100 Essential Jazz Albums According to The New Yorker

Jazz fans, here you go. A list of the most essen­tial jazz albums com­piled by David Rem­nick (edi­tor of The New York­er) and Richard Brody.

And, for the fun of it, I’m throw­ing in a video of David Brubeck play­ing the clas­sic “Take Five” cir­ca 1961. (Also find it on our YouTube playlist.)

Steve Jobs: Wisdom for the New Graduate

I like re-post­ing this from time to time, espe­cial­ly around com­mence­ment time: Steve Jobs, CEO of Apple Com­put­er, deliv­ered this speech at Stan­ford’s com­mence­ment cer­e­mo­ny in June 2005, offer­ing some sim­ple guide­lines for liv­ing a mean­ing­ful life. Some­what iron­i­cal­ly, Jobs nev­er grad­u­at­ed from col­lege. But no mat­ter, there’s lots of good think­ing here, and the speech is well worth a lis­ten. We’ve post­ed the video below (and it’s added to our YouTube playlist), but you could also catch it on iTunes: video here, or audio here.

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Can a Novel Be Written Wikipedia Style? The Results Are In.

The wis­dom of crowds con­cept works for writ­ing soft­ware. (Think open source.) But does it work for writ­ing nov­els? That’s what Pen­guin and De Mon­fort Uni­ver­si­ty (in the UK) want­ed to fig­ure out when they launched an exper­i­ment in Feb­ru­ary 2007 called “A Mil­lion Lit­tle Pen­guins.” Over the course of five weeks, rough­ly 1500 writ­ers draft­ed a col­lab­o­ra­tive nov­el using wiki soft­ware (the same one used by Wikipedia), and you can now view the com­plet­ed man­u­script here. So far the reviews are not over­whelm­ing. Accord­ing to one observ­er, “it’s inco­her­ent. You might get some­thing sim­i­lar if you took a stack of super­mar­ket check­out line pot­boil­ers and some Mad Libs and threw them in a blender.” And then there’s this pithy ver­dict by the snarky blog, Gawk­er: “The text itself is ter­ri­ble.” Ouch. But maybe some­one who is less reflex­ive­ly dis­mis­sive will have a dif­fer­ent view, though I would­n’t bet on it. Have a read here. Also see De Mont­fort’s post mortem of the project here.

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Shark Surfing: File Under Novel Ways to Spend Your Weekend

Just when you’ve thought that you’ve seen it all … Fake or real? I am guess­ing it’s the lat­ter.

(PS This has noth­ing to do with things cul­tur­al.)

via The Dai­ly Dish

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Wikipedia Goes Commercial

The Ger­man pub­lish­er Ber­tels­mann announced that it will pub­lish annu­al­ly a 1,000 page edi­tion of Wikipedia start­ing next Sep­tem­ber. To be called “The One-Vol­ume Wikipedia Ency­clo­pe­dia,” it will sell for 19.95 euros (or rough­ly $32 U.S.) and fea­ture some of the most pop­u­lar arti­cles from the Ger­man ver­sion of Wikipedia. One euro per copy will go back to Wiki­me­dia, which runs Wikipedia. But noth­ing, as Read­writeweb notes, will go to the writ­ers who actu­al­ly cre­ate the ency­clo­pe­dia entries.

Because Wikipedia is pub­lished under a free license, its con­tent can be freely used and com­mer­cial­ized. And that’s pre­cise­ly what Ber­tels­mann plans to do. In Wikipedia, Ber­tels­mann has found a moth­er­lode of free con­tent it. It can then mon­e­tize that con­tent, keep most of the prof­its (a pub­lish­er’s dream), and kick 5% back to Wiki­me­dia, most like­ly as a way to under­cut the crit­ics. It’s all per­haps legal. But does it feel a bit unseem­ly? Just a touch. Or maybe you dis­agree?

