Archives > Monthly

September 2005

Entertainment

A.J. Jacobs ROCKS

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His book The Know-it-all is a current TED Book Club choice. If that isn’t enough for you, try this great article on outsourced assistants. I had tears rolling down my face by the end …

Burt Rutan, space cowboy, to speak at TED2006

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TEDsters: Prepare to be transported. Burt Rutan, the legendary aircraft designer, will thrill us this February in Monterey, with his plans to make space travel a reality. Rutan, who won the $10M X-Prize for SpaceShipOne — the first private craft to reach space — has now partnered with Virgin Galactic (an offshoot of Virgin Atlantic) []

BuzzWordWatch: “Epigenome”

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Perhaps I didn’t spend enough time chatting with Craig Venter in Oxford, because this morning was my first encounter with the word “Epigenome,” defined by Wired News as the layer of biochemical reactions that turns genes on or off. Obviously.

Culture

TED Book Club: Everything Bad is Good For You

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Steven Johnson (TED2003) has wowed us at TED in the past, and his books never fail to intrigue and delight. His latest, Everything Bad is Good for You offers a provocative new lens through which to ponder the impact of modern culture. General assumptions among the cognoscenti: (1) Mass culture is dumbing us down (2) []

Architecture

Design Mystery #347: Clock-free airports

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Every so often, in the course of spotlighting great ideas, we ponderously turn our attention to great mysteries in design. Like: Why aren’t there clocks in airports? Seriously. Every other time-dependent location — train stations, schools, gyms — features prominent clockage. Yet airports, like casinos and spas, are conspicuously clock-free. Think about that, next time []

Technology

Robot Gets Knocked Down (but it gets up again)

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Researchers in Japan have invented a nimble humanoid robot that can regain its own footing after taking a tumble. Its secret lies in letting go of control: Rather than follow a strict set of predetermined rules, it makes on-the-fly adjustments based on body trajectory and momentum. This approach may sound familiar … it applies the []

Art

Web comics? NYT says "Ick." TED says "Slick!"

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The New York Times may be cranky about the new trend in web comics. (They question the distinction between web comics and animation, and bemoan the “added headaches.”) But those of us who recognize that emerging media are, by definition, works in progress, find the new form fascinating. Our favorite: The Right Number by Scott []

Music

Getting Your Jill Sobule Fix

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Long-time TEDsters may find themselves pining for our resident pixie chick, Jill Sobule. New Yorkers can get their Jill Fix this Thursday and Friday at Joes Pub (TEDsters will be in the house). Can’t make it? Satisfy the craving with the “Vid-Lit” (Think smart, low-tech music video) for her bittersweet single, Underdog Victorious.

Science

Inspired solution: Fast-drying Laundry

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File this under: Solutions we didn’t know we needed. Researchers in Florida — funded by P&G — have developed a detergent that leaves clothes 20% drier, reducing tumble time and thus saving electricity. (Dryers account for 5.8% of US residential electrical use.) The science? During the wash, cloth fibers act like tiny capillaries, holding on []