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Sanjeev Narang notes about poetry, quotations, scrabble, trivia, vocabulary, word lists, word oddities, word play, seattle and washington lists.

Saturday, June 04, 2005

Top 100 Largest newspapers by Circulation


1. Yomiuri Shimbun (Japan) 14,532,694
2. Asahi Shimbun (Japan) 12,601,375
3. Sichuan Ribao (China) 8,000,000
4. Mainichi Shimbun (Japan) 5,845,857
5. Bild (Germany) 5,674,400
6. Chunichi Shimbun (Japan) 4,323,144
7. Sun (England) 3,718,354
8. Renmin Ribao (China) 3,000,000
9. Sankei Shimbun (Japan) 2,890,835
10. Nihon Keizai Shimbun (Japan) 2,705,877
11. Gongren Ribao (China) 2,500,000
12. Daily Mail (England) 2,387,867
13. Daily Mirror (England) 2,339,001
14. Chosun Ilbo (South Korea) 2,225,000
15. Dong-A Ilbo (South Korea) 2,150,000
16. Hokkaido Shimbun (Japan) 1,962,666
17. Eleftherotypia (Greece) 1,858,316
18. Xin Min Wan Bao (China) 1,750,000
19. Wall Street Journal (United States) 1,740,450
20. Yangcheng Wanbao (China) 1,730,000

More ...

http://www.newspaperindex.com/blog/2005/06/03/100-largest-newspaper-by-circulation

BBC - Beethoven Downloads


Make it a habit to listen to Beethoven every day. Free MP3s from the BBC. What's your excuse ?!

BBC - Radio 3 - Beethoven Experience - downloads: "Download all nine of Beethoven's symphonies here the day after they are broadcast. All the symphonies are performed by BBC Philharmonic, conducted by Gianandrea Noseda. "

Men charged over plot to sell new Potter novel


Children to be tried for "inability to wait for the new book" !

MSNBC - Men charged over plot to sell new Potter novel: "Men charged over plot to sell new Potter novel
2 Britons charged with firearms offenses, handling stolen book
Updated: 10:21 a.m. ET June 4, 2005

LONDON - Two British men were charged on Saturday with firearms offenses after allegedly trying to sell a stolen copy of the new Harry Potter book to a tabloid newspaper before its release.

Police were called to an address in Kettering in central England on Friday after reports of a shot being fired.

The Sun newspaper said the incident came as the men tried to sell one of its reporters a stolen copy of �Harry Potter And the Half-Blood Prince� for 50,000 pounds ($90,880)."

Friday, June 03, 2005

Krispy Kreme Celebrates Doughnut Day


Free 200-300 Calories and 12-18grams of Fat ! Free !! Mmmm Mmm!

Krispy Kreme Celebrates Doughnut Day: "Krispy Kreme Celebrates Doughnut Day
Wednesday June 1, 6:47 am ET
Stop by Krispy Kreme for a free doughnut of your choice on Friday, June 3rd, 2005

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C., June 1 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Could there be a sweeter day of the year? On Friday, June 3rd, Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, Inc. (NYSE: KKD - News) celebrates National Doughnut Day by offering customers a free doughnut of their choice in participating stores throughout the U.S."

Scientists create 'trust potion'


BBC NEWS | Health | Scientists create 'trust potion': "Scientists create 'trust potion'

A key hormone helps determine whether we will trust lovers, friends or business contacts, scientists claim.

Exposure to an oxytocin 'potion' led people to be more trusting, tests by University of Zurich researchers found.

They report in the journal Nature that the finding could help people with conditions such as autism, where relating to others can be a problem.

But one expert warned it could be misused by politicians who want to persuade more people to back them."

Oxytocin is a molecule produced naturally in the hypothalamus area of the brain which regulates a variety of physiological processes, including emotion.

It also acts on other brain regions whose function is associated with emotional and social behaviours, such as the amygdala.

