Month: February 2008

  • Complementary goods

    [Starbucks helps independent coffee shops, rather than killing them](http://meganmcardle.theatlantic.com/archives/2008/01/coffee_boost.php). Nativist views (of which the anti-chain thing is one example) are just out of step with the real world, because they assume a zero sum world. The base insight of Adam Smith and Ricardo is that we’re not in a zero sum world. This is just…

  • Best Picture

    [No Country for Old Men](http://www.exasperatedcalculator.com/archives/2008/01/movie-review-no-country-for-old-men/) wins for 2007. Well deserved.

  • Retro-movies

    [Really retro – like 12th century Russian](http://www.hiero.ru/2024553). I love the idea of doing these as religious woodcuts. There are a lot more of these if you look in the rest of the gallery linked.

  • Speaking of weird

    [The strange (and wonderful) behaviour of glass](http://scienceblogs.com/cortex/2008/02/shattered_glass.php). I’d never heard of this one before – although I bet it’s a perennial hit at the Christmas parties at the average glass blowers.

  • Flat pack everything

    [Taking a cue from Ikea, a flat pack pen](http://www.parafernalia.it/prod_falter_2d.asp). Clever. But I bet you can’t board an airplane with one of those in your baggage…

  • Start your day off strange

    [Another cool optical illusion](http://www.isnichwahr.de/redirect_ext11541-.html). I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again – there are more bugs in the Human body than there are in the average computer OS…

  • Nerds only

    [A marching bands half-time tribute to great video games](http://www.collegehumor.com/video:1789288). I think it’s pretty likely that this is the nerdiest thing ever.

  • Coming Soon: Mamma Mia

    [The musical based on Abba’s music hits the big screen](http://www.apple.com/trailers/universal/mammamia/medium.html). Looks bad. Even worse than the music it’s based on.

  • True Love

    [Geek Like Me by the Wonderstrucks](http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J1-4LcmE538). If only I’d sen this before my wedding…

  • 19th century textbooks

    [US school textbooks from the 19th century](http://digital.library.pitt.edu/n/nietz/) It’s a little bit scary to look at these and realise just how much has changed in 150 years.