buchino

Shortform bloggestry by Michael Buchino. Check out Beard Revue, follow me on Twitter at buchino or Gmail me at michaelbuchino.

November 8, 2009 at 1:22am
0 notes

Building a Better Lightbulb →

The U.S. Department of Energy is offering $10 million to the first individual or company to develop an energy-efficient LED replacement for the standard 60-watt incandescent bulb. DOE lighting program manager James Brodrick discusses the L Prize, and what makes a better bulb.

{ Listen | NPR }

November 7, 2009 at 1:50pm
2 notes
reblogged from lordkitchenersvalet
They look like cartoon characters.
(via lordkitchenersvalet)

They look like cartoon characters.

(via lordkitchenersvalet)

8:00am
20 notes
reblogged from theoriginaljoefisher
Don’t let breast cancer steal second base.
(via timfsbrown, theoriginaljoefisher)

Don’t let breast cancer steal second base.

(via timfsbrowntheoriginaljoefisher)

November 6, 2009 at 8:36pm
4 notes

Jon Stewart is Glen Beck

This is awesome.

7:09pm
34 notes
reblogged from azspot

Capitalism's Fundamental Flaw →

But there is another less obvious bug in capitalism that I don’t believe regulation can quite handle. It is the fundamental flaw that our celebrated system rewards speculators much more than creators. A relatively junior hedge-fund manager or a bond trader on Wall Street makes a great deal more money in his career than Charles Kao, who invented the basic physics making optical communication a reality. Dr. Kao, now 73, won the Nobel Prize this year, but his net worth would not compare favorably with that of George Soros.

Yet, who added the real value? Soros or Kao?

In 2009, 30 million people sit unemployed in America. Yet, the speculators have managed to lift the stock market up, and the media pretends that we’re having a recovery.

We’re not having any recovery. We need the innovators, the entrepreneurs, the creators, the scientists, the technologists—those who build value, those who create jobs—to lead us out of this nightmare. Not a bunch of speculators who make money regardless of whether value gets created or destroyed. In fact, many of them are incentivized to destroy value by spreading fake rumors about companies and stocks, and they do so often. Some get caught, most don’t.

And our talented youth gets seduced by this profession of speculation known for its easy and abundantly flowing financial rewards, avoiding those that require much greater intellectual capacity. Most importantly, very early in their lives, our talented youth come to realize that fields that may earn them a Nobel Prize—cancer research or multi-core computing—may not make them rich. But moving money from here to there will.

And thus, we lose Berkeley Ph.Ds in nuclear physics to hedge funds and MIT computer scientists capable of delivering computing to 6 billion people to derivative manipulation on Wall Street.

(via azspot)

1:29pm
115 notes
reblogged from langer
The guys in the office knew I was freaking out about turning thirty, so they got me a birthday cake in hexadecimal to help soften the blow. 
(via langer)

The guys in the office knew I was freaking out about turning thirty, so they got me a birthday cake in hexadecimal to help soften the blow.

(via langer)

12:52pm
17 notes
reblogged from lkm

Remember when Timothy McVeigh blew up Oklahoma City and 80% of the news was about him being a Christian? Yeah, me neither.

— Twitter / Mike Monteiro (via lkmchartier)