Sunday, December 23, 2012
Weekend Links
- Hahaha = jajaja, and other ways to laugh online in different languages: http://flip.it/yWUzW #justwhatyouneed
- Apple stores: a digital layout http://flip.it/Z6uP9
- Check out these surprises in the 10 Most Read/Viewed articles in@WSJ in 2012: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324461604578193491263158594.html?mod=WSJ_hpp_LEFTTopStories …
- RT @TeresaAmabile: Gallup study reveals reasons for voluntary#employee #turnover. http://flip.it/kM5En via @GallupJournal #Happines
- PSY | Full Address | Oxford Union: http://youtu.be/2f99cTgT5mg via
- ‘Tis four days before Christmas | The Big Picture http://bit.ly/UiLbXD
- Meet The Entrepreneur Behind The Apocalypse's Must-Have Accessory http://bit.ly/R7KHDe
- Fractals, Other Mathematical Visions Reside on The Islands of Benoit Mandelbrot [Video]: Scientific American http://bit.ly/UiajxH
- Don Yacktman: A fund manager's faith produces results - Term Sheet http://bit.ly/VUuHkE
- Dorie Clark, “If you want to have an impact, you might as well be the one setting the agenda by blogging your ideas.” (HBR)
- his is not a profile of Nassim Taleb. (The Chronicle via Arts & Letters Daily)
- A profile of Abby Johnson, the head of Fidelity Investments. (Businessweek)
- Why your kid is a picky eater. (Slate)
Saturday, December 22, 2012
Saturday Links
@WSJ: Photographers share the stories behind the most compelling photos of the year: http://flip.it/AYVcG#bestphotos2012@flutteringmuse: BATMAN:an illustrated evolution http://flip.it/cI9ay@tedcoine: The Paradox of Social Media Popularity http://flip.it/aVNl4 via@markwschaefer@Columbia_Biz: Dean Glenn Hubbard recommends book Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence in@BW http://flip.it/awn37- Bill Ackman Unimpressed By Business Model Of Selling Diet Shakes To Your Friends; Diet Shake Salesman Unimpressed By Business Model Of Being Bill Ackman « http://bit.ly/UhXFPo
- Amazing Presentation: Bill Ackman's Herbalife Presentation - Business Insider http://bit.ly/UhYhVf (Although, another school of thought is that because of the affinity marketing nature of this business, they can extract higher margin products, but still, Ackman's presentation is very convincing)
Friday, December 21, 2012
Friday Links
- Relationships and kills in Game of Thrones replayed http://bit.ly/RZb27E
- How I Learned to Stop Criticizing and Be Nice to My Husband - Nina Roesner-The Atlantic http://bit.ly/U7Gno2
- The Truth of 'This Is 40': It's Actually Not Weird to Want Your Spouse to Die - Alexis Coe-The Atlantic http://bit.ly/UfNBGv
- The Most Awful "Honest" Men On OkCupid http://bit.ly/UfJ3ji
- 27 Science Fictions That Became Science Facts In 2012http://bit.ly/R5WYYC
- Why Most Venture-Backed Companies Fail | Fast Company http://bit.ly/WZT1mj
- Book Translates American Minutiae for Russians - http://bit.ly/UfRqM0
- Why are Cash-Rich Companies Being Subsidized by Tax-Poor Governments? | The Big Picture http://bit.ly/VSME2V
- UBS’s lies | Felix Salmon http://bit.ly/VQknKn
- Buy-and-Forget Portfolio: 10 Stocks To Last The Decade | The Big Picture http://bit.ly/R78YJB
- Counterparties: 2012 — The year of bank fraud | Felix Salmon http://bit.ly/R7cPq6
- Top Five Personality Traits Employers Hire Most - Forbeshttp://bit.ly/Ugef1U
- Seven Ways To Be Indispensable At Work In 2013 - Forbeshttp://bit.ly/Uge7Q0
- HEARTWARMING: The Magical Umbrella of Leadership: A Christmas Lesson from a Trappist Monk - Forbes http://bit.ly/Ugctht
- The 7 most illuminating economic charts of 2012 | AEIdeashttp://bit.ly/Ug0UGV
- "perfunctory risks" http://bit.ly/VSR7mq
- Why Touch Screens Will Not Take Over: Scientific Americanhttp://bit.ly/UfWLmg
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Wednesday Links
