How to do a Marketing Plan for a Marina
Monday, November 15, 2010
What's Payback Period?
Basics of Accounting Lessons- Payback Period
Related:
Solar Panels Payback Period
Payback period intuitively measures how long something takes to "pay for itself."
Related:
Solar Panels Payback Period
Labels:
Accountancy,
Basics,
Finance,
For Dummies,
How To,
Lesson Plans,
Multimedia
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Sunday, September 5, 2010
Monday, August 9, 2010
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Friday, July 23, 2010
Cantor, Boltzmann, Gödel and Turing
In this one-off documentary, David Malone looks at four brilliant mathematicians - Georg Cantor, Ludwig Boltzmann, Kurt Gödel and Alan Turing - whose genius has profoundly affected us, but which tragically drove them insane and eventually led to them all committing suicide.
Labels:
Documentaries,
History,
Multimedia,
Philosophy,
Profiles,
Science,
Spirituality
India's answer to MIT OpenCourseWare?
Excellent set of videos from Indian IITs- National Programme on Technology Enhanced Learning.
Basics in Mathematics, Science and Engineering
Management Information System
Leadership
Management Science I
Mathematics 01 (Rating 10 out of 10)
Link to YouTube channel
Basics in Mathematics, Science and Engineering
Management Information System
Leadership
Management Science I
Mathematics 01 (Rating 10 out of 10)
Link to YouTube channel
Labels:
Basics,
Engineering,
India,
Management,
OpenCourseWare,
Science
Thursday, July 22, 2010
The Creator of THE 99- Comics for Tolerance
Dr. Naif A. Al-Mutawa
I grew up in a part of the world where George Orwell's Animal Farm was banned. It was also banned in the former Soviet Union. The Kremlin banned it because as a totalitarian regime, it did not want democratic messages to be spread within its borders. The censors in the USSR chose to go beneath the surface of the allegory, understand the message in the book and ban it accordingly. In my neck of the desert, it was banned because there was a pig on the cover. Go figure.
The Holy Qur'an was revealed in an Arabia that was alive with the richness of Jahiliya (pre-Islamic) period poetry. The miracle of the Qur'an was not only in its message, but also in the complexity of the syntax used to communicate that message. Its prose is unmatched in the history of the Arabic language. It is an absolute shame that the Qur'an continues to be held hostage by those who favour the idolatry of words over the depth of their meaning and the elasticity of the human intellect.
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Sunday, July 18, 2010
Friday, July 16, 2010
First the Grip, Ready Position, Footwork, and then the Strokes
Badminton Tip of the Day;
The most important skill to learn for beginners is the grip. This is the fundamental to stroke selection and the direction/trajectory of the shuttlecock. After the grip, the ready position. After that is the basic footwork to 4 corners and the return to the centre base. Lastly is the strokes.via blog Badminton Research
But the technical skill of badminton takes years to learn. There are many scenarios, shot selection, guile, movements and most important maintaining dynamic balance, to be able to retrieve any shots quickly.
Monday, July 5, 2010
Artist of the Day - Norman Rockwell, the Buddhist Painter !
Norman Rockwell;
“To me the most important part of Rockwell’s work is that it illustrates compassion and caring about other people,” the filmmaker George Lucas, who lives in Marin County, Calif., said recently. “You could almost say he was a Buddhist painter.”
Sunday, June 27, 2010
Friday, June 25, 2010
Effective Collaboration with Google Wave
The Educator’s Guide to Google Wave
Using Google Wave in the Foreign Language Classroom
Google Wave Available for Everyone
Google Wave Available for Teachers in Thailand
Using Google Wave in the Foreign Language Classroom
Google Wave Available for Everyone
Google Wave Available for Teachers in Thailand
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
We have competition!
The most popular educator on YouTube does not have a Ph.D. He has never taught at a college or university. And he delivers all of his lectures from a bedroom closet.-College 2.0: A Self-Appointed Teacher Runs a One-Man 'Academy' on YouTube
This upstart is Salman Khan, a 33-year-old who quit his job as a financial analyst to spend more time making homemade lecture videos in his home studio. His unusual teaching materials started as a way to tutor his faraway cousins, but his lectures have grown into an online phenomenon—and a kind of protest against what he sees as a flawed educational system.
"My single biggest goal is to try to deliver things the way I wish they were delivered to me," he told me recently.
Saturday, June 12, 2010
I envy the Accountants
An interesting source of free accounting resources- Open Tuition;
Our site was officially launched on 12 February 2008. At the moment we feature free materials for ACCA, AAT and also free Accountancy tutorials for Non-Accountants.
