Thursday, May 19, 2011

@12:28, 05/18/11 2



  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    jburak1101
    • jburak1101 posted to Twitter an article:
      May 18, 2011
      In Japan Reactor Failings, Danger Signs for the U.S.
      “In Japan Reactor Failings, Danger Signs for the U.S. - http://nyti.ms/j3qIai” 
      Better there than here.
      It was our design.
      Our reactor designers must get back to work.
      There is an ancient slander about the Japanese penchant to copy design.
      One of the European mercenary yards was expecting a visit from a Japanese delegation. The yard drew a plan for an impossibly unbalanced destroyer. The delegation acquired a copy and had it built as drawn.  It capsized on launch.   


  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    SlowFoodUSA
    • SlowFoodUSA posted to Twitter an article:
      May 18, 2011
      Gilt Taste Arrives, With Ruth Reichl at the Helm
      “Gilt Taste Arrives, With Ruth Reichl at the Helm - http://nyti.ms/khYLH4” 

      One can pay any price for luxury.  One can pay any price for fashion.
      one can pay any price for honour.  one can pay for morality and for blessing.  Freshness, aging, purity, texture, flavour and colour all have costs and prices.  What is a fair price and a market price and a substitution price are all different.  What and when and where to buy all deserve attention and discussion.  Who pays is a very strong argument along with who is pleased.  
      I will not curry beef or put pork in the stuffed cabbage.
      Carob coated is not acceptable.  Turkey is good. Turkey bacon, I have not tried.  Turkey burgers were the subject of a competition.  If identifiable, they are objectionable.  
      I should not eat tofu. I do at a price.

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    xvarez
    • xvarez posted to Twitter an article:
      May 18, 2011
      Some Foreign Orchestras Offer Misleading Credentials
      “Do your homework: never trust exotic orchestras from afar - http://nyti.ms/ka1IRi” 
      Andrew S. Grossman makes a wonderful example of why there are "black lists".  
      I would not do business with him or with those who are doing business with him.

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    Sasha Koren
    • TPP recommended a blog post:
      Sep 22, 2010
      Showing Gay Teens a Happy Future
      A new online video channel is reaching out to teenagers who are bullied at school for being gay. The message: life really does get better after high school.
      As soon as you can is best.     
      A change of diet is not too much to ask.

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    LaVitaCucinare
    • thenaturalspace posted to Twitter a blog post:
      Apr 28, 2011
      Who Protects the Animals?
      “Who Protects the Animals? - http://nyti.ms/eoNhK4” 
      I don't want to deal with this problem in detail.
      We have divorced ourselves from the killing that necessarily precedes eating.  Slaughter and butchery have become terms opprobrium. 
      I do not approve of torturing animals or people.  
      Predation seems to me about as good a way to deal with overpopulation as any and much better than most.  People have decided that they are the top predator.  
      We eat most things and not much is allowed to eat us. 
      Farm and ranch management can be better.
      Abattoirs can be better.
      Ag gag laws will not do that.  Raising a popular outcry over good practice with a terrible appearance also will not lead to better practice.
      The stunning hammer is about as good as it gets for a few animals under field conditions.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humane_killer#Production
      In 1895, W.W. Greener invented the world's first Humane Killer, a gun designed to kill cattle, sheep, pigs and horses, quickly and easily. This instrument was adopted by the War Office, for use in the Veterinary, Remount and Butchering Departments, and by the Admiralty for is Victualling yards. The instrument was also modified to use .310 caliber cartridges. After several years, the models became obsolete in the 1960s and ammunition for the older models was impossible to obtain. Recently though, the company was asked to manufacture another model and hence, the Humane Killer Mk II was introduced. This new gun fires a .32 ACP round. [3]

      This is not work I want to do or see done.  
      It is work that must be done skilfully. 

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    kitchconfidante

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    derekreesenyc

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    ceciliakang
    • Shaun Dakin recommended a blog post:
      May 17, 2011
      U.S. Agencies Plan a Public Forum on Location Services
      Location-based services, the mobile-phone applications that make use of a person’s geographic location, are attracting growing attention in Washington following reports that phone and software companies might have been sharing location information...
      Regulation is coming.  It should require a warrant to snoop.

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    Hondo
    • w7md posted to Twitter an article:
      Apr 21, 2011
      Gut Bacteria Divide People Into 3 Types, Scientists Report
      “Gut Bacteria Divide People Into 3 Types, Scientists Report - http://nyti.ms/fRZ9nr” 
      http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v473/n7346/full/nature09944.html
      http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/04/gut-bacteria-types/
      http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/02/bacteriablood/
      It is still mostly science.  Not much practical.

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    JakePM
    • JakePM posted to Twitter an article:
      May 18, 2011
      In Silicon Valley, Buying Companies for Their Engineers
      “In Silicon Valley, Buying Companies for Their Engineers - http://nyti.ms/kUCX7W” 
      Engineers work on the project, the company is not that central.
      This is a business strategy not a technical one.
      The best engineers will not stay or produce.

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  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    uk51
    • uk51 posted to Twitter an interactive graphic:
      May 18, 2011
      Bin Laden’s Family Tree
      “Bin Laden’s Family Tree - By BILL MARSH http://nyti.ms/lFsw5x” 
      I am not worried by them or about them.

