The Story of Steve Jobs: An Inspiration or a Cautionary Tale?

Via Wired:

To some, Jobs’ life has revealed the importance of sticking firmly to one’s vision and goals, no matter the psychic toll on employees or business associates. To others, Jobs serves as a cautionary tale, a man who changed the world but at the price of alienating almost everyone around him. The divergence in these reactions is a testament to the two deep and often contradictory hungers that drive so many of us today: We want to succeed in the world of work, but we also want satisfaction in the realm of home and family. For those who, like Jobs, have pledged to “put a dent in the universe,” his thorny life story has forced a reckoning. Is it really worth being like Steve?

The Story of Steve Jobs: An Inspiration or a Cautionary Tale? | Wired Business | Wired.com

Points:

  • “Join or get out of the way—it’s a phrase that sums up what Jobs’ life has taught his admirers today.”
  • “My lesson from Jobs,” Levie says, “is that I can push my employees further than they thought possible, and I won’t rush any product out the door without it being perfect.” He adds: “That approach comes with collateral damage on the people side.”
  • “If you’re going to fail at building something,” he says, “fail at building the f-ing iPad. Don’t fail at building children.”
  • “Jobs was like dynamite,” Syal says. “Dynamite clears paths, but it also destroys everything around it.”
  • “If he could do Apple and Pixar—two multibillion-dollar companies—then I should be able to handle one business and also my family.”
  • “ Without his unyielding approach to design, we might never have had our iPods and MacBooks and iPads. But most of us don’t need, or want, to take such an unyielding approach.”

They Cracked This 250-Year-Old Code, and Found a Secret Society Inside

Via Instapundit and Wired:

For more than 260 years, the contents of that page—and the details of this ritual—remained a secret. They were hidden in a coded manuscript, one of thousands produced by secret societies in the 18th and 19th centuries. At the peak of their power, these clandestine organizations, most notably the Freemasons, had hundreds of thousands of adherents, from colonial New York to imperial St. Petersburg. Dismissed today as fodder for conspiracy theorists and History Channel specials, they once served an important purpose: Their lodges were safe houses where freethinkers could explore everything from the laws of physics to the rights of man to the nature of God, all hidden from the oppressive, authoritarian eyes of church and state. But largely because they were so secretive, little is known about most of these organizations. Membership in all but the biggest died out over a century ago, and many of their encrypted texts have remained uncracked, dismissed by historians as impenetrable novelties.

They Cracked This 250-Year-Old Code, and Found a Secret Society Inside | Danger Room | Wired.com

Points:

  • Breaking the cipher:
    • Complex cipher. Initial attempt was to record frequency of the symbols to correlate them to letters.
    • Turned to algorithms from computational linguistics normally used for translation. Similar to breaking ciphers: discover rules of the language and apply them.
    • Work backwards by tracking the known rules of English to reduce the number of possible combinations of letters.
    • Use multiple passes of an expectation-maximization algorithm to determine how the cipher corresponds to English or other language words.
    • Convert symbols into something machine readable.
    • The algorithm is time consuming: 5 hours per language compared.
    • Determined multiple symbols were used to represent single letters.
  • Secret societies:
    • “Hundreds of thousands of Europeans belonged to secret societies in the 18th century.”
    • “Though they were clandestine, they were often remarkably inclusive.”
    • “These societies were the incubators of democracy, modern science, and ecumenical religion.”

Ponder: How many more secrets can be made accessible through the algorithms that power modern computing?

Kyle Westaway: Career In Beta

Via Business Insider:

If the recession taught us anything, it's that the rules of the work world have changed. As companies streamlined their operations and new industries emerged as dominant forces, there's no turning back.

The keys to surviving in this new era of work are flexibility, entrepreneurialism and big ideas, according to Kyle Westaway, a social entrepreneurship attorney, Harvard lecturer and thought leader.

Kyle Westaway: Career In Beta - Business Insider

Click through the link and check out the slides. They addressed my pet rocks: robotics and artificial intelligence as workforce destablizers.

Lt General Freakley on Veteran Unemployment

Via Business Insider:

While veteran populations are disproportionately under-employed, they’re also disproportionately qualified for our most in-demand roles. So it raises questions about what systematic differences are present in this community that put these more qualified workers in a less marketable position.

Lt General Freakley on Veteran Unemployment - Business Insider

Points:

  • “While it prepares men and women for warfare, the Department of Defense doesn’t cultivate the networking and relationship skills necessary to empower careers within the military and in post-military civilian lives.”
  • RallyPoint is the platform that can help reshape the professional networking culture of the military community, helping to empower many well-qualified service men and women.” Note: General Freakley is on the board of advisors for RallyPoint. However, his larger point remains about the need for networking.

Ponder:

  • Is networking really the issue or is it a need for greater awareness that there is life after the military, and active duty people need to prepare for it? Those active duty people I know fell into these categories:
    • Awareness of life after the military in time to spend the several years it takes to get a degree and do other things to prepare.
    • Awareness of life after the military perhaps a year or two out, too late to complete a degree but enough time to get a certificate/certification or at least start preparing for the logistics of transition.
    • Those who appeared so duty driven they kept working right up until the end and only did the minimal things to transition out. Would a networking tool like RallyPoint really be of help?
  • Interestingly, those who were active in local churches off post tended to be aware there was life after the military and were able to build relationships or at least acquire knowledge to prepare for transition.

Book Review: The Half-Life of Facts

Via Arts and Letters Daily and WSJ.com:

The point, according to Samuel Arbesman, an applied mathematician and the author of the delightfully nerdy "The Half-Life of Facts," is that knowledge—the collection of "accepted facts"—is far less fixed than we assume. In every discipline, facts change in predictable, quantifiable ways, Mr. Arbesman contends, and understanding these changes isn't just interesting but also useful. For Mr. Arbesman, Wolf's copying mistake says less about spinach than about the way scientific knowledge propagates.

Book Review: The Half-Life of Facts - WSJ.com

Points:

  • “Mr. Arbesman's interest in the spread of knowledge also leads him to the story of Brontosaurus, the lovable, distinct herbivore we all grew up with—only it never existed.”
  • “Knowledge, then, is less a canon than a consensus in a state of constant disruption. Part of the disruption has to do with error and its correction, but another part with simple newness—outright discoveries or new modes of classification and analysis, often enabled by technology.”
  • “Mr. Arbesman illustrates the speed of technological advancement with examples ranging from the magnetic properties of iron—it has become twice as magnetic every five years as purification techniques have improved—to the average distance of daily travel in France, which has exponentially increased over the past two centuries.”

