Thinking is like loving and dying. Each of us must do it for himself” — Josiah Royce

Why Cars Are Considered Lame in Japan

Ryan Chin

PhD student at MIT Media Lab

Ryan Chin outlines the other revolutionary green vehicles under development at MIT Media Lab that have the potential to alter urban transportation.

In Science & Tech

  • Crickwatson

    Addicted to “Eureka!”

    Gregory Hannon

    The promise and thrill of discovery are what keep scientists going in spite of endless frustration. Watch

  • Taa7rib0kfapj28n5imdoxomfko-px9y
    Series

    The Future in Motion

    What if you could bid on a parking spot eBay-style? Bill Mitchell explains his plan to revolutionize urban mobility. This series is sponsored by Beyond the Edge (beyondtheedge.org). Watch

  • Picture_463

    An Ear With a View

    Marcelo Magnasco

    Our ears do more than hear. They can sense when someone is stressed, relaxed, or angry, and they can recognize the shininess of bathroom walls. Watch

Featured Blogs

Politeia

Pyramid
March 10, 2010 — 3:51 PM

How We Subsidize Obesity

Robert de Neufville

Bloggers are talking today about a striking chart comparing the foods we should be eating with the foods the government subsidizes. The chart, originally published in 2007 by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM), shows two side-by-side food pyramids. On the right is a version of the standard food pyramid, showing federal nutrition recommendations—that we should have 11 servings of grain a day, 9 servings of fruits and vegetables, 6 servings of high protein foods like meat and dairy products, and small amounts of things like sugar, oil, and salt. On the left is a pyramid showing the extent to which we subsidize each of those food groups. Read more

Trend World

Church
March 10, 2010 — 2:42 PM

How Much Does God Make Our Decisions For Us?

Tal Pinchevsky

The prevailing wisdom among millions of people on this planet is that God governs everything that happens. That idea about God has been a source of debate for some time now, but if we can’t agree on which god does what on this planet, we are starting to learn that, even if God doesn’t control the universe, He/She does govern the way we all make decisions. Read more

Focal Point

Myth_buster_blackberry_hcr
March 10, 2010 — 12:59 PM

Stupak Smoke Signals

Lindsay Beyerstein

Rep. Bart Stupak is being coy. On Monday, the anti-choice Democrat told a town hall meeting that there was "no such thing as compromise" on abortion funding under health care reform. Yet, in the next breath, he said he was "more optimistic than [he] was a week ago" that some kind of deal could be worked out.   Read more

The View From Europe

Caravaggio_bacchus
March 10, 2010 — 10:38 AM

Move Over, Michelangelo

Carrie Battan

One art historian has shown that Caravaggio (of “Bacchus” fame) now dominates the annals of Italian art instead of the world’s favorite Renaissance sculptor and painter. Read more

Resurgence

Cisco-rs1
March 10, 2010 — 2:53 AM

Cisco's New Router Precursor To Web 3.0

Kris Broughton

My soon-to-be seventy year old father called me around dinnertime on Saturday. He was having a problem adding some text to his website, he said, and wanted me to take a look at it. This is one of those rare times in our father-son relationship when he is willing to give up the position of authority and take direct instructions from his progeny. While I was fiddling with the HTML code to get the new text out of the footer of his site and into the body of the page where it belonged, he casually mentioned “I’m thinking about adding a video.” Which means that the announcement Cisco made last night about its new CRS-3 Carrier Routing system, a new generation of internet routers capable of transmitting data at three times the speed of its fastest available model, is getting here right on time. Read more

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