Nathan Young
Create an account or sign in to get started
Show: Comments - Likes - Both
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
Friday at 9:51 am - via Bookmarklet - Link
"Neither of them is perfect, but if you, out of nowhere, are going to grab a woman out of the woods and make her your vice presidential candidate, what can I do? [Sarah Palin] is like Jodie Foster in the movie 'Nell,' " Stewart continued. "They just found her, and she was speaking her own special language." - Nathan Young via Bookmarklet
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
Thursday at 10:18 am - via Bookmarklet - Link
"The stupids are a complex demographic of paste eaters, nitwits and numbskulls. Personal attacks are the issues that affect them, and they will be determining the election." - Nathan Young via Bookmarklet
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
Hippies Are Dead: David Byrne Played Davies Symphony Hall
Wednesday at 4:35 pm - via Bookmarklet - Link
"The set wrapped up with something that has almost become a Byrne tradition in San Francisco: an appearance by the Extra Action Marching Band. The band descended through the crowd-filled aisles for about 10 minutes of marching band jam-time, followed by a full-band version of "Burning Down The House" with all the house lights on." - Nathan Young via Bookmarklet
DB was incredible and the finale was awesome. I only wish that I had been able to make both of the shows in SF. - Nathan Young
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
Road to November: Canvassing for Obama in Elko, Nev. - The Caucus Blog - NYTimes.com
October 2 at 11:29 am - via Bookmarklet - Link
"For those voters whose minds were long ago made up, and see stark differences between the candidates, undecided voters seem a curious lot. Often it seems they are not waiting to hear the candidates weigh in on a particular issue, or feel torn over any particular point. They often can’t say anything particularly warm or scathing about either man, and can name no revelation they seek. It is almost as if they are standing before two suitcases, one empty and one full of cash, and just fear desperately they will make the wrong choice." - Nathan Young via Bookmarklet
FriendFeed
Thanks to FriendFeed...: Ana posted a message
“I reconnected with my former TA from freshman biology, who's since become a great friend (and an even better fellow Obama volunteer--that's a picture of us doing GOTV in Fort Wayne, Indiana)!”
I reconnected with my former TA from freshman biology, who's since become a great friend (and an even better fellow Obama volunteer--that's a picture of us doing GOTV in Fort Wayne, Indiana)!
October 1 at 12:25 pm - Link
We hadn't talked in over 10 years. But this was the email he sent me out of the blue: "Dear Ana, apologies upfront for this no doubt random seeming email from a long ago (and perhaps long forgotten) friend, but I was reading up on an interesting new webtool, and as I was checking the company info, there you were. The randomness of this event inspired me to look you up and send this quick note. I realize it's been eons, but If you have the time/interest I'd love to hear back from you and reconnect. I've never felt there should be a statute of limitation on such things, and I hope you feel the same!" - Ana
Yes, thank you FF! You'll always have a special place in my heart for helping us to reconnect. Rediscovering our friendship after so long was definitely one of the best things to happen to me all year! - Nathan Young
Hello, fellow Hoosiers :) Or were you just visiting? - Kamilah Gill
FriendFeed
Ana posted a link
September 30 at 3:35 pm - via Bookmarklet - Link
"“We just saw a big ship,” the pirates’ spokesman, Sugule Ali, told The New York Times. “So we stopped it.” He said that so far, in the eyes of the world, the pirates had been misunderstood." - Ana via Bookmarklet
I know this is really serious stuff, but I couldn't stop laughing out loud while reading this. - Ana
Too bad this didn't happen on Pirate Day. That would have been amazing. Someone should tell the actual pirates about that for next year. - Dana D
Was just going to share this! Loved that the pirates actually had a spokesman. The idea of this guy giving an interview to the NYT from the deck of this pirated ship surrounded by several pissed off navies is priceless. Liked too that he felt it necessary to say they eat "normal human being" food. Wished they could have just published the entire transcript of the 45 minute interview... - Nathan Young
i'd like to party with these pirates. - peter
Seems more articulate than Sarah Palin. I wonder if she eats normal human food. - Chris White
“Killing is not in our plans,” he said. “We only want money, so we can protect ourselves from hunger.” When asked why the pirates needed $20 million to protect themselves from hunger, Mr. Sugule laughed over the phone and said: “Because we have a lot of men.” - Sanjeev Singh
Seriously, this is the funniest thing I've read all day. "He said that so far, in the eyes of the world, the pirates had been misunderstood. “We don’t consider ourselves sea bandits,” he said. “We consider sea bandits those who illegally fish in our seas and dump waste in our seas and carry weapons in our seas. We are simply patrolling our seas. Think of us like a coast guard.”" - torque
FriendFeed
Ana posted a message
“I can't believe NBC is delaying the showing of Opening Ceremonies til primetime in the US. Get some coffee ready. It's good, but long. I fell asleep. Only four or five times.”
