Archive for the 'capitalism' Category

04
Jul
12

Happy July 4th!

It’s America’s birthday and I’m celebrating. What I write today will be… anything I want–gibberish, a short story, guest articles on crazy topics. I have no idea. My son’s in Kuwait protecting America’s distant shores. My daughter’s in San Diego preparing her LPD for some future battle. I’m here, thanking both of them and every other service member who accepted the calling to protect our nation’s freedoms.

God be with all of you.



Jacqui Murray is the editor of a technology curriculum for K-sixth grade, creator of two technology training books for middle school and four ebooks on technology in education. She is the author of Building a Midshipman, the story of her daughter’s journey from high school to United States Naval Academy. She is webmaster for six blogs, an Amazon Vine Voice book reviewer, a columnist for Examiner.com, Editorial Review Board member for Journal for Computing Teachers, Cisco guest blog, IMS tech expert, and a bi-weekly contributor to Write Anything. Currently, she’s editing a thriller for her agent that should be out to publishers this summer. Contact Jacqui at her writing office or her tech lab, Ask a Tech Teacher.

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16
Jan
12

How to Crack the Google Interview

I came across this Wall Street Journal article discussing Google interview questions. It’s fascinating. They want not only intelligent people, but those who think outside the box and problem-solve as part of their daily experience.

I’ve posted the first part of it and a link to the balance. Enjoy!

How to Ace a Google Interview

By WILLIAM POUNDSTONE

Imagine a man named Jim. He’s applying for a job at Google. Jim knows that the odds are stacked

How do you get out before the blades start churning? Photo illustration photography by F. Martin Ramin for the WSJ

against him. Google receives a million job applications a year. It’s estimated that only about 1 in 130 applications results in a job. By comparison, about 1 in 14 high-school students applying to Harvard gets accepted.

Jim’s first interviewer is late and sweaty: He’s biked to work. He starts with some polite questions about Jim’s work history. Jim eagerly explains his short career. The interviewer doesn’t look at him. He’s tapping away at his laptop, taking notes. “The next question I’m going to ask,” he says, “is a little unusual.”

You are shrunk to the height of a nickel and thrown into a blender. Your mass is reduced so that your density is the same as usual. The blades start moving in 60 seconds. What do you do?

The interviewer looks up from his laptop, grinning like a maniac with a new toy.

“I would take the change in my pocket and throw it into the blender motor to jam it,” Jim says.

The interviewer’s tapping resumes. “The inside of a blender is sealed,” he counters, with the air of someone who’s heard it all before. “If you could throw pocket change into the mechanism, then your smoothie would leak into it.”

“Right… um… I would take off my belt and shirt, then. I’d tear the shirt into strips to make a rope, with the belt, too, maybe. Then I’d tie my shoes to the end of the rope and use it like a lasso.”

Furious key clicks.

“I don’t mean a lasso,” Jim plows on. “What are those things Argentinian cowboys throw? It’s like a weight at the end of a rope.”

No answer. Jim now realizes that his idea is lame, but he feels compelled to complete it. “I’d throw the weights over the top of the blender jar. Then I’d climb out.”

“The ‘weights’ are just your shoes,” the interviewer says. “How would they support your body’s weight? You weigh more than your shoes do.”

Jim doesn’t know. That’s the end of it. The interviewer begins ticking off quibbles one by one. He isn’t sure whether Jim’s shirt—shrunken with the rest of him—could be made into a rope that would be long enough. Once Jim got to the top of the jar—if he got there—how would he get down again? Could he realistically make a rope in 60 seconds?

Read more…

Continue reading ‘How to Crack the Google Interview’

30
Oct
11

Tea Party vs. OWS–the Differences

Those in the population who support these two groups are roughly equal (last I read about 44% believed in the goals of the Tea Party and 38% OWS. That’s pretty close). Both groups want change in America. Both groups are willing to march and protest to achieve their goals, but there are a few areas they are vastly different:

These numbers were drawn from a variety of articles, some of which are:

I’m willing to speculate whether you agree with these numbers will depend upon which side of the political aisle you travel. If you choose to leave a comment, please don’t insult the messenger.

