Category Archives: 未分類

Ryūnosuke Akutagawa

After violating my wife, the robber, sitting there, began to speak comforting words to her. Of course I couldn’t speak. My whole body was tied fast to the root of a cedar. But meanwhile I winked at her many times, as much as to say “Don’t believe the robber.” I wanted to convey some such meaning to her. But my wife, sitting dejectedly on the bamboo leaves, was looking hard at her lap. To all appearance, she was listening to his words. I was agonized by jealousy. In the meantime the robber went on with his clever talk, from one subject to another. The robber finally made his bold brazen proposal. “Once your virtue is stained, you won’t get along well with your husband, so won’t you be my wife instead? It’s my love for you that made me be violent toward you.”
While the criminal talked, my wife raised her face as if in a trance. She had never looked so beautiful as at that moment. What did my beautiful wife say in answer to him while I was sitting bound there? I am lost in space, but I have never thought of her answer without burning with anger and jealousy. Truly she said, … “Then take me away with you wherever you go.”

Max Borders

There’s a weird symmetry between the Right and the Left. It’s difficult to articulate, but it’s becoming clearer to me now. They’re both Keynesians, only in different domains. The Left are Keynesians about economics, the Right are Keynesians about political strategy. The trouble with either is that Keynesianism doesn’t work very well anywhere it’s applied.
Lest I lose my reader straight out of the gate, allow me to explain in simpler terms the defining characteristics of what I’ll call the “Keynesian Model.” This model:

  1. Deals almost exclusively in macro-level aggregates.
  2. Holds that these aggregates are mostly informative.
  3. Information can be successfully used for macro purposes.

For example, in economics, Keynesians want to tweak or “stimulate” the economy by raining largess on particular sectors to stimulate aggregate labor demand, say.
But the trouble with this way of looking at the world is:

  1. The micro-level is where most of the action is.
  2. The devil of the economy is in the details of billions of individual means-ends actions, coordinations and transactions, which makes knowledge mostly local.
  3. These details are far to complex to be reduced to aggregates and manipulated to positive effect.

>森川友義

>私たち男は女性の見かけの良さを追求しがちですが、実はこれは私たちのDNAに根ざした欲求なのです。すなわち見かけの良さが体臭の良さ、性格の良さ、卵子の良さに連動しているので、男が女性の見かけの良さを追求することは、恋人選びの手段としては当然のことなのです。
しかし、美しさを「消費財」としてとらえると、経済学でいう「限界効用逓減(ていげん)の法則」が成り立ってしまうのも事実です。これは、ひとつのものを消費すればするほど、満足度は低下するという法則です。ビールの1杯目はおいしくとも、2杯目、3杯目と満足度は減ってしまいますよね。
その意味においては、確かに美人も毎日見ていると飽きてきてしまうのかもしれません。三日では飽きないにしても、徐々に満足度が薄れてくることは否定できません。
一方、「美人は三日で飽きる」とセットで昔から語られる言葉に「ブスは三日で慣れる」というものがありますが、おそらくこれも美人でない人々が作った嘘でしょう。ただし、ここで問題なのは、「美人は三日で飽きる」のと「ブスは三日で慣れる」のとでは、あたかも後者のほうがいいかのように語られているところです。
しかし、美人にいくら飽きようと、またブスにいくら慣れようと、両者の魅力度が逆転することはありません。ですからどんなに慣れてしまおうとも、前述したように男は女性の見かけの良さを追求すべきなのです。
しかし、ここで問題が発生します。どんなに見かけが良くても飽きてしまう以上、恋愛なり結婚なり長期的関係を望む場合には見かけ以上のものが必要になるということです。恋愛なり結婚で飽きさせない資質、つまり限界効用が逓減しない資質が恋愛には不可欠になるのです。

>Esther Dean, Mikkel Eriksen, Tor Erik Hermansen, Katy Perry, Sandy Julien Wilhelm

