Tuesday, December 28, 2010

@11:15, 12/28/10



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  • TimesPeople recommended an article:
    Dec 27, 2010
    Disney Command Center Aims to Keep Lines Moving
    An underground high-tech nerve center at Disney World addresses the most low-tech of problems: long waits.
    It still is not a fix.

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    Dec 27, 2010
    Niclas Ihrén

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    Dec 27, 2010
    TheBeerRunner

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    Dec 27, 2010
    Ali_Asi

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    Dec 27, 2010
    Daniso

    • Chuck posted to Twitter a blog post:
      Dec 20, 2010
      Birth of a Zombie
      “Birth of a Zombie - http://nyti.ms/eRRevs”
      Krugman has been thinking again. He is often right as he is here.

  • TimesPeople recommended a blog post:
    Dec 27, 2010
    On Forgiveness 
    There is a much smaller tale lurking inside this.
    Something without religion.

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    Dec 27, 2010
    G_Castillo

    • G_Castillo posted to Twitter an article:
      Dec 27, 2010

      You’ve Got to Have (150) Friends
      “Interesting @NYTimes article- How Facebook cements real life relationships. You’ve Got to Have (150) Friends - http://nyti.ms/ievFVX”
      It is also a very public forum.

  • TimesPeople recommended an article:
    Dec 27, 2010
    Seeking the Connectome, a Mental Map, Slice by Slice
    In the field of connectomics, the goal is to find how memories, personality traits and skills are stored.
    I think we don't care. The mind is mostly software that runs on the jelly ware. The relation between the two is recursive and infinitely adjustable.
    The problems attacked by this approach would be things like Gay, or paedophilia.  I would guess that the damage is much greater than the "correction".

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    Dec 27, 2010
    msmon

    • msmon posted to Twitter an article:
      6:41 am
      Caveon Uses Technology Against Cheaters
      “Dr. Fremer can kiss my patootie re: his position on standardized tests. Caveon Uses Technology Against Cheaters - http://nyti.ms/fjrief”
      A bad solution for a bad problem.  Better to write several exams or change the order of the questions. A random distribution of exams and question order will disrupt this form of cheating.  Computers are good at dealing with big sets of data. A preprinted label transfered from the exam to the answer sheet will specify the exam and question order.

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    Dec 27, 2010
    jenny8lee

    For the A-Cup Crowd, Minimal Assets Are a Plus

                I LOVE YOU.

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