According to a report in New Scientist, sleep scientists at Oxford have discovered an alarming fact – counting sheep does not help you drop off after all. But there is consolation for insomniacs, as they also found that conjuring up a pleasant and relaxing scene will have you nodding off in no time.

Those finding hard to sleep often seek distraction and some distractions work better than others, a team at Oxford University has found. “Picturing an engaging scene takes up more brain space than the same dirty old sheep,” says Allison Harvey. “Plus it’s easier to stay with it because it’s more interesting,” she adds.

“A Mess in Theory — a Mess in Practice”. Thoughtful article by Simon Caulkin on the failure of management education in Britain. Very good on the baleful impact of the RAE.

“management research must pass a dual test of rigour: it must be theoretically robust but also stand up to the buffeting of practice. (As one business-school head used to say: ‘There’s nothing so practical as a good theory.’) It is also transdisciplinary. Important issues such as supply-chain management or indeed productivity do not sit comfortably in traditional subject areas.

RAE tramples on both these imperatives. It judges research in 69 standalone units of assessment, and in purely academic terms, by peer review of books and articles in learned journals. For RAE purposes, articles in Harvard Business Review, the most influential management publication on the planet, don’t count because it is not an academic journal. ”

Netscape Communications, AOL Time Warner’s subsidiary, on Tuesday sued Microsoft for damages, citing its anti-competitive behaviour during the so-called “browser wars” in the mid-1990s. The private antitrust lawsuit is based on the government’s antitrust case against the software giant, which found the company guilty of anti-competitive behaviour. FT story here.

What a difference a year makes. According to this morning’s Financial Times, the John Lewis Partnership is to close Buy.com, the internet business it bought last year, following strong Christmas trading on its own website. The retail group hopes most of Buy.com’s 200,000 customers will move to to Johnlewis.com, where it will set up a technology shop.

How the Wayback Machine works.

The Internet Archive made headlines back in November with the release of the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, a Web interface to the Archive’s five-year, 100-terabyte collection of Web pages. The archive is the result of the efforts of its director, Brewster Kahle, to capture the ephemeral pages of the Web and store them in a publicly accessible library. In addition to the other millions of web pages you can find in the Wayback Machine, it has direct pointers to some of the pioneer sites from the early days of the Web, including the NCSA What’s New page, The Trojan Room Coffee Pot, and Feed magazine.

There was a nice profile of Susan Sontag in last Saturday’s Guardian, which quotes a magnificent sneering attack on her by Scott McLemee in his Washington Post review of her latest book.

“Her manner now is virtually indistinguishable from that of George Steiner in his lugubrious moments as Last Intellectual, striking that solemn pose as embodiment of high seriousness – perched atop the Nintendo ruins of western civilization”.

“Software that can detect when people are lying in their e-mails sounds a bit far-fetched, but its manufacturers declare it is true.” Oh yeah! The FT is reporting that “SAS Institute, which makes fraud-detection systems for banks and phone companies, will on Monday announce a product that can sift through e-mails and other electronic text to catch elusive nuances such as tone.”