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Posted by geri
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Monday, 09 March 2009 |
I realize how this event (the "Miracle on the Hudson") had touched people's lives, how ready they were for good news, how much they wanted to feel hopeful again. We've had a worldwide economic downturn, and people are confused, fearful and just so ready for good news. They want to feel reassured that all the things we value, all our ideals, still exist.
- Captain "Sully" Sullenberger
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Posted by geri
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Monday, 03 August 2009 |
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"During a remarkable 17-day lull from mid-May through early June, there were no tornado watches issued anywhere in the United States, a period that is typically the height of the season in Tornado Alley," reported the AP this week. (July 31, 2009)
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Posted by geri
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Friday, 04 December 2009 |
This is interesting: Communicating "I have some good news and some bad news" is better than combining messages into a single, bleak result when small gains and large losses occur together, according to a study in the current issue of Management Science, the flagship journal of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS).
The study, called "The Silver Lining Effect: Formal Analysis and Experiments," asked how people's choices change when they are presented with information in either of two ways: as an integrated whole or as two segregated pieces. For example, they ask, does an investor prefer a statement showing only an aggregate loss of $95 – or one showing a loss of $100 and a gain of $5?
The authors follow upon work first done by RH Thaler in 1985.
"Thaler's intuition was that decision makers would prefer to mentally separate a small gain from a big loss, thus providing a silver lining to the loss," explains Prof. Olivier Toubia, one of the authors. This study provides new tests to the original assumptions.
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Posted by geri
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Saturday, 12 December 2009 |
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We live in a world that's subjected to ever more stringent child safety regulations. No more dodgeball; suffocation warnings on every piece of plastic; warnings on coffee cups to tell us that the contents may be hot.
"We seem to think that any item sharper than a golf ball is too sharp for children under the age of 10," says Gever Tulley,
So, Tulley, founder of something called the Tinkering School, a place where kids build things with power tools, has written a new book called, 50 Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Children Do. (Number 46 is "Super Glue Your Fingers Together - Experience life without a thumb!)
When we round every corner and eliminate every sharp object, every pokey bit in the world, then the first time that kids come in contact with anything sharp or not made out of round plastic, they'll hurt themselves with it. So, as the boundaries of what we determine as the safety zone grow ever smaller, we cut off our children from valuable opportunities to learn how to interact with the world around them.
Tulley, a computer scientist by trade, wrote a blog post giving us the top five or six hazards, and why kids should be encouraged to dive in. They are:
1. Play with fire
2. Own a pocket knife
3. Throw a spear
4. Deconstruct appliances
5. Break the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
6. Drive a car
Read the full article by Tulley here, or watch his TED Talk video below...
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