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Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Paul Kedrosky's Infectious Greed

Paul Kedrosky's Infectious Greed


Why is U2 so popular?

Posted: 08 Nov 2011 12:46 PM PST

First answer to “Why is U2 so popular” is painfully super. Read the whole thing, but here is an excerpt:

Then you learn that U2 is coming to town—U2!  Earnest, melodic, Oprah-endorsed U2! $200 a ticket? No problem. You get a sitter. Your wife is excited—this is going to be great! You invite some friends from college to join you.

On the way, you listen to the "early stuff." The Joshua Tree pumps through the speakers of your Lexus SUV (no judgment—you have two kids!). The harmonies soothe. The lyrics are straightforward. You recall a simpler time before car seats and prostate exams. The nostalgia is so thick you have to wipe it from your face. You haven't looked at your phone in nearly 11 minutes.

You arrive at the show and see yourself everywhere. Tasteful North Face and Patagonia jackets abound. The stands are awash in earth tones. No one is shoving. No one has a nose ring. These are your people.You arrive at the show and see yourself everywhere. Tasteful North Face and Patagonia jackets abound. The stands are awash in earth tones. No one is shoving. No one has a nose ring. These are your people.

via Why is U2 so popular? – Quora.

 


Twitter Digest: 2011-11-08

Posted: 08 Nov 2011 12:00 PM PST

  • Word of the day: "ring rage", that feeling you get when your phone rings from someone actually calling you. http://t.co/IWNGQFVp #
  • What Stewart Brand Is Reading and Watching – http://t.co/b4mzowts #
  • Lengthy Paris Review interview of author William Gibson (@greatdismal) – http://t.co/thsLjlEb #
  • "… economics becomes more discursively powerful the greater its incapacity to inform us on … existing capitalism." http://t.co/e4Qya6RO #
  • i dread the thought of reading Gladwell's piece on Steve Jobs in NY-er. The former's compulsive contrarianism exhausts me. #
  • Papers from the near future: On the irresistibility of used bubble wrap #
  • Love my youngest's mondegreen for "contact lenses" — he calls them "constant glasses". #
  • Note to Malcolm Gladwell: Great tweaking _is_ invention (cf., William Shawn) #
  • I know zero about football, but this is interesting: The Footage the NFL Won't Show You http://t.co/mwMdqjPR #
  • Incredible. RT @izakaminska: Amazing colour photos of Warsaw from 1947 (showing war damage) http://t.co/bahRcqcd #
  • Does Moore's Law apply to solar cells? – http://t.co/bDg8g6Jo /via @nytimeskrugman #
  • From opening tick today to current price, Groupon has tumbled almost 10%. #
  • Echoing @TimHarford, nice to see Freakonomics getting abused for increasingly dumb arguments. http://t.co/KdAU6fBd #
  • While I hate patent trolls too, a Google lawyer whinging about mobile IP theft rankles – http://t.co/Nu0sv7cI #
  • Technology Is Finally Affecting Furniture Design – http://t.co/WvGXnAlj #
  • Recreationally checked availability on a GRPN short today. Nope. #
  • The US smartphone landscape http://t.co/nvuszH1o #
  • Pettis: Germany, not China, must bail out Europe – http://t.co/awHDEXoi #
  • Ultra distance trail-running is so taxing many competitors skip events. Meet its top athlete. http://t.co/P7AgZ7F3 #
  • Hey, back off Argentina. We're busy right right now with Italy. http://t.co/nYMop3KN #
  • Tracking the skyrocketing post-flood prices of hard-disk drives – http://t.co/40lAvMcn #
  • Russia warns against Israeli air strike on Iran – http://t.co/TBoXK9ln #
  • Worst airports in North America in October 2011, by on-time performance – /via @flightstats http://t.co/8Fbj3HSF #
  • Anyone ever done the Cactus to Cloud hike up Mt San Jacinto? Unreasonable to solo it in 3-4 hours? #
  • Tip to hotel owners w/wide: Never make your hotel name sound like Don Pardo. #
  • What a day: Paul Krugman warns of alien invasion (http://t.co/UIIH6Cpp), & White House says we're okay (http://t.co/THduHidJ). #
  • Missed this: California turfs senior oil permitting official – http://t.co/BW3DupvR #
  • In other news, Hummer to roll out bigger SUV. RT @BloombergNews: EU to roll out bigger rescue fund | http://t.co/GWwgOsPY #
  • Video: Stormchaser's car flips during tornado today near Tipton, OK http://t.co/V3k4o7h1 #
  • Taleb in NYT: End Bonuses for Bankers – http://t.co/VuTDVwdA /via @MarkThoma #

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Michael Lewis Visits Danny Kahneman

Posted: 08 Nov 2011 08:43 AM PST

Really nice piece by Michael Lewis on Danny Kahneman in current Vanity Fair:

He was working on a book, he said. It would be both intellectual memoir and an attempt to teach people how to think. As he was the world's leading authority on his subject, and a lot of people would pay hard cash to learn how to think, this sounded promising enough to me. He disagreed: he was certain his book would end in miserable failure. He wasn't even sure that he should be writing a book, and it was probably just a vanity project for a washed-up old man, an unfinished task he would use to convince himself that he still had something to do, right up until the moment he died. Twenty minutes into meeting the world's most distinguished living psychologist I found myself in the strange position of trying to buck up his spirits. But there was no point: his spirits did not want bucking up. Having spent maybe 15 minutes discussing just how bad his book was going to be, we moved on to a more depressing subject. He was working, equally unhappily, on a paper about human intuition—when people should trust their gut and when they should not—with a fellow scholar of human decision-making named Gary Klein. Klein, as it happened, was the leader of a school of thought that stressed the power of human intuition, and disagreed with the work of Kahneman and Tversky. Kahneman said that he did this as often as he could: seek out people who had attacked or criticized him and persuade them to collaborate with him. He not only tortured himself, in other words, but invited his enemies to help him to do it. "Most people after they win the Nobel Prize just want to go play golf," said Eldar Shafir, a professor of psychology at Princeton and a disciple of Amos Tversky's. "Danny's busy trying to disprove his own theories that led to the prize. It's beautiful, really."

via The King of Human Error | Business | Vanity Fair.


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