American Mensa | Top 50 websites

Posted on 6th April 2010 in Interesting

American Mensa | Top 50.

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AN OPEN LETTER FROM THE BOOMERS TO THEIR CHILDREN

Posted on 6th April 2010 in Funny, Global Perspective

AN OPEN LETTER FROM THE BOOMERS TO THEIR CHILDRENDear people between the ages of 25 and 40,As we near retirement, Mom and I wanted to write you kids to share a few thoughts about the lives weve lived and the world weve left behind for you. We feel this is necessary because at first glance it might seem like we are a generation of narcissistic, spoiled assholes who freeloaded off of the magnificent world our parents built for us and then cashed out before handing it over to you. This is an unfair characterization. It disregards the fact that we earned the right to do those things. We earned them by being awesome. Havent you seen the films of us marching around protesting The Man in the sixties? Or the Woodstock footage that documents the way we changed the world with drugs, bad music, and indiscriminate fucking? We didnt cash out. We merely took what was due.

the via ginandtacos.com » Blog Archive » AN OPEN LETTER FROM THE BOOMERS TO THEIR CHILDREN.

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Geithner: Disparity in recovery ‘deeply unfair’ – Stocks & economy- msnbc.com

Posted on 4th April 2010 in Money and Economics

WASHINGTON – Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Thursday its “deeply unfair” that some financial institutions that got taxpayer-paid bailouts are emerging in better shape from the recession than millions of ordinary Americans.He acknowledged public outrage over that and said people watched with disdain as Washington protected high-risk banks and investment houses, even as the national unemployment rate was soaring to double-digit levels for the first time in a generation.

via Geithner: Disparity in recovery ‘deeply unfair’ – Stocks & economy- msnbc.com.

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Robot Makes Scientific Discovery All by Itself | Wired Science | Wired.com

Posted on 2nd April 2010 in Interesting, Robotics

For the first time, a robotic system has made a novel scientific discovery with virtually no human intellectual input.Scientists designed “Adam” to carry out the entire scientific process on its own: formulating hypotheses, designing and running experiments, analyzing data, and deciding which experiments to run next.”It’s a major advance,” says David Waltz of the Center forComputational Learning Systems at Columbia University. “Science is being done here in a way that incorporates artificial intelligence.It’s automating a part of the scientific process that hasn’t been automated in the past.”The demonstration of autonomous science breaks major ground.Researchers have been automating portions of the scientific process for decades, using robotic laboratory instruments to screen for drugs and sequence genomes, but humans are usually responsible for forming the hypotheses and designing the experiments themselves. After the experiments are complete, the humans must exert themselves again to draw conclusions.

via Robot Makes Scientific Discovery All by Itself | Wired Science | Wired.com.

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