Ponder:

  • “…seems to overstate the predictive power of mathematical extrapolation. Still, he does show us convincingly that knowledge changes and that scientific facts are rarely as solid as they appear.”
  • “If shaky claims enter the realm of science too quickly, firmer ones often meet resistance.”

Practice: “What is to be done? The right response, according to Mr. Arbesman, is to embrace change rather than fight it.”

Hardcover              Kindle

WTFlevel.com: Real-Time updates on Twitter Swearing

Via Trend Hunter

WTFLevel.com is a project to track and monitor the amount of swearing on Twitter at any given moment. It's mostly a humorous attempt to get an idea of how aggravated the planet is at any moment.

We continuously check Twitter for references to a list of swear words. The list is private to prevent anyone from trying to manipulate the system, but as an example, the Seven Dirty Words are all on the list. At the moment, the list is made up of only swears in English.

WTFlevel.com: Real-Time updates on Twitter Swearing

Tracking the Twitter-sphere’s collective temper with technology. The Leaderboard lists words profanity was used in conjunction with.

End of the doctor's surgery | UK News | Express.co.uk - Home of the Daily and Sunday Express

Via Express.co.uk:

A new system of “virtual clinics” is being planned in which GPs connect with patients via iPads and Skype, an idea that NHS bosses are importing from India.

The reforms would save £2.9billion “almost immediately” and improve the lives of most patients, for example by avoiding the need to find child care during appointments, Health Minister Dr Dan Poulter said last week.

However, critics are concerned the initiative would create a two-tier NHS in which the less technologically able, particularly the elderly, would be left behind.

End of the doctor's surgery | UK News | Express.co.uk - Home of the Daily and Sunday Express

Points:

  • “…arming community nurses with iPads in rural areas.”
  • “…making more use of Skype video calling between GPs and patients.”
  • “…more online assessments “augmented” with video calls.”
  • “Mobile phone ‘apps’ will be used to access lab reports and health records and negative test results will be sent by text messages rather than delivered in person.”
  • “Patients would be encouraged not to attend GPs’ surgeries, firstly by telephone assessments and then by video links.”

Ponder:

  • “…not everyone, particularly frail older people, will have easy access to the internet.”
  • “Many people of all ages still prefer human contact.”
  • Need to give “the medical professional the chance to recognise health issues that may not be obvious from a distance.”
  • “Katherine Murphy, chief executive of the Patients Association, said: ‘The telehealth agenda must be driven by a desire to improve clinical outcomes and patient care, not the Government’s plans to save £20billion.’”

Martha Stewart inspires new wave of tech-savvy entrepreneurs

Via Seattle Times:

Stewart's company, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, has faced some difficult blows lately: substantial financial losses and layoffs and cuts at its magazines and television programs. But Stewart, 71, the founder, has emerged as a patron saint for entrepreneurial hipsters, 20- and 30-somethings who, in a post-recessionary world, have begun their own pickling, cupcake and letterpress businesses and are selling crafty goods online.

Martha Stewart inspires new wave of tech-savvy entrepreneurs | Nation & World | The Seattle Times

Points:

  • “Pilar Guzman, editor-in-chief of Martha Stewart Living magazine, said the magazine's readership had become ‘the intersection between Colonial Williamsburg and Williamsburg, Brooklyn.’”
  • “Many newer fans are skipping the print magazine entirely. MarthaStewart.com, the company's primary website, has counted a 40 percent jump in traffic among 18- to 34-year-olds every month, year over year, since January.”
  • “While some Martha Stewart fans abandoned their magazine subscriptions and Stewart's high-thread-count sheets after she went to prison for her 2004 conviction for lying to federal investigators about a stock sale, this new generation of fans said her prison time only gives her more street credibility.”
  • “Despite the encouraging news, Stewart's company has not figured out how to make these loyal fans lift it out of its deep financial troubles, no matter how many costs are cut. In advance of its third-quarter earnings, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia said it would cut back two of its four magazines and lay off about 70 employees, or 12 percent of the nearly 600-person company.”

A snapshot of retirement-aged American workers

Via MSN:

Combine this aging population with the difficult economy, and you have a population that no longer exits the workforce as soon as they reach their 65th birthday. Recently, Economic Modeling Specialists Intl. looked at the situation of workers 65 and older in order to see what their professional situation is like, and they found a group of workers that is steadily growing. In 2001, workers 65-plus were 4 percent of the workforce; in 2012 these workers are 4.7 percent of the workforce.

MSN Careers - A snapshot of retirement-aged American workers - Career Advice Article

No plans to step aside - made easier by technology.

Pilotless aircraft sooner than you think

Via The Economist:

America’s aviation regulators have been asked by Congress to integrate unmanned aircraft into the air-traffic control system as early as 2015…Pilotless aircraft could carry out many jobs at a lower cost than manned aircraft and helicopters—tasks such as traffic monitoring, border patrols, police surveillance and checking power lines. They could also operate in conditions that are dangerous for pilots, including monitoring forest fires or nuclear-power accidents. And they could fly extended missions for search and rescue, environmental monitoring or even provide temporary airborne Wi-Fi and mobile-phone services. Some analysts think the global civilian market for unmanned aircraft and services could be worth more than $50 billion by 2020.

Pilotless aircraft: This is your ground pilot speaking | The Economist

Firefox OS coming

Firefox OS | MIT Technology Review: The reason to be excited about Mozilla throwing its hat into the mobile OS ring is that Mozilla’s platform will be more open, it claims, than the likes of iOS. Mozilla says its OS will be “free...from the encumbrances of the rules and restrictions of existing proprietary platforms.”

The World's 25 Best Design Schools

Via Business Insider:

As we enter the golden age of design in startups, highly talented user-interface and product designers are becoming ever more important.

Some companies leading the charge are Apple, Path, Pinterest, Square, and Airbnb. What those companies have in common is that design is at the core of their businesses.

But which school is best suited to get you the design job you want?

The World's 25 Best Design Schools - Business Insider

Click the link to see which schools made the list.

What is your unfinished business?

"Your unfinished business is to meet this world’s needs for direction, decency, and compassion at the times and places God has placed you. He wants you to sow faith, hope, and love so others can reap truth, goodness, and mercy."

Shortcuts in Medical Documentation

Via Business Insider and NY Times:

The advent of electronic medical records has been a boon to patient safety and physician efficiency in many ways. But it has also brought with it a slew of “timesaving” tricks that have had some unintended consequences. These tricks make it so easy for doctors to document the results of standard exams and conversations with patients that it appears more and more of them are being documented without ever having happened in the first place.

