| Interesting reads Jan. 20, 2008 |
[Jan. 20th, 2008|03:19 pm] |
My Sunday reading habit is to work through the N&O in print and Washington Post and New York Times. Between Twitter, email newsletters and RSS feeds from the later two publications, I'll easily open about 20 browser tabs.
It struck me this morning that I was going to have a lot of material and material to write up from yesterday's NC Science Blogging conference, far more than I simply wanted to leave to Twitter.
"We're servants of our overload [1]" N&O ideas columnist J. Pedar Zane writes about the decline of capital 'R' Reading:
Start with books. Recent surveys show that fewer than half of all Americans read at least one work of fiction for pleasure each year. The decline is especially pronounced among teenagers. Many factors have contributed to the trend, but the rise of the Internet is clearly a chief culprit.
...
My guess is that the average American reads more words in a week than our ancestors read in a month. It's just that we're not reading books.
Steve Jobs says the number is around 40 percent. But where is that figure coming from?
- Half of Japan's top ten bestsellers started off as cellphone novels.
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The New York Times on the NFL's "air it out" 2007 season:
This was the year of the pass, when 3 yards and a cloud of dust gave way to the three-step drop. In one game of their undefeated season, the Patriots, who until this season featured a balanced offense, ran only twice in the first half. Seven quarterbacks threw for more than 4,000 yards this season, more than ever before, and two of them — New England's Tom Brady and Green Bay's Brett Favre — take their teams into Sunday’s conference championship games as favorites.
Bill Walsh's legacy, perhaps? Remember when the 49ers lined up with Joe Montana [2] under center and had Jerry Rice, John Taylor, Roger Craig, Tom Rathman and Brent Jones and they could all catch passes?
- The Senate is considering legislation that would force the FDA to require special labeling for cloned food. Short of that, consumer groups want allowance for labeling food as "clone-free." Interestingly, the Washington Post article says the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture has to help get cloned food to market.
- Disclosure
- Though Joe Cool is dear to the hearts of every 49ers fan, I liked Steve Young better, possibly because I remember more of watching Young play than Montana.
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| Comments: |
I pretty much spend 80-90% of my day either reading my e-mail, some design document, or someone's blog. I probably read a novel a day, maybe more, but I have slacked off on reading for pleasure. I'm down to less than a book a week (unless it's the new John Ringo, in which case I'm up until 3am finishing it), but it's not like I'm reading less . . just differently. I've also started to read more on-line fiction. There are some amazing talents (like Cheeseburger Brown ( http://cheeseburgerbrown.blogspot.com/) who rocks the serial sci-fi) that I would never have discovered except for the web. I do wonder if the web might increase acceptance of reading as a passtime, if we can get over the ADD that it causes. I blame the schools, though. By insisting on hard to read "literature", I think they tend to permanently turn off young readers. If I though every novel was going to be as dull "The Great Gatsby" and that I'd have to be searching for subtext to figure out what it meant, I don't think I'd be much of a reader. I've heard some schools teach Orson Scott Card's "Enders Game" - Don't we have more approachable novels that can not only teach, but make life long readers of our kids? | |