“I have no special talents, I am only passionately curious.” That’s what Einstein is known to have said time and time again. But mere curiosity or even the most passionate variety of curiosity in most people might not have the potential for delving into the mysteries of the universe to the extent that this man did.
Day: July 20, 2011
‪J.S. Bach Sonata Flute & Continuo in G Minor, BWV 1020
Gobi-Gazar, aka, Cauliflower-Carrots: A Colorful & Delicious Pairing
Gobi or cauliflower and Gazar or carrots make for a colorful and delicious pairing. These were stirfried in a skillet and received a tempered seasoning of Panch Phoran, the Bengali five-spice that consists of: nigella, black mustard, fenugreek, fennel, and cumin seeds.
Mirror, Mirror, On The Wall
A most exquisite mirror that I found in San Antonio, Texas on a recent touristy visit. Handmade in Mexico, across the border, it was one of a kind that I couldn’t help but pick up (and pay a handsome price for!), and bring home with me on a 5-hour plane trip. This lovely mirror adds to my small but growing collection of mirrors from around the world. It has found a place in our living-room, reflections of which may be seen from within the mirror itself. This is cross-posted in my Haiku Love section at: http://haikusdisaac.posterous.com/whos-the-fairest-of-us-all
Social Networking And The Friends vs Acquaintances Debate
The funny thing for me about Google + so far is that I have “blocked” more people than I have “added” to circles!
Google+ and the friends v acquaintances debate
By Tom de Castella BBC News Magazine
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The much-hyped arrival of the Google+ social networking site throws open the debate on the difference between friends and acquaintances. So where is the line?
“If a man does not make new acquaintance as he advances through life, he will soon find himself left alone,” said Samuel Johnson. “A man should keep his friendships in constant repair.”
The comment takes on new meaning in the Facebook era when it’s common for people to have hundreds of “friends”. But they’re not friends in the conventional sense.
The main novelty of Google+ is that it requires users to arrange their contacts in different categories or “circles”. A new member is given the default settings of Friends, Family or Acquaintance and encouraged to create new circles under headings of their own choosing.
Facebook aficionados would point out that it has always been possible to create groups on Facebook, but some can find it slightly fiddly. Google+ seems to push the user down this route so that they target messages at particular contacts.
“I can see the logic of Google’s split. Friends and family are quite insulated groups from each other, who you relate to in different ways,” says Prof Robin Dunbar, author of How Many Friends Does One Man Need.
He argues that beyond a core group of 150 people – made up of “intimates”, family members, and friends – what one is really talking about are “nodding acquaintances”.
“One list is for people I can tolerate talking to. The other is for people who can fall down a well.”
The phone-hacking scandal, with its nexus of journalists, media owners, politicians and police officers, has thrown a spotlight on the dividing line.
John Yates, who this week resigned as assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, referred to former News of the World executive Neil Wallis as a “friend” but not a “bosom buddy”. David Cameron has been happy to call his former media adviser Andy Coulson a “friend”. But some feel the need to offer a qualification.
Jeff Jarvis, who writes the BuzzMachine blog, says the distinction between an acquaintance or friend doesn’t matter online. “Acquaintance is just a label. I don’t use it.”
The circles on Google+ are just modern day mailing lists, he says. He organises his Google+ contacts into circles labelled things like “Germany”, “World” or “Celebrity”.
He argues it’s about relevance rather than privacy or intimacy. “The idea you can use these sites as a vault for your private thoughts is absurd. If you have a secret, leave it in your head.”
The different social networks overlap but prioritise different things. Indeed Facebook already allows users to put people into groups, it’s just a “pain” doing so, says Jarvis. Facebook is for maintaining relationships, Twitter for broadcasting, Tumbler for quotations and Google+ for sharing, he believes.
Social networks offer new relationships
Times columnist Caitlin Moran is an early adopter of Google+. She has never been a fan of Facebook – “too slow” – and although previously enthusiastic about Twitter says it has become too nasty. “Twitter is like a pub full of people shouting. Google+ is more like withdrawing to the smoking room with friends.”
Moran has eschewed Google+’s ability to have numerous different circles in favour of a clear distinction. After importing contacts from her existing social networks she set up two circles. “One is for people I can tolerate talking to. The other is for everyone else who can fall down a well.”
But in the Facebook age, it’s easy to get confused about friendship, says Gladeana McMahon, the former GMTV life coach. “A friend is someone you’ve got a regular relationship with now or in the past. You keep in contact and are involved in their life.”
On the other hand, an acquaintance is someone you’ve met but not had the chance to develop a friendship with. It may turn into friendship. But often it will never go further than a brief hello.
You can create worthwhile relationships online, she says. If they’re meaningful they will probably move into the “real” world but it’s also possible to have a modern version of the “pen pal” arrangement using Facebook or Skype to talk to someone you’ll never meet in the flesh.
But social networks will never be able to understand the multiplicity of human relationships, she warns. “One thing that will never fit into a box is a human being.”
