mostlyListening | 13 years ago | on: How well does Khan Academy teach?
mostlyListening's comments
mostlyListening | 14 years ago | on: The Real Cost of Used Games
And the point of the article is that if the incentives of money guys get subverted, their decisions will get subverted and that subversion which will trickle down the entire production chain.
mostlyListening | 14 years ago | on: Did You Hear We Got Osama?
You might not find such understanding of people and of the world to be worthy goal in itself, but even so such an understanding is useful as a framing device or an anology store for general reasonsing. In the same way that a mastery of philosophy has value as a reasoning device.
And, there is the value as source of inspiration: pointers towards topics to read up on or ideas to incorporate into one's life/work
mostlyListening | 14 years ago | on: What It’s Really Like to Work at Google
http://media.collegeboard.com/digitalServices/pdf/SAT-Percen...
mostlyListening | 14 years ago | on: Paul Graham: SOPA Supporting Companies No Longer Allowed At YC Demo Day
Going by PG's reasoning (If these companies are so clueless about technology that they think SOPA is a good idea, how could they be good investors?") then it should continue until there are major changes the leaderships of those companies. Right?
mostlyListening | 14 years ago | on: Why I am Not a Professor, or The Decline and Fall of the British University
http://www.ets.org/s/gre/pdf/gre_guide_table2.pdf
It would appear that GRE Physics is the easiest test, while Biochemistry is the hardest.
mostlyListening | 14 years ago | on: Why I am Not a Professor, or The Decline and Fall of the British University
mostlyListening | 14 years ago | on: Why I am Not a Professor, or The Decline and Fall of the British University
EDIT: anyone interested can download the test booklet here which has an example test:
http://www.ets.org/gre/subject/about/content/computer_scienc...
mostlyListening | 14 years ago | on: Inside Amazon's Playbook: How Bezos Built Today's GE
I think GE at its prime had more intrinsic advantages and unique technologies than just superb logistics.
mostlyListening | 14 years ago | on: Amazon Will Pay Shoppers $5 to Walk Out of Stores Empty-Handed
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/culturebox/2010/10/confes...
mostlyListening | 14 years ago | on: What They Don’t Teach Law Students: Lawyering
This goes to the heart of what education should be about. Foundations and theory, or vocational training.
mostlyListening | 14 years ago | on: Stephen Hawking: Human Survival Depends on Space Exploration