Category: Web/Tech

Assorted links

1. One calculation of implicit marginal tax rates on the poor.

2. The rise of Andrew Ross Sorkin at the NYT.

3. The problems of health care transition: "drop your bad risks ASAP" is another one.

4. Is there hope for Detroit?

5. "Salvaged [nuclear] bomb material now generates about 10 percent of electricity in the United States…" — read more here.

6. Debunking of Senate vote chart.

7. UK list of best movies of the decade.

8. New Mark Thoma blog at CBS MoneyWatch.

Assorted links

1. The vote to defund political science: how it went.

2. Jason Kottke doesn't read books anymore.

3. "Food rewards obsessiveness," the best eater in the United States.  The full article is gated (the link offers only an excerpt), so buy the 9 November New Yorker.  I don't usually link to gated material of this kind, but this was one of the three or four best magazine pieces I'll read in a year.

4. Why Buffett bought that railroad.

5. Weird stuff McDonald's sells around the world.  In the Philippines it is "spaghetti soaked in sugar."

6. Fruitless endeavors, or not?: translating works of literature into games of chess against each other, using a computer program.

7. Were the Neanderthals just unlucky?

8. Françoise Sagan: an appreciation.

How to run a successful blog

…They understand that public opinion matters…they understand that it’s a little harder to criticize someone after you’ve met him and he’s given you free cookies…they couldn't possibly have expected to change anybody’s mind, they understand that it’s better to talk to your critics than to avoid them. Waldman talks about some of the techniques used to make the attendees [readers] feel like they were being treated as special guests.

Whoops!  That's not advice for running a successful blog.  Those are James Kwak's comments on how Treasury tries to trick visiting bloggers.  We bloggers should know.  We give away lots of free stuff too, more than cookies even if it is sometimes sour rather than sweet.

Assorted links

1. Geithner meets with bloggers, and here: "We were offered a tray of cookies at the meeting, from which I
abstained on principle. Those of you who think that's silly have no
idea how much I like cookies."

2. Assuming a can opener, more on health care costs.

3. More on the multiplier (shout it from the rooftops).

4. Mandates don't stay modest.

5. Lane Kenworthy reviews Create Your Own Economy.

Assorted links

1. WEIRD subjects and their importance for social science.

2. Rational overoptimism.

3. Andrew Gelman will have a second blog.  I don't yet understand the forthcoming principle of individuation across the two blogs.

4. London Review of Books, full issue on-line.

5. Nouriel Roubini on the new carry trade.

6. From Chris F. Masse, nextbigfuture.com, a new science blog.  Here's their update on space elevators.

7. Will Doug Holtz-Eakin lose his health insurance?

8. Is Earth a habitable planet?

9. Germany's new conservative cabinet.  Not like ours would be.

10. Strictly personal interview with Esther Duflo.

11. Why American health care costs so much.

That's a lot but they're all good links.

Assorted links

1. The danger of personal locator beacons, namely the Tullock Effect.

2. How to stop teapots from dribbling.

3. What if 19th century-level natural disasters were to occur today?

4. Michael Clemens on the brain drain.

5. Mandate opt-out clauses for designated religions: how they work in the Netherlands.

6. How calculated is violence in relationships?

7. The public choice analysis of AARP.

8. Siberian women lobby for polygamy.

www.ideastorm.com

Customers offer their suggestions for how to make products better or more useful.

Many of the entries are pleas that firms give up some market power, such as people wishing for more transparent prices and people wishing that Windows wasn't bundled with PC purchases.  Some people don't like trialware.

Other people wish for standardized power cables for laptops.

Why don't they just ask for checks in the mail?

I thank Melody Hildebrandt for the pointer.