>You don’t have to feel like a waste of space
You’re original, cannot be replaced
If you only knew what the future holds
After a hurricane comes a rainbow
Maybe you’re reason why all the doors are closed
So you could open one that leads you to the perfect road
Like a lightning bolt, your heart will blow
And when it’s time, you’ll know
You just gotta ignite the light and let it shine
Just own the night like the 4th of July
‘Cause baby you’re a firework
Come on, show ’em what you’re worth
Make ’em go, oh
As you shoot across the sky

>彭希哲

>未来10年,中国人口出生性别比结构失衡的后果会逐渐凸显,这就是婚姻挤压。我国目前的出生性别比还是118,就是每出生一百个女孩,会出生118个男孩,这种状况已经存在了近30年。中国人一般在20岁到44岁结婚,现在这个年龄段的男性比女性多了1500万,这个比重在未来10年中会持续上升,结果是,也许会有将近3000万男性找不到老婆。
男光棍与剩女是不一样的,剩女的问题大多是个人主动选择的结果,而男光棍常常是被动的,是因为中国人口里少了几千万女性,必然有人不得不打光棍。

>Andrew Scott Cooper

>

The American economy’s chronic addiction to cheap oil is obvious. Less well known is the story of when that addiction began and why the United States became so reliant in particular on Saudi Arabia for its continued goodwill and cooperation. The same is true of America’s toxic relationship with Iran. The two countries have been at each other’s throats for so long now that it seems hard to believe they were ever allies—let alone partners in a secret contingency plan to invade Saudi Arabia and seize its oil wealth. Until these tensions are resolved, and until both countries come to terms with their complicated shared history, it seems inevitable that the tree of American-Iranian relations will bear poisoned fruit for many years to come.

>百度

>

百度の掲示板に「日本は福祉がすばらしいのに、なぜ日本のため死ねる人が少ないの?」というスレッドが立てられ、議論が交わされている。スレ主は、最近日本で行われたアンケートを紹介し、多くの日本人が「お国のためには死ねない」と答えたことを紹介している。これに関する中国人ネットユーザーの反応について、以下に中国語のBBSを日本語に翻訳して紹介する。
  • もし中国の街でアンケートをしたら、80%以上の愛国青年たちが「喜んでお国のために死ぬ」って答えると思う。
  • こういうところも、日本が好きな理由の1つだ。
  • 平和の時代に生活している人で、誰が国のために命をささげるかね。
  • 奴隷だけが主人のために死ぬというのが道理だ。どこに奴隷のために死ぬ主人がいるというのだ?朝から晩まで国のために犠牲を強いる国というのは、実質的に国民を奴隷とみなしているのだよ。
  • 何に基づいて国民は国のために死ななければならないの?国民は国に貢献すると同時に、国から保護を受けて当然よね。
  • 当然の結果でしょう。開けた文明的な国であればあるほど、人びとの考えも成熟して自分の考えを持つようになる。北朝鮮と比較したらよく分かるさ。みんな洗脳されちゃってるから。
  • 無能な国ほど国民を言い訳の材料にする。
  • 無能な国こそが国のために国民を犠牲にするね。
  • オレが思うに…もし国民が国のために死ななくてはならない状況までになっているなら、それはその国が今まさに戦乱の最中にあるということだと思う。平和という基本的なことが保障できないなら、国民に国のために死んでもらうことを望めるか?
  • 国家は国民を保護すべきであって、国民に国家のために死んでもらうようであってはならない。この道理が分からないようなら、中国はどんなに富んだとしても。意味はないね。
  • 命はどの国や組織にも属さない。日本は福祉がすばらしい。でも日本人にとってはそうでもない。永遠に満足することはないのよ。

>Sam Harris

>Publishers can’t charge enough money for 60-page books to survive; thus, writers can’t make a living by writing them. But readers are beginning to feel that this shouldn’t be their problem. Worse, many readers believe that they can just jump on YouTube and watch the author speak at a conference, or skim his blog, and they will have absorbed most of what he has to say on a given subject. In some cases this is true and suggests an enduring problem for the business of publishing. In other cases it clearly isn’t true and suggests an enduring problem for our intellectual life.
One thing is certain: writers and public intellectuals must find a way to get paid for what they do—and the opportunities to do this are changing quickly. My current solution is to write longer books for a traditional press and publish short ebooks myself on Amazon. If anyone has any better ideas, please publish them somewhere—perhaps on a blog—and then send me a link. And I hope you get paid.

