RSS: Coming Soon to Yahoo Mail

I’ve long felt that RSS — a way to subscribe to Web site content feeds — will become mainstream only when Microsoft introduces the standard into its new Vista operating system. Well, it looks like Yahoo is beating MSFT to the punch.

As TechCrunch reports, Yahoo mail will soon support RSS. Users will be able to subscribe to feeds and organize them into folders — the screen shots look really promising.

I’m excited about this because RSS works so well; it has vastly improved the way I use the Web, and I’m eager for more folks to discover its benefits. For an overview of how RSS works, check out my brief tutorial. For more in-depth info, “What is RSS?”, over at Richard’s Notes, is a good place to start.

Categories
Misc.

Borf: The Clothes Make the Man

In my newest Gridskipper post, I discuss notorious DC graffiti artist Borf‘s recent scrape with the law.

Extreme Russian Street Gymnastics

Parkour is a sort of gymnastics of the street. Check out this video for an insane example — straight outta Russia.

Parkour

All I Want for Festivus….

…is some water buffalo milk yogurt.

(Via SNP.)

Categories
Misc.

Bolivia, Evo Morales, and Market-Dominant Minorities

According to the NYT’s Juan Forero, coca-legalization proponent and indigenous coalition leader Evo Morales just might become the next president of Bolivia.

The election of Morales in Bolivia would represent the triumph of indigenous groups over the minority white elite ruling class — as well as the rejection of what’s viewed as American imperialism and the encroachment of globalization on poor people’s lives throughout the southern Andes.

This monumental shift, should it reach fruition, would mirror the central thesis of Amy Chua’s prescient tome “World On Fire”: that the world’s so-called “market-dominant minorities” — the wealthy whites, in the case of Bolivia — become enriched by globalization while the poor majority indigenous population becomes increasingly destitute and disenfranchised. Class tensions, in this scenario, are exacerbated; violence erupts.

The ascent of Morales in Bolivia, if it happens, may signal a sea change in Andean politics. Only time will tell; could Peru and Ecuador, which also have sizeable Indian populations, be next?

Funny Cat Clips

I’m usually not a huge fan of cats — they’re too attitudinal; I prefer a pet to be concerned with my happiness, not the other way around. Nevertheless, here’re some amusing clips of cats being silly. Good to see that dogs haven’t completely cornered the market on stupidity.

Categories
Misc.

Vanity, Thy Name is Newley

I’m delighted to see that my recent articles have been cited in some of my favorite blogs:

— Rolf Potts mentioned “Beating the At-Home Blues” (and a long-term traveler named Andrea chimed in, leaving a comment about her current yearning for the road).

— Mike Yessis at World Hum also linked to the piece.

— The new Indy Travel blog not only mentioned “Beating the At-Home Blues” but appealed to my vanity by calling me “a rising star in the travel writing world” and posting an image of my mug.

— Michael Turton, of the excellent View From Taiwan blog, linked to my scootering misadventures article.

— And, as I mentioned before, Chris Mohney at Gridskipper also linked to my scootering article.

Hasta Monday

I won’t be posting anything here until after the Thanksgiving weekend. Vaya con dios. Eat lots of turducken for me. See you next week.

My New Article About Scootering in Taiwan

A Kaohsiung intersection at dusk

I’ve got an article in this month’s Student Traveler magazine. The piece describes a fiasco that ensued when I attempted to obtain my scooter driving license in Taiwan last year. As the folks at the mag wrote in the issue’s table of contents:

“Riding a scooter is easy, right? Not in Taiwan, not when you’re being tested, and certainly not when you’re Newley Purnell.”

Truer words were never written.

(Thanks to Chris M. at Gridskipper for mentioning the piece.)

Categories
Misc.

On Being Happy — and the “Latino Bonus”

Kate Santich, writing in The Orlando Sentinel, surveys current research on what makes people happy — and discusses the so-called “Latino Bonus”:

One of the most intriguing finds to come out of the research so far is that Latin Americans consistently rank happier in life-satisfaction surveys than would otherwise be expected, given that many in the region live in poverty. In an in-depth study of 120,000 people in 82 nations, the World Values Survey found what one researcher dubbed “the Latino bonus.”

“I didn’t expect it,” says Ronald Inglehart, the survey’s director, based at the University of Michigan. “But the evidence is very consistent. And it is not true of all Hispanic countries, because Spain and Portugal are not high on the (life-satisfaction) scale.”

There are probably several factors at work, Inglehart proposes, the first being strong friendship and family ties, a universal source of satisfaction. Another is religious faith, which, interestingly, seems to boost happiness only in Latin America and the United States. In Europe, which is also predominantly Christian, it does not have the same impact.

Inglehart expects further studies of the Latino bonus, but those who have experienced it find it a powerful force.

Sister Ann Kendrick sees it daily in her community. A Roman Catholic nun, she has spent about 35 years helping the poor – mostly immigrants from Latin America – through the Office for Farmworker Ministry in Apopka.

“I’ll put five Hispanic women in my van to go to Orlando, and they can make a party along the way,” she said. “They get to laughing and telling jokes and carrying on. And there might even be some heavy discussion about something tough – like trouble in their marriage or one of their kids being in jail – but there’s a level of energy to their conversation. They generate a sense of connection that just feels good.”

(Emphasis mine.)

(Via Happiness and Public Policy.)