Restaurants per capita by state
I think I understand Mississippi's ranking and Utah's ranking. But what's up with Montana?
I think I understand Mississippi's ranking and Utah's ranking. But what's up with Montana?
I haven't tried any of these services, but still find I have to fax things occasionally--annoying!--I may in the near future.
. . . what to do with those skimpy, derriere-exposing hospital gowns."
An objective I heartily endorse
I assume that most of you reading this don't have to work "in Hell for $11 a day".
Some good advice for the youngsters (Wall Street Journal, 5/3). (Well, Lesson 3 is flawed because it fails to apply present value analysis, but hey, four out of five ain't bad.)
Along the same lines: "The $1500 Frisbee".
From the Dark Roasted Blend blog (5/20):
Awe-Inspiring Construction of Mountain Highway Bridges in China
China is home to some of the most spectacular mountains, and some of the deepest gorges that need to be spanned with ridiculously tall bridges - and all these infrastructure projects are supposed to be good for Chinese economy.
There is only one problem: the amount of jaws dropped into the gorges by awestruck tourists and the sense of professional envy these bridges inspire in architects around the world, itching to land a similarly grand project . . .
"WD-40 is mostly a mix of baby oil, Vaseline, and the goop inside homemade lava lamps." (Wired, 4/29.)
Mike Munger writes:
Because I know lots of students and ex-students, I get reports from the field from non-profit folks. These kids go over their wanting to change the world, and end up just shaking their heads and thinking, "WTF?" This, I thought, was a pretty good one. . . .
Idealistic young Americans considering service abroad would do well to read the report.
Real prices in the two periods of a dozen goods.
Tomato soup surprises me.
Bizjournals projects population growth for "the nation's 250 largest metropolitan areas" and finds:
Raleigh will set the fastest pace of any metropolitan area
The three-county Raleigh metro will virtually double its population during the study period. It had 953,000 residents in 2005, but should be closing in on 1.9 million by 2025.