Shortcuts in Medical Documentation - NYTimes.com

Points:

  • “This fall, the attorney general and secretary of health and human services warned the five major hospital associations that this kind of abuse [e.g., one click to insert a completed physical exam in the patient’s record] would not be tolerated.”
  • “A 2009 study found that 90 percent of physicians reported copying and pasting when writing daily notes.”
  • “Doctors are paid not by how much time they spend with patients, how well they listen or how hard they think about what could be wrong, but by how much they write down. And the rules for what we have to write are Byzantine.”
  • “…we should question whether paying physicians by documentation — instead of by time spent on quality patient care — is such a great idea after all.”

Free Sites to Promote Your eBook

Via GalleyCat:

…a long list of places where self-published authors can promote their eBook for free.

Free Sites to Promote Your eBook - GalleyCat

The Preparedness Message Isn’t Reaching the Public

Via Emergency Management:

Americans have a false sense of security when it comes to disasters, and should they become victims, most haven’t taken steps to help themselves during the first few days after one strikes. Experts say either the preparedness message isn’t getting across, or the wrong message is being sent. 

The Preparedness Message Isn’t Reaching the Public

Points:

  • “In a recent survey conducted by the Ad Council, 17 percent of respondents said they were very prepared for an emergency situation, which means they have a kit and a plan to sustain themselves during the first few days of a disaster. In the same survey, however, just 23 percent of respondents said they have a plan to communicate with family members if there is no cellphone service. But this figure is considered inflated by some who say the percentage of prepared citizens is dreadful. “Oftentimes you’ll get a survey saying 6 percent of the public is prepared,” said Ana-Marie Jones, executive director of the nonprofit organization Collaborating Agencies Responding to Disasters (CARD). “That’s nothing to write home about if you consider 4 percent of the population is Mormon and they prepare without being told to do so by the U.S. government.”
  • “The message is to have a kit, be aware of potential emergencies and have a family plan. The problem is that it’s generally based on fear, according to some emergency management professionals. But to some, being prepared takes a backseat because they’ve never experienced a catastrophe. “A mind-alerting event has not taken place in their lives to drive them to take some preparedness actions,” said Will Allen, retired colonel and CEO of consulting firm W. Allen Enterprises. He said most people don’t see preparedness as an important issue because of how it’s presented. “It has a lot to do with people’s experiences, their culture and awareness. Maybe our local government hasn’t made it an important issue to them.”

Ponder: What does it take to convince people to be prepared? Sooner or later, the technology will be overwhelmed when the emergency comes.

Preparing for a new era of knowledge work

Via McKinsey Quarterly:

…a broad swath of employment remained largely untouched: work requiring extensive human interactions. Among these positions are the jobs held by knowledge workers—the doctors, engineers, lawyers, managers, sales representatives, teachers, and other skilled professionals who together serve as the engine of the knowledge economy. Research from McKinsey and others has shown that such interaction workers are vital to the competitive success of companies and countries alike. Interaction work is the fastest-growing category of employment in developed countries, where it already accounts for a large proportion of jobs. Because technology has tended to complement, not replace, labor in interaction work, until recently many of these jobs had essentially been performed in the same ways for decades.

Not anymore. Today, interaction work is at an inflection point as global competition, emerging skill shortages, and changing demographics force companies to use their most highly paid talent more effectively. Employers in advanced economies may soon, for example, be unable to find as many college-educated workers as they require.

Preparing for a new era of knowledge work - McKinsey Quarterly - Economic Studies - Productivity & Performance

Points:

  • Interaction-based work = 1/3 of jobs in developed economies and 1/4 of jobs in developing countries.
  • Causes: stagnant population growth, underrepresentation of women, geographic workforce mismatches.
  • Approaches:
    • Disaggregate the jobs.
    • Become more virtual.
    • Allow more job flexibility.

CIOs Struggle With Relevance of Role to Business

Via CIO:

“The role of the CIO is going to vanish in the next few years,” says Yuvi Kochar, chief technology officer for the Washington Post Co. “We really need to change because no one is satisfied with IT; the business is frustrated.”

“The traditional role of the CIO has to go away,” concurs Joseph Spagnoletti, CIO for Campbell Soup Company. “We need to take a more consultative approach.”

However, while everyone agrees there is a chronic need for change, no one seems to agree on just what exact form that these changes should take.

CIOs have long been criticized for focusing too much on infrastructure rather than on information. Cases are regularly being made for the IT organization to become the steward of all information across the enterprise.

CIOs Struggle With Relevance of Role to Business

Points:

  • “ IT is becoming so embedded as to be indistinguishable from the business process.”
  • “…in the wake of the consumerization of IT and increased reliance on external “Shadow IT” services, business units now regularly do end runs around the IT department, which is making it increasingly difficult for CIOs to stay relevant.”

Ponder: Is that last point about becoming stewards of information along the lines of what the US Army did years ago? The CIO in the US Army is responsible for records, mail, correspondence, Freedom of Information Act requests, and Privacy Act issues.

From gum-stick to postage-stamp sizes, the era of small-form-factor embedded computing has arrived

Via Military and Aerospace Electronics:

…demand for small-form-factor embedded computing continues to increase, driven by size- and weight-constrained aerospace and defense applications like unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs), wearable computing, and manned ground vehicles.

From gum-stick to postage-stamp sizes, the era of small-form-factor embedded computing has arrived - Military & Aerospace Electronics

Points:

  • “Systems integrators apparently want small-form-factor embedded computing technology right now more than they need open-systems standards.”
  • “Field reliability for aerospace and defense systems designers is one of the chief forces driving the embedded computing industry in the direction of small form factor.”
  • “The typical credit card today represents one of the most popular sizes for the latest generation of small-form-factor computer boards. Smaller sizes and lighter weights mean less room for flexing under shock and vibration, which can make these small boards far more immune to shock damage then their larger 3U and 6U cousins. Still, the size of a credit card does not represent the limits of emerging small-form-factor embedded computing boards…On the horizon are small-form-factor embedded computing boards that will approach the size of a postage stamp.”

Cray Titan Supercomputer Now the World’s Fastest; IBM's Sequoia No. 2

Via e-Week:

IBM's Sequoia supercomputer in June became the first U.S.-based system to reach No. 1 on the Top500 list of the world's fastest supercomputers. Six months later, the system—at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory—was moved to No. 2, displaced by Cray's huge Titan supercomputer, housed at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. Titan, a massive XK7 system powered by Opteron processors from Advanced Micro Devices and GPU accelerators from Nvidia, hit a performance of 17.59 petaflops—or quadrillions of calculations per second—outdistancing Sequoia's 16.32 petaflops. The latest Top500 list—two are released every year—was unveiled Nov. 12 at the SC12 supercomputer show in Salt Lake City, and the systems continue to get more powerful. According to the list's organizers, there are 23 supercomputers on the Top500 list that offer more than a petaflops of performance. This is only four years after the first petaflops system—IBM's Roadrunner—hit the list. In addition, a growing number of systems are using accelerators—such as GPU accelerators from Nvidia and AMD, or Xeon Phi coprocessors from Intel—to increase the performance of the supercomputers, particularly when running highly parallel workloads.

