Tag Fast Company

Is That An X-Ray Machine In Your Pocket, Or Are You Just Glad To See Me?

Fast Company reports that a comapny called Tribogenics is working on a hand-held x-ray scanner that somewhat resembles both in form and function a tricorder. The technology behind it stems from the discovery that x-rays can be generated by static electricity, making it much easier to produce them without the high-voltage equipment most hospitals use. The lower-power x-rays also significantly reduce the radiation exposure risk to anyone who operates the equipment. No commercial products yet, but this promises to be a genuinely disruptive technology when it does hit the market.

I wonder if they’ll submit it for the Tricorder Prize competition.

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More Notes On The Occupation

The above image is a reduced version of an infographic put together by Fast Company showing some of the demographic breakdown of the Occupy Wall Street cohort, which you can see at its full size here. The information comes from a survey of over 5000 people at OWS and challenges some of the right-wing talking points about the makeup of the group, though not all.

Another on-the-ground report from Occupy Boston at Political Irony.com focuses on the challenge the local organizers are having dealing with the random street people who have attached themselves to the protest, which has also become a problem in Zuccotti Park as well.

The general strike instigated in Oakland late last week did result in some violent clashes between protesters and the police, but the overall strike was not nearly as contentious as the news media reported. Dangerous Minds.com shared some photos from someone working in an office building with a prime view of the march. DM also has this first-hand report of visiting Zuccotti Park.

In my last post about OWS, I linked to a video of Slavoj Žižek speaking to the crowd, and subsequently he has expanded upon those remarks here.

Professor Juan Cole recently shared some suggestions for OWS from Kusha Sefat, an Iranian media consultant who was involved with the uprisings in that country last year over contested elections. Though I think they’ve done well to get their message out with the “99%” meme, I think Sufat’s suggestion that they start some sort of awareness campaign with a color to represent the movement is an obvious one they’ve overlooked. However, the most important one is #9: “Don’t let politicians co-opt the movement”. Barack Obama, who is Wall Street’s meat puppet, really should not be allowed to identify himself with OWS at all, and I was a little disappointed to hear Elizabeth Warren trying to take credit for OWS the other day.

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Drug Addiction For Fun And Profit

Fast Company knows you have a problem. And they want to help you. They want to help you turn your caffeine addiction into a superpower!

(I’m not so sure that’s really helping anything, frankly. And I’m not quitting coffee cold turkey for 10 days to find out, but thanks anyway, FC)

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Hey Ferb, I Know What I’m Going To Post Today!

I am a total Phineas-&-Ferb-head. Well, to be totally honest, I am mostly a fan of Dr. Doofenschmirtz, but the whole Tri-State Area Universe is really right up there in my book. When Charlotte is in control of the remote, our Reisenfernseher is almost exclusively tuned to the Disney Channel or its sister network Disney XD (with the occasional flip to Nickelodeon), which means that at any given point in the day there is a 73% chance that there’s an episode of P&F on at that very moment or starting at the next half-hour mark.

Usually the cartoon series that Disney runs suck hard in comparison to the animated shows on Nickelodeon for the simple reason that Disney HATES anything funny. A show produced by/for Disney, animated or live, is contractually obligated to use Syntho-Phunnie™, a strange amalgam of predictable and pointless with a light coating of barely-amusing. But somehow the guys who create and produce P&F were able to avoid Syntho-Phunnie™ for the most part, and, as their show has gained popularity, have made a visible effort to push the humor boundary far, far beyond anything the House of Mouse has ever permitted. At the end of the day, they still play things pretty safe compared to, say, Cartoon Network, but how can you not laugh at jokes like Doofenschmirtz inventing a product called “eulg” that makes things come apart? Or the giant floating baby head?

This Fast Company post says that the Disney people are hoping to turn P&F into the next Spongebob Squarepants by overloading every imaginable retail category with tons and tons of merchandised crap. It being a Fast Company post, this is portrayed as a Really Great Thing, but we all know better, don’t we? I mean, some amount of merchandising is inevitable when it comes to pop culture products, but just think of all the unadulterated shit that has been cranked out of Chinese slave-labor factories in the last ten years plastered with that yellow fucker’s face. If they come even half as far as that, the landfills of America will be brimming with little aqua platypuses before you know it, and soon they will have destroyed THE ENTIRE TRI-STATE AREA!!! And no amount of eulg will undo all of that.

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More Recommended Reading

Not just a gambler, he cheated too: A fan proves that Pete Rose corked his bats during his quest to become baseball’s all-time hitter. This ESPN column from last summer tries to come to terms with the reality that Charlie Hustle will never be in the Hall of Fame, but in light of this article it’s hard to justify any sympathy at all.

I was moved by this story at Salon by musician John Manchester, who is the son of the late historian William Manchester. William Manchester, who died in 2004, left instructions that his children should build a coffin for him by hand, and in this article his son writes about not just trying to figure out how to do it, but figuring out why his father wanted them to do it.

From the department of “Capitalism Destroys Everything”, this post at 3Quarks Daily by Jeff Strabone makes an observation that should seem obvious but apparently isn’t to a lot of people: the insatiable juggernaut of capitalism compels corporations to do anything and everything they can get away with under the letter of the law in order to turn a profit, so if you want to rein them in, your only recourse is to regulate the motherlovin’ shit out of them. The folly of Reaganism is the single most destructive thing that happened to the United States in the 20th Century, though it has taken these last 30 years to really bear fruit. This may be our last chance to reverse Reaganism once and for all.