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    Millie
    • jburak1101 posted to Twitter an article:
      11:52 am
      In Japan Reactor Failings, Danger Signs for the U.S.
      “In Japan Reactor Failings, Danger Signs for the U.S. - http://nyti.ms/j3qIai” 

      Better there than here.
      It was our design.
      Our reactor designers must get back to work.
      There is an ancient slander about the Japanese penchant to copy design.
      One of the European mercenary yards was expecting a visit from a Japanese delegation. The yard drew a plan for an impossibly unbalanced destroyer. The delegation acquired a copy and had it built as drawn.  It capsized on launch.   

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    NYOB

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    NatAbortionFed
    • NatAbortionFed posted to Twitter an article:
      10:33 am
      Abortion and Choice
      “Reading: Abortion and Choice - http://nyti.ms/kPvuCK #prochoice ” 
      The point, in both cases, is choice. 
      Available, safe and rare.

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    EnterpriseCity

    • EnterpriseCity posted to Twitter an article:
      12:10 pm
      In Consumer Behavior, Signs of Gas Price Pinch
      “In Consumer Behavior, Signs of Gas Price Pinch - http://nyti.ms/iGL9OU via @NYTimes”
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gasoline
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gasoline#United_States_2
      http://www.fueleconomy.gov/feg/gasprices/
      http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/oog/info/gdu/gasdiesel.asp
      Any economic recovery looks quite dead.
      I will fill in New Jersey and at 300 mile intervals.
      Third one, Michigan.  End of the first day.
      Des Moins Iowa,   Second day.  Fith fill.
      Bridgeport, Nebraska.  Third day, seventh fill.
      Grand Teton, Wyoming.  Fourth day, ninth fill.
      Yellow Stone, Wyoming.  Fifth day,    tenth fill.
      Boise, Idaho. Sixth day  twelfth fill.
      Still two days out.  Doner pass
  •    

    TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    Reallycricket

    • AmySenese posted to Twitter an article:
      Sep 1, 2010

      Detroit’s Midtown Thrives as It Builds on the Past
      “Detroit’s Midtown Thrives as It Builds on the Past - http://nyti.ms/czWuR9” 
      http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/all/d/index.html
      http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/c/census/index.html?match=any&query=detroit&submit.x=14&submit.y=9&submit=Search
      http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/23/us/23detroit.html?ref=census
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detroit
      Historical populations
      Census City[103] Metro[104] Region[105]
      1820 1,422 N/A N/A
      1830 2,222 N/A N/A
      1840 9,102 N/A N/A
      1850 21,019 N/A N/A
      1860 45,619 N/A N/A
      1870 79,577 N/A N/A
      1880 116,340 N/A N/A
      1890 205,877 N/A N/A
      1900 285,704 542,452 664,771
      1910 465,766 725,064 867,250
      1920 993,678 1,426,704 1,639,006
      1930 1,568,662 2,325,739 2,655,395
      1940 1,623,452 2,544,287 2,911,681
      1950 1,849,568 3,219,256 3,700,490
      1960 1,670,144 4,012,607 4,660,480
      1970 1,514,063 4,490,902 5,289,766
      1980 1,203,368 4,387,783 5,203,269
      1990 1,027,974 4,266,654 5,095,695
      2000 951,270 4,441,551 5,357,538
      2010 713,777 4,296,250 5,218,852
      *Estimates [2][3]
      Metro: Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA)
      Region: Combined Statistical Area (CSA)


      Literacy

      47 percent of Detroiters are functionally illiterate.[117]
      http://detroit.cbslocal.com/2011/05/04/report-nearly-half-of-detroiters-cant-read/


  • TimesPeople recommended an article:
    May 17, 2011
    In Japan Reactor Failings, Danger Signs for the U.S.
    Vents that American officials said would prevent devastating explosions at nuclear plants in the United States were put to the test in Japan and failed.
    Better there than here.
    It was our design.
    Our reactor designers must get back to work.
    There is an ancient slander about the Japanese penchant to copy design.
    One of the European mercenary yards was expecting a visit from a Japanese delegation. The yard drew a plan for an impossibly unbalanced destroyer. The delegation acquired a copy and had it built as drawn.  It capsized on launch.   

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    2eatwellRD

    • seatwo posted to Twitter an article:
      Feb 7, 2010

      Time to Catch Up With Herself
      “Alice Waters has the Sunday routine down pat-really enjoyed reading this. Time to Catch Up With Herself - http://nyti.ms/ci0fBA” 
      After almost forty hectic years she and you should.  Bookmarked.

  • TimesPeople recommended an article:
    May 17, 2011
    In Silicon Valley, Buying Companies for Their Engineers
    Some companies want talent so badly, they buy start-ups for their employees and then jettison the products.
    Red Herring.( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_herring )

  • TimesPeople recommended a user:
    May 17, 2011
    Karen Fawcett

    • Karen Fawcett posted to Twitter an article:
      6:13 am

      The Dollar, Long Down, May Be Poised to Rise
      “The Dollar, Long Down, May Be Poised to Rise - http://nyti.ms/ijMhHp” 
      http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/17/the-invisible-attack-intensifies/
      http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/17/do-do-that-voodoo/
      http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/15/money-1937-slightly-wonkish/



http://www.nola.com/environment/index.ssf/2011/05/high_mississippi_river_water_d.html


NOLA has faith that God loves them.
He must, they know his agent.

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