Cray Titan Supercomputer Now the World�s Fastest; IBM's Sequoia No. 2

Take a look at how fast computer performance is improving. Seems to be on track with Ray Kurzweil’s book, The Singularity is Near.

Hardcover              Paperback             Kindle                    Audio

Data Breaches Grow ... and Grow More Serious

Via Baseline:

…corporate data theft reached 855 incidents and 174 million compromised records over the last year. "Mainline cyber-criminals are achieving 'economies of scale' by automating and streamlining highly repetitive—but quick and effective—attack methods," explains Wade Baker, principal author of the Verizon Data Breach Investigations Report series. "Organizations achieve very high levels of security in numerous areas but neglect others." Many of those attacks targeted trade secrets, classified information and other intellectual property, Verizon found. The instigators relied on a number of methods—including hacking, physical security breaches and social engineering—to extract the data they desired.

Data Breaches Grow ... and Grow More Serious

The slideshow at the link provides interesting information about this.

The World's 10 Best Places to Work

Via Baseline:

Whatever their industry, these companies have built a reputation that puts them in the driver's seat for getting the best talent. The top 25 on the list receive, on average, 11 times the number of job applications than they have employees.

The World's 10 Best Places to Work

Some are tech companies, others aren’t. However, all have to be tech-driven to be able to manage global operations and support large workforces.

You can control your circumstances

“Instead of fatalistically accepting what comes your way and trying to feel good about it, you can turn your circumstances, even the unpleasant ones, into tools that change reality. You control your circumstances the way you control something entrusted to you. When you understand your relationship with the one who gives you something to care for, the sense of responsibility that orders your priorities, and the results expected from you, your circumstances will work for a greater good rather than work you over.”

Your Unfinished Business

Jasper The Paralyzed Dog Walks Again

Via Business Insider:

They've restored the ability for dogs with spinal injuries to walk again by injecting them with special cells taken from their own noses

Jasper The Paralyzed Dog Walks Again - Business Insider

Exciting implications for humans.

Fort Drum Just Opened A Ranger-Style Fitness Facility

Via Business Insider:

When Command Sgt. Maj. Rick Merritt, who once was the senior enlisted advisor for a Ranger regiment at Fort Benning, arrived at Fort Drum, in upstate New York, and saw there wasn't a gym dedicated to functional fitness, he made one happen.

The frigid conditions and hilly terrain already provide ample training opportunities, as of Nov. 16, it also has the Mountain Functional Fitness Facility, which opened Nov. 16. Two other gyms also got upgrades. Soldiers now won't have any excuse to not have a perfect core, keep lightening-quick speeds, or Herculean strength.

Fort Drum Just Opened A Ranger-Style Fitness Facility - Business Insider

The series of photos at the linked article provide a good idea of the physical training needed for military people. When writing about military topics, remember that physical fitness dominates thinking, and one’s level of fitness is a significant marker of credibility in the military.

Becoming one with our technology

Via Business Insider:

With technology advancing at increasingly rapid rate, and researchers making serious headway into discovering the mysteries of the brain, it seems as if we'll all be reconstituted as a computer someday.

Ray Kurzweil On The Future - Business Insider

Click the link above to see his predictions.

In Case You Thought Making Millions Building iPhone Apps Was Easy...

Via Business Insider:

According to a very small survey of 252 gaming developers from Streaming Color Studios, 25% of all game apps make less then $200 in their lifetime, 25% make more than $30,000, and just 4% make more than a million.

In Case You Thought Making Millions Building iPhone Apps Was Easy... - Business Insider

Entrepreneurship takes commitment.

Williston North Dakota Oil Boomtown

Via Business Insider:

Ten years ago Williston, North Dakota was a quiet agricultural town with a population around 12,000.

Now, oil prices and drilling advancements have turned Williston into one of America's biggest oil boomtown, pushing its population to over 30,000. The wait at the town's Wal-Mart can push two hours, and the infrastructure is deeply strained.

Williston North Dakota Oil Boomtown - Business Insider

No skills? No problem!

8 Behaviours that make a Great Manager at Google – and 3 that don’t!

Via Business Insider and LinkedIn:

Based on some extensive research that involved interviews with their managers, surveys of their employees, and regression analysis of things such as job performance and employee satisfaction, Google was able to identify these eight behaviours that make a great manager in Google

8 Behaviours that make a Great Manager at Google – and 3 that don’t! | LinkedIn

Click the link to see what they are.

Vending machine for books

Found via Boing Boing:

The BIBLIO-MAT from Craig Small on Vimeo.

Technological progress

Via Facebook:

Timeline Photos | Facebook

A Photo Tour Of The USS Eisenhower

Via Business Insider:

There's no room to be anything less than focused, almost all the time and the jobs on board are just as varied as the people who fill them.

From pilots, to navigators, to recruits that wash the deck, everyone works together and supports the overall mission. No bitterness or condescension that I saw, and that would be a tough environment to hide it.

Sixty-one thousand men and women, doing things most people have no idea, in places most others can't imagine. It's like someone took the entire Ohio University student body, and a chunk of the faculty, and sent them off to parts unknown. 61,000 people is a lot, and that's just serving on carriers.

A Photo Tour Of The USS Eisenhower - Business Insider

Writers, can you convey the sophistication, complexity, and intense activity in words? And when you scroll down far enough, you'll see…Starbucks on an aircraft carrier?

Paper-Thin Material Can Stop Bullets In Their Tracks

Via Business Insider:

The material, a structured polymer composite made of alternating rubbery and glassy layers, can absorb the kinetic energy from high impact assaults with startling efficiency. During tests, researchers blasted it with tiny glass beads that simulated the impact from a 9-millimeter bullet.

Paper-Thin Material Can Stop Bullets In Their Tracks - Business Insider

Too bad the name Under Armour is already taken.

Special ceremony

So I went the the ceremonial opening of the new Veterans and Military Affairs Center at The University of Alabama today, expecting a nice ceremony and an opportunity to celebrate support for veterans getting help at the school. In addition to that, Phil Taylor came out, having done a portrait of Sr Airman Mark Foster for the Foster family, and presented it to the family. That was a special surprise for the ceremony attendees and a chance to be part of what has become a nationally recognized project.

