The Flynn Effect

Start the Week
James Flynn is best known for his research in the 1980s which flagged a generation-on-generation increase in scores in IQ tests during the 20th century, the Flynn Effect. Are we just getting cleverer or are the tests telling us something about the types of intelligence we are selecting and developing? 
Interesting clip from this morning's programme:


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Good ideas, well presented

Making Sense Of New Technologies And Media
Breaking technology news, the latest app, scores of startups launching in beta every day. The incoming wave of technology and media related news keeps increasing by the day with no signs of pause or slowdown. And while many blogs and news sites give plenty of coverage and space to the latest and most promising ventures, very few devote their time to make sense of all that is happening and connecting the dots of the ongoing revolution we are witnessing.
Robin Good republishes some thoughts of elearning and new technology author George Siemens. These are interesting in themselves but check out the difference in the way the material is presented.

On Siemens's blog the ideas appear as individual text-only posts and look rather dull, with a grey background and slightly darker grey text in a small, serif font. Robin Good republishes the same material but in a much more presentable form making the very same ideas seem far more interesting.

There is a lesson here for all those bloggers who think content trumps everything else.

Only if it gets read, dear hearts, only if it gets read.

I'm often surprised when I check a post in my RSS reader (where I have control over the presentational style) and then visit the blog or website and realize just how poorly presented and difficult to read the same post is in its original form.



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Facts are the enemy of, erm, Bush

So Iran's not a nuclear threat any more? All the more reason for Bush to unleash Armageddon
Bush is a bit like an unhinged iconoclast who has arbitrarily decided he doesn't believe in cows, and loudly and repeatedly denies their existence until you get so annoyed you drive him to a farm and show him a cow, and he shakes his head and continues to insist there's no such thing. At which point it moos indignantly, but he claims not to hear it, so in exasperation you drag him into the field and force him to touch the cow, and milk the cow, and ride around on the cow's back. And, finally, he dismounts and says, "That was fun'n'all, but dagnammit, I still don't believe in no cow." And then he shoots it in the head regardless, just to be on the safe side. Just so it isn't a threat.
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But their hands are clean, right?

Congress members briefed on Waterboarding in 2002
In September 2002, four members of Congress met in secret for a first look at a unique CIA program designed to wring vital information from reticent terrorism suspects in U.S. custody. For more than an hour, the bipartisan group, which included current House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, was given a virtual tour of the CIA's overseas detention sites and the harsh techniques interrogators had devised to try to make their prisoners talk. Among the techniques described, said two officials present, was waterboarding, a practice that years later would be condemned as torture by Democrats and some Republicans on Capitol Hill. But on that day, no objections were raised. Instead, at least two lawmakers in the room asked the CIA to push harder...
Glenn Greenwald comments:
Whether it’s the war in Iraq or illegal surveillance or the abolition of habeas corpus and now the systematic use of torture, it’s the Bush administration that conceived of the policies, implemented them and presided over their corrupt application. But it’s Congressional Democrats at the leadership level who were the key allies and enablers, never getting their hands dirty with implementation — and thus feigning theatrical, impotent outrage once each abuse was publicly exposed — but nonetheless working feverishly the entire time to enable all of it every step of the way.
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Social websites viewed as games

The Web: Hidden Games by C. Weng
Some websites are designed to be games. Most are not. But have you ever heard people, or found yourself addicted to Digg, YouTube, or Facebook? Have you ever wondered why? Well, it’s because they are games, at least partially! Officially, they are social networks, news aggregators, etc. and not designed as game sites like Second Life is. However, these sites contain all factors of a game. They are not only useful, but also entertaining. You can manage relationships with friends, gain recognition, and even set trends. This book will describe the view of websites as games in general, and then study Digg, YouTube and Facebook as specific case studies. It will show you what the goals of these websites are, how to play, and how to win. Applying the game perspective to more areas of the web, users may find other hidden games and can thus use those sites with greater efficiency. Web designers also can learn from this perspective and use the game design to achieve better results.
An interesting perspective which the writer expands on in a free downloadable ebook (link above). It explains why I'm not really into them, I'm just not a player.

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Finding Ralph

Director blasts 'BBC ignorance'
One of television's most imaginative film-makers has condemned Mark Thompson's leadership of the BBC as a 'catastrophe' and accused the corporation of undermining its worldwide reputation by insulting the intelligence of viewers.

Tony Palmer, who has won more than 40 awards including Baftas, Emmys and, uniquely, the Prix Italia twice, criticised the director-general after the BBC turned down a documentary of his. The film, about English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams, has been produced by Five instead.

Palmer said he received an extraordinary rejection letter from a BBC commissioning editor explaining that, 'having looked at our own activity via the lens of find, play & share', it had been decided the film did not fit with 'the new vision for [BBC] Vision'. Bizarrely, Palmer said, the letter concluded: 'But good luck with the project, and do let me know if Mr. V. Williams has an important premiere in the future as this findability might allow us to reconsider.' Vaughan Williams died in 1958.
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"There's more to boxing than hitting.

