Rachel Sussman shows photographs of the world’s oldest continuously living organisms — from 2,000-year-old brain coral off Tobago’s coast to an “underground forest” in South Africa that has lived since before the dawn of agriculture.
Lexus’ hoverboard ‘is like floating on a cushion of air’
Unbelievable
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_Oyx-vzZOg
The Lexus hoverboard is real, folks. It’s not computer-generated imagery you’re looking at, and it’s not smoke and mirrors. In fact, what looks a lot like smoke emanating from below the Japanese luxury brand’s hoverboard is actually caused by the liquid nitrogen required to keep the ‘board’s insides cool. How cool, you ask? Put it this way: liquid nitrogen freezes at -346 degrees Fahrenheit. Ice cold, baby.
Source: Lexus’ hoverboard ‘is like floating on a cushion of air’
Average Car Age Reaches An All-Time High – Fortune
The average age of vehicles in the U.S. has reached an all-time high of 11.5 years. Cars have become much more reliable throughout the years, so they can endure the road for a significantly longer period of time.
Still driving a car with a cassette deck?
We’re keeping our cars longer than ever. So it’s important to know the long-term cost of car ownership. Eight (8) factors go into the long-term car cost of ownership calculations: purchase price, depreciation, financing, fees and taxes, fuel costs, fuel economy, insurance, and maintenance and repairs. When it’s time to buy a new (or used) car, check out my Car Cost Comparison Tool for Excel which analyzes your options to save you money in the long term.
Quotes
|
Public Speaking
What’s the Best Way to Make a Good Speech? Keep It Simple
The best way to make a good speech is to keep it simple — to build it on the foundation of a single, solid core message. The core message should be a useful idea. It should be something that your audience will recognize as true. Ideally, it should be based on the wisdom of your own personal experience so you can speak authoritatively about it. And it should serve as an anchor for anything else you talk about during the speech.
Begin with the core idea. End with the core idea. And make sure that everything else you say in between ties back into it neatly.
10 Ways to Make Your Speeches More Powerful and Persuasive
Speaking to groups of people — large and small — is unavoidable in business. No matter who you’re talking to, you want them to listen to you attentively, understand what you are saying, and remember the most important ideas that you are trying to convey. The ability to do this does not come naturally to most people.
However, anyone can learn to make unforgettable, persuasive, and inspiring speeches. The secret is in the preparation — the time you spend on your speech before the actual event.
As Muhammad Ali said about boxing, “The fight is won or lost far away from witnesses — behind the lines, in the gym, and out there on the road, long before I dance under those lights.”
Here, then, are the 10 best ways I know of to power up your next presentation:
1. Tell them something useful.
This is the most important rule in speechmaking. What you say must benefit your listeners. Many novice speakers see the podium as a place to show how smart they are or to demonstrate their latest thinking. Nothing could be less interesting to an audience. Unless you are a guru of sorts — in which case you are speaking not to an audience but to a fan club — your job is to help or enlighten.
Remember, these people have taken the time (and in some cases have spent money) to hear you. You owe them something valuable in return.
2. Tell them something they don’t already know.
It’s not enough to give your audience useful information. At least some of it has to be new to them.
How do you know what’s new to them? You don’t. But if it’s new to you, chances are it’s new to them as well.
My favorite trick for coming up with new and different ideas is to read what others with a contrary point of view have said on the same subject. Think: “In what way is this guy’s thinking wrong or specious (see “Word to the Wise,” below) or shallow?” Most of the best ideas I’ve had over the years have come from my using this simple tactic.
3. Unify your speech with a single, overarching theme
Ask yourself: “What is the overriding idea here? If I had to summarize my message in 12 words or less, what would it be?”
A group of solid ideas linked together by a single, strong theme will resonate in your audience’s memory. A list of disparate ideas will disappear almost as quickly as it was put together. A unifying theme makes all the facts and perspectives in your speech easier to understand. And by designing your speech around a single theme, you’ll find it easier to edit out all the fluff.
4. Follow the “Tell ‘Em Three Times” Rule
At the beginning of your presentation, tell them what you’re going to tell them . . . then tell it to them . . . and, finally, at the end of your speech, tell them what you just told them.