23
Oct
11

Amazon is Now a Publisher

Amazon will publish 122 books this fall in an array of genres, in both physical and e-book form. This moves them beyond retailer and creates a new model for publishers. I wonder what the traditional guys will do? Read more…

08
Mar
11

Cap and Trade is Working–Without Passing

I love our planet. Personally, regardless the politics, I want to see it thrive under man’s stewardship. We can be curmudgeonly and self-centered, but every once in a while, we humans figure out how to do what’s right for our beloved homeland.

In this case, I’m talking about the atmosphere. Much debate centered around how to protect it, with Dems and Republicans drawing their lines in the sand. In the end, the free market did its job. No government controls (though I’m not

libertarian, I respect their sentiments). Just good old Yankee capitalism:

US HAS CUT EMISSIONS…WITHOUT CAP AND TRADE

While the federal Environmental Protection Administration is about to impose regulations and taxes on carbon emissions by executive fiat – in the name of stopping global climate change – the United States has already dramatically cut its emissions and probably has already complied with the Kyoto/Copenhagen goals for reduced emissions. And this has been done without taxes, without regulations, and without government intervention.

Source 1996 2009Coal 52% 45%
Natural Gas 13% 23%
Nuclear 20% 20%
Renewable 2% 4%
Source: US Energy Information AdministrationThe free market, free enterprise system has responded to persuasion and incentives like it does in free societies without the heavy hand of taxation, government regulation, and coercion.These data expose the basic truth: Cap and trade or carbon regulation is not necessary to lower U.S. emissions. The government bureaucratic/environmentalist alliance want these measures to increase public control over our economy, not to fight global warming. Just as the Obama stimulus package was designed to increase public spending, not to stimulate anything, so the environmental regulations are exploiting public concern over climate change to ratify a growth in government power and oversight.And that’s the inconvenient truth!

In 2007, the U.S. emitted 6.12 billion metric tons of carbon. In 2008, emissions fell to 5.92. In 2009, while Obama was promising that the U.S. would cut its emissions to 5.0 by 2015, the American economy and public – on their own – cut the emissions to 5.5 billion. Most likely, by the time the 2010 measurements are in, we will have reached the Obama goal.While many attribute cut to the recession which, presumably, will end sometime, the fact is that emissions dropped before the recession hit and have continued to fall. A big part of the reason is the reduction in the use of coal to generate electricity.

As we explain in our new book Revolt! (to be released on March 1), coal accounted for 52% of electric generation in 1996 but only for 45% today. In the past twelve months, coal’s share has dropped form 49% to 45%. Natural gas has almost doubled its share from 13% in 1996 to 23% in 2009 while renewables have risen from 2% to 4%.

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30
Jan
11

Did You Know: California Has a Plan for Paying Off Their Deficit

Traffic fines. Wow. Look at this story from the LA Times:

THE LOS ANGELES TIMES HAS AN ARTICLE ON:

HUGE California Traffic Tickets Fines Effective 01/06/2011

Continue reading ‘Did You Know: California Has a Plan for Paying Off Their Deficit’

24
Jan
11

Did You Know: Web Business Helps Magazine Turn a Profit

The 153-year-old Atlantic magazine will turn a profit this year for the first time in at least a decade thanks to advertising revenue from online ads this year.

 

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17
Jan
11

Did You Know: iPhone vs. Android

According to USA Today, U.S. consumers have bought a total of 89 million iPhones vs. 47 million Android phones, a tally that includes devices from different manufacturers and wireless providers, according to financial services firm Piper Jaffray.

But the iPhone is no longer the hottest seller: Some 33 million phones sold in the second half of 2010 were powered by Android, beating iPhone’s sales of 29 million

21
Nov
10

Sunday Stats: Americans Find New National Oil Wells

According to the Wall Street Journal, Texas has seen the greatest increase of rigs in the past year, adding 300, a 73% increase. North Dakota added 83 rigs in the last year, Oklahoma gained 71, and Colorado picked up 30. Analysts at IHS Cambridge Energy Research Associates have identified 20 significant shale prospects across North America.

12
Sep
10

Sunday Stats: Everything You Need to Know About the Blogosphere

blog dataHere’s the breakdown:

29
Aug
10

Sunday Stats: America vs. Labor Unions

Americans’ approval of labor unions has recovered slightly from last year’s all-time low, but at 52% remains significantly lower than what it was before 2009. For the second year in a row, more Americans say they want unions to have less influence than more.
Read more at GALLUP.com.
06
Jun
10

Sunday Stats: Hire Me!

