/ in English


The company Bayer is famous for inventing aspirin in 1898, which is arguably one of the world’s most beloved brands, and for good reason. But I was surprised to learn that just two weeks earlier, the same three guys who gave the world aspirin also created Bayer’s other big brand, heroin, which was marketed for about eight years as the world’s best cough medicine” (Q&A: Tell Us 5 Things About Your Book: ‘The End of Advertising’ via MA.TT).

Fun if true—and full of lessons about the drug industry, I suppose.

Share & Comment


Gangnam Style loses its title as most-viewed YouTube video
Share & Comment


I am convinced, however, that we went way wrong with the Web as a platform by basing it from the start on client-server (aka calf-cow), which (to leverage McLuhan) retrieved the mainframe, which retrieved the monopoly, which retrieved the feudal system” (Doc Searls, How the Web failed us, and vice versa).

Share & Comment


Uppsala from the air. Almost home.

Share & Comment


Leaving Quebec City and the amazingly well organized CPA conference with this five year old memory from its sister conference the IPA, that time in Cardiff.

Share & Comment


Montreal from Mont Royal.

Share & Comment


Halfway (sort of) between Stockholm and Montreal. Wow!

Share & Comment


We survived another birthday party.

Share & Comment


Wikipedia’s Switch to HTTPS Has Successfully Fought Government Censorship
Share & Comment


Why Remix ‘Sgt. Pepper’s’? Giles Martin, The Man Behind The Project, Explains
Share & Comment


Academics are being hoodwinked into writing books nobody can buy *

“A few months ago, an editor from an academic publisher got in touch to ask if I was interested in writing a book for them.

I’ve ignored these requests in the past. I know of too many colleagues who have responded to such invitations, only to see their books disappear on to a university library shelf in a distant corner of the world.

If someone tried to buy said book – I mean, like a real human being – they would have to pay the equivalent of a return ticket to a sunny destination or a month’s child benefit. These books start at around £60, but they can cost double that, or even more.

This time, however, I decided to play along.”

What follows is a frank description that illustrates a major element of contemporary academic book publishing. In addition to what is mentioned in the article, I have also heard that writers sometimes have to pay for proofreading and other services normally provided by a publisher.

This seems to be a relatively big business for the publishers (they are at least almost guaranteed a small profit on each project) and, as the Anonymous Academic in the Guardian points out, not a very good deal for anyone else.

“So why don’t academics simply stay away from the greedy publishers? The only answer I can think of is vanity.”

I can think of another. These books (and book chapters) often count significantly in various academic reward systems. Compared to getting published in a high-quality peer-reviewed journal, writing these books is simply a good career move.

* This is the title of an article originally appearing in The Guardian 2015-09-04 (which recently came to my attention via my Facebook feed).

Share & Comment


Today, this happened.

(Yes, at 42 I made my first ever Rhubarb pie.)

Share & Comment


Back in Sweden again where it is finally spring. For real: No snow, green leaves on the trees. At least, that is what it looks like through the window I am trapped behind, with a backlog of work, which I was not able to get through while travelling.

Share & Comment


Now Pink Floyd’s instantly recognisable artwork, spectacular stagecraft and pioneering advances in sound design will be showcased in “Their Mortal Remains”, opening today at London’s Victoria and Albert museum. The exhibition is a heavenly ride through all they touched, all they saw, all their life was. For fans uncomfortably numbed by museums, on Friday Mr Waters will release his first rock album in 25 years, ahead of a North American tour. The time is gone, but the song isn’t over—and they’ve something more to say.

From The Economist Espresso: Not the final cut: Pink Floyd

Share & Comment


Conferencing in Valencia. At home: a rare May snowfall. Perfect timing.

Share & Comment


Beginning: Brunnsviken 8:30 in the morning (picture).
Middle: Final seminar with the master thesis students.
End: Pizza and Retsina in Rosendal followed by coffee and Laphroaig in KĂ„bo.

A good day.

Share & Comment


Share & Comment


Serious writer’s block has turned into professional procrastination. At least I am getting (other) things done now. Monday deadline. There is still hope.

Share & Comment


First epic micro.blog (test) post!

Share & Comment


It’s not such a good idea to cause suffering to real entities in the service of fictional stories” (Yuval Noah Harari).

Share & Comment


I do not talk much on the phone. One of the reasons for this is that I do not pick up if I don’t recognise the number, or rather, if the person is not in my address book and I am greeted with a name instead of a number. I am bad at remembering numbers. Did I mention that I teach and do research in accounting?

However, there is, at least, one exception to this policy of mine and that is when the office phone rings. (Technically it is a cell phone but it never leaves my room at work.) Around the third signal or so, a mutinous voice in my head reminds me that it, kind of, is my job to answer that phone. So, I answer. And then I sometimes—as I was yesterday—am presented with the second reason for not answering: I am really bad at saying no on the phone. I have no problem saying no to sales people or telemarketers (whom I try to avoid at all costs to begin with = reason 1) but when someone genuinely ask something of me, and has a reason for doing so that at least sound legitimate, then I say yes. And that is why I now am going to Lund in November. For a 15-minute talk. I’m sure it’s going to be great. But still. I need a new policy.

Share & Comment


A suggestion: Why doesn’t someone with moderate programming skills set aside an afternoon and invent hyperlinks between sentences in (e-)books. That cannot be a hard problem to solve. The address could, for instance, be the ISBN number plus the (parts of the) sentence being referenced. If there is copyright issues, the person following the link could be asked if they want to buy the book.

Anyone?

Share & Comment

The vanished grandeur of accounting


“In the wake of decades of financial scandal—much of it linked to creative accounting, or to no accounting all—the Dutch tradition of accounting art suggests it might be us, not the Dutch, who have misjudged accounting’s importance in the world. Accounting in the modern sense was still a new idea in the 1500s, one with a weight that carried beyond the business world. A proper accounting invoked the idea of debts paid, the obligation of nightly personal reckonings, and even calling to account the wealthy and powerful through audits”.

[…]

“Double-entry accounting made it possible to calculate profit and capital and for managers, investors, and authorities to verify books. But at the time, it also had a moral implication. Keeping one’s books balanced wasn’t simply a matter of law, but an imitation of God, who kept moral accounts of humanity and tallied them in the Books of Life and Death. It was a financial technique whose power lay beyond the accountants, and beyond even the wealthy people who employed them”.

(Jacob Soll, writing for the Boston Globe.)

Share & Comment

MacKenzie on algorithms and the moral order(ing) of markets


Interesting seminar today at the SSE with Donald MacKenzie on “How Algorithms Interact: Goffman’s ‘Interaction Order’ in Automated Trading”. At the seminar he demonstrated how buy and sell orders entered into an order book on a capital market queue, like—but not exactly similar to—how humans queue while, for instance, waiting for the bus. This is interesting, because, there is a moral order to a queue. In most countries the first-in-first-out (first in line, first to enter the bus) principle rules, regardless of gender, race or economic status. The queueing rule in the matching algorithm on a capital market similarly impose a moral order. And like the social rules of queueing may differ between countries, so the queuing rules may differ between markets.

Share & Comment

37


“We’ve found four more retractions for an erstwhile accounting professor, bringing his total to 37.

The latest retractions follow a 2014 investigation into the work of James H. Hunton by his former employer, Bentley University in Massachusetts, which found him guilty of misconduct, resulting in more than two dozen retractions. Here’s the list of retractions released by the American Accounting Association (Retraction Watch, May 12th, 2016).

Share & Comment