August 8 at 11:41 am - Link
Loved Zhang Yimou's production "Impressions of Sanjie" on the Li River in Yangshuo, so I'm really looking forward to seeing what he does on a much bigger scale. Will be watching tonight on HDTV with friends and eating Chinese takeout! - Nathan Young
I'm a big fan of sleeping at public events. - Clare Dibble
This is what DVRs are made for. - Chris White
you were AT the opening ceremonies? - eviltom
NBC's coverage in the past has been generally awful IMO. It's like there are no other nations involved other than the US. I'd like to see a more even handed approach. - Jonathon
Can't get over the number of people who had their digital cameras and videos during the march of the nations,,,,Wonder where those video clips will show up. - kamla bhatt
Maybe in an SF MOMA exhibit. - Ontario Emperor via fftogo
amazingly beautiful... - Pokai
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
Survey Finds Trove of Endangered Primates in Congo Republic - NYTimes.com
August 4 at 7:12 pm - via Bookmarklet - Link
"A grueling survey of vast tracts of forest and swamp in the northern Congo Republic has revealed the presence of more than 125,000 western lowland gorillas, a rare example of abundance in a world of rapidly vanishing primate populations." - Nathan Young via Bookmarklet
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
Mayor says to snap out of economic funk, U.S. needs new New Deal
August 3 at 9:43 am - via Bookmarklet - Link
"It's time for a new New Deal - one that invests more money, more wisely. It is as impossible to imagine America without FDR's New Deal as it is to imagine the country without Eisenhower's interstate highway system. Those massive public investments epitomized both the vision and courage that are desperately lacking in today's Washington." - Nathan Young via Bookmarklet
Like the cartoon - j1m
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
Study Promises Benefits of Exercise in a Pill | Wired Science from Wired.com
July 31 at 2:26 pm - via Bookmarklet - Link
"Working out is tough. So why not skip the exercise and pop a few endurance-boosting pills? That dream, cherished by millions of sedentary couch potatoes, just got a little bit closer. Today, researchers are reporting that an experimental drug can mimic the results of an exercise regimen -- with no exercise required. After four weeks of taking the pill, mice who hadn't worked out displayed a 44 percent increase in their running endurance." - Nathan Young via Bookmarklet
FriendFeed
Ana posted a link
Fitness - Recent Triathlon Deaths Have Experts Searching for Answers - NYTimes.com
July 28 at 4:01 pm - via Bookmarklet - Link
"No one knows for sure why deaths are more common during the swim portion of triathlons, but researchers have some intriguing theories. Public accounts of this year’s fatalities indicate that the athletes seemed outwardly healthy, and autopsies turned up no obvious cause of death, such as blocked arteries. The combination of apparent good health and a negative autopsy suggests a fatality caused by abnormal heart rhythms, said Pamela Douglas, a Duke University cardiologist who has studied triathletes. Evidence suggests that swimming may trigger a certain type of cardiac arrhythmia caused by a genetic condition called long QT syndrome, said Michael Ackerman, a cardiologist and the director of the Windland Smith Rice Sudden Death Genomics Laboratory at the Mayo Clinic. About 1 in 2,000 people are born with a heart condition that causes a glitch in the heart’s electrical system, and the most common of these is called long QT syndrome, after the tell-tale interval on an electrocardiogram." - Ana via Bookmarklet
I can attest to the anxiety and heart irregularity that comes from swimming in open water -- I experienced that as well. The first time in the water for my practice swim, I had a complete freak out and almost quit the whole thing! During the race, my HRM showed my heart was beating super fast without much energy being expended. I like that the article pointed out that we should look at the denominator, not the numerator here. - Erin
When I was in Kona I watched people training on what is the open water section of the original IronMan and noticed that a pod of dolphins were swimming along with them -- that would scare the life out of me - Brian Sullivan
