Feeding The Poor With iPads

Warren McLaren reports on FareShare, a food rescue service that has saved 468 tonnes of food from the landfill:

Using an iPad application developed by staff and volunteers, IT Wire reports that FareShare is now able to alert the kitchen's chefs of what food ingredients have been collected in real time, increasing their capacity to prepare free nutritious meals for charities.

FoxNation Or The Onion?

It can get hard to tell them apart at times. But one thing leapt out at me in this story – from the comments section. One FoxNation member wrote:

"HAHAHAHAHAHA OBUMMA – Un-raveled. EPIC FAILURE. IMPEACH it.”

All of which is par for the course, except for that last pronoun. It? Obama is a thing or an animal? Sometimes, the underlying feeling just slips out, doesn't it? I really don't want to believe that the underlying passion among some against the president is racist at its core. And yet, there it is.

The View From Your Window Contest

Vfyw-contest_11-27

You have until noon on Tuesday to guess it. City and/or state first, then country. Please put the location in the subject heading, along with any description within the email. If no one guesses the exact location, proximity counts.  Be sure to email entries to VFYWcontest@theatlantic.com. Winner gets a free The View From Your Window book, courtesy of Blurb. Have at it.

How Texting Could Save Lives

Ryan Singel investigates how the ability to text 9-1-1 could increase efficiency for emergency responders:

The last real overhaul of 911 by the FCC came in 2001, when mobile carriers were required to allow 911 to identify the location of callers either through GPS or cell-tower data. … But the 911 system still can’t handle text messages, multimedia messages or streaming video, all of which could be very helpful to first responders. A system that could handle those messages would also allow people to report crimes without being overheard, which could be useful in situations ranging from kidnapping to seeing someone being robbed on the street.

Forever Burgers

A scientist at Serious Eats tests whether it's true that McDonald's hamburgers never age:

Turns out that not only did the regular McDonald's burgers not rot, but the home-ground burgers did not rot either. Samples one through five had shrunk a bit (especially the beef patties), but they showed no signs of decomposition. What does this mean?

It means that there's nothing that strange about a McDonald's burger not rotting. Any burger of the same shape will act the same way.

He adds:

[T]he burger doesn't rot because it's small size and relatively large surface area help it to lose moisture very fast. Without moisture, there's no mold or bacterial growth. Of course, that the meat is pretty much sterile to begin with due to the high cooking temperature helps things along as well. It's not really surprising. Humans have known about this phenomenon for thousands of years. After all, how do you think beef jerky is made?

Shut Up And Sing: John Mayer

A reader writes:

My nomination goes to John Mayer's "Waiting on the World to Change." If you don't pay close attention, it sounds like a classic protest song, but if you actually pay attention to the lyrics, it's an ode to doing nothing.

The first verse ends, "They say we stand for nothing / And there's no way we ever could." Setting up for a defiant rebuttal? Not so much. Second verse: "Now we see everything that's going wrong / With the world and those who lead it / We just feel like we don't have the means / To rise above and beat it." So, what is the response of Mr. Mayer and his friends? Chorus: "So we keep waiting / Waiting on the world to change." This is repeated ad nauseam throughout the song.

The song goes on to list off all the woes of society, and concludes that someday this generation will be in charge and that will make everything better. My eyes may be permanently rolled due to this.

Another writes:

By waiting on the world to change instead of trying to actually change the world himself, Mayer's both musically lame and lazy.

The Blessings Of Work

Mark T. Mitchell gives thanks and muses:

Those of us who spend most of our days working with ideas that all too often thin into mere abstractions are, I think, in danger of forgetting the full goodness of work even as we struggle to accomplish all that we have to do. Checking items off a to-do list is not the same as laying the foundation of a house. Writing a paper or delivering a lecture can, of course, be satisfying, but there is a unique concreteness, perhaps a less obscure goodness, in building something that occupies space and is useful or beautiful.

Aggregating The Official Line

Joshua Keating asks whether Google News is lending legitimacy to authoritarian regimes and their news outlets by featuring their stories fairly high in the results:

Informal studies have observed that Google tends to prioritize original reporting over re-reported content. With either shrinking news budgets or government restrictions preventing Western news agencies from covering events in countries like Iran and Russia, that gives state-sponsored outlets a clear edge. A search for the latest news on Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is likely to turn up so many stories from loyal state-sponsored outlets like PressTV and Fars News because they spend a lot more time covering him and have much better access. …

But he explains why Google is hesitant to change:

Google already labels some stories as blog posts, press releases, or paid content, rather than reported articles, but Gaither explained the company's reluctance to expand labeling further.

"One thing we have not done is to label anything according to any perceived political bias," he says. "We feel that's a slippery slope that we don't really want to go down."