The “Man Tax”
I had to read the Reuters story twice just to make sure that the “man tax” was for real. Sure enough, “A group of Swedish parliamentarians has proposed levying a “man tax” to cover the social cost of violence against
Technology & Society
I had to read the Reuters story twice just to make sure that the “man tax” was for real. Sure enough, “A group of Swedish parliamentarians has proposed levying a “man tax” to cover the social cost of violence against
Read all about it here.
Here’s my column on VoIP from last week.
I’m at the Telecosm conference in Tahoe — a great group of people who are really interested in ideas. This morning Steve Forbes spoke on the cancers of capitalism which include trial lawyers, protectionism, and trade barriers. He also said
I’m at the Telecom 04 conference in Vegas this week. It’s a huge conference with tons of exhibits and technologies on display. A cool one I saw this morning was a DSLAM — DSL access multiplexer — in a fish
PRI hosted an event last Friday where author Virginia Postrel spoke about her new book The Substance of Style. The main thesis is that style is more important to the marketplace than most people realize. The value comes from the
Here’s my column from last Friday on why the California stem cell initiative is flawed.
It’s always somewhat precarious to make predictions about political outcomes, but tonight I got some very interesting information. My mother, a liberal who believes in government-sponsored universal health care, says that she thinks Bush will (and should) win. Kerry and
Dick Cheney did a great job last night reminding viewers that the adults are currently in office. John Edwards, on the other hand, was nervous and kept saying “The American People” over and over. For a hilarious take on Edward’s
The California PUC is supposed to help consumers get better telecom services, but instead it appears to be holding back investment. Here’s an excerpt from a recent column I wrote about it: As a result of the PUC’s action, Verizon
Nothing all that exciting happened in the debates last night as far as I’m concerned. It was, however, a warning for Bush that he needs to take his opponent a little more seriously. Bush seemed unprepared and petulant last night.
Well, it finally happened. Ah-nold just signed the one bill that has completely annoyed me all session — John Burton’s foie gras bill. The legislation makes the production and sale of foie gras illegal if it’s made through force-feeding ducks.
Just when you thought you were caught up on all the acronyms for unwanted messages, here comes another. Spam is of course unwanted email, Spim is spam over instant messaging, and Spit (yes, that’s right, Spit) is spam over Internet
See my column on it here.
How about a cell phone to tell you when your breath smells bad? It can also meaure alcohol levels. Here’s the story (scroll down a bit).
Here’s my coloumn in TNW today urging government to stay out of designing technology.
Here’s an interesting piece on Déjà Vu in the NYT.
The folks over at the AEI-Brookings Joint Center have released a study arguing that cell phone driving is more dangerous than drunk driving. An argument for restricting cell phone use or legalizing drunk driving? You decide.
This is really amazing. A German who had his lower jaw cut out because of cancer has enjoyed his first meal in nine years — a bratwurst sandwich — after surgeons grew a new jaw bone in his back muscle