Month: August 2019

Tomato Ramen

E.A.K. Ramen’s chef Kiyoyuki Miyashita will debut an idea he first began to consider 5 years ago. At his Hell’s Kitchen location, he’ll serve noodles in a cabbage broth — with some garlic and ginger for kick — that includes with a surprising ingredient: homemade tomato paste. “I love tradition. But what good is tradition without fun?”

Jackson Heights eats

In the last 10 years, the Jackson Heights dining scene has exploded. With an emphasis on South Asian, South American, Southeast Asian, and Mexican, it has one of the most interesting mix of reasonably priced restaurants in the city. And within each category, there is stunning diversity. You can get food from a restaurant representing a specific state in Nepal, or from a shop and beer bar that seeks to reproduce the sandwich culture of Lima, Peru. Meanwhile, the menu of a Filipino newcomer centers on the Bicol region of the archipelago. 1 area to watch lies along Northern Boulevard, where the growth in South American restaurants during this period has been amazing. Now there are many cocktail bars that mount happy hours from 16-20:00. (walk east from 80th Street and check the chalkboards), where a mixed drink can cost a mere $5, with cheap snacks galore. 3 restaurants specialize in elaborately topped hot dogs washed down with fruit drinks. So come with us now and enjoy the remarkable dining and drinking neighborhood of Jackson Heights.

Photo Query Matching

Google Local Photos Match the User Query

What does this mean for your business? Well given Google’s penchant for wanting to answer a users’ query and their belief that they can pick a photo better than you, it means the same thing that it always has. It means you need to upload lots of great photos so that no matter which one Google chooses it is a good one.

But now it also means that you really need to be thinking about photos that reflect the broad range of products and services that you deliver and that users might be searching on. If you carry wedding bands and engagement rings and earrings and necklaces you will want to be sure that you have great photos of each. And that they are easily identified in the image.

Against High Energy Physics

high energy physics thinks that bigger colliders will let them find new particles, but this view is probably wrong.

You could build a circular machine 3x the size of the Large Hadron Collider to collide electrons and positrons; you could upgrade the LHC, or even build a next-generation linear accelerator. Probing higher energies offers the hope of new physics — it could be supersymmetry, it could be something else, I don’t know what. But before exploring higher energies, it makes sense to me to build a muon collider, and to clarify the question of the Higgs first. Here we already have a particle that we want to explore. We may even find signs of new physics by studying the Higgs very precisely. For that we don’t need to go to a 100-kilometer-around tunnel. Think about how many days it takes to walk 100 kilometers! And it all has to be extremely functional, every single piece has to work — it’s a miracle if people succeed in making it work.

Rezdôra

Times critic Pete Wells just awarded Gramercy Italian restaurant Rezdôra a glowing 3 stars, commending chef Stefano Secchi’s “excellent” pasta tasting menu. Wells writes that the 5-course tasting was as if the chef had laid down a straight flush. He especially digs the maccheroni al pettine, served in a “smooth, almost fluffy” tomato-basil sauce, as well as the tortelloni filled with “plush fresh ricotta.”

Long-termism

This spring Richard Fisher at BBC Future has commissioned a series of essays about long-termism: Deep Civilization. I really like this effort (and not just because I get the last word):
The perils of short-termism: civilization’s greatest threat by Richard Fisher.
Technology in deep time: how it evolves alongside us by Tom Chatfield.
Are we on the road to civilization collapse? by Luke Kemp.
Why we need to reinvent democracy for the long-term by Roman Krznaric.
Why catastrophes can change the course of humanity by Seth Baum.
How and why did religion evolve? by Brandon Ambrosino.
Why the ‘post-natural’ age could be strange and beautiful by Lauren Holt.
How art and culture can help us rethink time by Ella Saltmarshe and Beatrice Pembroke.
How to build something that lasts 10 ka by Alexander Rose.
Deep ethics: the long-term quest to decide right from wrong by Simon Beard.
The simple rule that can help you predict the future by Tom Chatfield.
Strange evolution: the weird future of life on Earth by Mico Tatalovic.
Has humanity reached ‘peak intelligence’? by David Robson
The greatest long term threats facing humanity by Anders Sandberg.