I was thinking the same thing about location. If you can, move to a city where there is less competition for jobs. Midwest cities have a lot of jobs in banking and insurance that aren't as competitive.
I had trouble remembering which question corresponded to which number as I read the article. It would have been nice to include the question above each person's answer (or maybe a hover over the number reveals the number, or something similar).
Dan Carlin Hardcore History - Very long episodes covering history in detail. Dan is a very enjoyable story teller.
Common Sense with Dan Carlin - Episodes covering recent events. The host is opinionated, but very interesting.
Skeptic's Guide to the Universe - this podcast covers science, but mostly is about combating pseudoscience in society. The hosts can seem dismissive, but I agree with them, so I like it.
EconTalk - I'd say some of these are a step above pop Econ. The variety and high stature (some Nobel laureates) of the guests is impressive.
StarTalk - NGT, what else is there to say. I like the comedians he has on as cohosts too.
Stuff You Missed In History Class - less in depth than hardcore history above, but also more easily consumed.
How To Start a Startup - good advice on startups. This is one you listen to over and over again.
Startup - this one doesn't have a lot of specific advice on starting a startup, but is interesting nonetheless.
Lexicon Valley -Etymology of different a words and phrases. Good hosts.
I Love Marketing - covers direct response marketing. The hosts can seem self serving, but the early episodes are very informative.
I've just recently started listening to more podcasts. I've listened to "Skeptic's Guide to the Universe" for years, but I think my favorite podcast currently is Dan Carlin's "Hardcore History."
I agree that it's a very difficult problem. I think that it's a major missing piece for online math learning right now (actually interacting with math symbols in a non ASCII/textbox way). Thanks for all of the hard work you guys do!
Are there any plans for an interactive equation editor supported by KaTeX? I think this is something the web is missing. I've been following the MathJax dev google group, and it seems like there aren't any solid plans for them to implement this feature.
It would be nice to have something officially supported by a large project. I think that there is a lot of potential on the web for interactive math lessons with symbolic input using a CAS (not multiple choice).