Tweet TweetTy and Dan talk with Chip Patterson from CBSSports.com about a range of spring storylines from North Carolina State to Washington State, the reality of being a rival college football podcaster, the career of Jonathan Taylor Thomas, and the
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With Spring Wide Open (4/1) â The Solid Verbal: Living College Football
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»Wohn-Serie - Teil 1 - Veraendertes Wohnen« herunterladen
Wohnen ist ein umkämpftes Gut. Das zeigt sich materiell bei Zwangsräumungen, aber auch auf dem knappen Wohnungsmarkt. Im ersten Teil der Serie
http://detektor.fm/wirtschaft/netto-kalt-teil-1-wohnen-im-wandel-der-zeit/
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»Wohn-Serie - Einleitungsstueck« herunterladen
Wohnen ist ein umkämpftes Gut. Das zeigt sich materiell bei Zwangsräumungen, aber auch auf dem knappen Wohnungsmarkt. Im ersten Teil der Serie
http://detektor.fm/wirtschaft/netto-kalt-teil-1-wohnen-im-wandel-der-zeit/
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War Games and Armageddon | Tim Harford Pop-Up Economics (BBC)
Episode 3. Tim Harford tells the story of Thomas Schelling, an economist who helped America and the Soviet Union to avoid nuclear war.
Tagged with bbc radio economics tim hartford thomas schelling cold war
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The Pragmatic Bookshelf | Johanna Rothman on how to “Manage It”
Books, screencasts, forums, articles, and more, all aimed at helping software developers get better and have more fun. Our titles are available on paper and electronically, and all our ebooks are DRM-free. Enjoy!
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The Pragmatic Bookshelf | Andy Hunt on Pragmatic Wetware
Books, screencasts, forums, articles, and more, all aimed at helping software developers get better and have more fun. Our titles are available on paper and electronically, and all our ebooks are DRM-free. Enjoy!
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The Pragmatic Bookshelf | Johanna Rothman Interview, with Ian Dees
Books, screencasts, forums, articles, and more, all aimed at helping software developers get better and have more fun. Our titles are available on paper and electronically, and all our ebooks are DRM-free. Enjoy!
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Rippin’ the Rainbow a New One
We tear into this show with a dark scene from 1665. A young Isaac Newton, hoping to ride out the plague by heading to the country to puzzle over the deep mysteries of the universe, finds himself wondering about light. And vision. He wants to get to the bottom of where color comes from—is it a physical property in the outside world, or something created back inside your eyeball somewhere? James Gleick explains how Newton unlocked the mystery of the rainbow. And, as Victoria Finlay tells us, sucked the poetry out of the heavens.
Jonah Lehrer restores some of the lost magic by way of Goethe—who turned a simple observation into a deep thought: even though color starts in the physical world, it is finished in our minds.
Which, thanks to Mark Changizi, brings us to a very serious question: what do dogs see when they look at the rainbow? We humans see seven colors: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet (ROYGBiV!). But as Thomas Cronin and Jay Neitz—two guys who study vision—explain, that’s just a sliver of the spectrum. Along the way, we get some help imagining the rainbow from a choir, and we meet this little sea creature, who with 16 color receptors, blows the rest of us earthlings out of the water:
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How To Create A Life Plan
Michael Hyattâs thoughts on leading with purpose, personal productivity, book publishing, and social media.
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Culture Digitally the Podcast Episode 3: Conversations on Algorithms and Cultural Production // Culture Digitally
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