major Metro Newspaper. Next week doesn't look good, either.
- Death doesn't quite work the way we think it does. No, really - it's not the fall that kills you, it's when your cells start getting oxygen again that does it.
- More reasons it's bad to be a newspaper. How much does the printing part of running a newspaper cost? A whole lot.
- We Haven't Gone There Yet, by Harry Turtledove. A short story, for free, on the web, brought to you by the publisherTor Books
- What If Frank Miller drew Charlie Brown? Only two panels, if you've already seen that one, you should go check out the post-apocalyptic Charlie Brown instead. I promise, there aren't any corny A Boy and His Dog jokes in it. Except for that one.
- A really interesting Patrick McGoohan interview, from the 1970s. Includes confirmation of who Number Six really is.
- So, there's this guy. And he decides to make music by sampling You-Tube videos. And it's really, really, seriously good. You should watch it.
- People are starting to look at the spread of malware via high-density WiFi as an epidemiological phenomenon. This is very interesting.
- The Oakland Observatory opened in 1883, and the Chabot Space Center has several Victorian era telescopes. They're throwing a steampunk party on April 18th. For all your aetheric observation needs, eh?
- There's this hypothesis, called the Broken Window theory, that if you clean up a neighborhood, crime drops. They recently ran the experiment in Lowell, Mass. Details inside.
- Nate Silver, over on Five-Thirty-Eight, keeps posting excerpts from econ articles by the folks at Hussman Funds. In particular, they have two weekly article series that are often quite good.