And animal studies have shown oxytocin is linked to bonding between males and females and mother-infant bonding.

Reaping rewards

The Swiss and American team of researchers suspected the same effect may occur in humans and invited 58 people to take part in a "trust test".

The participants in the study played a game, in which they were split into "investors" and "trustees". The investors were then given credits and told they could choose whether to hand over zero, four, eight or 12 credits to their assigned trustee.

If the investor showed trust, the total amount which could be distributed between the two increased, but the trustee initially reaped all the reward.

It was then up to them to decide if they would honour the investor's trust by sharing the profit equally - or if they would keep the lot.

At the end of the game, the credits were translated into real money, meaning both participants had a selfish financial incentive.

Investors and trustees were either given oxytocin via a nasal spray, or a dummy, or placebo, version.

Of 29 investors who were given oxytocin, 13 (45%) displayed "maximal trust" by choosing to invest highly, compared with six (21%) of the 29 investors who were given the dummy spray.

Oxytocin did not change the behaviour of trustees.

In addition, when trustees were replaced by a computer, the oxytocin effect was no longer seen on the investors.

Possible 'abuses'

The researchers, led by Dr Ernest Fehr, say this suggests the chemical promotes social interaction, rather than simply encouraging people to take risks.

And they say it appears to over-ride obstacles such as the fear of being betrayed.

Writing in Nature, the team says: "Oxytoxin does not increase the general inclination to behave prosaically. Rather, oxytocin specifically affects the trusting behaviour of investors."

They suggest this is because people in the position of "investors" have to take the first step.

The scientists say their findings could potentially be used to help people with conditions such as social phobia and autism which can be linked to persistent fear and avoiding social situations.

"Our results might lead to fertile research on the role of oxytocin in several mental health disorders with major public health significance."

In the same journal, Dr Antonio Damasio of the Department of Neurology at the University of Iowa College of Medicine, US, said some might fear the findings could be used by those trying to gain people's trust.

"Some may worry about the prospect that political operators will generously spray the crowd with oxytocin at rallies of their candidates.

"The scenario may be rather too close to reality for comfort, but those with such fears should note that current marketing techniques - for political and other products - may well exert their effects through the natural release of molecules such as oxytocin in response to well-crafted stimuli.

"Civic alarm at such abuses should have started long before this study."

Thursday, June 02, 2005

80 Years of The New Yorker to Be Offered in DVD


One of the best literary and cartoon magazines - on DVD !

80 Years of The New Yorker to Be Offered in Disc Form - New York Times

80 Years of The New Yorker to Be Offered in Disc Form

The New Yorker, the weekly magazine that started as "a hectic book of gossip, cartoons and facetiae," as Louis Menand once wrote, and has evolved into a citadel of narrative nonfiction and investigative reporting, will publish its entire 80-year archives on searchable computer discs this fall.

The eight-disc "Complete New Yorker" is to be available this fall.

The collection, titled "The Complete New Yorker," will consist of eight DVD's containing high-resolution digital images of every page of the 4,109 issues of the magazine from February 1925 through the 80th anniversary issue, published last February. Included on the discs will be "every cover, every piece of writing, every drawing, listing, newsbreak, poem and advertisement," David Remnick, editor of the magazine, has written in an introduction to the collection.

Legal Downloads up; Illegal Downloads up; 1:10 Ratio


Some people are getting used to paying for songs ... but for every song bought legally, 10 are downloaded for free.

March 2005
Legal downloads: 25.9 million
Illegal Downloads: 242 million

Macworld UK - Illegal downloads on the up
Illegal downloads on the up
By Macworld staff
The number of people buying music online has doubled since last year, but illegal downloads are also on the up.

Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Test Single Quote


Test single quote.

It's a simple life.

He said " You've ruined my life."

Photos of Jazz Greats


Photos of Jazz Greats

Sony BMG tests technology to limit CD burning


Sony - the company that lost the MP3 Player race to iPod because it insisted on using bad music management software (you had to check-in and check-out songs from your own player!) - just misses the whole point.

