Weekly newsletter 78
A selection of our best article links of the week, plus featured FiveBooks interviews, videos, quotations and more.
(http://thebrowser.com)
Weekly Newsletter
Best of the Week
Boss Rail
Evan Osnos | New Yorker | 15 October 2012
How a high-speed rail disaster exposed China's corruption. "An engineer who worked on the railway’s construction told me, 'There is an expression in Chinese: when you take too great a leap, you can tear your balls'" Comments (http://thebrowser.com/articles/boss-rail)
Hunt For Geronimo
Mark Bowden | Vanity Fair | 12 October 2012
Book extract. How US found and killed Bin Laden. Cracking read. Pentagon gave job to navy SEALs, not CIA, because SEALs had done plenty of similar missons before. Vital experience if something went wrong, as it always did Comments (http://thebrowser.com/articles/hunt-geronimo)
The Brashness And Bravado In Big Deals
John Kay | John Kay/FT | 17 October 2012
Concise skewering of big mergers. "These commercial decisions often reflect policy-based evidence, not evidence-based policy. Doing the deal is what matters. Justification comes afterwards." But bigger does not equal stronger Comments (http://thebrowser.com/articles/brashness-and-bravado-big-deals)
The Vanishing Groves
Ross Andersen | Aeon | 16 October 2012
Superb essay on the bristlecone pines of California, the world's oldest trees, and their interaction with humans, land and climate. Most ancient is estimated to be 4,800 years old. They're an extraordinary record of the Earth's past Comments (http://thebrowser.com/articles/vanishing-groves)
Bill & Hillary Forever
John Heilemann | New York | 14 October 2012
They boost Obama, Obama boosts them. "[Bill] Clinton is seeing his legacy restored to what he regards as its rightful status, a restoration that will mightily benefit his wife if she hurls herself at the White House in 2016" Comments (http://thebrowser.com/articles/bill-hillary-forever)
Where Will The Next Pandemic Come From? And How Can We Stop It?
David Quammen | Popsci | 15 October 2012
Best guess: A human disease that comes from wildlife, probably from a subgroup known as RNA viruses. They're highly adaptable, jump species, disappear quickly or kill. And human behaviour is making an outbreak more likely Comments (http://thebrowser.com/articles/where-will-next-pandemic-come-and-how-can-we-stop-it)
The Self-Destruction Of The 1 Percent
Chrystia Freeland | NYT | 13 October 2012
America would do well to learn the lesson of 14th century Venice. Economic elites that act to lock in their privileges and exclude others become extractive societies, ultimately destroying innovation and prosperity Comments (http://thebrowser.com/articles/self-destruction-1-percent)
Google Throws Open Doors To Its Top-Secret Data Center
Steven Levy | Wired | 17 October 2012
Visit to the "beating heart of the digital age". Server farm in North Carolina. "This is what makes Google Google: Thousands of fiber miles, thousands of servers that, in aggregate, add up to the mother of all clouds" Comments (http://thebrowser.com/articles/google-throws-open-doors-its-top-secret-data-center)
(http://www.amazon.com/Best-of-FiveBooks-2011-ebook/dp/B007GAM6RC?tag=thebro-21)
FiveBooks Interview
(http://thebrowser.com/interviews/philip-marsden-on-sea)
Philip Marsden on The Sea
The travel writer casts his net over books about the sea and comes up with a haul including Moby Dick and a naval history Of Britain Read on (http://thebrowser.com/interviews/philip-marsden-on-sea)
Featured Topic
(http://thebrowser.com/reports/fall-lance-armstrong)
The Fall of Lance Armstrong
Once a hero, but now the game is up. Here's how the aggressively preserved reputation of Lance Armstrong finally crumbled Read on (http://thebrowser.com/reports/fall-lance-armstrong)
Reader Recommendations
@joespring Checking in on a oceanic Eden, where hell lies just below the surface. "Paradise with An Asterisk" #longform #browsings t.co/TcchSI3R #browsings (https://twitter.com/search?q=#browsings) More like this (http://thebrowser.com/browsings)
Book of the Week
Book of the Day (http://thebrowser.com/recommended/moon-and-bonfires-by-cesare-pavese)
The Moon and the Bonfires by Cesare Pavese
Tim Parks says (http://thebrowser.com/interviews/tim-parks-on-italian-fiction) : “All his books are about people who, in a sense, miss the action, as Pavese himself felt he missed the action. This is considered his masterpiece and is a wonderful book” FiveBooks Archive (http://thebrowser.com/fivebooks)
Video of the Week
Stratos Jump: Lego Edition
(http://thebrowser.com/videos/stratos-jump-lego-edition)
Felix Baumgartner tribute More videos (http://thebrowser.com/videos)
Quote of the Week
Demian Farnworth, on failure (http://freelanceswitch.com/start/why-freelancers-fail)
"Failure can be a great teacher—especially if you learn from someone else’s failure"
More quotes (http://thebrowser.com/quotations)