Fewer than half of employers — 44% — plan to hire recent college grads in 2010, according to a CareerBuilder survey.

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26
May
10

SB 1070 Treats Illegal Aliens Almost Like Citizens

SB 1070, the Arizona effort to control the tsunami of illegals that threaten to upend their state, has become  a lightening rod to factions within our country. Congress gave the President of Mexico a standing ovation when he condemned it (and by proxy, the nation), even though polls show a majority of Americans agree with controlling illegal immigration (up to 75% on the last one I read) Continue reading ‘SB 1070 Treats Illegal Aliens Almost Like Citizens’

25
May
10

Take a Stand or Shut Up (and sing)

Most anti-Arizona Immigration Law pundits say something like this:

Now that Arizona has toughened illegal immigration laws, will the border crossings stop? Not until we look at the business end of immigration… If you seriously want to stop illegal border crossing, you have to hit where it hurts: the wallet. There are two reasons that Americans let illegals cross over in the first place: we don’t want to spend $25 on tomatoes, and we don’t want to get caught growing our own pot or making our own drug factories because that’s illegal and highly enforced. Continue reading ‘Take a Stand or Shut Up (and sing)’

23
May
10

Sunday Stats: Most Americans Owe More on Their Home Than It’s Worth

57% Say Their Home is Worth More Than What’s Owed On Their Mortgage
No wonder we’re in a housing crisis. What happened to banks requiring the mortgage be only 25% of income? OMG…

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16
May
10

Sunday Stats: Communism or Democracy?

A stunning 72% say most Hungarians are actually worse off now economically than they were under communism, according to a Pew Research Center study.

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02
May
10

Sunday Stats: More About the Stupidity of Americans

Once more, it’s our fault–Everyman–that we don’t get what the politicians are trying to say. I’m pretty tired of being http://www.duriandaniel.blogspot.com/called stupid, uninformed, misguided. If I’m too stupid–despite being in the top 3% of education level for Americans–where’s that leave our politicians, who aren’t even required to have a Bachelors to run for Congress?

A pox on all their houses:

(I know I know–this is from 1999. It still makes me mad)

79% – Missing the Point Entirely Continue reading ‘Sunday Stats: More About the Stupidity of Americans’

01
Mar
10

Thar’s Oil in Dem Dar (American) Hills

With the focus on the Middle East, it’s easy to forget that America has a lot of oil on our own land. Alaska, Texas, California–and now North Dakota. Called the Bakken Shale deposit, it’s not new, but advancements in technology have made it more accessible than ever before. In fact, there’s a boom going on one hundred miles south of Canada. Unemployment is 4.3%.

The question is, can we ever keep ahead of our oil requirements? Continue reading ‘Thar’s Oil in Dem Dar (American) Hills’

21
Feb
10

Sunday Stats: Stimulus Plan Budget Fully Funds 19.5 Million Jobs

The median income in the US for one wage earner is around $40,000. The $780 billion stimulus plan would pay 19.5 million people for a full year. They’ll get the money, spend it on living, fuel the economy and kickstart the recovery.

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13
Feb
10

Sunday Stats: What the Heck Happened?

What's Changed This Decade
Source: Online Education

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What’s in this blog

Discover the sizzle in science. It's not that stuff that's always for the smart kids. It's the need to know. The passion for understanding. The absolute belief that for every problem, there is a solution. The creative mind seeking truth in a world of mystery. The quest for the Holy Grail.

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Books I’m Reading

Great Science Books

Assembling California
Born On A Blue Day: Inside the Extraordinary Mind of an Autistic Savant
The Forest People
Geology Underfoot in Southern California
The Land's Wild Music: Encounters with Barry Lopez, Peter Matthiessen, Terry Tempest William, and James Galvin
My Life with the Chimpanzees
Naked Earth: The New Geophysics
Our Inner Ape: A Leading Primatologist Explains Why We Are Who We Are
The Runaway Brain: The Evolution of Human Uniqueness
Sand Rivers
The Singing Neanderthals: The Origins of Music, Language, Mind, and Body
The Tree Where Man Was Born
The Wildlife of Southern Africa: A Field Guide to the Animal and Plants of the Region
The Worlds of a Maasai Warrior: An Autobiography


