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Monthly Archives: June 2010
Seduced by Data
For the last few months I’ve been writing about the challenges facing people at the top of large, hierarchical organizations, with the story of the US military’s failure in Vietnam (as told by David Halberstam) as a running example. You … Continue reading
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3 Comments
Immigration and Intellectual Laziness
A few months ago, This American Life re-aired an episode from 2002 about the campaign to get the American Psychiatric Association to remove homosexuality from the official list of psychiatric disorders. Until the 1970s, the DSM, the bible of the … Continue reading
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8 Comments
Immigration and Ignorant Voters
One of the striking things about the immigration debate is the disconnect between public perception of the immigration situation and objective reality. A recent poll found that 59 percent of respondents consider illegal immigration to be a “very serious” problem. … Continue reading
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8 Comments
The Underwhelming Dangers of “Multitasking”
The New York Times recently ran a story about the supposedly insidious effects of connectivity and “multitasking” on our brains and our relationships with one another. They asked me to participate in a “Room for Debate” feature on the article: … Continue reading
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1 Comment
Healy on Obama’s Oil Spill
I don’t know anything about geology or marine biology, so I don’t have much to say about the oil spill. But I wholeheartedly endorse Gene Healy’s take on the flak President Obama has been getting: It’s hardly surprising that a … Continue reading
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1 Comment
Credibility and the Exit Option
Reader Pete makes a great point about Google’s Data Liberation Front: Moves like the Data Liberation Front function are a costly, and therefore credible, signal to users that Google they should be comfortable giving users their [data]. Google’s basically an … Continue reading
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Jagger Puts the Recording Industry in Perspective
Jerry Brito points to a BBC interview with Mick Jagger: People only made money out of records for a very, very small time. When The Rolling Stones started out, we didn’t make any money out of records because record companies … Continue reading
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9 Comments
Google and the Importance of Being Open
I’m back. I’ve completed the requirements for the master’s portion of grad school and when I go back to school in the fall I’ll be a PhD candidate. I’m interning at Google this summer. As a reminder, nothing I write … Continue reading
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