Beat the midterm blues: Play our Butler Bingo.

From a tipster:

"go to google maps. click street view. check out college walk - might bwog-readers care to find their friends?"

As if websites, news, print media, videos and pictures weren't enough, Google has made Googleable yet another category of information: every fucking square inch of Manhattan. While Bwog is impressed with the audacity of such an undertaking, it's not sure how exactly this is useful, unless you have hours to kill at your internship or are badly pining for College Walk. Cool new feature, or part of Google's sinister conspiracy to enslave the human race and ascend to God-like heights? You be the judge.


Podcasting His Life Away:
Electrical Engineering Prof. Daniel P.W. Ellis has a hobby even his wife finds creepy: digitally recording every waking moment of his day. Seeing it as an audiologged diary (or a "lifelog"), Ellis recounts such highlights as the fight with his wife in which he made "asshole" comments and his pleas to doctors for information on his injured infant son (as well as their queries as to why he was holding an Mp3 player the whole time). See the rest in this piece from the Chronicle of Higher Education on the lifelogging phenomenon.

MIDI-Makers Frozen Out...Again: In the week since Bwog reported on subzero temperatures shutting down the Computer Music Center in Prentis Hall, the heat has been turned on...and then off once more. After CMC officials thought the problem had been remedied, the chill returned. Now, CMC director Brad Garton is demanding a permanent solution - and spare heaters installed, just in case - before the center reopens and classes are resumed. Seriously, admins, it's one thing to cut essential services to Columbia's computer musicians - and another to give them a brief spell of hope before shutting them back out in the cold.

Get Your Beauty Rest: All nighters can make you fat. Really. According to the Daily Times of Pakistan, which assembled a compendium on US universities' sleep research, Columbia scientists determined that "adults who sleep less than seven hours a night had an increased risk of obesity. The risk ranged from 23 percent for six-hour-a-night sleepers to 73 percent for individuals who slept only two to four hours. Experts attributed this phenomenon to the fact that sleep deprivation lowered the level of leptin, a protein that suppresses appetite, and raised grehlin, which makes you want to eat." Columbia researchers: doing their homework so you have an excuse not to.

-CJS


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