1. If you let people burn once, they'll rip it back and you are back to square one.

2. Dumbing down the word "piracy" to include casual school yard CD exchange between the best potential music customers for life is a symptom of a company in fundamental denial of the way people listen and exchange music.

Reuters News Article

Sony BMG tests technology to limit CD burning

Sun May 29, 2005 10:11 PM ET
NEW YORK (Billboard) - As part of its mounting U.S. rollout of content-enhanced and copy-protected CDs, Sony BMG Music Entertainment is testing technology solutions that bar consumers from making additional copies of burned CD-R discs."

Since March the company has released at least 10 commercial titles -- more than 1 million discs in total -- featuring technology from U.K. anti-piracy specialist First4Internet that allows consumers to make limited copies of protected discs, but blocks users from making copies of the copies.

The concept is known as "sterile burning." And in the eyes of Sony BMG executives, the initiative is central to the industry"s efforts to curb casual CD burning.

"The casual piracy, the school yard piracy, is a huge issue for us," says Thomas Hesse, president of global digital business for Sony BMG. "Two-thirds of all piracy comes from ripping and burning CDs, which is why making the CD a secure format is of the utmost importance."

Sudoku puzzle enchants British problem-solvers


Solving crosswords and puzzles regularly is a proven brain-upkeep method ...

MSNBC - Sudoku puzzle enchants British problem-solvers

Sudoku puzzle enchants British problem-solvers

LONDON - Britain has a new addiction.

Hunched over newspapers on crowded subway trains, sneaking secret peeks in the office, a puzzle-crazy nation is trying to slot numbers into small checkerboard grids.

It"s Sudoku � a sort of crossword without words that has consumed the country.

�There"s something about that grid with its empty squares � it�s just crying out to be filled in,� said Wayne Gould, a retired judge and puzzle aficionado who helped spark Britain�s love affair with the game.

A Japanese brainteaser that has quietly appeared in puzzle magazines in Asia and North America for years, Sudoku hit Britain in the pages of The Times newspaper in November. It now has thousands of avid followers, a host of Web sites and books, and runs daily in eight national newspapers, which compete fiercely to offer their readers the best puzzle.

Newspapers go Sudoku crazy
The Independent offers four a day, of varying levels of difficulty. The Guardian boasts that its puzzle is �hand-crafted by its Japanese inventors,� rather than spawned by a computer like the others. The Times is offering a version for mobile phones. The Daily Telegraph promises a 3-D �ultimate Sudoku� version.

The name, which translates roughly as �the number that is alone,� has become a handy catch-phrase. A Times columnist wrote dismissively about Prime Minister Tony Blair"s recent Cabinet shuffle: �It is not exactly Sudoku, is it?�

Sudoku consists of a grid of nine rows of nine boxes, which must be filled in so the numbers one through nine appear just once in each column, row and three-by-three square.

It looks like arithmetic, but requires the application of logic. It can be fairly straightforward or fiendishly difficult.

�I think the attraction is that you can definitely get it right,� said Anton Viesel, a 23-year-old London bookseller. �It"s very satisfying.�

Getting Cringe Tasks Done


A simple flowchart for handling cringe tasks.

Best Tool For the Job � Getting Cringe Tasks Done

Sportsbook.com expects Lance Armstrong to retire with yellow jersey


Current odds:
Will Lance Armstrong Win the Tour de France Odds:
Yes : 5-6
No : 10-11

Sportsbook.com expects Lance Armstrong to retire with yellow jersey

Someday maybe project - Building the Li'l Beauty Skin-on-frame Kayak


Someday maybe project - Building the Li'l Beauty Skin-on-frame Kayak

Li'l Beauty Kayak

Eatery furniture confirms obesity trend


Restaurants offer larger portion sizes ... restaurant increase chair sizes ... Restaurants offer larger portion sizes ... on and on.

