…and suicide. This isn’t just a problem for the IT industry — we see it in space as well. Of course, as some have theorized, it’s possible that more people are being born this way, since the Silicon Valley culture over the past decades has allowed more of them to socialize together and mate with each other, opportunities that were more rare in a less mobile era that didn’t concentrate geeks to the same degree. We need to help the Asbergers-afflicted more as a society (no, I don’t mean government programs). As the article points out, many believe (including me) that they have advanced us greatly in not just computer technology, but tech in general, but they often pay a price in being social pariahs.
Category Archives: Business
Lessons Learned From FDR
…the wrong ones.
The Future In Space
…is bright, with the end of the Shuttle.
Be Careful Today And Tonight
…billions may die. Sorry, when you believe wacky stuff, you don’t get points for earnestness.
The Tyranny Of The EPA
I hope that the SCOTUS slaps down the Ninth Circuit. If could be a major blow for freedom.
Why Would You Go?
How do you convince the twentieth generation of space colonists to leave earth?
[Update a few minutes later]
Slightly related: Charles Krauthammer wonders if we’re alone in the universe. I disagree with him, though, that politics is the driver of human history. Technology plays at least as large a role.
Nine Easy Charts
…that summarize 2011, econcomically.
A Reprieve For California Drivers
A federal judge has blocked implementation of the state’s idiotic carbon law.
Repo Men
A depressing description of how Wall Street bought the Congress and the White House for pennies on the dollar:
…the real bonus turned out to be Treasury secretary Tim Geithner, who came up through the ranks as part of the bipartisan Robert Rubin–Hank Paulson–Citigroup–Goldman Sachs cabal. Geithner, a government-and-academe man from way back, never really worked on Wall Street, though he once was offered a gig as CEO of Citigroup, which apparently thought he did an outstanding job as chairman of the New York Fed, where one of his main tasks was regulating Citigroup — until it collapsed into the yawning suckhole of its own cavernous ineptitude, at which point Geithner’s main job became shoveling tens of billions of federal dollars into Citigroup, in an ingeniously structured investment that allowed the government to buy a 27 percent share in the bank, for which it paid more than the entire market value of the bank. If you can’t figure out why you’d pay 100-plus percent of a bank’s value for 27 percent of it, then you just don’t understand high finance or high politics.
It’s long, but read the whole thing.
Ballooning Is Not Spaceflight
Jeff Foust has to explain this to The New Scientist.