He says he struggles to make sure he captures the essence of the person in each portrait. Writers should have the same sense of struggle in trying to capture the essence of their subjects in words.

Inside Army Sapper School At Fort Leonard Wood

Via Business Insider:

In a 28-training-day course at Fort Leonard Wood sapper students learn demolition, knot-tying, rappelling, urban combat tactics, and they also brush-up their hand-to-hand combat techniques. The training — done straight through without a day off — is so physically demanding that most students will lose at least 10 pounds over the four weeks.

The Military Channel followed Course 05-09 for the three-part feature dubbed "Mission Demolition"

Inside Army Sapper School At Fort Leonard Wood - Business Insider

Some sources to help writers achieve accuracy when including military topics in their writing.

IBM Financing Small Businesses

Via Business Insider:

Rather than sitting back and waiting on the economy, IBM announced today that it's going to lend out $4 billion to small and medium businesses in a calculated bet that getting these companies to adopt their technology and forming relationships now will pay off as the recovery and these businesses pick up steam.

IBM Financing Small Businesses - Business Insider

Big bucks from Big Blue.

Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise'

Via The Hill:

From January to June, Google received nearly 8,000 requests for user data from the U.S. government. The search company said it "fully or partially" compiled with roughly 90 percent of them. That's up from the 5,950 requests for user data that Google received from the U.S. government during the same period a year ago.

Google: Surveillance 'is on the rise' - The Hill's Hillicon Valley

Points:

  • “India and Brazil came after the U.S. with 2,319 and 1,566 requests for user data, respectively, during the first half of 2012.”
  • “Google received 20,938 requests for user data from government officials worldwide in the first half of this year, which targeted roughly 34,614 accounts. That's up from the 18,257 government requests for user data that Google received during the same period a year ago, around a 15 percent rise.”
  • “Google saw a notable spike in the number of requests it received from government officials to remove content from YouTube and its other services during the first half of 2012.”

In case you’re still wondering where the next boom will come from

Via Business Insider:

According to the Frankfurt-based International Federation of Robotics, China could become the world's biggest consumer of industrial robots by 2014, with demand reaching 32,000 units. Gudrun Litzenberger, the organisation's general secretary, has described China as the fastest-growing robot market in the world.

China Is Buying Robots Like There's No Tomorrow - Business Insider

Points:

  • “China's working-age population is shrinking, sending labour costs spiralling upwards.”
  • “The Taiwanese manufacturing giant Foxconn has revealed plans to boost its fleet of industrial robots from 10,000 to 1m within three years.”
  • “Chinese officials have openly championed the industry's growth.”

Ponder: What will it take to join the robotics revolution if you don’t have an advanced engineering degree?

Practice:

  • Get to your nearest higher education institution and get a certificate in robotics to familiarize yourself with this field.
  • Then get a certificate in a business discipline like project management.
  • Then join an organization and start competing! Be willing to start lower and prove yourself.

Robotics school for Pinoy kids makes math and science fun

Via GMA News Online:

…one learning center in the Philippines offers a way for children to enjoy these topics, which may help them become innovators, problem solvers or simply great thinkers.

The Fun Inspirational Road to Science and Technology (FIRST) Robotics Learning Center along Annapolis Street in Greenhills inspires students to connect with math and science in a wide range of disciplines rather than just learning these subjects in isolation.

Robotics school for Pinoy kids makes math and science fun | SciTech | GMA News Online | The Go-To Site for Filipinos Everywhere

Steve Sinofsky Leaves Microsoft

Via Business Insider:

The man who has been in charge of the heart and soul of Microsoft is out of the company, reportedly because he clashed with other top executives.

Steve Sinofsky Leaves Microsoft - Business Insider

Known especially for delivering software projects on time all the time.

Stanford University Researchers Create Self-Healing Skin

Via Business Insider:

To demonstrate the material's healing powers, researchers sliced the material in half with a scalpel and then pressed the pieces together for a few seconds. The material returned to nearly 100 percent of its original strength within 30 minutes. This was true even after 50 cuts. 

Researchers hope the synthetic material could be used in prosthetics or to wrap electronic devices.

Stanford University Researchers Create Self-Healing Skn - Business Insider

A thought for those trying to integrate their Christian faith and daily living

The world may not be our home, but we should always leave a place better off than how we found it.

Career Advice For The Military To Civilian Transition - Forbes

Via Forbes:

Employers hire to solve a business problem or fill a need.  Even if they are impressed by your background, if it’s not clear exactly how it relates to WIIFM (what’s in it for me?) they will pass on you. Regardless of how extensive your past credentials are, you can’t assume that employers will care.  You have to translate the value of your military background and experience to how it meets their specific needs.

Career Advice For The Military To Civilian Transition – Forbes

It’s a language gap brought on by the military service gap where the vast majority of Americans have not served in the military.

Overcoming The Skills Gap: The "Talent Paradox" - Business Insider

Via Business Insider:

But despite the surplus of job applicants, many companies have difficulties finding employees with the skills they’re looking for —creating what experts at Deloitte Consulting are calling the “Talent Paradox.”

A survey conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit of more than 350 executives from around the world discovered that employers are growing more concerned over the issue. Nearly two-thirds of the survey respondents say that talent shortages “are likely to affect their bottom line in the next five years.”

The Talent Paradox is equally challenging for workers as it requires them to continue learning new skills and developing existing ones.

Overcoming The Skills Gap: The "Talent Paradox" - Business Insider

Points:

  • “…it can be more beneficial to learn a subject or a skill from people who’s recently learned it themselves.”
  • “…set aside a portion of your unemployment benefits to advancing your career and helping you adapt for your next job.”
  • “…taking on more responsibility at work to strengthen skills you already possess and learn new ones.”
  • “Aim to build technical skills and stay up-to-date on trends in your industry.”

Ponder: How can you convince a new employer or your current employer you have the skills for a new position or promotion?

Veterans Deploy To Northeast After Superstorm Sandy

Via Drudge and NPR:

Among the thousands of volunteers helping the victims of Superstorm Sandy in New York and New Jersey, hundreds of military veterans have turned out to help.

For this group, work like this seems to address a real need for a sense of mission. Former troops who have been cleaning up and rebuilding say that volunteering helps them as much as it supports the local residents.

Veterans Deploy To Northeast After Superstorm Sandy : NPR

The best approach may be the age old truth that going outside one’s self creates joy (meaningfulness), something quite different from happiness.

Happy Vs Meaningful Life

Via Business Insider:

As psychologists zero in on the key to a good life, it's becoming clear that there are two distinct paths.

