Posts Tagged ‘ZIP codes’
Monday Morning Links!
* In Milwaukee, I lived two lives. On the East Side was the liberal Catholic school I attended for nine years; on the North Side was everything else. Dateline Milwaukee: Affluent and Black, and Still Trapped by Segregation. Some Lesser Known Justice Facts about Milwaukee and Wisconsin. And a more positive Milwaukee profile: How Milwaukee Shook Off the Rust: The Midwestern hub reclaimed some of its industrial glory by doing a surprising thing. It cleaned up.
* Google’s response to inquiries was chilling: “Google News Archive no longer has permission to display this content.” Entire Google archive of more than a century of stories is gone. Why?
* A narrow street dead-ends at the Detroit River, where a black-and-white boat bobs in the water, emblazoned with a Postal Service eagle. This is the mail boat J.W. Westcott II, the only floating ZIP code in the United States.
* Hugo Awards Celebrate Women in Sci-Fi, Send Rabid Puppies to Doghouse. Special congratulations to N.K. Jemisin, whose The Fifth Season I’ve been meaning to read for a while, and to Nnedi Okorafar, whose “Binti” I have read already and is fantastic. Relatedly, Abigail Nussbaum asks: Do the Hugos actually need saving?
* In Conversation With Colson Whitehead.
* This seems like a pretty big deal: Justice Department Says Poor Can’t Be Held When They Can’t Afford Bail.
* U.S. Army only fudged its accounts by mere trillions of dollars, auditor finds.
* An Indiana City Is Poised To Become The Next Flint.
* Another late-summer syllabus: Problems in Posthumanism. #WelfareReformSyllabus. And a study guide for a world without police.
* “It’s ridiculous—we are talking about the biggest retailer in the world. I may have half my squad there for hours.”
* Ranking the Most (and Least) Diverse Colleges in America. Marquette sneaks in at #86, while my alma mater Case Western is a surprisingly high #40 and Duke gets #32.
* The strangeness of deep time.
* “The jobs that the robots will leave for humans will be those that require thought and knowledge. In other words, only the best-educated humans will compete with machines,” Howard Rheingold, an internet sociologist, told Pew. “And education systems in the US and much of the rest of the world are still sitting students in rows and columns, teaching them to keep quiet and memorize what is told to them, preparing them for life in a 20th century factory.” Nothing can stop Judgment Day, but with the liberal arts you just might have a chance of surviving it…
* 98 personal data points that Facebook uses to target ads to you.
* Hot.
* Only about a hundred groups of isolated indigenous people are believed to still exist, with more than half of them living in the wilderness that straddles Peru’s border with Brazil. Fiona Watson, the field director of the tribal-people’s-rights group Survival International, told me that the situation was dire for the region’saislados, as isolated people are called in Spanish. In a cramped London office, Watson laid out satellite maps to show me their territory, small patches in a geography overtaken by commerce: arcs of slash-and-burn farmland; huge expanses where agribusinesses raise cattle and grow soy; mining camps that send minerals to China; migrant boomtowns. Some of the indigenous groups were hemmed in on all sides by mining and logging concessions, both legal and illegal. One tribe in Brazil, the Akuntsu, had been reduced to four members. Near them, a man known to anthropologists only as the Man of the Hole lives in a hollow dug in the forest floor, warding off intruders by firing arrows. He is believed to be the last of his tribe.
* The poet and activist June Jordan once wrote that “poetry means taking control of the language of your life.” Solmaz Sharif does just that in her excellent debut collection, “Look,” pushing readers to acknowledge a lexicon of war she has drawn from the Defense Department’s Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms. Language, in this collection, is called upon as victim, executioner and witness.
* Mr. Robot and Why TV Twists Don’t Work Anymore.
* Pittsburgh and the birth of the self-driving car.
While people around the world will no doubt continue to project various fantasies onto the tiny island republic, the fact remains that Iceland has yet to see any surge in left mobilization comparable to that in Portugal and Greece — or even the more modest adjustments being made inside the two trans-Atlantic establishment left-liberal parties in the form of the Bernie Sanders and Jeremy Corbyn campaigns.
* This brilliant map renames each US state with a country generating the same GDP.
* 88 College Taglines, Arranged as a Poem.
Lang will reprise his role as Colonel Miles Quaritch, Avatar’s villain who appeared definitively dead at the end of the film after taking several huge Na’vi arrows through his chest. Despite that setback, Quaritch is expected to be resurrected in some way and will appear in all the remaining sequels.
Eywa* save us all.
* Reader, I googled it.
* Lovecraft and suburbia and Stranger Things.
* Anyway, the point I’d like you to take away from this is that while it’s really hard to say “sending an interstellar probe is absolutely impossible”, the smart money says that it’s extremely difficult to do it using any technology currently existing or in development. We’d need a whole raft of breathroughs, including radiation shielding techniques to kick the interstellar medium out of the way of the probe as well as some sort of beam propulsion system and then some way of getting data back home across interstellar distances … and that’s for a flyby mission like New Horizons that would take not significantly less than a human lifetime to get there.
* I Went on a Weeklong Cruise For Conspiracy Theorists. It Ended Poorly.
* My new favorite Twitter bot: @dungeon_junk.
In the dragon's horde, you find the mythical staff Rod of Gnoll which allows you to summon dragons but only during the day.