Eatery furniture confirms obesity trend - (United Press International)

Eatery furniture confirms obesity trend

Chicago, IL, May. 23 (UPI) -- Furniture makers are selling bigger chairs and tables to U.S. restaurants, an apparent accommodation to growing customers.

The National Restaurant Association's four-day conference in Chicago featured numerous displays of supersized furniture for supersized diners, the Dallas Morning News reported Monday.

"The other (traditionally sized) ones can be uncomfortable," said Bob Murphy, vice president of systems and technology for Chili's Grill & Bar, the flagship chain of Dallas-based Brinker International Inc. "When you sit at them, they're too small."

Chili's has begun testing more spacious eating spaces and was looking at installing tables up to 12 inches larger at future Chili's outlets, he said.

One chair manufacturer said his company is rethinking size -- as in making products bigger -- because customers are bigger.

"Let's face it, America has an obesity problem," said Jerry Falk of Foldcraft Co. of Minnesota.

Thinking and Paper


With Blogs, wikis, Palm/Pocket PCs, web-based To-Do lists etc, paper has a place in your GTD method - it can be as simple as the hipster PDA.


Ask E.T.: Thinking and Paper

Thinking and Paper

I like to think that I have - over the years - devised a personal operational work system that combines the benefits of both chaos and organisation. It is completely paper-based, although I have had a computer on my desk since 1982.

15 things you can do with RSS


15 things you can do with RSS (it was supposed to be 10, but I got carried away) - Tim Yang's Geek Blog

15 things you can do with RSS

Get the news as it happens from multiple news sources
Collect your email from all your email accounts in your RSS reader
Track Fedex packages
Get notified of bargains at Ebay
Get the weather reports
Find out what people are saying about you, your company or your product online
Get music, radio programs and TV clips
Stay updated on someone's schedule
Get cinema schedule updates
Read your favourite comics
Find out what other people surfing
Automatically backup your weblog posts
Get software updates
Get the latest bittorrent files and ahem, p*rn

You can do anything - but not everything.

You can do anything - but not everything.


David Allen's article in Fast Company in May 2000 before GTD became a cult!

You can do anything - but not everything.

At the heart of David Allen's productivity coaching is the discipline of a weekly review. "That is critical to making personal organization a vital, dynamic reality," he says. Here, adapted from Allen's Web site, is a list of steps that you should work your way through every Friday afternoon.

1. Sort your loose papers. Gather all scraps of paper -- business cards, receipts, miscellaneous notes -- and put them into your in-basket to process.

2. Process your notes. Review journal entries, meeting notes, and miscellaneous scribblings. Turn them into appropriate action items, projects, and so on.

3. Review previous calendar data. Look through expired daily calendar pages for remaining action items, and move those items forward.

4. Download your data. Write down any new projects, action items, "waiting-for" items, and so on.

5. Review outcome lists. One by one, evaluate the status of each project, goal, and outcome.

6. Review "next action" lists. Check off all completed actions. Look for reminders of further action steps.

7. Review "pending" and "support" files. Browse through work-in-progress materials and update lists of new actions, completions, and "waiting-for" items.

8. Review "reminders" lists. Make sure that there isn't anything that you haven't done that you need to do. Also, make sure that there aren't any checklists that you need to review.

9. Review "someday" and "maybe" lists. Look for any projects that may have become active, and transfer them to your "projects" list. Delete any dead items.

10. Review "waiting-for" lists. Record appropriate follow-up actions. Check them off as you complete them.

11. Be creative and courageous. Add to your system any new, wonderful, harebrained, thought-provoking, risk-taking ideas that have occurred to you.

Mathematical Fiction Homepage


Mathematical Fiction Homepage

"Do you like fiction and mathematics? Are you looking for a book or story that might be useful for the students in your math class? Are you interested in what our society thinks about mathematicians? Then you've come to the right place..."

An excellent place to satisfy your science and writing hobbies!