Archive for June 4th, 2008

Filed under: ,

Six degrees of Wikipedia

Ever wonder how many clicks it takes to get from the Wikipedia page for Bill Gates to the page for Mark Shuttleworth? The answer is three. How about from “ice cream” to “cone?” Surprisingly, the answer is four. We know this not because we’ve been wasting hours clicking on each possible Wikipedia link and tabulating the results, but because somebody’s done all the hard work for us by creating a Six Degrees of Wikipedia page.

Just type in any two items, and the web service will dig through a database of Wikipedia articles and figure out how long it would take to get from one to the other. The Wikipedia page for “2007″ is apparently the closest to the “center” of Wikipedia, meaning that you can get to any other page from 2007 with an average of 3.45 clicks. When you take out Wikipedia pages for dates or long lists of items, the page for “United Kingdom,” is the closest to the center, since it’s an average of 3.67 clicks away from any other page.

[via Digital Inspiration]

Read

Comments No Comments »

Filed under: ,

If you’ve noticed that your mailbox isn’t quite as full as it used to be, it’s because credit card companies are mailing out fewer credit card offers to let naive consumers know that they’ve been PRE-APPROVED!!!! … to pay 23% interest.

Mintel Comperemedia reports that unsolicited mailings from credit card, banking, investment, and mortgage loan companies mailed out 12.7% fewer unsolicited offers in the first quarter of 2008 versus the same period last year. JPMorgan Chase alone cut its credit card mailings by 34%.

Well isn’t that just great: now that the economy is struggling and food costs are rising, the credit card issuers are tightening up. Of course when the economy was booming, they were happy to lend stupid people money to purchase luxury apparel. Now, many consumers are tapped out, maxed-out and overdrawn, and they’re no longer good risks for credit card issuers.

In the long run, like most developments that reduce the availability of high-cost consumer credit, this is good news for most people. With credit card companies pulling away the punchbowl, they’ll have to resort to more creative ways to meet their expenses like, oh, I don’t know, working more and spending less.

Comments No Comments »

Close
E-mail It