Love ESPN's Jeremy Schaap. Excellent journalist and enjoyed his recap of the 2008 Summer Olympics.
Showing posts with label olympics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label olympics. Show all posts
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Saturday, August 2, 2008
"Tocqueville on China"
Pretty cool project by the American Enterprise Institute:
Today's China-watchers face no shortage of issues or policy areas to study. Experts look at China's economy, foreign and defense policies, human rights record, business practices, corruption levels, environmental policies, even demographics. But for all the important work being done on China today, we believe too little attention has been paid to understanding contemporary Chinese civic culture. Yet it is precisely China's underlying civic culture which will, as much as anything, help inform how particular policy issues are addressed by the Chinese, and more broadly, how China is likely to develop in the future. Perhaps the greatest student of civic culture is Alexis de Tocqueville, whose studies of American democracy and pre-revolutionary France still represent the gold standard in terms of elucidating the fundamental civic spirit--the moeurs--of both regimes. In the tradition of Tocqueville's studies and methodology, AEI's "Tocqueville on China" project convenes a select group of scholars, policy analysts, and government experts to generate innovative studies that elicit the underlying civic culture of post-Mao China, enabling policymakers to better understand the internal forces and pressures that are shaping China's future.
One study from this project, "China's Protestants. A Mustard Seed for Moral Renewal?"
Today's China-watchers face no shortage of issues or policy areas to study. Experts look at China's economy, foreign and defense policies, human rights record, business practices, corruption levels, environmental policies, even demographics. But for all the important work being done on China today, we believe too little attention has been paid to understanding contemporary Chinese civic culture. Yet it is precisely China's underlying civic culture which will, as much as anything, help inform how particular policy issues are addressed by the Chinese, and more broadly, how China is likely to develop in the future. Perhaps the greatest student of civic culture is Alexis de Tocqueville, whose studies of American democracy and pre-revolutionary France still represent the gold standard in terms of elucidating the fundamental civic spirit--the moeurs--of both regimes. In the tradition of Tocqueville's studies and methodology, AEI's "Tocqueville on China" project convenes a select group of scholars, policy analysts, and government experts to generate innovative studies that elicit the underlying civic culture of post-Mao China, enabling policymakers to better understand the internal forces and pressures that are shaping China's future.
One study from this project, "China's Protestants. A Mustard Seed for Moral Renewal?"
Sunday, January 6, 2008
INNOTIVE'S SILVERLIGHT INTEGRATION... MICROSOFT SILVERLIGHT TO POWER BEIJING OLYMPICS
Timely news from from Allen Stern, "NBC Universal Selects Microsoft and Silverlight to Power Olympics Video," since my friend Jimmy, CEO of Innotive, called me a couple days ago to check out their new build on Microsoft's Silverlight platform. Innotive already had a video wall application, which can show hundreds of simultaneous video streams running, but with Silverlight they built one with a hundred live video streams. It's pretty cool, so check it out:
In the video is our friend, Peter, Innotive's CTO who led this project. Both are my friends that I did my first two startups with.
More on the NBC and Microsoft partnership for the Beijing Olympics from TechCrunch and Mashable.
In the video is our friend, Peter, Innotive's CTO who led this project. Both are my friends that I did my first two startups with.
More on the NBC and Microsoft partnership for the Beijing Olympics from TechCrunch and Mashable.
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