UC courses ponder food’s culture, future – SFGate

The workshop will include field trips to urban farms, food parties and guest speakers from food security organizations such as People’s Grocery in Oakland. How the workshop of 30 to 35 unfolds will depend on the participants, but it will use storytelling, singing and movement to explore rituals, culture and memories about food.

via UC courses ponder food's culture, future – SFGate.

Edible Education 103: Telling Stories About Food and Agriculture. The course, in its second year, is open to undergraduate and graduate students; 300 free seats are also available to the public.

Racers’ Brains Provide Data for Autonomous Cars | Autopia | Wired.com

Scientists from Stanford’s Revs Program will be looking at the biometrics of two drivers who will pilot a 1966 Ford GT40 during the Rolex Monterey Motorsports Reunion. Stanford scientists will be looking at body temperature, heart rate, and, best of all, brain activity. Under their helmets, both drivers will have their scalps covered with electrodes.

via Racers' Brains Provide Data for Autonomous Cars | Autopia | Wired.com.

US to drive 3,000 Wi-Fi linked vehicles in massive crash avoidance trial

The test will feature nearly 3,000 cars, trucks and buses equipped Wi-Fi technology that will let the vehicles "talk" to each other in real time to help avoid crashes and improve traffic flow in the test area around Ann Arbor, Mich.

via Layer 8: US to drive 3,000 Wi-Fi linked vehicles in massive crash avoidance trial.

Potentially a wealth of data for transportation research! It’ll be interesting to see how reliable wifi connectivity is / whether it is sufficient.

HT Leighton

China Is Building an Army of Noodle-Making Robots – Robots – Eater National

In the face of rising labor costs, Chinese restaurateur Cui Runguan is selling thousands of robots that can hand slice noodles into a pot of boiling water called the Chef Cui. Runguan says in the report below that just like robots replacing workers in factories, "it is certainly going to happen in sliced noodle restaurants." The robots costs $2,000 each, as compared to a chef, who would cost $4,700 a year.

via China Is Building an Army of Noodle-Making Robots – Robots – Eater National.

Yeah!

HT Pranjal

Coursera Hits 1 Million Students, With Udacity Close Behind – Wired Campus – The Chronicle of Higher Education

Coursera, an upstart company working with selective universities to offer free online courses, announced this week that it had reached one million registered students. A rival company, Udacity, which also offers what have become known as Massive Open Online Courses, or MOOC’s, says it has more than 739,000 students.

via Coursera Hits 1 Million Students, With Udacity Close Behind – Wired Campus – The Chronicle of Higher Education.

Coursera works with some of the world’s best-known universities, such as Princeton University and the University of Virginia, while Udacity works with individual professors rather than institutions.

Udacity’s founder, Sebastian Thrun, said in an e-mail interview that his company planned to remain focused on computer science and related fields. “We are not doing humanities,” he said.

Coders Get Instant Gratification With Khan Academy Programming | Wired Enterprise | Wired.com

The tutorials are interactive and live entirely in the browser. Instead of a video, each lesson contains a pane on the left side for students to enter code and a pane on the right that displays the output. The first lesson walks students through the process of writing code that will draw a face in the right pane. After learning to generate graphics, students work up to animation and eventually to games, such as a Pac-Man clone.

via Coders Get Instant Gratification With Khan Academy Programming | Wired Enterprise | Wired.com.

Khan Academy Computer Science

Interactive tutorials, not videos like previous lessons. Immediate feedback on code chance (without recompiling!).

Resources for learning Chinese (intermediate/advanced)

I’ve been a bit obsessively looking for ways via The Internet to improve my Chinese in a low-effort yet regular way, and here are the resources I liked! Feel free to comment with what you’ve found useful for you!