>Brian Urquhart

>

I think you have to look at Dag Hammarskjöld as Secretary-General as someone who had dedicated himself to – for him – the most important cause in the world, which was the UN and peace in a divided east-west nuclear world. He didn’t really feel that there was too much time for much else except he thought that literature, all the arts, particularly music and painting, were an absolute key part of life and he was very active in all these areas.
I think you have to remember that Hammarskjöld was operating in the Cold War. And during the Cold War, everyone – including one’s children if they were over five – had at the back of their minds a constant feeling that if you were in New York or Washington or Moscow, you might quite likely encounter a nuclear war, suddenly and quite unexpectedly. It was a very disagreeable background – I mean nuclear war, east-west, was perfectly possible.

>Clayton Christensen

>

Disruptive innovation describes a process by which a product or service takes root initially in simple applications at the bottom of a market and then relentlessly moves ‘up market’, eventually displacing established competitors.
An innovation that is disruptive allows a whole new population of consumers access to a product or service that was historically only accessible to consumers with a lot of money or a lot of skill. Characteristics of disruptive businesses, at least in their initial stages, can include: lower gross margins, smaller target markets, and simpler products and services that may not appear as attractive as existing solutions when compared against traditional performance metrics.
Because companies tend to innovate faster than their customers’ lives change, most organizations eventually end up producing products or services that are too good, too expensive, and too inconvenient for many customers. By only pursuing “sustaining innovations” that perpetuate what has historically helped them succeed, companies unwittingly open the door to “disruptive innovations”.
Some examples of disruptive innovation include:
Disruptor
Cellular phones
Community colleges
Discount retailers
Retail medical clinics
Disruptee
Fixed line telephony
Four-year colleges
Full-service department stores
Traditional doctor’s offices

>Sam Zarifi

>

North Korea can no longer deny the undeniable. For decades the authorities have refused to admit to the existence of mass political prison camps.
These are places out of sight of the rest of the world, where almost the entire range of human rights protections that international law has tried to set up for last 60 years are ignored.
As North Korea seems to be moving towards a new leader in Kim Jong-un and a period of political instability, the big worry is that the prison camps appear to be growing in size.
Hundreds of thousands of people exist with virtually no rights, treated essentially as slaves, in some of the worst circumstances we’ve documented in the last 50 years.

>James Surowiecki

>

… under the right circumstances, groups are remarkably intelligent, and are often smarter than the smartest people in them. Groups do not need to be dominated by exceptionally intelligent people in order to be smart. Even if most of the people within a group are not especially well-informed or rational, it can still reach a collectively wise decision. This is a good thing, since human beings are not perfectly designed decision makers. Instead, we are what economist Herbert Simon called “boundedly rational.” We generally have less information than we‘d like. We have limited foresight into the future. Most of us lack the ability — and the desire — to make sophisticated cost-benefit calculations. Instead of insisting on finding the best possible decision, we will often accept the one that seems good enough. And often we let emotion affect our judgment. Yet despite all these limitations, when our imperfect judgments are aggregated in the right way, our collective intelligence is often excellent.
This intelligence, or what I’ll call “the wisdom of crowds,” is at work in the world in many different guises. It’s the reason the Internet search engine Google can scan a billion Web pages and find the one page that has the exact piece of information you were looking for. …

>Indur M. Goklany

>

Modern economic growth is characterized by unparalleled technological change, which has transformed the world more in the past two centuries than all the other events put together since the beginning of agriculture 10 millennia ago. This technological change was accompanied by a prodigious increase in the use of inanimate energy, particularly fossil fuels and other renewable and nonrenewable natural resources. The associated industrialization and increases in agricultural productivity, urbanization, population, mobility, trade, and consumption of material goods have transformed the social, cultural, and physical landscapes of societies.

