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Stories from July 15, 2011
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1.Is There Anything Good About Men? (fsu.edu)
333 points by simonsarris on July 15, 2011 | 223 comments
2.How to Cure Deep Procrastination (calnewport.com)
200 points by joshuacc on July 15, 2011 | 68 comments
3.Why we gave up web design after 10 successful years to move to products (silktide.com)
191 points by paulsilver on July 15, 2011 | 53 comments
4.PHP to deprecate MySQL extension (marc.info)
181 points by mildweed on July 15, 2011 | 100 comments
5."Very bold or very dumb": data caps don't apply to ISP's own movie service (arstechnica.com)
178 points by d0ne on July 15, 2011 | 89 comments
6.Dealing with Timezones in Python (pocoo.org)
158 points by samrat on July 15, 2011 | 25 comments
7.The Massive Mystery In Google's Finances (siliconvalleywatcher.com)
154 points by Straubiz on July 15, 2011 | 60 comments
8.Linus Torvalds proposes a change to the Git commit object format (spinics.net)
153 points by avar on July 15, 2011 | 45 comments
9.Founder Stories Volume 01: Slicehost (37signals.com)
150 points by davidedicillo on July 15, 2011 | 35 comments
10.Google's Android Market is crippling small development teams
142 points by CCapigami on July 15, 2011 | 77 comments
11.Italy and the euro: On the edge (economist.com)
141 points by llambda on July 15, 2011 | 105 comments
12.How To Get a Job in Japan. Or Anywhere. (makeleaps.com)
136 points by po on July 15, 2011 | 30 comments
13.IOS Integration Testing by Square (squareup.com)
133 points by sahillavingia on July 15, 2011 | 27 comments
14.What is a y-combinator? (stackoverflow.com)
128 points by lenmod on July 15, 2011 | 36 comments
15.The horrifying AAA debt-issuance chart (reuters.com)
126 points by MaysonL on July 15, 2011 | 99 comments
16.There's no speed limit (2009) (sivers.org)
118 points by chintanp on July 15, 2011 | 25 comments
17.The Singularity is Far: A Neuroscientist's View (boingboing.net)
112 points by caustic on July 15, 2011 | 83 comments

I'd say a better link is to the issue we marked 'fixed' :

http://code.google.com/p/support/issues/detail?id=2454

Or to the project creation page:

http://code.google.com/hosting/createProject

We hope you like it.

19.Oops: Microsoft accidentally reveals secret social project (venturebeat.com)
95 points by hydrazine on July 15, 2011 | 65 comments
20.Spotify vs the US Competition (like.fm)
93 points by chrischen on July 15, 2011 | 104 comments
21.Why Comcast Should Be Sued (frooglegeek.com)
91 points by d0ne on July 15, 2011 | 49 comments
22.Speed matters: how Ethernet went from 3Mbps to 100Gbps... and beyond (arstechnica.com)
90 points by mukyu on July 15, 2011 | 22 comments
23.The Smartest Man in Europe Is Very Cautious (blackstone.com)
89 points by rafaelc on July 15, 2011 | 65 comments
24.Getting Your Groove Back (jasonshen.com)
86 points by jasonshen on July 15, 2011 | 10 comments
25.How to make fun of Google Bot (PicoLisp Wiki) (picolisp.com)
85 points by markokocic on July 15, 2011 | 20 comments

>Since Dawkins became fashionable

I am curious why people keep taking this attitude to Dawkins. And Dawkins himself was also curious why people had this reaction to his books. In his 1976 book The Selfish Gene, he says:

"We can rise above our genes, indeed, we do every time we use contraceptives."

As he makes clear, several times, in the book, our evolution allows a range of behavior that allows for more than simplistic game-theory calculations.

Personally, there were 2 main things that I got from The Selfish Gene:

1.) sometimes simple experiments, with simple motivations, lead to surprising results (or sometimes game theory models have surprising conclusions). For instance, the story of the 2 pigs was surprising -- they had to push a lever on one end of the pen to get a reward at the other end of the pen, and it turned out that it was the dominant pig who had to do all the work whereas the submissive pig got to eat most of the food.

2.) evolution is too slow to react to fast changing circumstances, so behavior was "invented" to allow creatures to quickly adapt to circumstances. The word "behavior" in this sense, is meant to suggest a range of possible actions that a creature can change without having to change its genes. Dawkins devotes a lot of time to this idea, and it seems to me this idea goes directly against the interpretation that so many people want to ascribe to Dawkins: "it risks creating a self-fulfilling prophecy of barbarism".

I suspect that a lot of people who criticize Dawkins have never actually read Dawkins.

This sentence deserves special criticism:

"How is it even possible to behave in a non-animalistic manner once you have internalised these ideas?"

Here the word "animalistic" is being used to suggest a failure of morality. There is history behind this usage, which I don't have time to get into. For now, I'll simply point out that humans are part of the animal branch of life, and therefore all human behavior is animalistic by definition.

The above sentence suggests that being an animal leads to immoral behavior. Frans B. M. de Waal has been especially good about undermining this idea:

http://www.amazon.com/Good-Natured-Origins-Humans-Animals/dp...

Good Natured: The Origins of Right and Wrong in Humans and Other Animals

Kindness is also a product of evolution. Our sense of decency is also a product of evolution. To be clear about this, all human behavior has been facilitated by evolution. Our genes do not control us in a rigid and deterministic way, but our genes do establish perhaps the outer limits of the possible for us. It might be best to use the word "facilitate" when describing the effect of evolution on our behavior.

When Saint Francis of Assisi gave all of his possessions to the poor, his actions were facilitated by evolution.

When Hitler ordered 6 million Jews killed, his actions were facilitated by evolution.

When marine Jason Dunham decided to sacrifice his life to save his fellow soldiers, by diving on top of a hand grenade, his actions were facilitated by evolution.

When Susan Leigh Vaughan Smith killed her 2 children, her actions were facilitated by evolution.

When Adrienne Rich decided to write a book denouncing male-dominated family life, and when she came out as a lesbian, her actions were facilitated by evolution.

When George F. Gilder wrote a book denouncing feminism, his actions were facilitated by evolution.

What we are capable of has been facilitated by our history so far, all 4 billion years of it. This includes all behavior, including what some might regard as "good" and some might regard as "bad". But, while keeping all this in mind, it is also important to realize that we are still evolving today, still inventing the new, day by day. Possibly the pace is so slow that it is hard to see, but still, evolution is still happening, for every species on the planet, including humans. If we could get in a time machine and skip 100,000 years in the future, we would probably note the emergence of many new behaviors in the human line.


OK, finally found a decent explanation of what a Git generation number actually IS:

http://www.spinics.net/lists/git/msg161165.html

28.MySQL::Replication - peer-to-peer based, multi-master replication for MySQL (mysql.com)
69 points by alfiejohn_ on July 15, 2011 | 20 comments
29.This is how vulnerable your Facebook Page can really be (thenextweb.com)
69 points by bond on July 15, 2011 | 22 comments
30.Ask HN: Can I help you be more awesome today? (No strings. Inquire within.)
64 points by mikegreenberg on July 15, 2011 | 76 comments

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