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The hotel room I stayed in last night was on the ground floor right next to the lift shaft. It did have a nice bed.

It did not, however, make the Lonely Planet‘s list of the Top 10 most extraordinary places to stay in 2014.

Perhaps next time I’ll get off the ground floor and stay in one of the Free Spirit Spheres, suspended above the forest in Vancouver. I can be one with the squirrels and the birds, instead of the motor of the lift.

Free Spirit Spheres 750

Or I could aim even higher, and climb to the top of the 900 year old Torre Prendiparte B&B in Bologna.

Prendiparte 750

But I think I’ll get even more out of town and stay in my very own sandcastle. The Mihir Garh sits all by itself in the middle of the Thar Desert near Jodhpur.

Mihir Gahr 750

What about you?

What I Learnt On 19th February in other years

19th February 2011 Bobby Fischer's DefenceBobby Fischer’s Defence
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How are you going with your New Year resolutions?

’59 seconds’ is new book and YouTube Channel from psychologist, quirkologist and magician Richard Wiseman. Just in the nick of time!

 

 

What I Learnt On 12th January in other years

12th January 2016 I found this humerus…
12th January 2011 Presentation ZenPresentation Zen
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MailPilot is a brand spanking new email client for Mac, and it is being launched today.

This is a limited release – if you would like to test it out you really need to act fast.

A Brief History of Mac Email clients.

For many years there was no good replacement on OSX for Apple Mail. Messages were acted upon and then either deleted to sorted into folders based on their subject matter. Inboxes grew huge and the amount of stored mail kept threatening the capacity of hard drives. Half your time was spent managing spam and spam filters. The other half was spent categorising mail into different folders. If you worked on a computer at home and work and also used an iPhone and iPad it was impossible to keep everything in sync – which messages have I replied to and what did I say?

Are you using Gmail to consolidate all your email accounts? If not, you should be. That is the first step in getting everything in sync.

Gmail has such a huge storage capacity that there is no need to delete old emails. You can access your account from anywhere and it remains all ‘joined up’. You can keep all your old email addresses, while still storing the mail on the gmail server.

Sparrow was the first mail client that took full advantage of gmails cloud-based features. It had a very different approach to managing email. Sparrow is a light client, in that most of the mail was stored on the Gmail server, but the experience of the user is as if it is all stored locally.

The interface of Sparrow encouraged you to pursue ‘Inbox Zero’. Achieve an empty Inbox by archiving each message as you act upon them. Don’t worry about deleting, categorising and folders – the messages are all stored on the gmail server and the gmail search engine is so good you can alway find what you want.

Sparrow was also available on iPhone and iPad. Their products were so good that last year they were bought out by Google and the Sparrow Apps went out of development. Many of the best Sparrow features are starting to appear in Gmails own apps.

In January this year, the app Mailbox was launched on iPhone and then on iPad. Mailbox understands that people use their Inbox as a giant todo list. It takes a ‘task orientated’ approach to your gmail. Each message is actioned – ‘completed’, ‘remind me tomorrow’, ‘remind me on a certain date’, ‘add to a list’. The Mailbox server takes care of moving messages back to your Inbox on the day you have specified.

The Mailbox launch was so huge that they had to ration access. I remember being 500,000th in the waiting list.

Mailbox has not yet launched a Mac desktop app.

Since Sparrow, I have been using the app Airmail as my preferred email client on the desktop. I really like it. It is fast, has good search functions, and has customisable themes. However, it doesn’t have some of the cool ‘task orientated’ features found in Mailbox.

Today there is a new contender in the Mac desktop email client market. MailPilot has been available on the iPhone and iPad for a few months. I’ve had the chance to test it out the desktop version for the last few days.

MailPilot also takes a ‘task orientated’ approach to your email.

It looks really good. The messages load quickly. The interface and keyboard shortcuts make it easier to get to the nirvana state of ‘Inbox Zero’.

The current beta release has some quirks, but I notice that each ‘build’ of the program is improving. In fact, a new build is downloading right now. Hopefully it will soon allow the use of ‘aliases’.

