Live Performances at AOL Sessions

Cour­tesy of Metafil­ter:

“AOL Ses­sions has live videos from more than 150 dif­fer­ent artists spe­cial­ly record­ed for the series. Here are just a few of the artists on offer: Paul McCart­ney, Bri­an Wil­son, Mod­est Mouse, Tom Pet­ty, Red Hot Chili Pep­pers, Weez­er, Sarah McLach­lan, Bon­nie Raitt, Iggy Pop, and more. To the left of the videos there’s a Q&A link that has short inter­view videos with the artists as well as behind the scenes footage and longer inter­views.”

Beatboxing Flute

To the tune of the Inspec­tor Gad­get Theme. So far viewed 14.5 mil­lion times. Pret­ty amaz­ing. Take it away (and check out the musi­cian’s CD here) …

Added to our YouTube playlist.

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Philip Roth’s New Novel: Read The First Chapter

Philip Roth’s lat­est is out. And, as one review­er described it, the nov­el, like his last two, is “ruth­less­ly eco­nom­i­cal and relent­less­ly death­bound.” You can read the first chap­ter of Indig­na­tion here for free. Or, buy the nov­el here.

The 2008 Bailout v. The Great Depression Bailouts

Key­ing off an opin­ion piece by Paul Krug­man, Eric Rauch­way, an Amer­i­can his­to­ri­an (and also an old grad school col­league of mine), offers an intrigu­ing analy­sis of the Bush/Paulson bailout and how it com­pares to the Hoover and FDR bailouts from the Depres­sion era. The dif­fer­ence between 1932/33 and 2008? In 2008 (get text of leaked plan here), Con­gress will have no over­sight and the exec­u­tive branch will be “behold­en to nobody and sub­ject to no review.” (Sound vague­ly famil­iar?) There will also be no stat­ed restric­tions on how much a giv­en cor­po­ra­tion can be assist­ed, and no require­ment that cor­po­ra­tions give the gov­ern­ment any­thing back in turn. (There’s not even a require­ment that the gov­ern­ment buy the bad debt for fair mar­ket val­ue.) Back in the 30s, how­ev­er,  “All loans had to be secured, couldn’t be made on for­eign secu­ri­ties or accep­tances, no more than 5% of the mon­ey could go to any one com­pa­ny, couldn’t exceed three years’ term, couldn’t pay fees or com­mis­sion to appli­cants for loans, and so forth. Rail­roads accept­ing such loans had to do so under terms accept­able to the reg­u­la­to­ry Inter­state Com­merce Com­mis­sion.”

The idea of hand­ing the Bush admin­is­tra­tion anoth­er blank check is hard­ly a hap­py one. We’ve been down that road before and things did­n’t exact­ly go smooth­ly.  But then again I’m not sure that the 1930s offers won­der­ful mod­els for cat­a­stro­phe man­age­ment (not that Rauch­way is say­ing that). Let’s hope that our lead­ers take a lit­tle time to think things through.

And, by the way, New Rule: No one on Wall Street should be allowed to make more than six fig­ures until they’ve cleaned up their mess and reim­bursed the tax­pay­ers. Yes, wish­ful think­ing I know, since appar­ent­ly Lehman, even hav­ing gone bank­rupt, has found a way to a share a $2.5 bil­lion bonus pool.

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Solar Eclipse Seen From Outer Space

The NASA STEREO space­craft sees the disk of the Moon pass in front of the Sun in a view nev­er seen before by human eyes.” For more videos, see The Bad Astron­o­my chan­nel on YouTube, which we’ve added to our col­lec­tion: Intel­li­gent Life at YouTube: 70 Edu­ca­tion­al Video Col­lec­tions.

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What It Feels Like To Have a Stroke (And More About Your Brain)

From the TedTalks con­fer­ence. Fas­ci­nat­ing talk. Here’s a sum­ma­ry that intro­duces the clip below …

“Neu­roanatomist Jill Bolte Tay­lor had an oppor­tu­ni­ty few brain sci­en­tists would wish for: One morn­ing, she real­ized she was hav­ing a mas­sive stroke. As it hap­pened — as she felt her brain func­tions slip away one by one, speech, move­ment, under­stand­ing — she stud­ied and remem­bered every moment. This is a pow­er­ful sto­ry about how our brains define us and con­nect us to the world and to one anoth­er.” Added to our YouTube playlist.