- Huge Sea Monster Used To Rule Rivers - Business Insiderhttp://bit.ly/VSsW7G
- The Psy-Fi Blog: Invert, Always Invert http://bit.ly/TmoS11
- Ex-Moody's analyst: 'By 2006 it was toxic everywhere' | Joris Luyendijk|Comment is free http://bit.ly/12kuuOl
- Nate Silver confuses cause and effect, ends up defending corruption « mathbabe http://bit.ly/UfskNa
- Entrepreneurial Lessons: 48 Things I Know Now That I Wish I Knew Then http://bit.ly/Plqg17
- 24 Things I Know Now That I Wish I Knew Then - Rand's Bloghttp://bit.ly/Px1AaA
- The money behind the Newtown massacre - The Term Sheet: Fortune's deals blog Term Sheet http://bit.ly/U7Psgu
- RT
@globeandmail: Coming to Canada? Your odds are better if you’re young: new guidelines http://flip.it/Ke1ZJ - Obama Plays with Spider-kid http://flip.it/QJ4Bv
- RT
@digg: That video of an eagle grabbing a baby is fake!http://flip.it/zHqtm - RT
@mtaibbi: New post on the David-Brooks-teaching-Humility-at-Yale story http://flip.it/laW1x - RT
@EconBizFin: How long does it take to build the world's tallest skyscrapers? http://flip.it/kUACn - RT
@WSJ: Prepare to cringe: Twitter is allowing users to download their entire history of tweets. http://flip.it/JhUcB via@allthingsD - Best Sports GIFs 2012 - Business Insider http://bit.ly/T8v9gV
- Good Eats | Columbia Business School Alumni http://bit.ly/TxeweA
- Why Top Colleges Miss Some Great Students - Bloomberghttp://bit.ly/VQcMvt
- Today in weird headlines :Recent increase noted in pubic hair grooming injuries http://bit.ly/VQh8md
- Wal-Mart hinted at more problems in Mexico | http://bit.ly/VQo031
- A grumpy Christmas video to you, from FT Alphaville | FT Alphavillehttp://ftalphaville.ft.com/?p=1313012
- PHD Comics: Les (Really) Miserables - I dreamed a dreamhttp://bit.ly/VQpvOS
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
In pursuit of uselessness
Last time I did a post
on the philantrophy
of Warren Buffet. In his conversations Buffet mentioned a philanthropist that no one else knew about and that was “Abraham Flexner”. I did some research
on Flexner and learned that he truly did change the face of medicine in America,
but Flexner also brought to light a philosophy on education reform that is very
relevant today.
Flexner believed that people detach themselves from the
realities of everyday life to devote themselves to engagement in other things
they prefer, perhaps to escape the tedium of the days. The world today and even
before that has been in a sorry state, and people tend to ignore the factors
which impact them most. There is much wrong in this world already, and unless
there is a conscious effort to change that, the world will continue to be in
its sorry state. Whether there will be sufficient opportunities to lead a full
life, in other words, whether we will find purpose in what we deem useful is a
more philosophical question, for our definition of what’s useful might have
become too narrow.
Flexner
once posed a question to George Eastman –“Who is the most useful worker in the
field of science?” and the reply came back as “Marconi”. But the truth is that Marconi
was not the inventor, but merely the aggregator of the findings of others
before him. Maxwell and Hertz had done most of the work well before Marconi,
and neither were they concerned with the utility nor the practical objectives of
their developments.
The entire history of science is filled with people who did what
the did merely to satisfy their curiosity. ‘Curiosity’ was the only thing the
were concerned with and they satisfied their spiritual selves with such
undertakings.
Institutions of education and learning should be devoted to
cultivation of curiosity rather than immediate
application, and by doing this, they are more likely to contribute to human
welfare.