This is probably the oldest rule in speechmaking — and with good reason. Because it works. It makes it easier for your listeners to follow the details of your speech and easier for you to stick to the point.
5. Let the audience see how much you care about what you’re saying.
If you care about your message — and you should — you will be enthusiastic when talking about it. This is perhaps your greatest asset as a speaker. Let that spirit show. It will ignite interest in everyone who listens to you.
6. Stick to what you know is absolutely true.
The only way you can feel sure of the validity of your big idea is if it is one with which you’ve had experience. If, for example, you are talking about the best way to hire new employees, be sure your overriding theme is something you personally discovered — some interesting little trick you employ or some larger observation you’ve made. If you do so, your words will ring true. If your big idea is something you’ve only read about, you are setting yourself up for trouble.
7. Structure your speech in small “sound bites.”
According to Business Week magazine, the typical U.S. executive has an on-the-job attention span of six minutes. So, think of your presentation as six-minute “sound bites.” If you are using visual aids, make sure each one has its own headline. And always plant a verbal flag in each six-minute sound bite with a statement such as “Let me highlight this idea for you.” This signals the main idea of that particular section and grabs attention.
8. Create “the perfect moment.”
One goal of your presentation should be to create what Spalding Gray called “the perfect moment.” That’s the moment in a speech when your big idea is suddenly made to seem powerful, correct, and even brilliant. One way to do this — after you’ve introduced your idea, have shown how it works, and have provided data to support it — is to present it in the form of a metaphor. You might, for example compare your big idea on hiring with pitching in the World Series . . . or singing the blues.
By going at your big idea from a different direction — by using a metaphor, allegory, quotation, etc. — you can often give your audience a “Eureka!” moment. (“Yes! I get it! That’s right!”)
9. Speak to individuals, not the entire group.
Look at one person in your audience when you start your speech. It might be someone you know or just someone who seems friendly. Make eye contact. Smile. Try to get a reaction. Then move on to someone else and try, again, for a reaction. Build rapport with your audience one person at a time. As Ron Hoff says in his book “I Can See You Naked” [insert amazon code], act like a dog that’s glad to see its master — and convey that simple message clearly and unpretentiously.
10. Memorize the first and last lines of your presentation, but nothing else.
The speaker who reads his speech is sure to fail. He can’t make eye contact. He can’t become passionate about what he’s saying in any genuine way. He can’t light up his audience.
You need a strong opening and a strong close. But in between, you need to speak from the heart.
So, instead of using a script, prepare your speech on index cards. What you write on each card should be no more than a short phrase that will remind you of a story or an idea about which you can speak confidently.
(Ed. Note. The above is an excerpt from Michael Masterson’s soon-to-be-published leadership book.)
____________________________________________________
7 Ways to Be a Better Public Speaker
Last week, Charlie showed me a list of suggestions from Toastmasters International for making confident, effective speeches.
Some were useless. For example, advice to “Just relax.” How’s that for some specific help? Another one was “Ease tension by doing exercises.” Does anyone really do this before making a major speech?
But these were good:
1. Know the room. Be familiar with the place in which you will speak. Arrive early, walk around the speaking area, and practice using the microphone and any visual aids.
2. Know the audience. Greet some of the people as they arrive. It’s easier to speak to a group of friends than to a group of strangers.
3. Know your material. If you’re not familiar with your material or are uncomfortable with it, your nervousness will increase. Practice your speech and revise it if necessary.
4. Visualize yourself giving your speech. Imagine yourself speaking — your voice loud, clear, and assured. When you picture yourself as successful, you will be successful.
5. Realize that people want you to succeed. Audiences want you to be interesting, stimulating, informative, and entertaining. They don’t want you to fail.
6. Don’t apologize. If you mention your nervousness or apologize for any problems you think you have with your speech, you may be calling the audience’s attention to something they hadn’t noticed.
7. Concentrate on the message — not the medium. Focus your attention away from your own anxieties and outwardly toward your message and your audience. Your nervousness will dissipate.
By far the most important piece of advice in the above list is to know your material. Most nervousness comes from the fear of looking like a fool. If you’re totally confident in your mastery of your subject, you’ll never have this problem.