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Video Lectures for the Science Mind

We talk a good deal here about free uni­ver­si­ty cours­es and lec­tures, and most­ly we end up talk­ing about the human­i­ties. But here’s a good excuse to talk about the sci­ences, and par­tic­u­lar­ly about com­put­er sci­ence. A project start­ed in Slove­nia, Videolectures.net pro­vides “free and open access of high qual­i­ty video lec­tures pre­sent­ed by dis­tin­guished schol­ars and sci­en­tists at the most impor­tant and promi­nent events…” Among the most pop­u­lar lec­tures, you’ll find lec­tures along these lines: Fuzzy Log­ic, Where the Social Web Meets the Seman­tic Web, and an Inter­view with Tim Bern­ers Lee. But, you’ll also stum­ble upon a few non-sci­en­tif­ic talks giv­en by some well known names. Take for exam­ple Noam Chom­sky (Force, law and the prospects of sur­vival) and Umber­to Eco (On The His­to­ry of Ugli­ness).

For more uni­ver­si­ty con­tent, vis­it our Uni­ver­si­ty Pod­cast Col­lec­tion and our list of Free Online Cours­es, which includes a good deal of sci­en­tif­ic con­tent. Also see our Sci­ence Pod­cast Col­lec­tion.

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Junot Diaz, New Pulitzer Prize Winner, Speaks @ Google

Last week, Junot Diaz land­ed the Pulitzer Prize for fic­tion with his debut nov­el, The Brief Won­drous Life of Oscar Wao. The book, which Diaz took 11 years to write, also won the Nation­al Book Crit­ics Cir­cle Award for best nov­el of 2007. Below, we have Diaz speak­ing last year about his prize win­ning book at Google. (Get more Google author talks here.) You can also catch his inter­view on NPR’s Fresh air (iTunes — Feed — Stream here).

Introducing The Straddler

A quick heads up: The first issue of The Strad­dler, a new quar­ter­ly online mag­a­zine, has just been launched. If the edi­tors have their way, it will be the “anti-mag­a­zine of our day.” In the first issue, you’ll find:

  • an essay explor­ing the rela­tion­ship between an Emi­ly Dick­in­son poem, the New Testament’s Book of Matthew, the Get­tys­burg Address, and George Bush’s 2007 Memo­r­i­al Day speech.
  • a con­sid­er­a­tion of the Amer­i­can gang­ster film in light of the Amer­i­can eco­nom­ic sys­tem;
  • a med­i­ta­tion on works by Anne Car­son and recent Nobelist Doris Less­ing; and also
  • some orig­i­nal art­work, poet­ry, and fic­tion.

Thanks Elaine for the heads up.

How Wikis (and Other Stuff) Work in Plain English

This video gives you the quick gist of how wikis work, and it’s part of a larg­er series of videos on YouTube — called The Com­mon­craft Show — that explain the inner-work­ings of var­i­ous tech items. Recent videos delve into the mechan­ics of Twit­ter, RSS Feeds, social net­work­ing, and online pho­to shar­ing. We’ve added the video below to our YouTube playlist and the Com­mon­craft series to our larg­er col­lec­tion called 60 Signs of Intel­li­gent Life on YouTube. For oth­er good videos that demys­ti­fy things tech­ni­cal, you may want to check out this and this.

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The Kindle is Back in Supply

Just a quick fyi: Ama­zon’s dig­i­tal book read­er, the Kin­dle, is final­ly back in sup­ply. If you’ve been wait­ing since March, now is your chance.

This American Life on TV: Season II Starts Sunday

A quick fyi: Sea­son 2 of the tele­vi­sion ver­sion of This Amer­i­can Life starts tonight at 10 pm on Show­time, and we’ve post­ed below the brief trail­er for the new show. Mean­while, the radio ver­sion remains the most down­loaded pod­cast on iTunes ( iTunes — Feed — Web Site). It has been that way for a long time. And you can always find it in our Ideas and Cul­ture Pod­cast Col­lec­tion.


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