There's not getting hit, for instance."**


Boxing | Hatton v Mayweather build-up

I used to be a great fan of boxing. I remember getting up in the early hours to listen, with my father, to Eamonn Andrews commentating on the first Liston vs Clay (Ali) fight in 1964. There was an electric atmosphere that night listening to the fight on an old Sobell valve radio.

I think the last 'live' fight I saw was 'The Rumble in the Jungle' in 1974. The incredible match between Ali and Foreman which Ali won with the help, according to some, of 'loose ropes'. I saw it in a cinema in London via satellite.

I'm not one for predictions but my gut feeling is that Hatton will do his best tonight but be outclassed by the bigger guy. But I wouldn't put money on it.

**George Foreman
UPDATE: 5-25am Hatton is on the receiving end of a boxing lesson and getting hammered in the process. Mayweather is in a different class. If Hatton hangs on for the full 12 rounds he'll have done well....Spoke too soon...The fight is stopped in the tenth at the same time as Hatton's corner throws the towel in. A brave attempt but outclassed and outboxed by a world-class welterweight. Stepping up a weight division proved too much for him.

Stuck feeds, grrr

Magnolia is playing silly buggers this weekend and I've had to disable my sidebar feeds. The guys at Magnolia are working on it and it's an intermittent problem at present but as I can't get my site showing until the JS feeds load fully it's actually a major pain. I think I can order things so that the rest of the page loads first and doesn't get hung up on the JS, so under the hood I go...



Get your nose out of that t'interweb!

Youth seduced by internet's 'inanities', says Lessing
The winner of this year's Nobel prize for literature, Doris Lessing, has warned of the dangers of the internet, and defended the continued importance of books. In her Nobel lecture, the British novelist says a whole generation have been seduced by what she calls the inanities of the internet, creating a fragmented culture in which people read nothing and know nothing of the world. But while people in wealthy countries were turning their backs on literature, Doris Lessing says there is still an astonishing hunger for books in the developing world.
Which will, of course, evaporate just as soon as they have the same kind of access to the internet, TV and film as the wealthy countries now have. Doh! Lessing is one of those tedious, irrelevant, outdated writers who complain about modern developments like 't'internet and blogging without themselves having any experience of them at all. They then have the gall to criticise the young for having no knowledge of the world. Lessing wrote her 'breakthrough novel' back in the sixties when just about every novel being written had as its central character a writer trying to come up with a 'breakthrough novel'. In Lessing's case the central character happens to be a woman writng about her experiences of, oooh, lets guess, Central Africa, the Communist Party and a broken love affair, in other words, Lessing's life up until then. Oh, what an imagination that woman had (her and hundreds of other boring writers writing about 'the process of writing'). Not so much 'navel gazing-writing' as 'disappearing up your own arse-writing'.

Lessing went the way of most ex-Communist, consciousness-raising feminist writers from the sixties. She got cynical, misanthropic and fatalistic. In other words, she became an old woman. Lessing just can't understand why anyone would rather spend hours surfing the web rather than ploughing through her self-indulgent 'The Golden Notebook'. And that, as they say, is her problem.
 
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Crack, sex, suicide and porn...it must be Friday and b3eta

B3TA : NEWSLETTER : "A NOT-FOR-PROPHET PUBLICATION"

This week's b3ta is particularly, erm, NSFW. The crack (in every sense of the word) sex link is probably best avoided but the Celebrity Fuckfest is well done and funny if rather, erm,  hard-core. (def. NSFW) I limited myself to these harmless and completely non-pornographic snips from the animal suicide links.



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Look out, he's got a dildo!

Alabama Ban on sex toys targeted
A Birmingham, Alabama legislator has filed a bill that would revoke the state's 10-year ban on the sale of sex toys, a prohibition that has drawn national attention and led to lengthy court battles...Dan Ireland, executive director of the Alabama Citizens' Action Program, a Baptist group, said it would oppose any effort to overturn the law. "Laws are made to protect the public," he said. "Sometimes you have to protect the public against themselves." The 2008 regular session is scheduled to begin Feb. 5. The law prohibits the sale and manufacture of items "designed or marketed as useful primarily for the stimulation of human genital organs."

"Sometimes you have to protect the public against themselves." 

Right!

Alabama Gun Laws - State Requirements:

Rifles and Shotguns

* Permit required to purchase rifles and shotguns? No
* Registration of rifles and shotguns required ? No
* Licensing of owners of rifles and shotguns required ? No
* Permit to carry rifles and shotguns required ? No

Handguns

* Permit to purchase handgun required ? No
* Registration of handguns required ? No
* Licensing of owners of handguns required ? No

Other Requirements

* Is there a waiting period for handguns? No
* Is there a waiting period for long-guns? No
* Record of sale reported to state or local government: No




Maybe this is the answer. A gun-shaped vibrator. Er!

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