— Dungeon Junk (@dungeon_junk) August 19, 2016
While looting the tomb you find a magical muttering flask! It has an unsettling accent and it blurts out your embarrassing secrets.
— Dungeon Junk (@dungeon_junk) August 18, 2016
You locate a gold sword. It shines with serrated edges of finely-crafted sapphire. It's worth €30, minimum.
— Dungeon Junk (@dungeon_junk) August 10, 2016
* Viacom is hemorrhaging money, in part on the basis of the struggling Star Trek (and Ninja Turtles, and Ben Hur) reboot franchises.
* Friend acquires a lot of cheese. What to do with it?
* And of course you had me at Historic Midcentury Modernist Motels of the New Jersey Coast.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 22, 2016 at 9:00 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, advertising, Alpha Centauri, America, architecture, Ask Metafilter, attention economy, automation, Avatar, Avatar 2, bail, Ben Hur, Binti, Brazil, Case Western, charts, cheese, class struggle, climate change, college, Colson Whitehead, conspiracy theory, corpocracy, cruises, CWRU, debt, deep time, Department of Justice, diversity, Donald Trump, down the shore, Duke, Dungeons & Dragons, East Chicago, ecology, extrasolar planets, Facebook, film, finance, Flint, found poetry, fraud, GDP, Google News, graft, hotels, How the University Works, Hugo awards, human extinction, Iceland, Indiana, James Cameron, jobs, Judgment Day, liberal arts, Lovecraft, mail, maps, Marquette, Michigan, military-industrial complex, Milwaukee, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel, modernism, motels, Mr. Robot, N.K. Jemisin, NASA, New Jersey, Nnedi Okorafor, outer space, Paramount, Peru, Pittsburgh, poems, poetry, police abolition, politics, post-industrial cities, posthumanism, prison, prison-industrial complex, Proxima Centauri, R2-D2, race, racism, revolution, robots, Rust Belt, science fiction, segregation, self-driving cars, shoplifting, slogans, Solmaz Sharif, special effects, spoiler alert, Star Trek, Star Wars, Stranger Things, suburbia, syllabi, taglines, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, television, the Army, the banks, the courts, The Fifth Season, the humanities, the law, The Man of the Hole, the suburbs, The Underground Railroad, true crime, twists, Twitter, Twitter bots, uncontested tribes, USPS, Viacom, Wal-Mart, waste, welfare reform, white flight, Wisconsin, work labor, ZIP codes
Thank God It’s Thanksgiving Week Links – 2
* For the propaganda vault: Why English Majors are the Hot New Hires.
* I’ve already asked on Facebook and Twitter, but does anyone know what “Psychological Test: BC” means on Kennedy’s Harvard application? I assume it means “extremely deluded narcissist, do not give any power,” but I’m curious about the precise scale involved. PS: Stick around for a bold “letter of recommendation from my dad” choice at the end.
* Tensions rise at Kean U. as officials recommend denying tenure to 2/3 of eligible professors.
* The wisdom of markets: Eight months ago, Snapchat was valued at $70 million. Today, it is valued at $4 billion, even though it has zero revenue. Six months ago, Pinterest was valued at $2.5 billion. Today, it is valued at $3.8 billion — and no revenue there, either. And last week news broke that Dropbox was said to be seeking a new round of funding that would value the company at $8 billion, up from $4 billion a year ago.
* Great line from Boing Boing on this Washington Post elite zip code article: “what money looks like from space.”
* My Idea for Higher Ed Reform: Do Nothing.
* In oh-sure-I-guess-that-show-is-still-on-the-air news: Family Guy kills off Brian for what looks like an episode and a half or so.
* I’m no expert, but I bet you could get better results innovating new schooling forms than medicating so many kids.
* Meanwhile: What happens if enough New York parents say they don’t want their kids to take tests?
Written by gerrycanavan
November 25, 2013 at 9:39 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, ADHD, bullying, class struggle, college, college admissions, economic bubbles, English majors, Family Guy, Harvard, How the University Works, JFK, kids today, letters of recommendation, medicine, narcissism, politics, standardized testing, tenure, the kids are all right, the wisdom of markets, war on education, what money looks like from space, ZIP codes
Friday Quick Links!
* In fact, the U.S. Department of Labor’s guidelines for when a private sector internship can be unpaid and still legal can hinge upon whether the intern is a student. The guidelines, which are not technically law but are a subset of rules under the Fair Labor Standards Act, say that “the more an internship program is structured around a classroom or academic experience as opposed to the employer’s actual operations, the more likely the internship will be viewed as an extension of the individual’s educational experience (this often occurs where a college or university exercises oversight over the internship program and provides educational credit).”
* Yale Officially Declares ‘Nonconsensual Sex’ Not That Big of a Deal.
* Nation interns embarrass the magazine re: its exploitative practices, get results immediately.
The bill, unveiled in March by a powerful California lawmaker, initially would have required the state’s 145 public colleges and universities to grant credit for low-cost online courses offered by outside groups, including for-profits companies, among them the providers of massive open online courses, or MOOCs. The legislation was the subject of massive media coverage, with many citing it as evidence that traditional higher ed models were doomed.
Written by gerrycanavan
August 2, 2013 at 9:37 am
Posted in Look at what I found on the Internet
Tagged with academia, California, class struggle, Fukushima, How the University Works, income inequality, internships, Japan, MOOCs, nuclearity, politics, rape, rape culture, The Nation, Yale, ZIP codes