Thursday, 22 July 2010
Nels Cline on Miles
Nels recommends these recordings:
Miles Smiles
In A Silent Way
Bitches Brew
Live Evil
Get Up With It
The Miles Davis Podcast Series features a cast of world class musicians sharing their passion for the music of Miles Davis. A collaborative project of Legacy Recordings, Concord Music Group, Verve Records & Rhino, the series is produced by Vella Interactive.
Photo credit: Charles Harris
DJ Makala - Global Sounds Selection

* 01. Healer Selecta – Foundation of Love – Freestyle
* 02. Nickodemus feat. Jay Rodriguez & Ticklah – Funky in the Middle – Wonderwheel
* 03. Me & You – Hoop Loop (Solo Moderna Mix) – Tru Thoughts
* 04. Up Hygh – Compatible (Pth Projects Remix) – Tru Thoughts
* 05. The Society – Sweeping Tom – Freestyle
* 06. Flow Dynamics – Bossa For Bebo (Diesler Mix) – Freestyle
* 07. Basement Freaks – World Fiesta – Innvision
* 08. Kokolo – Congo Bongo (Dj Floro & Ale Costa Mix) – Cañamo / Nuevos Medios
* 09. Kokolo – Afrika Man (Diesler Remix) – Record Kicks
* 10. Kokolo Afrobeat Orchestra – Mister Sinister (Faze Action Vocal Mix) – Jamayka
* 11. Afefe Iku – Bodydrummin – King Street Sounds
HERE
direct download
(left click to play, right click to download)
I once saw God...
...and he scored against Oliver Kahn @ 31. August 1993 in Frankfurt.
One of the finest goals of all times
JayJay Okocha later played for Bolton Wanderers and Hull City in the Premier League
Wednesday, 21 July 2010
Happiness and Sadness Spread Just Like Disease
There may be a literal truth underlying the common-sense intuition that happiness and sadness are contagious.
A new study on the spread of emotions through social networks shows that these feelings circulate in patterns analogous to what’s seen from epidemiological models of disease.
Earlier studies raised the possibility, but had not mapped social networks against actual disease models.
“This is the first time this contagion has been measured in the way we think about traditional infectious disease,” said biophysicist Alison Hill of Harvard University.
Data in the research, in the July 7 Proceedings of the Royal Society, comes from the Framingham Heart Study, a one-of-a-kind project which since 1948 has regularly collected social and medical information from thousands of people in Framingham, Massachusetts.
Earlier analyses found that a variety of habits and feelings, including obesity, loneliness, smoking and happiness appear to be contagious.
In the current study, Hill’s team compared patterns of relationships and emotions measured in the study to those generated by a model designed to track SARS, foot-and-mouth disease and other traditional contagions. They discounted spontaneous or immediately shared emotion — friends or relatives undergoing a common experience — and focused on emotional changes that followed changes in others.
In the spread of happiness, the researchers found clusters of “infected” and “uninfected” people, a pattern considered a “hallmark of the infectious process,” said Hill. “For happiness, clustering is what you expect from contagion rates. Whereas for sadness, the clusters were much larger than we’d expect. Something else is going on.”
Happiness proved less social than sadness. Each happy friend increased an individual’s chances of personal happiness by 11 percent, while just one sad friend was needed to double an individual’s chance of becoming unhappy.
Patterns fit disease models in another way. “The more friends with flu that you have, the more likely you are to get it. But once you have the flu, how long it takes you to get better doesn’t depend on your contacts. The same thing is true of happiness and sadness,” said David Rand, an evolutionary dynamics researcher at Harvard. “It fits with the infectious disease framework.”
The findings still aren’t conclusive proof of contagion, but they provide parameters of transmission rates and network dynamics that will guide predictions tested against future Framingham results, said Hill and Rand. And whereas the Framingham study wasn’t originally designed with emotional information in mind, future studies tailored to test network contagion should provide more sophisticated information.
Both Hill and Rand warned that the findings illustrate broad, possible dynamics, and are not intended to guide personal decisions, such as withdrawing from friends who are having a hard time.
“The better solution is to make your sad friends happy,” said Rand.
Brandon Keim @'Wired Science'
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