>Azamat Abdoullaev

>

The significant part of the world’s wealth is in the form of urban land and buildings, commercial property and residential property and infrastructure capital. The real estate, and now the world’s population, is mostly concentrated in an urban area, as a town, large town, city, large city, metropolis, conurbation, megalopolis (unified super-city), or ecumenopolis (the urban world).
Over the last several years we have seen how the concept of Intelligent or Smart Cities has been fast moving from the academic world of conferences and workshops to the strategic planning of national governments and primary commercial projects of global IT corporations, multinational infrastructure providers and system integrators. Unlike the traditional legacy city, a smart city, new or retrofitted, is anticipated as a prime city of well being, prosperity and productivity. It is characterized as an innovative urban settlement with Intelligent Information and Communications Technology Infrastructure inbuilt in the Environment, Transport, Utilities and Energy Networks, Buildings, Social Infrastructure, Government, and Services.

>Alan Posener

>

Er hat eine Begründung für den Abzug geliefert, die das offizielle Ende einer expansiven Epoche amerikanischer Außenpolitik darstellt, „eines Jahrzehnts des Krieges“, wie Obama in seiner Ansprache an die Nation sagte, in dem Amerika Gefahr lief, „sich zu überdehnen“ bei dem Versuch, „jedem Übel zu begegnen, das sich in Übersee finden ließ“.
Es sei Zeit, sich „auf Nation Building bei uns zu Hause zu konzentrieren“. Erst mit dieser Rede ist die neokonservative Ära endgültig vorbei. Wer darüber jubelt, könnte sich bald eines Besseren besinnen. Denn gefährlicher als der amerikanische Expansionismus ist der regelmäßig auf solche euphorischen Epochen folgende Kater des amerikanischen Isolationismus.
Was den Abzug aus Afghanistan betrifft, so geht er den Militärs zu schnell vor, dem kriegsmüden Volk zu langsam. Der Streit darüber ist aber müßig, weil der Zeitplan von etwas Wichtigerem diktiert wird als dem Schicksal Afghanistans – nämlich vom Schicksal des Präsidenten.
Bis zum Wahltermin im November 2012 wird Obama genügend Soldaten nach Hause geholt haben, um seinen Anhängern die Ernsthaftigkeit seiner Absichten zu demonstrieren, aber nicht so viele, dass Afghanistan kollabiert.

Siobhan

A good friend of mine sent this to me this morning, and I thought I would pass it along. I completely agree, and it’s well worth remembering for those of you that feel guilty when indulging in time with your girlfriends. Which, by the way, I never do! Thanks to all my girlfriends, all over the world, for all the laughs and good times we’ve shared.
“I just finished taking an evening class at Stanford. The last lecture was on the mind-body connection – the relationship between stress and disease. The speaker (head of psychiatry at Stanford) said, among other things, that one of the best things that a man could do for his health is to be married to a woman whereas for a woman, one of the best things she could do for her health was to nurture her relationships with her girlfriends. At first everyone laughed, but he was serious.
Women connect with each other differently and provide support systems that help each other to deal with stress and difficult life experiences. Physically this quality “girlfriend time” helps us to create more serotonin – a neurotransmitter that helps combat depression and can create a general feeling of well being. Women share feelings whereas men often form relationships around activities. They rarely sit down with a buddy and talk about how they feel about certain things or how their personal lives are going. Jobs? Yes. Sports? Yes. Cars? Yes. Fishing, hunting, golf? Yes. But their feelings? Rarely.
Women do it all of the time. …”

>Kevin Perry

>

“Saiou ga uma” is a Japanese phrase that means “Saiou’s horse.” It’s an abbreviation of “Ningen banji saiou ga uma,” by which a famous Japanese proverb is known.
The literal translation is “All human affairs are like Saiou’s horse”. It basically means you can never really know what will prove to be “good” or “bad”. The meaning came from a Chinese folk tale about an old man called Sai. Here’s the story:
Once upon a time, an old man, Sai, lived near the Chinese Northern Fort. One day his horse ran away. His neighbors commiserated with him over his misfortune, but Sai said “How do you know this is not really good luck?”.
A few days later the horse returned, bringing another horse with it. When his neighbors congratulated him on his good luck, the old man said “How do you know this is really good luck?”
Sure enough, some while later Sai’s son fell while riding the horse, and broke his leg. The neighbors called it a misfortune.
But it turned out to be good fortune when all the young men of the village were ordered to join the Emperor’s army. Sai’s son didn’t have to go because he had a broken leg.
Psychologists call this reframing. When you take an event and view it from slightly different circumstances, its meaning can change dramatically.