Jacqui's favorite books »
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RSS Fact and Fiction about Early Man

  • The Runaway Brain: The Evolution of Human Uniqueness July 25, 2011
    author: Christopher Wills name: Jacqui average rating: 4.08 book published: 1993 rating: 5 read at: date added: 2011/07/24 shelves: science, early-man review: In my lifelong effort to understand what makes us human, I long ago arrived at the lynchpin to that discussion: our brain. Even though bipedalism preceded big brains, and we couldn't be who we are […]
    Christopher Wills
  • The Origin Of Humankind July 25, 2011
    author: Richard E. Leakey name: Jacqui average rating: 3.86 book published: 1994 rating: 5 read at: date added: 2011/07/24 shelves: early-man, history review: If you're interested in man's roots, there are several authors you must read: Birute Galdikas Dian Fosse Donald Johanson GHR Von Koenigsman Glen Isaacs Jared Diamond Ian Tattersell Lev Vygots […]
    Richard E. Leakey
  • Lucy: The Beginnings of Humankind July 24, 2011
    author: Donald C. Johanson name: Jacqui average rating: 4.07 book published: 1983 rating: 5 read at: date added: 2011/07/24 shelves: early-man, science review: I read this book when I was writing a paleo-historic drama of the life of earliest man. My characters were Homo habilines, but they cohabited Africa with Australopithecines, so to understand the co-st […]
    Donald C. Johanson
  • Through a Window: My Thirty Years with the Chimpanzees of Gombe July 24, 2011
    author: Jane Goodall name: Jacqui average rating: 4.24 book published: 1990 rating: 5 read at: date added: 2011/07/24 shelves: early-man, science review: I have read every book that Jane Goodall wrote. She has an easy-going writing style that shares scientific principals easily with the layman. Probably because when she started, she was little more than a no […]
    Jane Goodall
  • In the Shadow of Man July 24, 2011
    author: Jane Goodall name: Jacqui average rating: 4.33 book published: 1971 rating: 5 read at: date added: 2011/07/23 shelves: early-man, science review: I read Jane Goodall's In the Shadow of Man (Houghton Mifflin 1971) years ago as research for a paleo-historic novel I was writing. I needed background on the great apes so I could show them acting appr […]
    Jane Goodall
  • Timewalkers: The Prehistory of Global Colonization January 29, 2011
    author: Clive Gamble name: Jacqui average rating: 3.71 book published: 1994 rating: 4 read at: 2010/02/07 date added: 2011/01/28 shelves: early-man review: It's a difficult question. Why did earliest man leave Africa and migrate to new areas. Mostly, animals evolve suited to their environment and they don't stray far. They may have several areas th […]
    Clive Gamble
  • Gorillas in the Mist January 26, 2011
    author: Dian Fossey name: Jacqui average rating: 4.14 book published: 1983 rating: 5 read at: date added: 2011/01/25 shelves: early-man review: […]
    Dian Fossey
  • The Singing Neanderthals: The Origins of Music, Language, Mind, and Body January 26, 2011
    author: Steven Mithen name: Jacqui average rating: 3.80 book published: 2005 rating: 4 read at: 2009/07/28 date added: 2011/01/25 shelves: early-man, reference, research, science review: I have avoided this book in the past because my personal interest extends to an earlier time than Neanderthals, but I shouldn't have. The title is misleading in that he […]
    Steven Mithen
  • The Evolution Of Homo Erectus: Comparative Anatomical Studies Of An Extinct Human Species January 18, 2011
    author: G. Philip Rightmire name: Jacqui average rating: 4.00 book published: 1990 rating: 4 read at: date added: 2011/01/18 shelves: early-man review: Evolution of Homo erectus by G. Philip Rightmire is a scholarly discussion of Homo Erectus' evolution through time, across the planet, through his diverse global locations--China, Africa, Indonesia, Spai […]
    G. Philip Rightmire
  • Bunyoro: An African Kingdom October 30, 2010
    author: John Beattie name: Jacqui average rating: 3.20 book published: 1960 rating: 4 read at: date added: 2010/10/29 shelves: africa, early-man, science review: Man's path from paleo-history is a fascinating study. Since our records of that era is confined to rocks and natural artifacts, those like me who want to understand what man was like in that ti […]
    John Beattie
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