But Flexner also noted that - “It is merely the folly of man and
not the intention of scientists that is responsible for the destructive use of agents
employed in modern warfare”. Take machines for example, which originally
started with the invention of the printing press and for the greater good of
mankind, but soon turned into unmanned drones designed strictly to spy
and kill.
Alfred Noble, whose name is attached to establishment of the
Nobel Prizes, made his wealth by producing commercial dynamite, which found its
use in mining, railroad tunnel establishment, but also of course to the abuse
of politicians for warfare.
The Wright brothers built the airplane with the dream and
obsession to fly like the birds, but politicians with their corrupt minds again
found its purpose in warfare.
Perhaps it is also true that blaming Quant’s for inventing derivatives
is also a misdirected
exercise. The greed of humanity has existed since its existence; only the
tools have changed.
Marc Anderson recently at the Deal
breaker Conference recently said that people who majored in English will
end up working at shoe stores, but such statements discount the capacity of humans
to apply and borrow knowledge from different spectrum's and apply it somewhere
else(I emphasized this in my post on Andrew
Carnegie).
No educational institution can possibly direct the channels
in which someone should work. Knowledge can only be acquired if one makes an
effort to acquire it; no one can force learning on anyone else. Thus such eccentric
but curious pursuits, perhaps aren't wasteful at all.
But this is not to criticize institutions who make an effort
to integrate applied learning(STEM sector degrees, or business school perhaps?),
but only to state that the useless is a feeder to the useful. Marconi was successful
because he picked the brains of right men. This also points to the fact that
any scientific discovery is rarely attributed to a sole inventor, the most
critical example here is Tesla(and if you don’t know who that is, please do
this world a favor and read this)
Even in the pursuit of the practical an enormous amount of
useless activity goes on. The mere fact that they bring satisfaction to an
individual is all the justification that is needed. Flexner also mentioned that
such motivation runs deeper than any other since it has to deal with the
dissimilarities of humanity:
“Does humanity want symphonies and paintings
and profound scientific truth, or does it want Christian symphonies, Christian
paintings, Christian science, or Jewish symphonies, Jewish paintings, Jewish
science, or Mohammedan or Egyptian or Japanese or Chinese or American or German
or Russian or Communist or conservative
contributions…”
A Harvard professor was once offered a stipend to move to
Princeton; on the offer he asked-“What are my duties?” To which the Flexner
replied -“There are no duties – only opportunities.”
Perhaps if we all start seeing the world as a land of
opportunities, we can also find and pick the brains of others who have been
busy doing useless things. Maybe innovation really is just finding the catalyst
or becoming the catalyst to whatever useless stuff there is already out there.
Socrates once said that –“An unexplained life isn’t really
worth living for”. I hope that you continue to leave nothing unexplained and
set only one goal for yourself for next year – and that is to continue a
pursuit for useless knowledge that will have consequences in the future that
won’t be so useless after all.
Read More:
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Tuesday Links
- Daily chart: Faiths and the faithless | The Economist http://bit.ly/Ua33Uy
- Harvard Business Review: The Top Five Career Regretshttp://s.hbr.org/Rtof8U
- RT
@nytimes: 25 lessons about first graders http://flip.it/a28IV - Marcus Byrne: The dance of the dung beetle TED
- Ben Saunders: Why bother leaving the house? TED
- 30 Reasons Why Katy Perry Is The Best http://bit.ly/VMOLFX
- America's Gun Problem In One Chart - Business Insiderhttp://bit.ly/VMNsqp
- Aww yeah, cardboard. http://bit.ly/U8a7kB
- Who are the absolute worst chief executives of 2012? |http://buswk.co/VLPgQz