>Marisol Valles Garcia

>

We had a beautiful idea. That’s why I accepted the job.
We wanted to re-establish people’s confidence in the police.
Yes, there is fear.
It’s like all human beings. There will always be fear, but what we want to achieve in our municipality is tranquility and security.
We were helping the people they were recruiting from.
I don’t think they liked that. We were trying to help them make a better life.
I thought we made it clear to the drug cartels, we were going to be focused on social issues.
We weren’t going to attack them. That was the job of the state and federal police.
I came here for the security my country cannot provide for me.
The fear will never go away. What I experienced is a fear that will last a lifetime.

平井憲夫

 話が一通り終わったので、私が質問はありませんかというと、中学二年の女の子が泣きながら手を挙げて、こういうことを言いました。
 「今夜この会場に集まっている大人たちは、大ウソつきのええかっこしばっかりだ。私はその顔を見に来たんだ。どんな顔をして来ているのかと。今の大人たち、特にここにいる大人たちは農薬問題、ゴルフ場問題、原発問題、何かと言えば子どもたちのためにと言って、運動するふりばかりしている。私は泊原発のすぐ近くの共和町に住んで、二四時間被曝している。原子力発電所の周辺、イギリスのセラフィールドで白血病の子どもが生まれる確率が高いというのは、本を読んで知っている。私も女の子です。年頃になったら結婚もするでしょう。私、子ども生んでも大丈夫なんですか?」と、泣きながら三百人の大人たちに聞いているのです。でも、誰も答えてあげられない。
 「原発がそんなに大変なものなら、今頃でなくて、なぜ最初に造るときに一生懸命反対してくれなかったのか。まして、ここに来ている大人たちは、二号機も造らせたじゃないのか。たとえ電気がなくなってもいいから、私は原発はいやだ」と。ちょうど、泊原発の二号機が試運転に入った時だったんです。
 「何で、今になってこういう集会しているのか分からない。私が大人で子どもがいたら、命懸けで体を張ってでも原発を止めている」と言う。
 「二基目が出来て、今までの倍私は放射能を浴びている。でも私は北海道から逃げない」って、泣きながら訴えました。
 私が「そういう悩みをお母さんや先生に話したことがあるの」と聞きましたら、「この会場には先生やお母さんも来ている、でも、話したことはない」と言います。「女の子同志ではいつもその話をしている。結婚もできない、子どもも産めない」って。
 担任の先生たちも、今の生徒たちがそういう悩みを抱えていることを少しも知らなかったそうです。

>DeeAnne White

>

My grandfather used to say that we were born as smart as we’d ever be, and that we became less bright with age. I never understood what he meant, until today.
You see, when we’re born we see the world in an uncomplicated way. We know what we need, and we ask for it. We like nice people, and we don’t like mean people. We sleep when we’re tired, we eat when we’re hungry, and we stop eating when we’re full.
As we grow older, we eat and drink to console ourselves, rather than addressing what’s bothering us. We overwork to avoid close relationships, rather than finding people we can trust to form strong bonds with. We hold grudges, play games, spend more than we make, want things we don’t need, and we get too far away from our basic human needs. In other words, we complicate things.
Today, on what would have been my grandfather’s 88th birthday, I dedicate this list to my Papa. Thank you for everything. I finally get it.
1. Don’t try to read other people’s minds
7. Don’t try to be friends with everyone. Cultivate closer relationships with fewer people.
99. Stretch every day
100. If a relationship is over, let it go

>Steve Biddulph

>

Most men don’t have a life. Instead we have an act, an outer show, kept up for protection. We pretend things are fine, that everything is cool, and sometimes we even fool ourselves. But ask a man how he really thinks, and the first thing he thinks is “What am I supposed to say?” The average man today is deeply unhappy, but he would be the last to admit it.
Most women are not like this. Women today act from inner feeling and spirit, and more and more they know who they are and what they want. The Women’s Movement helped this along, but women were always more in touch with themselves and each other. The men in relationships with these strong and healthy women are no match for them, in every sense of that word. Conversations go nowhere, and relationships collapse, because to be in a relationship, you have first to know who you are, and the man does not have this worked out.

