All entries by this author
Jun 29th, 2009
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By
Roger Ellman
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Category:
This morning's reading
Morning Reading, selected articles of interest from various publications. Can We Reverse Aging By Changing How We Think? Langer and her Harvard colleagues have been running similarly inventive experiments for decades, and the accumulated weight of the evidence is convincing. Her theory, argued in her new book, “Counterclockwise,” is that we are all victims of […]
Tags: aging, brain, health, research, staying young, stereotypes
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Jun 26th, 2009
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By
Roger Ellman
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Category:
This morning's reading
Morning Reading, selected articles of interest from various publications. Get Smarter, by James Cascio Pandemics. Global warming. Food shortages. No more fossil fuels. What are humans to do? The same thing the species has done before: evolve to meet the challenge. But this time we don’t have to rely on natural evolution to make us […]
Tags: AI, artificial intelligence, bio ethics, brain chip, evolution, experiment, future, honesty, honesty cafe, honor system, Indonesia, intelligence, singularity, Technology
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Jun 12th, 2009
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By
Roger Ellman
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Category:
This morning's reading
Morning Reading, selected articles of interest from various publications. The Way I Work: Matt Mullenweg (founder of WordPress) I travel a lot, but when I’m in San Francisco, I usually work from home. Everyone else works from home, too. We’re a virtual company. We recently got an office on Pier 38, a five-minute walk from […]
Tags: blogs, Britain, corruption, entertainment, hard work, Mullenweg, Politics, scandal, stars, time management, Wordpress, working
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Jun 10th, 2009
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By
Roger Ellman
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Category:
This morning's reading
Morning Reading, selected articles of interest from various publications. The Failed Promise of Innovation in the U.S., by Michael Mandel During the past decade, innovation has stumbled. And that may help explain America’s economic woes If the reality of innovation was less than the perception, that helps explain why America’s apparent boom was built on […]
Tags: biotech, food, food trucks, innovation, new ventures, restaurants, Technology, US lead
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May 27th, 2009
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By
Roger Ellman
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Category:
This morning's reading
Morning Reading, selected articles of interest from various publications. WalMart CEO interview (NYTimes) Q. So you find that people make business more complicated than it is? A. No doubt about it. I think that all of us read far too many business books. I’ve worked 30 years now in management roles, and a number of […]
Tags: Business/Entrepreneurship, CEO, effective communication, executives, management, strategy, Walmart
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May 22nd, 2009
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By
Roger Ellman
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Category:
Business/Entrepreneurship, Popular
Lamb on the spit A “freakonimics” example: It is a tradition in Crete to eat lamb for Easter – preferably lamb roasted on a spit. This year, a consumers co-op that runs a chains of super-markets, intervening to help consumers and producers both get a good deal, created an unpredictable result: lack of lamb for […]
Tags: Crete, economy, fair trade, freakonomics, intervention, unpredictable
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Business/Entrepreneurship, Popular
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May 20th, 2009
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By
Roger Ellman
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Category:
This morning's reading
Morning Reading, selected articles of interest from various publications. Matthew May interview on TomPeters.com about “In Pursuit of Elegance” Quite frequently, what we tend to do is leap to a solution because we want to control the outcome. Since October, I have read daily in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and other […]
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May 19th, 2009
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By
Roger Ellman
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Category:
This morning's reading
Morning Reading, selected articles of interest from various publications. Scribd turns page from document sharing to selling Scribd’s biggest advantage is a system that will allow any document bought from its store to be read on different gadgets – a personal computer, an electronic book reader like Amazon.com Inc.’s Kindle or a sophisticated mobile phone. […]
Tags: Amazon, digital books, DRM, e-books, Google, Scribd
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May 17th, 2009
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By
Roger Ellman
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Category:
This morning's reading
Morning Reading, selected articles of interest from various publications. Has Google killed the riddle? (by Abraham Veghese) Which is why when I offered a new riddle to my students last week while we were rounding, I emphatically added, “Don’t Google!” Nothing at all against Google–we’re proud of Google at Stanford, and indeed my kid brother works there. But […]
Tags: Google, medicine, quiz, research, thinking
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Apr 8th, 2009
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By
Roger Ellman
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Category:
Technology
The American Chemical Society (ACS) has announced the winners of the “What is Nano?” video contest held by ACS Nanotation, the Web community site for nanoscience and nanotechnology researchers and enthusiasts. See also: https://www.physorg.com/news158337074.html 1st place: The Nano song The Nano Song from nanomonster on Vimeo. runner-up: Nanotechnology Brings us Delicious New Solar Cells
Tags: nano, nanotechnology, song, video
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