哆啦A梦 Doraemon
Japanese manga series, in Chinese, 300+ video episodes available, 20 minutes
[Tudou]

德国之声中文广播 Deutsche Welle Chinese Podcast
Daily news, twice daily, audio only, 30 minutes
[Podcast details] [Podcast link] [More from DW]

异想电波 fancyradio podcasts
Stories of various genres including horror, sporadic publishing, audio only, variable duration
[Website]

新闻播客 BBC Podcast of the day
Daily news and interviews from reporters based in Asia, audio only, variable duration
[Website] [Podcast link]

麻省理工《科技创业》中文网 MIT Technology Review, Chinese version
Tech articles in Chinese and corresponding articles in English
[Chinese version][English version]

New vocab (08/03-08/10/2012)

Hokkien

tiong tombs
hae mee prawn noodles
char mee fried noodles
mee hoon wheat

Malay

bahru new
Singapura/सिंहपुर Singapore, lion city

Mandarin

紧急 jǐnjí urgent/emergency
讯号/信号 xùnhào/xìnhào signal
优等 yōuděng first-rate / top quality
酱油 jiàngyóu soy sauce
口粮 kǒuliáng ration
互动 hùdòng interactive
前夕 qiánxī eve / the day before
法院 fǎyuàn court of law
组装 zǔzhuāng to assemble and install
作秀 zuòxiù to show off (loanword, from English “show”)
留意 liúyì to take care / mindful
数字化 shùzìhuà to digitalize / digital (lit. to make into numbers)
货币 huòbì currency
象征 xiàngzhēng symbol
戛然而止 jiárán’érzhǐ to roll to a grinding halt (idiom)
支付方式 zhīfùfāngshì payment method
怀疑 huáiyí [to] doubt / to suspect / skeptical
拌面 bànmiàn lo mein, noodles served with soy sauce etc
板麵 bǎnmiàn board/block noodle dish, often in soup
叙利亚 Xùlìyà Syria
埃及 Āijí Egypt
伊朗 Yīlǎng Iran
伊斯兰 Yīsīlán Islam
莫斯科 Mòsīkē Moscow
俄罗斯 Éluósī Russia
阿富汗 Āfùhàn Afghanistan / Afghan
利比亚 Lìbǐyà Libya
联合国 Liánhéguó United Nations
欧盟 Ōuméng European Union / EU
欧元 Ōuyuán Euro (currency)
胡锦涛 Hú Jǐntāo Hu Jintao (1942-), President of PRC from 2003
温家宝 Wēn Jiā Bǎo Wen Jiabao (1942-), Premier of PRC from 2003

Misc

Peranakan Chinese / Baba-Nyonya descendants of late 15th and 16th-century Chinese immigrants to the Indonesian archipelago of Nusantara during the Colonial era
Sir Thomas Stamford Bingley Raffles British statesman, founder of British Singapore in 1819

Singapore: National Day

Singapore’s 47th National Day marks Singapore’s independence from Malaysia and consists of a “Parade” with lots of marching, music and singing, salutes, performances, and fireworks. Unfortunately, you need an invite or ticket to attend, so we watched the stream from our apartment by downtown Singapore (oh yeah– hello from Singapore!). Interestingly, many of the local people do not recognize National Day as a holiday — rather, it is mostly wealthier people, civil servants, and foreigners who partake. The locals told us that it’s essentially a government function. What we saw affirms this too; aside from the flags and banners everywhere, life and traffic seemed to continue as usual. Our morning started with a huge procession of red-wearing Singaporeans next to our apartment walking off to somewhere, and we got very excited for the big day, but the places we went did not seem to be affected by the holiday at all. We learned that educators and officials are invited to the parade, and I wonder who else. I originally associated National Day with US’s Fourth of July, but after some research, I deemed it to be more like a festive version of the State of the Union address. Except it seems that this year, they aired the National Day message a day early (transcript here). So there goes that theory.

[Photo credit: 1 2 3]

Either way, it was very interesting to see Singapore show off its various groups of armed forces and performers of the various southeast Asian cultures, to listen to the singing in Singapore’s 4 national languages, and to see the sea of some 27,000 people in the world’s largest floating stadium. So many colors, so many styles! I guess the mix of cultures is their culture. Despite the utter lack of Caucasians, there is a touch of British influence to much of what we see in Singapore, and it is even apparent in the show, when performers wearing traditional southeast Asian drag dance to rap. And since Singapore’s such a tiny place, we could hear the fighter jets and fireworks from our apartment as we caught them on the TV.

Anyway, happy National Day!