>google.com

>

A
B
C
D
E
F
G
for aol
for best buy
for craigslist
for dictionary    
for ebay
for facebook
for gmail
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
for hotmail    
for ikea
for jet blue    
for kayak
for lirr
for mapquest    
for netflix
O
P
Q
R
S
T
for old navy
for pandora    
for qwop
for run
for skype
for target
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
for usps
for verizon    
for weather
for xbox
for youtube
for zappos

>原子力安全委員会

>

原子力安全委員会の対応
原子力安全委員会委員長は、官邸で開催された第11回原子力災害対策本部に出席した。(3/21)
原子力安全委員会委員長は、官邸で開催された第10回原子力災害対策本部に出席した。(3/17)
原子力安全委員会委員長は、官邸で開催された第9回原子力災害対策本部に出席した。(3/16)
原子力安全委員会委員長は、官邸で開催された第8回原子力災害対策本部に出席した。(3/15)
原子力安全委員会委員長は、官邸で開催された第7回原子力災害対策本部に出席した。(3/14)
原子力安全委員会委員長は、官邸で開催された第6回原子力災害対策本部に出席した。(3/13)
原子力安全委員会委員長は、官邸で開催された第5回原子力災害対策本部に出席した。(3/13)
原子力安全委員会委員長は、官邸で開催された第4回原子力災害対策本部に出席した。(3/12)
原子力安全委員会委員長は、官邸で開催された第3回原子力災害対策本部に出席した。(3/12)
原子力安全委員会委員長代理は、官邸で開催された第2回原子力災害対策本部に。。。(3/12)
原子力安全委員会委員長は、総理大臣の現地視察に同行した。(3/12)
原子力安全委員会委員長は、官邸で開催された第1回原子力災害対策本部に出席した。(3/11)

>David Goldman

>

Google’s recent change to its search algorithm has dramatically shaken up the businesses of websites that moved up or down its search rankings. Sites whose rankings rose to the top found that their traffic and revenue soared — but the adjustment had an equally devastating effect on those that were dropped.
The Online Publishers Association, a group of content producers comprising many of the Internet’s largest properties (including CNN.com), estimates that the algorithm change shifted $1 billion in annual revenue.
Some of the losers felt the hit immediately. Mahalo.com laid off 10% of its workforce last week thanks to what CEO Jason Calacanis called “a significant dip in our traffic and revenue.”
The stakes are high in the Google-placement game. The top spot on a search page typically attracts 20% to 30% of the page’s clicks, according to Adam Bunn, SEO director of Greenlight. After that comes an enormous tail-off: Positions 2 to 3 generate 5% to 10% of the clicks, and links below the fold receive less than 1% of users’ attention. Fall off to the second page and your search-engine-driven clicks will be negligible.

>Jerry Haber

>

Thank you, Mr. President, for vetoing the UN Security Counsel Resolution condemning the Israeli settlements as illegal.

Thank you for making America the only country in the world to support Israel on this matter.

Thank you for contradicting long-standing US policy on the settlements.

Thank you for not abstaining on this vote – which is what the US has done in the past.

Thank you for talking the talk on settlements but not walking the walk.

Thank you for allowing Israel to say, as it always does, “We and the US have disagreements on various items, but our bond is strong.”

Thank you for doing nothing about the biggest settlement activity within East Jerusalem in over forty-three years.

Thank you for undermining the PA and Abu Mazen.

Thank you for showing the Palestinian people how much – or how little – you can be relied upon.

Thank you for holding the Palestinians hostage to a non-existent (fortunately) peace process.

Thank you for allowing Israel to kill any chance of a two-state solution.

Thank you for making the United States irrelevant in the Middle East.

And Shabbat Shalom from your neighbor up 16th Street.

>Kerry Magruder, JoAnn Palmeri

>

Why do we use Wikipedia? Should you?

