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YouTube. Why Glasses Are So Expensive. □□ Pakistan's Fake Degrees. Poverty makes man inventor. - Inventions of People Smarter than Albert Einstein ... Watch The Edupreneur: Making the impact and the income Online. Oats Breakfast Smoothie Recipe - Oats Recipes For Weight Loss - Vegan (No Milk) 12 ways to get smarter – in one chart. View the high resolution version of today’s graphic by clicking here. The level of a person’s raw intelligence, as measured by aptitude tests such as IQ scores, is generally pretty stable for most people during adulthood. While it’s true that there are things you can do to fine tune your natural capabilities, such as doing brain exercises, puzzle solving, and getting optimal sleep – the amount of raw brainpower you have is difficult to increase in any meaningful or permanent way.

For those of us who constantly strive to be high-performers in our fields, this seems like bad news. If we can’t increase our processing power, then how can we solve life’s bigger problems as we move up the ladder? The Key is Mental Models The good news is that while raw cognitive abilities matter, it’s how you use and harness those abilities that really makes the difference. Mental Model Example In a recent Medium post by Simmons, he highlights a well-known mental model that is the perfect bread crumb to start with. A well educated mind v/s A well formed mind: Dr. Shashi Tharoor at TEDxGateway 2013. I spent a week in a VR headset, here's what happened. This Farm of the Future Uses No Soil and 95% Less Water. A Forest Garden With 500 Edible Plants Could Lead to a Sustainable Future.

Why you should say no to Bed-Tea early morning, ask Rujuta Diwekar. Anant Agarwal: Why massive open online courses (still) matter. Joel Selanikio: The big-data revolution in health care. Kenneth Cukier: Big data is better data. Fawn Qiu: Easy DIY projects for kid engineers. Jaron Lanier: How we need to remake the internet. Tamas Kocsis: The case for a decentralized internet. Shohini Ghose: Quantum computing explained in 10 minutes. A love letter to libraries. Helen Pearson: Lessons from the longest study on human development. Erica Stone: Academic research is publicly funded.

8 Things I Learned Reading 50 Books A Year For 7 Years. I’ve read over 300 books since the beginning of 2011, not counting the many I started but didn’t finish and the endless content we all read online.

8 Things I Learned Reading 50 Books A Year For 7 Years

I’ve read about topics ranging from Buddhism to business, philosophy to physics, and writers ranging from feminists to pick-up artists (and even Trump’s “Art of The Deal.”) I’ve read old books, new books, books with illustrations and fancy charts, a lot of books from which I got nothing and a handful of books I still love. 90% of this was non-fiction. Here’s what I’ve learned in all that reading time — and some of my favorite books from my 20’s. There are two camps of “good books” and both of them are rare. The first is good content. (Writing that offers both, it should be said, is the incredibly rare and precious gem indeed.)

When it comes to choosing between them, as we must, I prefer the former over the latter. Here’s one such excerpt. Regardless of which direction you go, though, the truly good book is a thing to cherish. Writers are people. Your Apps Know Where You Were Last Night, and They’re Not Keeping It Secret. News Archive. Teacher Education.