The gift that keeps on giving: this Fast Company article documents the ongoing health nightmares affecting people who helped clean up the Exxon Valdez oil spill 21 years agom which are already beginning to show up in workers cleaning up along the Gulf Coast. So far the human death toll from this incident is still 11, but how many more lives will it eventually claim.

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A Smorgasbord Of Food Links


I have to admit that I do not follow Harold McGee’s posts in the New York Times Food section, even though he is probably the most important food writer going. For those of you who aren’t clued in, McGee wrote the ne plus ultra book on food science, On Food And Cooking, dispelling generations-worth of handed-down cooking lore and legend in favor of actual scientific explanation of how cooking works in terms of chemistry and physics. You can think of him as sort of the Ultimate Mythbuster of Food. So, I completely missed this post from all the way back in February ’09, wherein McGee explains that the traditional method of cooking pasta in vast amounts of water is completely unnecessary. McGee determined that you could cook an entire pound of spaghetti in as little as 1 1/2 quarts of water (as opposed to the traditional 4-6 quarts). And he didn’t wait for the water to come to a rolling boil either; he put the pasta directly in the cold water. The total cooking time was about 18-20 minutes, but that is directly comparable to the amount of time it takes to bring water to a boil AND cook the pasta in boiling water. Because the pasta needs more stirring in this method to prevent sticking, it may not be as useful to the multitasking chef, but for someone cooking a pot of spaghetti at home it is a perfectly reasonable way to work, and he says the resulting cooking water is even better for using in pasta dishes than the more diluted traditional version. Thanks a ton to Lifehacker for bringing this to everyone’s attention.


Raye’s Mustard is a product made in Eastport, Maine that probably most people outside of Maine have never heard of. In fact, I’d wager most people inside of Maine haven’t heard of it either, even though it has been around for a long time. Apparently Martha Stewart “discovered” it not too long ago (Martha owns an island off the coast of Maine and spends a lot of time there…it probably reminds her of her days in the pokey), and she still has enough juice with the foodie crowd to bump a product. This morning there’s a post on The Atlantic’s food blog by Zingerman’s co-founder Ari Weinzweig, also singing its praises, so I guess it’s as good a time as any to get in on the bandwagon. Weinzweig writes about how the Rayes produce the mustard using an actual stone mill, the last of its kind in the U.S. You might remember this post I wrote back at the end of 2008 reporting the end of traditional mustard making in Dijon, which helps underscore what marvelous things traditional handmade food products like Raye’s Mustard really are. (Unsurprisingly, Zingerman’s does indeed sell Raye’s, in case you were wondering)


Among the glut of “Best Of The Decade” articles that have inundated us all these last several weeks, Fast Company (of all places) had a post summing up what it called the “Eight Biggest Kitchen Innovations of the 2000s”. Now, usually Fast Company is more interested in social networking, green technology, and other buzzword-of-the-minute flimflammery, but that drew my attention. Sadly, the piece is one of those annoying “slideshows” that makes you reload the page every time you advance forward (all the better to collect ad revenue, my dear), and the resulting text is a little slim but here is my neat little summary list for you and some personal opinionating to go with:

  1. The turbo-oven — Yes, that thing Starbucks uses to overcook your breakfast sandwich. I’m not sure you’ll find too many $8000 turbo-ovens in home kitchens yet, but the professional models are showing up in all sorts of smaller restaurant situations that would never have sprung for the big convection ovens heavy-duty kitchens have.
  2. Vacuum sealers — Those crappy things you see on infomercials have been upgraded quite a bit in recent times. The one in the FC post is a deluxe model (natch), but a basic one can be had for about $100 according to this site. I have to say I might actually buy one of these.
  3. FreshDirect.com — A-ha! FC shows its true colors by naming a website as a “kitchen innovation”. This is a New York City-only service that lets insufferable New York foodies feel superior and sanctimonious about buying “fresh and local” produce. What bullshit!
  4. Home Molecular Gastronomy — Oh, please.
  5. Vorwerk Thermomix — a German-made überappliance that blends, steams, boils, grates, whisks, kneads, chops and has a built-in food scale all for only $1400! And you have to buy it from a Canadian website! Could it get any more trendy?!?!?! Foodies will LOVE it! WARNING: If you actually buy one of these, Alton Brown will personally come to your house and bitch-slap you.
  6. Microplane Grater — At last, an actual kitchen tool worth talking about! The fine-rasp grater was a HUGE sensation when it came out, and rightly so. This guy is the ultimate grater for Parmesan cheese, nutmeg, lemon zest, or anything else you want finely grated. I have a couple of larger-grate Microplanes as well, but this one is truly indispensible. Good call!
  7. Epicurious iPhone App — More electronica, but this one is actually pretty handy because it builds shopping lists and has a metric buttload of recipes to choose from. I don’t know if the recent demise of Gourmet magazine will doom this or not. Also, not really an “innovation”, as recipe software has let you make shopping lists for eons, but a very good portable app for the gadget-loving cook (ahem!).
  8. Tabletop Sous Vide — Professional kitchens ADORE sous-vide (but only in places where local food ordinances haven’t banned it), and if this came down a few notches in price it might catch on with home cooks, too.
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