Blogs

Selling Low Probability, High Impact Events

David H. Rosen's picture

Tom Friedman has an excellent column today comparing the
application of Dick Cheney's "One Percent" Doctrine on terrorism to
climate change.  As Friedman explains, the question is what to do
about potential events that are unlikely to happen, but if they do the
fallout would be catastrophic.

With that in mind, he counters about the downside if we're wrong on climate change:

First Lady to Kids: "Start Thinking About Your Future in That Way"

David H. Rosen's picture

1

There was a gem of a quote in today's NY Times coverage of the Obama's state dinner hosting India.  The First Lady, talking to some schoolchildren, said:

The Money Myth: School Resources, Outcomes, and Equity

The Money Myth: School Resources, Outcomes, and Equity by W. Norton Grubb. Russell Sage Foundation. 2009. 400 pages. $35.

Increased funding does not guarantee improved school performance, according to Berkeley education professor W. Norton Grubb in The Money Myth. Despite lavish funding, he says, many U.S. school districts lag far behind others in the quality of education they offer their students. Those students will consequently be at a steep disadvantage throughout their adult lives.

David Brooks on Americans' "Eschatological" Faith in the Future

David H. Rosen's picture

(What?  You don't know what the heck "Eschatological" means either?  Let's ask our friends at Wikipedia: 

Shuttle Launch: A Personal View from the Shore of the Earth

David H. Rosen's picture

I’ll skip the poetry and just try and convey what went
through my mind through the launch. 

 

It's Not the Shuttle Launch that Makes NASA's Tweetup a Success - It's the Right Topic + Right People

David H. Rosen's picture

Given some stereotypes of social media users (I just told
a reporter from the German Press Agency that the Star Trek ones are
true :) ) this group is not a bunch of people who prefer to stare at their
iPhones instead of making eye contact.  In fact, their most defining
characteristic is the ability to have a great conversation.  They're
interesting and interested.  Their hyper sharing online translates into
hyper helpfulness offline.  And given the friendly nature of the
technical social channels, there's much more of a "we're all in this

Space Art & Public Opinion: An Interview with Jim Plaxco

David H. Rosen's picture

Astronaut-Glory-2

Miles O'Brien on how Social Media is Beating Traditional Press at its own Game

David H. Rosen's picture

Miles O'Brien was a featured speaker at today's NASA Tweetup for STS-129.  After a terrific speech (watch it here via UStream)about how the internet has changed journalism, he was kind enough to share his thoughts with me on how the quality of information delivered via social channels can be superior to that found in traditional media.  Listen carefully because I think Miles coined a new term that should resonate in social circles...the "editorial commons." 

Massimino: From the Hubble to Craig Ferguson

David H. Rosen's picture

Astronaut Mike Massimino on the stage now...he's the first person to Tweet from space.  "That's one 140 character message for man, one giant leap for social kind."  Sorry.  Way to cheesy.  But how can you not revert to being 10 years old at something like this?  Check out the famous video of Mike fixing the Hubble, and then later on Craig Ferguson.

Syndicate content