___________________________________________________________-
3 Quick Tips for Better Public Speaking
1. Replace “ahs” and “ums” with pauses.
2. Prepare important speeches by rehearsing them on videotape. While watching yourself, take notes on the important points you’re trying to get across.
3. Make eye contact with individual members of your audience.
Inspiration For A Life Well Lived…
NFL Fantasy Football Results for 2 Leagues where I used Advanced Statistics
Quick summary for this years’ NFL Fantasy Football Leagues. I played in 2 leagues, a ‘money’ league and a ‘work’ league. Results are in:
1 Championship – 1st Place (Work League, all friends, low stress, still some very good competition. Final record: 11-3-1)
1 Runner-Up – 2nd Place (Money League, me and 11 near strangers fighting it out weekly for cash. Highly competitive. Final record: 13-2)
A combined 24-5-1 record. Impressive.
I actually watched very little NFL football during the season. I did not want my personal bias interfering with the system. Most guys watch just a few games and ESPN highlights each week and think they know something, and become anchored to favorite players, teams, etc. I’m using the “wisdom of crowds”. A crowd of experts in this case.
This article explains my methods: Two Free Websites that will have you dominating your NFL Fantasy League
Now I can enjoy the (real) playoffs!
Two Free Websites That Will Have You Dominating Your NFL Fantasy Football League
What can advanced statistics do for Fantasy Football? It turns out quite a bit. I’m playing in two NFL fantasy leagues this year. After five weeks I’m a combined 9-0-1 (9 wins, no losses, 1 tie). In first place in both leagues. I’m using two websites to achieve this record:
Website #1: http://www.borischen.co/
Boris Chen, a data scientist who works for the New York Times, applies a “clustering algorithm” to an aggregation of expert ranking data. The algorithm finds natural tiers and clusters within the data. The charts that result visualize the tiers and help you decide your starting lineup each week.
The intuition behind both this model is that a panel of a hundred experts can provide more accurate predictions than any one single expert can. Each expert uses his or her own sources and analysis to generate player rankings each week according to matchups, injuries, strength of offense and defense, etc. When you combine them, you get a consensus ranking of all players (weighted by expert accuracy).
But all ranked lists share a flaw. They imply a strict monotonic ordering and do not illustrate the true distance between players. A list implies QB1 > QB2 > QB3, whereas the reality might be QB1 >> QB2 = QB3.
The clustering algorithm addresses this, and the results are clear in the charts that are generated. The colors correspond to the tier of each player found by the algorithm.
An example chart:
Fantasy Football ranking chart
(1) Always favor higher tier players. Tiers are probabilistic; the numbers vary, but roughly speaking:
Player A is 1 tier higher than player B = player A has a 60% chance of scoring more
Player A is 2 tiers higher than player B = player A has a 70% chance of scoring more
Player A is 3 tiers higher than player B = player A has a 80% chance of scoring more
(2) When choosing between players of the same tier, flip a coin or go with your gut. I also recommend diversifying your starters across teams. Another good suggestion consists of going with the player in the game with a higher vegas line.
(3) To use the flex chart, fill in your RB, WR, and TE slots first. Then, refer to the flex chart to find the best of your remaining options.
(4) Boris updates these charts each week – they are a great way to pick up players off the waiver wire.
(5) Boris is a hero on the fantasy football subpage at Reddit – username u/prayes. Look him up.
Website #2: Defense Wins Championships!
What if you could pluck your starting defense each week off the waiver wire, and they would threaten to score league-leading totals every single time?
Another data scientist (and former poker player) is doing amazing things with NFL defenses. His name is Dylan Lerch and he posts his rankings weekly on Reddit, as well as an ‘Empeopled’ website. Dylan analyzes Las Vegas oddsmakers data on defenses to come up with his rankings. Las Vegas provides widely available, incredibly accurate projection models for NFL scoring. Dylan takes this data and translates them into fantasy scoring projections.
Most fantasy players stick with the same NFL defense for too long. Meanwhile each week there are usually better options available.
Follow Dylan on Reddit – username u/quickonthedrawl.