"Hundreds of thousands of people have taken part in triathlons over the last four years, and with just 23 deaths recorded by USA Triathlon since 2004 (not including last weekend’s deaths), the timing could be a statistical anomaly. But this much is clear: 18 of those 23 deaths occurred during the swim portion." - Brian Johns
My good friend has this syndrome. True to form, she didn't know she did until at the age of 17 she was dragged out of the Mediterranean having nearly drowned after passing out during a swim. Her heart stopped on at least two other occasions despite medication so she finally had an operation to cut the left sympathetic nerves feeding her heart. Despite all this, or maybe because of it, she's one of the most active and energetic people I know. She certainly doesn't take her life for granted! - Nathan Young
A friend of mine drowned in her own backyard pool a few years ago, at the age of 25. We weren't good enough friends that I ever found out the reason, but now, I wonder if this is what happened. - Ana
Thanks for posting this for my lurking mom and dad to read on FF the very week of my Ironman. :) Seriously though, I was at the height of my physical fitness in 1997 and competing as a skier when my heartbeat started to feel funny and sometimes would race a bit. I ultimately saw a doctor who, following an EKG, had me on a specialist's operating table within a day. 22 years old, in amazing shape, and I needed a heart operation! Often these conditions are just under the surface, waiting to be aggravated. - Christopher Sacca
it's a good thing i dont know how to swim! no danger of dying while competing in a triathalon! - eviltom
Sacca: good luck on your ironman!!! You're my triathlete dream.. (olympic distance wimp) - Erin
Google Reader
Jim Norris shared an item on Google Reader
July 28 at 12:44 pm - Link
I am really impressed by his concise and to-the-point summary of what most of the media reports have patently missed and/or glossed over. I would love to hear what Faust (Harvard's current president) thinks of these findings. - Ana
"We just simply don't know yet. The problem with Summers' claim wasn't that it is heresy to study these issues or consider the hypotheses. The problem is that the president of Harvard is in a position over the policy that could be implemented to remedy what might be a long-standing deep unfairness to women in these fields.… Where Summers was wrong was in seeming to indicate that he wouldn't pursue policies that would try to find a way to improve on past unfairness without weakening his university (the fundamental challenge of affirmative action). Scientists working in this area can and should be considering every possible hypothesis and the relevant data. Policy guys need to be more cautious where the science is uncertain and the policy decisions have significant impacts." - Jim Norris
It's still pretty disheartening to realize how shallow and inaccurate so many press reports are... apparently journalists are bad at math too. - Jim Norris
Maybe I'm just bad at math (or at least statistics), but I fail to see the point this post makes. We are unable to norm for differences in how boys and girls are raised, so I am skeptical of the idea that you can just point to math test scores as a way to determine (or even estimate) biologically differences in math ability. - C. Golis
From p.253 of this article addressing the issue of differences in achievement and that males show greater variance in standardized test scores (http://www.pitt.edu/~bertsch/w...). He makes the argument that this effect could be at least partly attributable to some mental traits lying on the X chromosome, and since males only have one copy of any X-linked gene, one might predict that they should exhibit greater variance in those traits they affect. Male variability would not be a product of what they have that females don't, but rather, what males lack (i.e., a genetic mechanism for buffering against variability). The whole article is actually worth reading because it focuses on how the concept of variance is generally underappreciated, often to ill effect. - Nathan Young
