1/ So, a few words about my friends at @MathsGear - the most wonderful online store for nerds everywhere.
MathsGear is the brainchild of brilliant maths & science performers @standupmaths@MouldS@jamesgrime@stecks - who have adapted brilliantly to evaporation of audiences...
2/ Where else but @MathsGear can one buy non-transitive dice? (Yellow beats red, red beats green, green beats blue, blue beats purple... purple beats yellow...) mathsgear.co.uk/collections/di…
3/ And where else but @MathsGear can one buy skew dice, which look weird but are actually perfectly fair? (Hurry: these sell out fast.) mathsgear.co.uk/collections/di…
5/ But perhaps you'd rather have a maths T-shirt? Or a maths game? Or a cheeseboard with a protractor engraved upon it, for cheese-angle precision? mathsgear.co.uk/collections/ki…
6/ At this point you may have questions, such as "Can I buy a clock where the numbers are mathematical constants?" (Yes: mathsgear.co.uk/collections/ki…)
Or "is Tim on commission?" (No.)
7/ But I do have an ulterior motive. @MathsGear allows you to pre-order signed copies of my book, "How To Make The World Add Up". mathsgear.co.uk/products/how-t…
Originally we thought 500 copies would be enough, but we blew through that number. Woo hoo!
8/ Not to worry: I've signed a few more. If they sell out like a pair of skew dice, which they look like they will, then I'll do my best to brave the coronavirus rules at the warehouse and sign even more.
But safest to order now while stocks last... mathsgear.co.uk/products/how-t…
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This is my father-in-law, Eamonn Monks. He was born in Dublin in 1933 and came to the UK in the mid 1950s. At first he lived in London, where he trained as a dentist and met his future wife, Brigid.
But later Eamonn and Brigid moved to Poulton-le-Fylde, outside Blackpool. This Irish immigrant became a pillar of the local community, caring for the community’s aching teeth before becoming a dentist for the prison service. The Northwest was lucky to have him…
…and his amazing children, who became a) Britain’s best baker b) One the UK’s finest audiologists c) The founder of an amazing mental health charity in Hackney d) the driving force behind Liverpool’s parks and green spaces and e) An award winning portrait photographer...
Why children can be better than adults at spotting misinformation: ft.com/content/157d51…
For the past few months I've been trying to figure out how to help 9-13 year olds make sense of the world (and particularly the numbers that describe it).
It might seem an umpromising task...
Most adults struggle with complex statistics and many feel powerless to evaluate almost any claim in the form of a number. An unnervingly large minority doubt straightforward claims. If the adults can’t cope, what hope do pre‑teens have?
Oo, first glimpses inside The Truth Detective, which is out next week! Ollie Mann has done a wonderful job bringing my ideas to life.
For those asking, the book is aimed at 9-13 year olds, although I keep having to confiscate my copy from the grown-ups...
Here's one of our Truth Detectives, Muhammad Yunus, microfinance pioneer and advocate of the "worm's eye view"...
Here's magician Derren Brown tossing a coin and getting ten heads in a row - with NO MAGIC REQUIRED.
How is it done?
Large complex projects have a habit of going wrong - sometimes catastrophically wrong. Just ask @dgardner and @BentFlyvbjerg, authors of the well-worth-your-time new book "How Big Things Get Done"
But @BentFlyvbjerg has found that if large complex projects are built up from repeated modular elements, the same gloomy tendency does not apply. Modular projects are less likely to overrun and vastly less likely to overrun catastrophically. Why is this?
If if may permitted some mild grumpiness, I present my opinionated guide to bad email etiquette. Whether you’re a cubicle dweller or a corporate communications supremo, here are the seven types of email you should never send... ft.com/content/5700be…
1) The email reminding me that my 7.34am train tomorrow departs at 7.34am. Or that I will need to bring my passport if I want to get on the plane. Stuff changes (especially these days) so these emails must be read. But they're an insult to the 99% least incompetent customers.
2) The omnibus email. On and on it goes, rambling like a pub storyteller. Generally if you have three different things, three short emails will be better; then I can deal with each one in turn. Also...
Tell me, people, is there a sexier word in the English language than "storage"? ft.com/content/557fd6…
Ah, okay. You may be right. But that's a problem. In today's column I ask whether we're skimping on storage (I think we are, even after accounting for hindsight) - and if so, why.
Part of the problem is that the "storage business model" is regarded with distaste. Start a business in which you fill warehouses with PPE, toilet paper, bottled water, bottles of cooking gas, and rice, then sell it all on at a profit when there's trouble; you'll not be thanked.