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Free Stanford Computer Science & Engineering Courses Now Online

Stan­ford Engi­neer­ing Every­where is a new project rolling out of Stan­ford, and it’s mak­ing avail­able to any­one, any­where 10 com­plete online com­put­er sci­ence and elec­tri­cal engi­neer­ing cours­es. This includes the three-course Intro­duc­tion to Com­put­er Sci­ence series tak­en by the major­i­ty of Stan­ford under­grad­u­ates.

The top-notch cours­es are free, which means that we’ve added them to our large col­lec­tion of Free Online Cours­es. They’re also acces­si­ble via mul­ti­ple for­mats (YouTube, iTunes, tor­rents, etc.) and released under a Cre­ative Com­mons License, allow­ing stu­dents and edu­ca­tors world­wide to use these cours­es for their own edu­ca­tion­al pur­pos­es. They come com­plete with hand­outs, assign­ments, exer­cis­es and soft­ware. Quite a good deal, I must say. Below, we’ve post­ed the ini­tial line­up of cours­es. Def­i­nite­ly check them out.

Intro­duc­tion to Com­put­er Sci­ence

Arti­fi­cial Intel­li­gence

Ten Days That Shook the Financial World

If you’re won­der­ing why so many domi­nos (Fan­nie & Fred­die, Lehman Broth­ers, Mer­rill Lynch, AIG) have fall­en so swift­ly this past week, give a lis­ten to today’s episode of Fresh Air (iTunes — RSS Feed — Stream Here). It fea­tures Michael Green­berg­er who gives a very lucid expla­na­tion of how/why our unreg­u­lat­ed shad­ow finan­cial sys­tem final­ly col­lapsed, and why the gov­ern­ment is sprint­ing to social­ize the loss. Good stuff here.

Sep­a­rate­ly, in anoth­er won­der­ful case of Amer­i­ca reward­ing utter fail­ure, you can read all about how Mer­rill CEO John Thain and his two senior lieu­tenants will get $200 mil­lion for “less than a year’s work which cul­mi­nat­ed … in the bank sur­ren­der­ing its 94-year-old inde­pen­dence.” Pathet­ic.

Free Presidential Biographies on iTunes: FDR and Beyond

Thanks to PBS, you can now down­load from iTunes a four-hour defin­i­tive biog­ra­phy of Franklin Delano Roo­sevelt. FDR guid­ed the US through the Great Depres­sion, then World War II, serv­ing as pres­i­dent for an unprece­dent­ed four terms. The video pod­cast run a good four hours, and it’s part of a series called Amer­i­can Expe­ri­ence: The Pres­i­dents. Oth­er pres­i­dents fea­tured in this series include Har­ry Tru­man, Lyn­don John­son, Richard Nixon, Jim­my Carter, and Ronald Rea­gan. You can watch more videos from The Amer­i­can Expe­ri­ence series online by click­ing here.

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When Fiction Failed David Foster Wallace

The news of David Fos­ter Wal­lace’s sui­cide came as a shock. 46, supreme­ly tal­ent­ed, and gone. We’re not left with much. His books, his essays, and the under­stand­able desire to find some link between his writ­ing and his end. Here’s a line that caught my atten­tion from David Stre­it­feld’s blog. (He’s a for­mer books edi­tor at The Boston Globe, and now a reporter for The New York Times.)

Fic­tion, [DFW once said], is “one of the few expe­ri­ences where lone­li­ness can be both con­front­ed and relieved. Drugs, movies where stuff blows up, loud par­ties — all these chase away lone­li­ness by mak­ing me for­get my name’s Dave and I live in a one-by-one box of bone no oth­er par­ty can pen­e­trate or know. Fic­tion, poet­ry, music, real­ly deep seri­ous sex, and, in var­i­ous ways, reli­gion — these are the places (for me) where lone­li­ness is coun­te­nanced, stared down, trans­fig­ured, treat­ed.” Maybe he asked too much of fic­tion. Maybe it failed him in the end, and there was noth­ing left.

A Movie For Our Times

Released last month, this Sun­dance 2008 selec­tion speaks direct­ly to Amer­i­can finan­cial mis­steps:

I.O.U.S.A. — One Nation. Under Stress. In Debt.

Pret­ty time­ly. Watch a short trail­er here or a longer intro below, and get more on the film here.


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