… we frequently link to Wikipedia for background information on an author or topic in the history of science. This practice is subject to some controversy, so this post will explain why we do so.

We will also distinguish between sources appropriate for original research and the use of Wikipedia as a ready reference.

… external links should not be taken as an endorsement of the content you find at Wikipedia or any other external website. Wikipedia articles are of markedly uneven quality, and even when Wikipedia is at its best, there is a difference between setting context with background knowledge (where a general, non-professional source like Wikipedia is appropriate) and conducting actual research in the history of science. For the latter, reliable professional secondary sources are required such as you will find with the aid of reference works like the Isis Bibliography for the History of Science, the Dictionary of Scientific Biography, and other reference resources. We link to Wikipedia for background knowledge; we will point you to reliable professional sources when you are doing research.

Wikipedia remains useful for obtaining general background information as a springboard for research (it is not a substitute for research). It is easily accessible, and often the most informative ready reference on the web. Consult it to get your bearings, but then guide your actual research by relying upon the professional literature. Go beyond where Wikipedia leaves off. At a bare minimum, independently verify anything you use from Wikipedia. And as always, if you use it, cite it.

>Patricia Galagan

>

Collecting knowledge is the easy part of knowledge management. We’re not constrained by information, we are constrained by sense making … what to do with the information.
Knowledge management processes:
  • Generating new knowledge.
  • Accessing knowledge from external sources.
  • Representing knowledge in documents, databases, software and so forth.
  • Embedding knowledge in processes, products, or services.
  • Transferring existing knowledge around an organization.
  • Using accessible knowledge in decision-making.
  • Facilitating knowledge growth through culture and incentives.
  • Measuring the value of knowledge assets and the impact of knowledge management.

>コンスタンス

>

もし、現在の人類統計比率をきちんと盛り込んで、全世界を100人の村に縮小するとどうなるでしょう。その村には、
  • 57人のアジア人、21人のヨーロッパ人、14人の南北アメリカ人、8人のアフリカ人がいます。
  • 52人が女性で、48人が男性です。
  • 70人が有色人種で、30人が白人。
  • 70人がキリスト教以外の人で、30人がキリスト教。
  • 89人が異性愛者で、11人が同性愛者。
  • 6人が全世界の富の59%を所有し、その6人ともがアメリカ国籍。
  • 80人は標準以下の居住環境に住み、70人は文字が読めません。
  • 50人は栄養失調に苦しみ、1人が瀕死の状態にあり、1人はいま、生まれようとしています。
  • 1人は(そうたった1人)は大学の教育を受け、そしてたった1人だけがコンピューターを所有しています。

>Генрих Сапгир

>

Рано-рано
Выпал снег.
Удивился человек:
«Это снег?
Не может быть.
На дворе?
Не может быть!
В октябре?!
Не может быть!!!
Неужели это снег?» —
Не поверил человек.

>Nam Le

>

It always struck me how everything seemed larger in scale on Summit Street: the double-storied houses, their smooth lawns sloping down to the sidewalks like golf greens; elm trees with high, thick branches — the sort of branches from which I imagined fathers suspending long-roped swings for daughters in white dresses. The leaves, once golden and red, were turning brown, dark orange. The rain had stopped. I don’t know why, but we walked in the middle of the road, dark asphalt gleaming beneath the slick, pasted leaves like the back of a whale.

>James Blunt

>

you’re beautiful, you’re beautiful
you’re beautiful, it’s true
I saw your face in a crowded place
and I don’t know what to do
’cause I’ll never be with you
but it’s time to face the truth
I will never be with you

Nancy Evans

Pictures from the mid-1960s Lunar Orbiter program lay forgotten for decades.
Nancy Evans was at her desk when a clerk walked into her office, asking what he should do with data tapes that had been released from storage.
“What do you usually do with things like that?” she asked.
“We usually destroy them,” he replied.

“I could not morally get rid of this stuff,” said Evans.

李宇春

不该往下走 虽然我要走的方向
你刚好也一样的逞强
我们都默许
太远的烦恼现在暂时不想
可是又怎样
爱情不是想象的模样