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Newsweek’s Daniel Gross explains the Consumer Price Index (here’s the official BLS site) in a very simple video. I could do without the goofy sound effects, but it’s a good, 2 minute explanation of how the government tracks inflation.

Per David Simon’s Berkeley talk, though, the video doesn’t go into why this matters. Perhaps they’ll cover that in the next installment of the Economics 101 series.

(via @newsweek, Newsweek’s Twitter feed)

2:42 pm | leave a comment
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Man, that was some finish! After a really boring game for 3 quarters, the final 10 minutes were un-freaking-believable.

I’m glad that Brady got shut down. He showed, once again, that even a little bit of pressure in his face will make him an average quarterback. He also showed that he doesn’t have the arm to throw to Moss. That last deep play where the ball went off of Moss’s hands… another yard further on the throw and Moss is home free, TD, Pats win. Tom Terrific is human after all.

He’s still a great QB, and the 2007 Pats will go down as one of the best teams in history. Let’s be honest though. The defense was overrated. The offense was the difference, but the Giants blitzing scheme was a great match for it. After watching the Eagles nearly pull of the upset of the century, I had the Giants circled as the only team that could shut down the Brady/Moss offense.

Even then, though, I thought the Pats had this one in the bag. Never would’ve predicted a Giants win.

Another thing: that catch by David Tyree after Manning somehow escaped the Pats rush… man, that’s why I watch sports. Great finish. Congrats New York Giants!

BTW, did anyone see Tom Brady congratulate Eli Manning after the game? Or was he still a classless jerk at the end?

11:46 pm | 6 comments

And these are only the top 10… there are probably dozens more.

9:15 pm | leave a comment

If I had to characterize the themes of my year-end giving, it would be the following:

  • Civil Liberties Organizations (EFF, ACLU)
  • Third world development (Kiva, OLPC)
  • Independent culture & entertainment (NPR, Real Art Ways)

It helps having these themes because it helps me think of other places where I can give time or money. For example, the One Laptop Per Child Project (OLPC) is new this year. It combines my love of technology with a good program that is doing some good out in the world. If you aren’t familiar with OLPC, here’s how they describe their mission:

It’s not a laptop project. It’s an education project.

In 2002, MIT Professor Nicholas Negroponte experienced first-hand how connected laptops transformed the lives of children and their families in a remote Cambodian village. A seed was planted: If every child in the world had access to a computer, what potential could be unlocked? What problems could be solved? These questions eventually led to the foundation of One Laptop per Child, and the creation of the XO laptop.

If you’re still looking for ideas, OLPC is doing a great program this year to encourage giving, their Give One, Get One program. Basically, donate $400 which will send one laptop to a child in Afghanistan, Cambodia, Haiti, Mongolia, or Rwanda and send you one laptop for a child (or hacker) in your life. On top of that, T-Mobile is offering free T-Mobile HotSpot access for one year to anyone who gives through the Give One, Get One program. It’s like donating to a charity but with benefits to you, too.

Heidi and I debated this for a while (normally donating $400 would give two laptops out rather than one), and ultimately the T-Mobile HotSpot access swung me toward this program rather than just simply giving $400.

A little consumerism, yes, but I really do want to support the program. Next year, we’ll go for the simply giving option.

If OLPC isn’t for you, make your own themes and donate what you can to those programs. Even small donations can make a big difference when they’re aggregated together.

10:55 pm | 1 comment

This makes me proud of my team and the teams I work with at ESPN.com:

DraftCast Screenshot

Considering the asynchronous nature of the Internet, to have two computers within about a half-second using the TCP-based protocol (we’re not doing what video games do) we use is pretty amazing. This is pretty cool.

Even better (though unfair in this test), is the fact that we’re ahead of TV. We’re probably actually closely in sync with TV, as I’m watching on my Slingbox which adds a few seconds of latency.

3:13 pm | leave a comment