A forthcoming paper by Roy Baumeister, Kathleen Vohs, Jennifer Aaker, and Emily Garbinsky in the Journal of Positive Psychology looks at the difference between a happy life and a meaningful life.

Happy Vs Meaningful Life - Business Insider

Points:

  • “Satisfying one’s needs and wants increased happiness but was largely irrelevant to meaningfulness.”
  • “…people can feel both happy and meaningful — indeed the two feelings reinforce eachother — but nonetheless one may have to choose which matters more.”
  • “Happiness was linked to being a taker rather than a giver, whereas meaningfulness went with being a giver rather than a taker.”

Ponder: Expressed in the language of research - What we've read in the ancient philosophers and The Good Book and heard in our pastors' sermons.

How to succeed in business by really trying hard

Via Business Insider:

"I think Carnegie's genius was first of all, an ability to foresee how things were going to change," historian John Inghan told PBS.

ANDREW CARNEGIE: Rags To Riches - Business Insider

Pivotal moments according to the biographical outline:

  • “Soon he took a job as a messenger at a telegraph office. During the several years he worked here, the teenage Carnegie made an effort to get to know important people around town.”
  • “At age 17, Carnegie took a job as a telegrapher and assistant to a local railroad man for an impressive salary of $35 a month. Over the next decade, he became essential to running the profitable railroad.”
  • “Carnegie also started investing. A $217 investment in a sleeping car company soon paid $5,000 a year. He helped form a pig iron company to build railroad bridges. His investments became so profitable that his $2400 a year from the railroad amounted to only 5 percent of his income.”

Notice how his ability with a new technology got him in the door and how, once in, he began building a personal network. He also learned how to run an organization because he was willing to do more than just his telegrapher/assistant job, and he paid attention to his personal finances..

Give This Gutter-Cleaning Robot to Your Chore-Phobic Friend

Via Mashable:

The Looj uses a rubber augur and scrappers to lift debris from the gutters and throw it on the ground. Just place it in the gutter and hit the “Auto Clean” button. You can drive it from a wireless remote from the ground and bag the debris as it drops it. And the remote works from 50-100 feet away so you can multitask.

Give This Gutter-Cleaning Robot to Your Chore-Phobic Friend

More on the way.

UAV strikes have increased annually since 2009

Via Army Times:

The number of UAV attacks in Afghanistan has increased every year under the Obama administration, according to data released by the Air Force on Nov. 7.

UAV strikes have increased annually since 2009 - Army News | News from Afghanistan & Iraq - Army Times

Points:

  • “Since the start of 2009, there have been 1,160 strikes in Afghanistan. There were 255 strikes in 2009, 278 in 2010, 294 in 2011 and 333 through Oct. 31.”
  • “As UAV use has increased, the average number of manned flights in which weapons were used has dropped, from 165 a month in 2011 to 139 a month this year.”

Ponder:

  • Will increasing UAV use lead national leaders to think of war as a video game?
  • Will reliance on UAVs to minimize US casualties lead to more asymmetric warfare, e.g., terror strikes in the US?
  • Will the use of UAVs alienate and radicalize the very people we’re trying to help?

The Last Policeman: solving a murder before an asteroid wipes out life on Earth

Via Boing Boing:

It won't spoil the story when I tell you, because it's revealed on page 22: "six months and eleven days from today... a 6.5-kilometer-diameter ball of carbon and silicates will collide with Earth." That explains why most people in the police department don't care whether or not the dead man was murdered. The world is about to end.

The Last Policeman: solving a murder before an asteroid wipes out life on Earth - Boing Boing

Fascinating plot premise to examine the significance of moral obligation.

Kindle                       Paperback               Audio

    

Solving the Problem of Irreproducible Results

Via Real Clear Science:

Partially because of this increasing complexity, however, the scientific literature is littered with papers that cannot be replicated, either because of the good faith efforts of scientists who fail in their attempts to be jacks-of-all-trades or because corners are cut deliberately.

RealClearScience - Solving the Problem of Irreproducible Results

Points:

  • “…peer reviewers often do not themselves have the comprehensive expertise to evaluate thoroughly all aspects of a scientific study.”
  • “…growing specialization required for the modern scientific enterprise to advance.”
  • “…rise of core facilities in the best universities, in which departments intent on recruiting and keeping top scientific talent provide incentives.”

Addressing the issue:

    Reproducibility Initiative using Science Exchange as a platform. The initiative has two tracks. First, if they have the funds to pay for the service, researchers may submit findings that they want to have independently replicated, perhaps because of its potential translational or commercial value. Where we have providers with the necessary expertise, we will randomly assign replication studies to them.

    Second, as part of a broader, more inclusive survey of reproducibility, we invite authors of recently published papers to nominate their work for independent replication.

Engineering civic duty: Local robotics teams encourage participation

Via The Voice:

As I talked with Anderson about the robotics teams, I was impressed by the general sense of excitement and team work that was taking place all around me. There were kids working together at a large table full of Lego bricks while another group of kids gathered around laptop computers to input mathematical formulas to program their robots.

Engineering civic duty: Local robotics teams encourage participation | The Voice of Mini Cassia - Burley & Rupert Idaho

Getting an early start on STEM (science, technology, engineering, math) education.

Google Ventures: $1.5 billion Over Five Years

Via The Next Web:

Google Ventures is dedicating $1.5 billion to invest in startups over the next five years, boosting the size of its fund by 50 percent, from $200 million to $300 million a year.

Google Ventures: $1.5 billion Over Five Years

Good news for entrepreneurs.

Are New Ideas Constantly Distracting You from Today's Work?

Via The Next Web:

You don’t have to stop thinking of ideas just because you are working.  You don’t have to give up on pursuing ideas because of things you have going on in the present. However, we have to find the right balance of current, paying work and the ideas that run through our heads and keep us up at night with excitement and planning.

Are New Ideas Constantly Distracting You from Today's Work?

A set of tips on staying focused.

Battling Bare Ashley Wise Facebook Group Ft. Campbell

Via Business Insider:

With Veterans Day approaching and most of the vet's I know in conditions like these women refer to on their backs, I thought I'd mention Ashley again. She's still at Ft. Campbell, struggling to get her husband the help he needs, and fighting his chain of command for every break she receives.

Battling Bare Ashley Wise Facebook Group Ft. Campbell CNN Business Insider - Business Insider

Doing what it takes to bring them home.

Sophisticated Computer Literacy, a Necessity in the Workplace

Via Metropolis Magazine:

For those in search of more comprehensive lessons than offered by traditional university curricula, online resources are becoming places to learn first-rate computer literacy.

Sophisticated Computer Literacy, a Necessity in the Workplace | Metropolis POV | Metropolis Magazine

The new language requirement in school.