Flickr
Casey Muller published a photo on Flickr
Big Empty live, disappointed by the bass in the bridge
July 26 at 1:11 am - Link
STP did a Lou Reed/Obama mashup in the middle, and played an illegal second encore they claimed would cost them $20k in fines. - Casey Muller
Or $2.50 per person at the show. Only off by a factor of 2 ;) - Nathan Young
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
Inside Gate, India’s Good Life; Outside, the Servants’ Slums - NYTimes.com
July 27 at 6:51 pm - via Bookmarklet - Link
"India has always had its upper classes, as well as legions of the world’s very poor. But today a landscape dotted with Hamilton Courts, pressed up against the slums that serve them, has underscored more than ever the stark gulf between those worlds, raising uncomfortable questions for a democratically elected government about whether India can enable all its citizens to scale the golden ladders of the new economy." The pictures bring to mind the beginnings of a Margaret Atwood novel. - Nathan Young via Bookmarklet
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
New Orleans Dining Is Up for Review Again - NYTimes.com
July 25 at 10:16 am - via Bookmarklet - Link
This is making me so hungry! Must mean it's time to go back home for a visit. The review of Mr. B's, one of my favorites, at: http://blog.nola.com/brettande... - Nathan Young via Bookmarklet
Gmail/Google Talk
Ana updated their status message on Gmail/Google Talk
“Home sick today after yesterday's mandatory day of fun :(”
June 26 at 8:28 am - Link
Hope you feel better. - Aaron Myers
why cant *I* have mandatory fun?! - eviltom
The upside is now you can watch Spain-Russia :) - Nathan Young
Sorry.. hope you feel better... - Chad
and this *illness* has nothing to do with your car troubles... right? :) - Jeanette Martinez
FriendFeed
Obamamania: Nathan Young posted a link
June 26 at 11:07 am - via Bookmarklet - Link
"On MySpace, Obama lists more than 401,000 friends to McCain's nearly 56,000. A similar sevenfold gap exists on Facebook, where Obama supporters number 1,040,185 while McCain's clock in at 152,570. And on YouTube, it's like Obama and McCain operate in two separate layers of the atmosphere. McCain's channel, which has posted 208 videos, has been viewed 3.7 million times; Obama's more than 1,100 videos on his channel have been viewed 53.4 million times." - Nathan Young via Bookmarklet
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
Teach the Controversy - Intelligently designed t-shirts urging you to show both sides of every story
Teach the Controversy - Intelligently designed t-shirts urging you to show both sides of every story
Teach the Controversy - Intelligently designed t-shirts urging you to show both sides of every story
June 17 at 12:03 am - via Bookmarklet - Link
"Because we know that dinosaur bones were really planted by Beelzebub." - Nathan Young
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
The Mundaneum Museum Honors the First Concept of the World Wide Web - NYTimes.com
The Mundaneum Museum Honors the First Concept of the World Wide Web - NYTimes.com
June 16 at 11:04 pm - via Bookmarklet - Link
"In 1934, Otlet sketched out plans for a global network of computers (or “electric telescopes,” as he called them) that would allow people to search and browse through millions of interlinked documents, images, audio and video files. He described how people would use the devices to send messages to one another, share files and even congregate in online social networks. He called the whole thing a “réseau,” which might be translated as “network” — or arguably, “web.”" - Nathan Young
FriendFeed
Nathan Young posted a link
YouTube - Turkey - Czech Republic 3 - 2
Play
June 15 at 9:13 pm - via Bookmarklet - Link
Arguably the most dramatic game of a great day for watching sport. Down 0-2, Turkey scored three goals in the last 15 minutes to advance to the quarters of Euro 2008. Missing from this video is the fact that Turkey played a man down (their keeper no less) during stoppage time! Classic reaction from the announcers after the game winner. - Nathan Young
Tip: Now you can add FriendFeed to your blog with our new customizable FriendFeed widgets!

Other ways to read this feed:Feed reader