Scott Rosenberg's Links & Comment

News of Salon, Salon blogs, and the world
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Thursday, August 08, 2002 PERMALINK

When vaporware smells
.Net continues to be Microsoft's ball of confusion. News.com reviews the company's marketing blunders -- in particular, the way it rolled out two largely separate initiatives, one aimed at developers and one aimed at consumers, and gave them both the ".Net" moniker. Not since the days of Java and Javascript have people been this confused.
comment [] 5:40:34 PM | permalink


Salon Blog watch
David Harris has details of today's report that the old "eight glasses of water a day" standard is scientifically unsupported. I heard the scientist behind this interviewed on NPR this morning. It's just a myth, a bit of common knowledge that got repeated so many times everyone assumed it was solid science.
Unrelated Disney is offering Critiques of Editorials, along with an interesting look at how big recent revisions to the GDP numbers have been.
Adam Lasnik has taken my enthusiasm for They Might Be Giants lyrics as a cue and pushed it over the edge of absurdity!
Christian says his blogging time is cutting into his time to read Salon. There's always cutting back on your sleep...

comment [] 4:49:01 PM | permalink


Stem cell backlash?
John Robb suggests that Bush's year-old stem-cell research policy -- hailed by some at the time as a Solomonic compromise -- is a failure, one that will bite back at the president in future elections, as voters with ailing relatives who might have been helped by robust research turn on him.

As I argued at the time (and Michael Kinsley later echoed), the policy -- which is built around Bush's stated conviction that all embryos are sacred and the government should act to protect them -- is baldly hypocritical. Vast numbers of embryos are created and discarded every year during fertility treatments like in vitro fertilization. If Bush actually felt this was profoundly immoral, he'd do something to stop it. But since such fertility treatment touches the lives of a huge swathe of the electorate, the president wouldn't think of banning it. Couples who are stuck with extra embryos as a byproduct of such treatment typically have no choice but to dispose of them; stem cell research offers a way to make good use of them for the betterment of all. Why not allow that? Why not, in cases where it doesn't conflict with people's religious beliefs, encourage that?
comment [] 9:24:50 AM | permalink




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