This map shows what % of total products each country provides. Top Five = 81% (China = 46%).

This map shows what % of total products each country provides. Top Five = 81% (China = 46%).


If you’ve been as addicted to I am with T.E.D.’s unbelievably excellent lecture content, then get yourself over to their newly refurbished site at Ted.com.
As noted in the NY Times you’ll find a strong focus on their TED Talks video archives, including many just released from last month, with an incredible amount of work that has gone into making the site highly interactive. Enjoy!
These just hit the streets of NYC recently.
Is it a coincidence that this was strategically placed directly outside Apple’s Fifth Ave store, Mac Geek Mecca? (I should know, that’s why I was there!)
Doubt it.
The postal box is part of a campaign for Star Wars stamps that can be voted on until May 20 at (I kid you not): uspsjedimaster.com
Simple questions require simple answers. Do I Need A Jacket? gives simple, straight-forward weather advice based on zip/postal code for US and Canada.
In an analysis measuring best quality of life in cities worldwide, Vancouver has again placed in the top third, but Switzerland is still (incrementally) better. The analysis is based on an evaluation
of 39 quality-of-living criteria for each city including political,
social, economic and environmental factors, personal safety and health,
education, transport and other public services.
Here’s the top five (Incl. tie scores):
1. Zurich, Switzerland
2. Geneva, Switzerland
3. Vancouver, Canada
3. Vienna, Austria
5. Auckland, New Zealand
5 .Düsseldorf, Germany
Noted highlights: Amsterdam (13), Ottawa (18), Honolulu (27), San Francisco (29), New York (48).
Bill Clinton describes the focus the Clinton Foundation has taken on running a pilot health care system in Rwanda, based on the work of Dr. Paul Farmer with Partners In Health in Haiti, and their aim of showing its potential as a model for the entire developing world.
T.E.D. Wish: Help him build this system in Rwanda, to bring world-class health care to a people who have overcome deadly hatred to rebuild their nation.
James Nachtwey talks about his decades as a photojournalist witnessing street violence, famine, and disease. A slideshow of his photos reveals two parallel themes in his work: The frontlines of contemporary wars are right where people live, and when a photo catches the world’s attention, it can truly drive action and change.
T.E.D. Wish: Help with gaining access to a story that needs to be told, and developing a new, digital way to show these photos to the world.
E.O. Wilson makes a plea on behalf of his constituents (insects and small creatures), to learn more about our biosphere. "We know so little about nature that we’re still discovering tiny organisms indispensable to life; yet we’re steadily, methodically, and vigorously destroying nature."
T.E.D. Wish: Work together on an Encyclopedia of Life, a web-based compendium of data from scientists and amateurs on every aspect of the biosphere.
Here’s a slide show of their latest race down Lombard Street in San Francisco.


Seth Godin gives a great factual reality check of the Diffusion of Innovations theory.
Buddhist monks at the Namgyal Monastary creating a sand mandala. More on their practice here.