- A Rambling Muse cold: the chart http://bit.ly/U891oQ
- Why You Should Have Gone (and Should Still Go) to See 'Frankenweenie' - Christopher Orr-The Atlantic http://bit.ly/U7ZyOz
- Seven Ways to Make 2013 Your Most Productive Year Ever | The Reformed Broker http://bit.ly/U4tnyp
- If you only learn one thing today, let it be this: | The Reformed Broker http://bit.ly/VJLbfA
Monday, December 17, 2012
Monday Links
- Demographics: Nonsense nonsense crisis | The Economist http://bit.ly/VLSSC8
- 13 Insights From Paul Tudor Jones - Ivanhoff Capital-Ivanhoff Capital http://bit.ly/RYSLax
- PRAGMATIC CAPITALISM – Richard Bernstein: 13 for 2013 http://bit.ly/VLSVOk
- What a Star Fund Manager Can Teach Us About Improvement | SMB Capital|Day Trading Blog http://bit.ly/VLSW4K
- The Graham Disciple http://bit.ly/VLSXWw
- Should The Pope Tweet? | PollinaPR {& communications} http://bit.ly/VLSZNW
- Why don’t bad ideas ever die? - The Washington Post http://bit.ly/U7hloX
- Dealbreaker: Wall Street Insider – Financial News, Headlines, Commentary and Analysis–Hedge Funds, Private Equity, Banks http://bit.ly/Tc8U9x
- America's Milk Business Is In a 'Crisis' - http://bit.ly/VLTmIh
- Amazon's zero profit business strategy: It's amazing, but someday we may all get screwed. http://bit.ly/T9CyMG
- From Bernie Madoff to Steven Cohen, Enabling Suspiciously High Returns - ProPublica http://bit.ly/VLTpE3
Friday, December 14, 2012
Friday Links
- I continually think NYT's public editor columns are a prank the paper pulls on itself. Bizarre self-immolation.http://publiceditor.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/13/dealbook-conference-was-impressive-lucrative-and-chummy/?smid=tw-share …
-
@BloombergNews: RIM says U.S. Immigration will test new BlackBerry 10 devices next year | http://flip.it/9kvFV @HarvardBiz: What If You Don't Want to Be a Manager?http://flip.it/MZC6D- Great new piece by
@stevenstrogatz: The 3 Most Confusing Things Your Math Teacher Ever Told You http://flip.it/ktiOZ - What's your big idea for 2013?
@TomKeenesays "Read a Textbook" http://flip.it/eymVY#inbigidea @WSJ: 'Lincoln' leads field of Golden Globe nominees:http://flip.it/agKA6- Craft brewers are threatened by Big Beer's immitation-craft brands| http://flip.it/hiurt
- Space photos: Helix Nebula, a solar explosion, and more in best of 2012 http://flip.it/ImwhE
- TOP 10 best of everything - Arts & Entertainment| Full List |http://bit.ly/TecDn5
- The math of cartels and how to spot the dodgy tactics| The Economist http://bit.ly/Te5O4U
- CONVERSABLE ECONOMIST: Paper Towels v. Air Dryershttp://bit.ly/TdxU08
- The Epicurean Dealmaker: The Rules to be a banker http://bit.ly/TdxgzE
- How to Pass Along Values and Life Lessons to Heirs - http://bit.ly/SjcphJ
- A Giant Statistical Round-up of the Income Inequality Crisis in 16 Charts - Derek Thompson-The Atlantic http://bit.ly/ZfBDiQ
- Crowdfunding on Hold as Regulators Weigh Rules - http://bit.ly/Zi56ZK
- Major Shifts In Hedge Fund Start Ups - Business Insiderhttp://bit.ly/TdulXR
- The Market is Not a Math Problem | Adam Grimes http://bit.ly/TdstOK
- Behavioral Macro - The Other Big Lie http://bit.ly/Sj65H6
Top tweets from DealBreaker Conference
I didn't attend this dealbreaker conference in NYC, but grabbed some tweets I thought were interesting from Twitterverse:
- Jamie Dimon: "Technology is like dark matter, it is touching everything!"
#DBConf - RT
@jyarow: Andreessen: If you get an English degree, you're going to end up working in a shoe store. http://www.businessinsider.com/marc-andreessen-at-the-dealbook-conference-2012-12 …#DBconf - Eric Schmidt tells
@qhardythat this is the best time in the world to be an entrepreneur.#DBConf" - No one says I'll take a higher tax rate, but we can still be irresponsible in spending. - Jamie Dimon
#DBConf - The big takeaway from
#dbconf: Paul Krugman has never heard Justin Bieber. - Anither gem from Krugman: Technology is part of the reason for the decline of labor's share of economy
#DBConf - Krugman said it was also pretty silly that people went so bonkers when Steve Jobs died last year.