Points:

  • “…a 30% growth [in jobs for software developers and computer programmers] is projected between 2010 and 2020.”
  • “Median pay for systems software developers is about $94,000, more than double the national average salary of $42,000 for college grads.”

These Are The Most Disengaged Employees

Via Business Insider:

…the most disengaged workers tend to be between 31 and 49 years old. They are also:

  • More highly educated (i.e. those with a post-graduate education).

  • Lower-level income employees earning less than $50K.

  • Newer employees, especially those in the organization less than a year.

These Are The Most Disengaged Employees - Business Insider

Points:

  • Take an interest in the workers.
  • Make them proud to work for the company.

On the other hand, post-graduate degrees + low pay? Higher pay would be a better start.

Professors deliver self-service online courses | The Daily Caller

Via The Daily Caller:

Professors with large followings and technical prowess are breaking off to start their own online institutions, delivering courses with little or no backing from traditional campuses.

Professors deliver self-service online courses | The Daily Caller

This may become similar to how martial arts instructors market themselves. Read most bios, and they lay out their training lineage, naming which martial arts masters they trained under. Perhaps students of well-known professors will do something similar to point out their bona fides.

Two New Rules Will Make It Easier For Vets To Get A Commercial Driver's License

Via Business Insider:

The new law allows states to issue a commercial driver's license (CDL) to soldiers who are stationed in that state but not residents.

Two New Rules Will Make It Easier For Vets To Get A Commercial Driver's License - Business Insider

Help for future veterans just in time for Veterans Day.

How Obama Won The Election

The power of data and statistics:

In Chicago, the campaign recruited a team of behavioral scientists to build an extraordinarily sophisticated database packed with names of millions of undecided voters and potential supporters. The ever-expanding list let the campaign find and register new voters who fit the demographic pattern of Obama backers and methodically track their views through thousands of telephone calls every night.

That allowed the Obama campaign not only to alter the very nature of the electorate, making it younger and less white, but also to create a portrait of shifting voter allegiances.

How Obama Won The Election - Business Insider

Bottom line: Stay awake in math class.

Staten Island hurricane aftermath

Via Business Insider:

When we got to the small, working-class community on the island's southern flank, we discovered a war zone

Staten Island Residents Blast Response - Business Insider

Staten Island population: 470,467. New Orleans population within city limits (pre-Katrina): 484,674. That should give a sense of the scale of population affected by the hurricane. We know that over half the world's population lives in cities, and most of that population lives in coastal areas. This means getting good at disaster relief needs to be a top priority because we can expect more of this. City design probably needs to be reviewed for how it facilitates emergency response.

RED CROSS: We Wish We Could've Gotten To The Hardest-Hit Sandy Victims Sooner

Via Business Insider:

"When you have 8 million people in need, with roads that are damaged, infrastructure broken down, flooding everywhere, we can't be there that fast. And we feel bad about that."

RED CROSS: We Wish We Could've Gotten To The Hardest-Hit Sandy Victims Sooner - Business Insider

The real points:

  • According to the UN, more than half of the world’s population lives in cities, and of that, 60% are exposed to at least one major natural disaster risk.
  • According to Don Hinrichson, a consultant for the UN, “the overwhelming bulk of humanity is concentrated along or near coasts on just 10% of the earth’s land surface. As of 1998, over half the population of the planet — about 3.2 billion people — lives and works in a coastal strip just 200 kilometers wide (120 miles), while a full two-thirds, 4 billion, are found within 400 kilometers of a coast.”

This means we need to treat this kind of emergency management as a routine thing because there will be more to come.

How sensors and data might bring boxing back from the dead

Via Forbes:

Punch Zone, the first product in the sport to map in real-time the location of punches on a boxer’s body. It could essentially create a visual representation, or heat map, of the fighting predilection of a boxer and his performance in a particular fight. Punch Zone ignited fan passion for new boxing stats which  in turn spawned Punch Force which is expected to roll out next year, according to the Wall Street Journal. It utilizes a lightweight device, embedded in the boxing glove, to measure the speed and force of a boxer’s punches. This information is transmitted real-time and can be presented as part of the live boxing telecast or through an online application.

Tracking Innovation through Boxcars, Boxing, Bears and Automobiles – Forbes

Other points:

  • “No one is really thinking of cars as an intelligent mobile platform that at any moment in time has an enormous active user base.”
  • “…a small device (sound familiar) to plug into the port that can be paired with a user’s cellphone via Bluetooth. Collected data is combined with smartphone sensors, driver social profile and ambient information from the trip. As both a hardware and software service, think of Dash as a next-generation, web-enabled OnStar or LoJack on steroids.”

Preparing a Business for Natural Disaster: What I Wish I'd Done

Via Forbes:

…now I realize there were holes in our plan as far as coping with an extended period where heat, power, internet and gasoline are scarce. Here’s my to-do list to prepare for any future storms, in case it helps others who are also trying to regroup.

Preparing a Business for Natural Disaster: What I Wish I'd Done – Forbes

Click the link above to read the list.

Making Connections At 45,000 Feet: Future UAVs May Fuel Up In Flight

Via Armed With Science:

DARPA’s two-year Autonomous High-Altitude Refueling (AHR) program, which concluded Sep. 30, explored the ability to safely conduct fully autonomous refueling of UAVs in challenging high-altitude flight conditions. During its final test flight, two modified Global Hawk aircraft flew in close formation, 100 feet or less between refueling probe and receiver drogue, for the majority of a 2.5-hour engagement at 44,800 feet. This demonstrated for the first time that High Altitude Long Endurance (HALE) class aircraft can safely and autonomously operate under in-flight refueling conditions.

2012/10/05 Making Connections At 45,000 Feet: Future UAVs May Fuel Up In Flight

More proof of the growing capability of robots.

The Future? Let’s Ask a Sci-Fi Writer

Via PJ Media:

…given conditions as they exist today, where do you think we are headed in 20 years, and what will the world look like?

PJ Media » The Future? Let’s Ask a Sci-Fi Writer

Points:

  • “I expect resurgent fascism in Italy, Spain, and France at a minimum, as socialism does what it does best — fail disastrously.”
  • “The U.S. is still the world leader, but what it leads is much reduced from even 20 years before.”
  • “For the last 100 years we’ve been on this path where the schools create serfs and the state extends to points unheard of, and … well, it’s the whole miserable history of the 21st century.”
  • “If we continue down our current path of ever-growing government, increasing dependency, bloated bureaucracy, and never-ending spending, then within twenty years we will see an economic collapse like the world has never known.”