OpenTuition.com is dedicated to providing all accountancy students throughout the world with the resources they need to study for the major accountancy qualifications, completely free of charge. Providing high quality study materials, believing that your success is our success!
Thursday, May 20, 2010
Saturday, May 15, 2010
The Charms of Mathematics and Assorted
Random OCW course- The World of Mathematics, Tokyo University
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Business Idea of the Day
very, very rich people stay in reasonably small spaces on luxury yachts, and very, very rich people travel in extremely small spaces on Learjets
-Cool Minimalist Hotels
Saturday, April 17, 2010
William Farr- the inventor of medical statistics?
In 1858, a British epidemiologist named William Farr set out to study what he called the “conjugal condition” of the people of France. He divided the adult population into three distinct categories: the “married,” consisting of husbands and wives; the “celibate,” defined as the bachelors and spinsters who had never married; and finally the “widowed,” those who had experienced the death of a spouse. Using birth, death and marriage records, Farr analyzed the relative mortality rates of the three groups at various ages. The work, a groundbreaking study that helped establish the field of medical statistics, showed that the unmarried died from disease “in undue proportion” to their married counterparts. And the widowed, Farr found, fared worst of all.
Farr’s was among the first scholarly works to suggest that there is a health advantage to marriage and to identify marital loss as a significant risk factor for poor health. Married people, the data seemed to show, lived longer, healthier lives. “Marriage is a healthy estate,” Farr concluded. “The single individual is more likely to be wrecked on his voyage than the lives joined together in matrimony.”
While Farr’s own study is no longer relevant to the social realities of today’s world — his three categories exclude couples living together, gay couples and the divorced, for instance — his overarching finding about the health benefits of marriage seems to have stood the test of time. Critics, of course, have rightly cautioned about the risk of conflating correlation with causation. (Better health among the married sometimes simply reflects the fact that healthy people are more likely to get married in the first place.) But in the 150 years since Farr’s work, scientists have continued to document the “marriage advantage”: the fact that married people, on average, appear to be healthier and live longer than unmarried people.
via NYT
The following bit about him was also interesting;
There was a major outbreak of cholera in London in 1849 which killed around 15000 people. Early industrialisation had made London the most populous city in the World at the time, and the River Thames was heavily polluted with untreated sewage. Farr subscribed to the conventional theory that cholera was carried by polluted air rather than water - the miasmic theory.
As a result of studying this outbreak, the physician John Snow proposed what is now known to be the actual mechanism for transmission - that people were infected by swallowing something and that it multiplied in the intestines.
There was another epidemic in 1853, and Farr gathered statistical evidence to try to support the miasmic theory. He demonstrated statistically that cholera was spread by polluted air by showing that the likelihood of dying of the disease was linked to the height that the victims lived above the River Thames. He interpreted this as support for the miasmic theory - the air at lower altitudes being dirtier. However he also obtained details of where different water companies drew their water, and generated statistics on the number of deaths per water company. He discovered that people supplied with water from two companies in particular- the Southwark & Vauxhall and the Lambeth water companies - which drew their water directly from the Thames were particularly likely to suffer. Although he did not agree with Snow's waterborne theory, he gave him a great deal of help in collecting data to support it; in particular by providing the addresses of people who had died.
There was a further epidemic in 1866, by which time Snow had died. Farr had by now come around to believe Snow's explanation. He produced a monograph which showed that mortality was extremely high for people who drew their water from the Old Ford Reservoir in East London.
We recommend the The Ghost Map by Steven Johnson
Labels:
Applied Statistics,
Carriers,
Health_Medicine,
History,
People,
Research
Saturday, March 6, 2010
Friday, February 19, 2010
Games and Education
What will interactive electronic media mean for personal identity and society over the next hundred years?
Labels:
Big Quesitions,
Computing,
Education,
Games,
Intellectual Tresspassing,
Philosophy,
Psychology,
Quotes
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Maths Podcast of the Day
In his book The Mathematician's Apology (1941), the Cambridge mathematician GH Hardy expressed his reverence for pure maths, and celebrated its uselessness in the real world. Yet one of the branches of pure mathematics in which Hardy excelled was number theory, and it was this field which played a major role in the work of his younger colleague, Alan Turing, as he worked first to crack Nazi codes at Bletchley Park and then on one of the first computers.
Melvyn Bragg and guests explore the many surprising and completely unintended uses to which mathematical discoveries have been put.
Download the podcast
Sunday, January 10, 2010
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