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interesting #3


1. Largest digital survey of the sky mapped billions of stars, EngadgetSee picture. Two petabytes of data. That's one thousand million million, or 10^15 bytes.2. Can you tell if you'll like someone based on their profile picture?, QuartzGuessing people would want to know more than ever with the holidays coming up. Superficiality of the digital era? Framing? Priming?Despite the wealth of new information available in the live interaction, perceivers’ judgments based on the photograph they had seen months earlier strongly predicted their judgments following the live interaction. If perceivers had formed a favorable impression of the woman based simply on her portrait, they continued to hold a favorable impression of her following the interaction. If perceivers had initially formed an unfavorable impression, then they continued to hold these unfavorable impressions, even after meeting her.3. In defence of hate speech, the trial of Geert Wilders, the EconomistRelevant in an age where echo chambers have gone mainstream.Proponents of hate-speech laws argue that they foster social harmony by forcing people to be more polite to each other. The opposite is more likely to be true. Criminalising something as subjective as the giving of offence encourages more people to say they are offended, so they can use the law to suppress views they dislike. This enrages those who are silenced; hardly a recipe for social tranquillity.4. Learn a new lingo while doing something else, Scientific AmericanAs someone who's trying to get their French and Chinese up to par, this is interesting. Basically passive language learning. For me, it's about integrating small things into my life and creating the right habit. French music through Stromae, improve listening skills through movies .... Time to start watching a series I like and pretend that I'm doing it to learn. You'll never have to work a day in your life if you love your job, right?

interesting #2

But Singapore’s paternalism has not gone away. Earlier this month the government announced that only ethnic Malays will be permitted to run for president next year. The constitution will be amended to mandate that presidential elections be reserved for members of a certain ethnic group if nobody from that group has served as president for the past five terms.

Living in China, this article was very enlightening.


China today is extraordinarily homogenous. It sustains that by remaining almost entirely closed to new entrants except by birth. Unless someone is the child of a Chinese national, no matter how long they live there, how much money they make or tax they pay, it is virtually impossible to become a citizen. Someone who marries a Chinese person can theoretically gain citizenship; in practice few do. As a result, the most populous nation on Earth has only 1,448 naturalised Chinese in total, according to the 2010 census. Even Japan, better known for hostility to immigration, naturalises around 10,000 new citizens each year; in America the figure is some 700,000 (see chart).

Bumped into this while trying to untangle myself the knot of the conflicts going on in Syria. Complicated but this video gives it a very good shot.

Humans deem themselves superior to animals. What about AI and robots?  


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interesting #1



see picture

"I was already puzzled by the evolution of large brains in cephalopods, and this discovery made the questions more acute. What is the point of building a complex brain like that if your life is over in a year or two? Why invest in a process of learning about the world if there is no time to put that information to use? An octopus’s or cuttlefish’s life is rich in experience, but it is incredibly compressed.


The particular puzzle of octopus life span opens up a more general one. Why do animals age? And why do they age so differently? A scruffy-looking fish that inhabits the same patch of sea as my cephalopods has relatives who live to 200 years of age. This seems extraordinarily unfair: A dull-looking fish lives for centuries while the cuttlefish, in their chromatic splendor, and the octopuses, in their inquisitive intelligence, are dead before they are 2? There are monkeys the size of a mouse that can live for 15 years, and hummingbirds that can live for over 10. Nautiluses (who are also cephalopods) can live for 20 years. A recent Nature paper reported that despite continuing medical advances, humans appear to have reached a rough plateau at around 115 years, though a few people will edge beyond it. The life spans of animals seem to lack all rhyme or reason.



We tend to think about aging as a matter of bodies wearing out, as automobiles do. But the analogy is not a good one. An automobile’s original parts will indeed wear out, but an adult human is not operating with his or her original parts. Like all animals, we are made of cells that are continually taking in nutrients and dividing, replacing old parts with new ones. If you keep replacing the parts of an automobile with new ones, there is no reason it should ever stop running."




"In no other country that participated in the PISA survey is the difference in test results between immigrant students and non-immigrant students so flagrant as in Flanders, Belgium." 

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