The respondents were a panel of science-fiction writers, and they seem to have a dystopian view of things.

Think tank recommends big military benefits cuts

Via Air Force Times:

The Center for American Progress calls for capping pay raises, eliminating military health benefits for many retirees who are covered by an employer-provided plan, and reducing the value of military retired pay as well as making retirees wait until age 60 to start receiving it.

Think tank recommends big benefits cuts - Air Force News | News from Afghanistan & Iraq - Air Force Times

One area where you as a writer can demonstrate knowledge of military matters is in policy areas like benefits. The idea of benefits is the same as benefits in other organizations, so you don’t have to have served on active duty. Some research could help you flesh out some blog entries or write some non-fiction articles.

US Air Force struggles with aging fleet

Via Charter:

analysts say the Air Force has a real problem, and it will almost certainly get worse no matter who wins Tuesday's election. It was created in part by a lack of urgency in the post-Cold War era, and by design glitches and cost overruns that have delayed attempts to build next-generation aircraft.

Looming budget cuts limit the force's ability to correct itself, they argue, as China's rise as a world power heightens its need to improve.

US Air Force struggles with aging fleet - Welcome to Charter.net

The article lists issues writers can address in non-fiction and fiction.

Battling the Enemies of Innovation

Via LinkedIn:

It takes 13 years to take a new healthcare innovation from the point where we’ve demonstrated its benefit to the point where it has been established as the standard of care. We need to reform our medical institutions so that they energize innovation through clearly articulated goals and strategies, and so that their culture does not automatically discourage the new and untried.

Battling the Enemies of Innovation | LinkedIn

A call for innovation reform.

Profile of Amazon's impact on a region

The Amazon mystique: "With some 10,000 well-paid headquarters jobs, Amazon is the backbone of the revitalization of South Lake Union and is playing a big role in the center city boom. The outfit that likes operating in near anonymity plans three towers in the Denny Triangle."

What price do executives pay for a seemingly more happening big-city life? - The Economic Times

Via The Economic Times:

Big-city respondents (in Delhi, Mumbai) come across as indifferent, busy, internet-connected executives with hectic social life on the surface. But their real-world relationships are weak. In contrast, small-city respondents (in Chandigarh, Jaipur, Ahmedabad) have stronger and warmer relationships with those around them.

What price do executives pay for a seemingly more happening big-city life? - The Economic Times

Interesting take on quality of life in the global environment. Technology shapes life, and technology is also part of creating the social fabric.

5 Online Tutoring Services That Supplement Students' Learning

Via Edudemic:

Online tutors can assist a child with their homework assignments or help them acquire important learning skills that will make it easier for them to succeed. Choosing the right online tutoring platform that corresponds to your child’s learning needs and your financial ability can be difficult.

5 Online Tutoring Services That Supplement Students' Learning – Edudemic

Points:

  • “…certification of its tutors.”
  • “…online program or lesson plans correspond directly to your child’s short- and long-term educational needs and expectations.”
  • “…get his tutor’s assistance whenever he needs it.”
  • “…compare prices from different the online tutoring service providers.”

Click the link above to see the 5 services.

DARPA Robotics Challenge

Via I Programmer:

The idea behind the DARPA Robotics Challenge is to develop robotic technology for disaster response operations, looking to improve the performance of robots that operate in the rough terrain and austere conditions characteristic of disasters, and use vehicles and tools commonly available in populated areas.

DARPA Robotics Challenge

Points:

  • “…develop ground robotic capabilities to execute complex tasks in dangerous, degraded, human-engineered environments.”
  • “…advance the technologies of supervised autonomy, mounted mobility, dismounted mobility, dexterity, strength, and platform endurance.”

Your brain on Facebook

Via MakeUseOf:

Internet Addiction Disorder is set to become officially recognised as a “psychological diagnosis”.

INFOGRAPHIC: Facebook Psychology – Is Addiction Affecting Our Minds?

Click the link to see the infographic.

Do We Need Another Angel List? NOAH Insider Seems To Think So

Via TechCrunch:

Many would say Angel List has become an indispensable resource for investors and startups to find, connect and recommend each other. This almost altruistic effort has taken Silicon Valley to the world, and, increasingly, the world to Silicon Valley. Slowly but surely European-based startups have also started using it over the last couple of years, and, used in combination with CrunchBase, it can be pretty powerful. However, not all think this. And only this week, a new player emerged with an attempt at its own land grab: NOAH Insider.

Do We Need Another Angel List? NOAH Insider Seems To Think So | TechCrunch

A European-based funding resource.

Constantine’s mixed legacy

Via National Post:

The historical judgment is that of a mixed blessing. The Constantinian settlement was better than what preceded it — the age of persecution — and enabled the rise of the Christian Europe and Western civilization. Yet it also brought to the Church the capacity to impose, rather than to propose, the gospel. In the 1,700 years since, the freedom to propose without the power to impose has been an elusive balance.

With the French Revolution, and other developments that opened the door to totalitarianism over the subsequent two centuries, the Church returned to a pre-Constantinian age of brutal persecution in many places. At the same time, the rise of liberal democracy provided space for the Church to live as an evangelizer of culture rather than as a holder of power. Whether the rise of secular fundamentalism will permit that to continue is now a pressing question.

Constantine’s mixed legacy | Full Comment | National Post

A reflection on Christian church-society relations worth reading prior to election day in the US.

What does this have to do with technology? Christianity offers a critique of the kind of society technological progress can drive us to.

Disaster Relief

Via North American Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention:

Friday, November 2, the 72 hour mark passed for the SBDR response due to super storm Sandy.  In that time frame, an Area Command and 5 Incident Commands have been established in affected areas.  Mobile kitchens are open and currently have the capacity to prepare 170,000 meals.  By Sunday, an additional 100,000 meal capacity will be operational. Currently, 25 recovery units are working in Maryland, West Virginia, New Jersey, New York and New England.  Largely due to the tireless work of DR volunteers, Southern Baptist response to the storm is ahead of schedule.

Disaster Relief

Donations are appreciated.

World Vision Donations: Disaster Response in the USA

Via World Vision:

Your support is needed today as we respond to the devastation of Superstorm Sandy.

World Vision Donations: Disaster Response in the USA

Wired editor-in-chief Chris Anderson leaving for UAV startup 3D Robotics

Via Boing Boing:

 

Wired editor-in-chief Chris Anderson is leaving the magazine after 11 years to lead the robotics company he founded, 3D Robotics (blog).

Wired editor-in-chief Chris Anderson leaving for UAV startup 3D Robotics - Boing Boing

In case you’re still wondering if robotics will drive the next boom. The only question is what you're doing to prepare for it.