#dbconf - "Most of the value of technology comes from using it, not making it."
@NYTimesKrugman#DBConf - RT
@Sequoia_Capital: Moritz: An industry that does not employ software programmers is severely threatened#DBConf - beware! - All economic statistics are just a boring form of science fiction. Chinese statistics more than most - Krugman
#dbconf - Almost impossible to uphold contracts in Italy.
#DBConf - Goldman's Blankfein: Curb Your Enthusiasm For Early 2013http://onforb.es/SVy8dM
$GS#DBconf - Andreessen denies Internet bubble, advises Times to stop printing http://reut.rs/SczoLk
- Indra Nooyi: "At the end of the day we are in the eating occasion business—'Share of Stomach'." Adorable insight.
@DealBook#DBconf - "We have to run the company for decades to come.....not the tenure of one CEO" -
@PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi#dbconf - Schwarzman on Blackstone's new hires: 'If you ever violate insider trading rules; I will hunt you down and send you to jail.'
#dbconf - "The danger is in treating hedge funds as a group. Differentiation is key." Ray Dalio.
#DBconf - Interesting perspective from Dalio - says hedge funds industry has too much beta (aka: they basically track the broader market).
#dbconf - Rubinstein: Interest rate bubble could bust when when the Chinese refuse to buy our dollars.
#DBconf - Ray Dalio: 'He who lives by the crystal ball is destined to eat ground glass.'
#Brilliant#DBConf - For 2013 Rubenstein likes carbon energy and healthcare in the US, European assets that have suffered in 2012 and Sub-Saharan Africa
#dbconf - Legendary hedgie
#Dalio: "Best trade, eventually, is to short global bond markets as long-term interest rate structure backs up."#DBConf - Jamie Dimon says at
#DBconf the electricity trading ban on JPMorgan is "not that big a deal": http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/12/12/jpmorgan-ferc-idUSL1E8NC6B720121212 … More to come on this. - Twitter's
@dickc tells NYT's@qhardy: Once someone's an active user on Twitter, "we don't lose you."#DBconfpic.twitter.com/kEgexgx8 - Moritz:
@EricSchmidt is right that it's easier than ever to start a company, but prob harder than ever to build a biz that endures#DBConf - Stupidest decision by US is educate talent from around the world here and then kick them out - Eric Schmidt
#DBConf - RT
@NYTimesComm Eric Schmidt at the@DealBook Conference: "Intelligence is distributed universally & a lot of it is not in the US."#DBConf - "You have people walking around in India with more computing power in their pocket than we had when first flying to the moon"Moritz-
#DBconf - Moritz: Nobody can imagine at the start how significant a company will become b/c in the beginning you're just struggling to survive
- Google's Schmidt took ride in
$GOOG's self driving car, says it is more of a tailgater than he would like.#dbconf - Blankfein: We have a responsibility to enlarge the pie, and distribute it in a fair way.
#DBconf - Even when it correlates negatively. MT
@danroth Goldman's Lloyd Blankfein: "Every activity our firm does correlates with growth."#dbconf - Gov't-wary Marc Andreessen: "There is an appropriate level of regulation" for privacy. Hard to figure out, tho
#DBconf - Steve Jobs is a role model for Silicon Valley entrpreneurs. “I think his spirit is going to live on for a v long time.” (Andreessen)
- Marc Andressen says the market is ascribing zero value to several of Google's key businessses. "Wall St hates tech."
#DBconf - RT
@mariaaspan: “My experience of life is the regulators always win anyway.” - Jamie Dimon at@dealbook conference$JPM#DBConf - Andreesen argues that non-quant college degrees are becoming irrelevant if you want to be prepared to enter the new work force
#DBConf - “My experience of life is the regulators always win anyway.” - Jamie Dimon at
@dealbook conference$JPM#DBConf - Dimon on lobbying: "It's in the 1st Amendment."
#DBconf. @andrewrsorkin "When you look in the mirror, do you think 'Greatest of all-time?' or 'Less than a god, but more than a man.'"#dbconf
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