If you want to test it out, you should apply for a beta preview version today. I’d hate to see a loyal WILT reader be 500,000th in the queue.

What I Learnt On 4th December in other years

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”I’d take the awe of understanding over the awe of ignorance any day.” Douglas Adams

20131105-212718.jpgTIm Minchin is a leading composer, lyricist, actor, writer and comedian. He is ‘spectacularly’ not a Nobel laureate, yet has been chosen to write the forward to the collection of ‘The Best Australian Science Writing 2013’.

He rejects the view that there is a conflict between art and science.

“I’ve only been to Portland once, but it’s a great city – its population a paragon of liberalism and artiness, sporting more tattoos than you could point a regretful laser at, and boasting perhaps a higher collective dye-to-hair ratio than anywhere on earth. Great music, great art, wonderful coffee … it’s my kind of town. Except, the residents recently voted – for the fourth time since the 1950s – against adding fluoride to the water supply. It’s as if a mermaid on one’s lower back is an impediment to sensible interpretation of data, or perhaps unkempt pink hair acts as a sort of dream catcher for conspiracy theories.”

“This apparent inverse correlation between artistic interest and scientific literacy seems to play out all over the world. Go to Byron Bay and you’ll find more painters and musos per capita than anywhere in the country, and – inevitably – a parallel glut of aura readers, homeopaths and anti-vaccination campaigners. There’s clearly no such thing as a free lunch: you want to listen to good blues, you have to have your palm read – and maybe get measles in the process.”

“Great science writing is the art of communicating that ”awe of understanding”, so that we readers can revel in the beauty of a deeper knowledge of our world.

If the entire volume is as good as the foreword, it will be a great read.

What I Learnt On 5th November in other years

5th November 2011 The Language of LoveThe Language of Love
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20131101-164852.jpg
Flight Attendant: Sir, I’m going to have to ask that you turn off your cellular phone.
Toby Ziegler: We’re flying in a Lockheed Eagle Series L-1011. Came off the line twenty months ago. Carries a Sim-5 transponder tracking system. And you’re telling me I can still flummox this thing with something I bought at Radio Shack?
—- 1.01: The Pilot.

Hooray! At last!

No longer do we risk bringing down a $300 million A380 and it’s 800 passengers by listening to Jack Johnson during take off.
It’s Soduku all the way to the terminal.

In a press release today the US FAA announced that it is safe to use our iPods, iPhones and iPads (or all at once) at all times during a flight. Currently, airlines insist that electronic devices are all turned off until 20 minutes after take off and for what seems like an eternity before landing. We can now reveal that this has always been a strategy to force us into reading their inflight magazines.

I accept the airlines’ apologies.

WASHINGTON– The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Administrator Michael Huerta today announced that the FAA has determined that airlines can safely expand passenger use of Portable Electronic Devices (PEDs) during all phases of flight, and is immediately providing the airlines with implementation guidance.

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EconomyRay Dalio is worth a cool $13 billion.

His investment company, Bridgewater Associates, is the world’s largest hedge fund, with $150 billion to look after.

He’s made his money by predicting big macroeconomic cycles. The New York Times says ‘he is one of the few investors to see the financial crisis of 2008 developing, and perhaps just as important, the rebound.’

Until now, his economic theories have been only known to those clients willing to invest with Bridgewater, paying the 2% management fees and 20% of profits.

But Mr Dalio has now decided to share his approach via a rather engaging cartoon on his new web site Economic Principles.

“While I kept it confidential until recently, I now want to share it because I believe that it could be very helpful in reducing big economic blunders, if it was more broadly understood,” he told the NY Times. He explained that, “I believe that most influential decision makers and most people cause a lot of needless economic suffering because they are missing the fundamentals.”

Even I could understand ‘How the Economic Machine Works in 30 minutes’. It should be piece of cake for someone who has a Macroeconomic exam next week (I’m looking at you, Oliver).

What I Learnt On 27th October in other years

27th October 2011 Crowdsourcing To Cure TBCrowdsourcing To Cure TB
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