Jarvis says that Mark Zuckerberg grasped this point. The Facebook creator believes that people each have one authentic identity rather than different selves. In interviews for Jarvis’s forthcoming book Public Parts, Zuckerberg told him that it was becoming impossible for people to maintain separate identities.
Essentially our work, home, recreational and family selves are one and the same. If you bump into your lawyer at the supermarket at the weekend, he may be wearing shorts and be with his child. He is a complete person not just someone you know from work, Jarvis argues.
Banal updates
Dunbar, professor of evolutionary anthropology at Oxford University, says that may work while you’re at university. But by the end of one’s twenties it’s no longer tenable. Not only do we see people in different contexts, like work or leisure. We also have friends scattered around the world who don’t necessarily mix or interact.
And then there’s how we communicate online. Status updates on Facebook are often banal, he says. “You write ‘I had Weetabix for breakfast’, which your best friend may care about but not many others will.”
This is because people don’t change the way they converse online. Research has shown that they behave as if they are addressing a maximum of four people, even though a post may go out to hundreds.
And social networking friendships demand a huge amount of work if they are to be maintained. Otherwise they will wither in a matter of months once emotional closeness is lost, Dunbar says. When it comes to using technology with our closest friends, it is texts not websites that count, he argues.
Research carried out by one of his post doctoral students involving 30 Sheffield sixth formers showed that 85% of the texts they sent were going to one of two people – usually a boyfriend or girlfriend and a best mate. It illustrates that there are things we still want to share with only our nearest and dearest, he says.
But as Oscar Wilde reminds us, friendship mixed with human nature can be a prickly business. “Anybody can sympathise with the sufferings of a friend, but it requires a very fine nature to sympathise with a friend’s success.” Or, for that matter, their choice of breakfast.
Largest Refugee Camp As Thousands Flee Somalia
Somali refugees arrive at the Dadaab Refugee Camp in eastern Kenya, July 18, 2011.
The outskirts of the Dadaab refugee complex are jammed with dome-like huts made of sticks, refuse, plastic sheeting and discarded cartons from aid packets. Toilets are scarce, and water is delivered periodically by truck. More than 60,000 people are occupying these makeshift encampments built atop a harsh arid landscape in the far east of Kenya, just over the Somali border. The ragged domes in the desert look like something from the post-apocalyptic world of Mad Max.
The Dadaab refugee complex is already the largest in the world, with more than 380,000 residents – four times the capacity it was built for, when the three encampments that form the complex were built in the early 1990s. The camps no longer accept new admissions, so tens of thousands of new refugees, most of them women and children, that are fleeing Somalia in the wake of the drought that has gripped the horn of Africa are left to set up makeshift housing in the no-mans land that surrounds the official camps. Simply put, there is no place for them in Dadaab itself. (World’s Greatest Ongoing Humanitarian Disaster Reaches a Crisis Point)
The famine-like conditions in Somalia have led to an increase in the number of refugees coming over the Kenyan border from around 5,000 per month in 2010 to an estimated 30,000 in June. The refugees must make a perilous journey from their conflict-ridden country and navigate for days through forbidding terrain, usually on foot. Most of those who arrive are badly malnourished, and aid workers say that many children did not survive the trip, while others died as soon as they arrived.
Hawa, 40, came here from the Buale district in Somalia after a 23 day trek on foot with her seven children. She left, as did all of her neighbors, because there was not enough food. When fighting arrived in her locale, her husband disappeared, and she fled with the children. Her one year old son, Abdu Noor, is recovering in a hospital run by Medecin Sans Frontiers from severe malnourishment. Now, the rest of her family has settled in a makeshift hut in the outskirts of the official camps, living rough and scrambling for basics like food and water.
Coming here, she had hoped for a safe haven, says Hawa. “What I found is that there is little difference between Somalia and a refugee camp.” (Kenya’s Banking Revolution)
The recent surge of refugees has led to a flurry of new media and diplomatic attention, but in truth the conditions in the camps have been bad for years, with four families forced to settle on a plot built for one. Things really began to get bad in January of this year, but despite warnings from aid groups and relief agencies and government drought monitors, the response from international donors was tepid.
“We raised the alarm quite early, but for me, the response was inadequate”, says Dr. Edward Chege, the director of the hospital run by Medecin Sans Frontier in the Dahagely refugee camp. The number of severely malnourished children – meaning they are close to death — at the hospital has swelled from 20 in January to more than 130 now. They expect the number of patients to increase in the coming six months, says Dr. Chege.
Malnutrition rates for small children in the outskirts is around 30%, and about half of those are severe. That is twice as high as the malnutrition rates in the official camps, but even 15% is already at crisis levels. It is usually children under 2 that get the worst of it. That said, aid officials say they are seeing severely malnourished children up to 10 years old, which is extremely unusual and shows the severity of the crisis.
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I’m afraid I don’t know the name of this gorgeous flower!

Social networks offer new relationships 