17 Rules To Live By
Found this on Buster Benson’s website:
A few rules that I try to live by
1. You must not dilly-dally. 2. You must be your word. 3. You must have good intentions. 4. You must admit to being the maker of meaning. 5. You must not feel sorry for yourself. 6. You must have a vision that you are striving for. 7. You must tie creativity and experimentation with survival. 8. You must be the change you want to see. 9. You must rally others with your vision. 10. You must stake your reputation on your better self. 11. You must be comfortable with the consequences of being who you are. 12. You must share. 13. You must make your own advice and take it. 14. You must manage your stress, health, and clarity. 15. You must study your mistakes. 16. You must retry things you don’t like every once in a while. 17. You must make time to enjoy things.
2014 Subaru Legacy – The Car You Should Buy Today
Looking for good value in a safe, reliable car? The 2014 Subaru Legacy provides the lowest total cost of ownership in one of the safest cars from a reliable manufacturer.
How did I determine this? Here’s how to do it:
Safety First!:
The website www.informedforlife.org is an independent organization created solely for the purpose of helping individuals select a car that may save lives in an accident. They combine IIHS and NHTSA data along with vehicle weight to determine the safest cars on the road. The safest vehicles for model-years 2011-2014 must meet the following criteria:
* Rated “Top Pick” by IIHS and “5-Star Overall” by NHTSA. The testing protocols used by these agencies complement each other and they must both agree the vehicle meets their highest standard.
* Each individual IIHS / NHTSA rating must be in the top quartile for frontal impact, side impact and rear impact. This filters out vehicles with poor individual crash modes.
* The size/weight-based projected driver fatality rate must be less than the rate for the average weight (3200 lb) passenger car. The relative weight of a vehicle compared with one it collides with in a head-on crash is a critical determinant of the forces the occupants are subjected to, however vehicle weight is ignored in the 5-Star system used by IIHS / NHTSA and must be evaluated separately.
Here is the list of 2011-2014 vehicles which meet the above criteria – they are the safest 3% of vehicles available (click on picture to enlarge):
Reliability
Now that we have our list of safest cars, let’s filter the list by manufacturer reliability. Here are the top 10 brands determined by Consumer Reports most recent (October 2013) annual reliability rankings:
CR Most Reliable
Subaru
GMC
Honda
Volvo
Infiniti
Mazda
Audi
Acura
Toyota
Lexus
Reviewing our list of safest vehicles for the above brands yields the following possible models:
2013 GMC Acadia (SUV)
2014 Acura MDX (SUV)
2011-14 Volvo XC60 (SUV)
2011-14 Honda Odyssey (Van)
2014 Mazda CX-5 (SUV)
2012-14 Volvo S60 (Car)
2013 Lexus ES350 (Car)
2013-14 Subaru Outback (Car)
2013-14 Subaru Legacy (Car)
2012-14 Honda Accord (Car)
Four of the above vehicles (Subaru Legacy, Subaru Outback, Honda Accord and Honda Odyssey) are also on Consumer Reports list of “Top 10 Cars Most Likely to Go 200,000 miles”.
Value
Now we can evaluate these models for total cost of 5-year and 10-year ownership. For this I use the ‘Car Cost Comparison Tool’ Excel spreadsheet. This Excel spreadsheet uses an eight factor model of purchase price, depreciation, financing, fees and taxes, fuel costs, fuel economy, insurance, and maintenance/repairs. You can input your own driver, vehicle, financing and fuel costs to personalize your estimates and find the least expensive long-term vehicle option. Choosing the right vehicle will save you tens of thousands of dollars over the next few years.
For this exercise I’m evaluating new (2014) models. Here are screenshots of the analysis (click on picture to enlarge).
I used Edmunds.com to price the vehicles, choosing the most fuel-efficient model in a ‘mid-level’ package. The 2014 Subaru Legacy in 4-cylinder Premium Package will cost $36,225 (0.48 $/mile) to operate for the next 5 years, lowest of all these safe, reliable vehicles.
Obviously your individual options and financing play a key role. If a manufacturer offers 0% financing it can cut thousands off your cost. Use the spreadsheet to evaluate all offers and options, including new and used cars.
This car cost comparison excel spreadsheet is available on the Research Offers page.