the weirdest book in the world.

Sapere Aude
Category: Uncategorized
the weirdest book in the world.

Others have visited just as many countries, but Bown made a point of sticking around and immersing himself in each culture. “Some of the least travelled people I’ve ever met have been to 100 countries — what they do is fly between major cities, stop off in the airport, and then say that they’ve ‘done’ such and such country. such people are passengers, not travelers.”
amazing. i stopped counting after 12 references.
the L train is full of sufferers like this.
The RAND Corporation’s National Security Research Division has released a 297-page report on the likely consequences of a collapse of the North Korean regime, within the Korean Peninsula, as well as to China, Japan, the US and others
This seems like a good idea. Most papers will never be read by anyone, so this is a nice way to create less throwaway work in academia.
Medical students at the University of California, San Francisco, will be able to get course credit for editing Wikipedia articles about diseases, part of an effort to improve the quality of medical articles in the online encyclopedia and help distribute the articles globally via cell phones. While professors often incorporate Wikipedia work into classes, hoping that student research can live on online, this is the first time a medical school will give credit for such work.
the proposed Free Trade Zone in Shanghai will have huge consequences for China’s financial markets and that of the world. It will be a tax-free zone; the RMB will be fully convertible; the FTZ will have its own rules and regulations that cannot be trumped by central government; it will be legally outside the Chinese Customs, in fact a separate territory inside China; it has the effect of abolishing control over capital account investment, so allowing freedom to set up all kinds of companies and moving capital in and out of the FTZ, meaning in and out of China; it will become an international settlement center for international trade and it will allow banks within the FTZ greater flexibility in conducting business. In short, the implications of the development of the FTZ, if the pilot scheme goes smoothly, will be humongous not just for China but for the global economy.
Maybe we should start a religion around this stuff. We could call it cosmos.