Amazon’s Drone Strike

Jeff Bezos unveiled Amazon’s next disruptive delivery service on 60 Minutes last night: a fleet of flying autonomous drones capable of delivering packages within 30 minutes of ordering. Amazon Prime Air, as the project is called, is currently capable of delivering packages weighing 5 pounds or less within a 10 mile radius of Amazon’s distribution […]

Eldercare Crisis
Taking the Elderly Out of Institutions

One tool Americans have for managing their eldercare expenses may be quietly fading away right when it is most needed. Long-term-care insurance allows Americans to pay an annual premium in exchange for coverage of eldercare expenses in nursing homes, assisted living programs, and even home care situations. But the WSJ reports this insurance is quickly becoming […]

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Grand Strategy
The End of History Ends

For the first time since the Cold War, the United States is going to have to adopt a coherent Eurasian strategy that integrates European, Middle Eastern, South Asian and East Asian policy into a comprehensive design.

Week in Review

While many of us were enjoying Thanksgiving meals with our loved ones (and maybe even deep-frying turkeys), the chattering classes were chewing over the interim deal signed with Iran last week. The deal seemed to signal some kind of turning point, but in this week’s essay, we asked: a turning point toward what? [O]ur first […]

Iran’s Nuclear Power "Red Line"

Iran won’t abandon its nuclear energy ambitions in pursuit of a nuclear deal, according to leaders in Tehran over the weekend. Iran’s top nuclear official Ali Akbar Salehi reportedly considers the abandonment of his country’s Arak heavy water nuclear reactor a “red line” that won’t be crossed in pursuit of easing Western sanctions. Not only […]

You Betcha

Saturday’s Washington Post ran an interesting article on its front page, above the fold left, called “Virginia stays out of gaming as stakes rise.”  As the author, with the very improbable name of J. Freedom du Lac, explains, Virginia is one of only ten states (plus the District of Columbia) to have successfully resisted the […]

Photo of the Week

[Thai anti-government protesters shake hands with policemen outside the Government house during a demonstration in Bangkok on December 1, 2013. Photo courtesy of Getty Images.]

Are MOOCs Teaching the Wrong Things?

MOOCs have their fair share of critics, but they generally fall back on the same few arguments: MOOCs offer a low-quality facsimile of in-person education, dropout rates are high, student interaction is low, and it’s difficult to assess how much students have actually learned. But over at the Financial Times Edward Luce attacks MOOCs from […]

How Disruptive Can 3D Printing Get?

A new research project at the Cardiovascular Innovation Institute shows us that the disruptive possibilities of 3D printing have only begun to be imagined. Live Science reports that CII scientists are embarking on an attempt to 3D print a full human heart from human cells: The heart represents one of the most ambitious goals for researchers working to […]

Yellow Shirts Gaining Ground in Thai Protests

The protests in Thailand have just entered their eighth day, and it’s beginning to look like the anti-government “yellow shirts” are gaining momentum in the struggle. Over the past few days, yellow shirt protestors have stormed a number of Government buildings, taken over a TV station, and forced the Prime Minister to go into hiding […]

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