Friday, March 30, 2007

Universcale

The Universcale, graphically showing the relative size of objects from Quarks to the entire Universe.

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Across the Universe

A blog about the cosmos, written by Brian May, the guitarist for Queen. (Yes, the Queen of "Bohemian Rhapsody" fame.)

He dropped out of an Astrophysics PhD program 30 years ago ("I was busy!" he says) and is now re-registered. Luckily, the topic of his half-completed thesis, dismissed as uninteresting 20 years ago, is now thought to be wonderfully important, allowing him to pick up where he left off.

Driving directions

Google driving directions from New York City to Dublin, Ireland.    Note step 23 in particular.



Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Irrational Public Radio

Ok, you know me and my rather quirky sense of humor.
Consider that reminder fair warning when I tell you that I find this absolutely hilarious.

Irrational Public Radio offers a near-perfect parody of NPR. Try the brief demo, or go straight to the Episode Guide and dig right in.

Letter to the RIAA

If you ever get swept up by one of the RIAA's "copyright pirate" fishing expeditions, hope that your lawyer shows as much competence as this one

- milan

Slashdot says:
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "In SONY BMG v. Merchant, in California, the defendant's lawyer wrote the RIAA a rather stern letter recounting how weak the RIAA's evidence is, referring to the deposition of the RIAA's expert witness (see Slashdot commentary), and threatening a malicious prosecution lawsuit. The very same day the RIAA put its tail between its legs and dropped the case, filing a Notice of Voluntary Dismissal. About an hour earlier NYCL had termed the letter a 'model letter'; maybe he was right."


Monday, March 26, 2007

Pat the bunny

Got some time, maybe LOTS of time?

Don't mind a bit of urgency, maybe even some drama?

Did pretty well in College Biology lab?

Hands feel steady?

Ok,  pat the bunny's belly .

Serendipitous inventions

Applying a "clustering algorithm" to the original list from Wikipedia (below), some interesting coincidences appear:
 
Sweet Stuff:  Acesumfame, Cyclamate, and Aspartame artificial sweeteners (courtesy of the long tradition of sloppy chemists accidentally tasting things; see LSD.)
 
The "Wrong Way Corrigan" cluster:
    High-temperature superconductivity, discovered while looking for a better insulator.
   Post-it notes - world's weakest adhesive found while looking for strongest one
 
The "signal at zero" cluster, for discoveries found in the control sample:
   Infrared radiation - gee, my 'control' measurement is higher than my 'signal' measurement...
    Cosmic Gamma-ray bursts - seems like we're getting a lot of 'false positives' from the nuclear bomb detector....
   Microwave background radiation - why is the noise floor of my receiver 4 degrees K?
 
The "dirty lab glassware" award goes to:
    Penicillin - mold contamination
   Polyethylene - oxygen contamination
   Teflon - iron contamination
 
The "oops" award, for discoveries made after dropping something:
   Vulcanized rubber - latex and sulfur, on a hot stove
   Indigo - a mercury thermometer
   ScotchGard - splashed onto sneakers
   Silly Putty - "my synthetic rubber sample bounces!" 
 
While the "sloppy cooking" prize is shared by
    Chocolate Chip cookies
   Corn Flakes
    Potato Chip

 

Chemistry

Pharmacology

Medicine and Biology

Physics and Astronomy

Inventions

Serendipitous ideas

Some ideas and concepts that came to scientists by means of fortuitous accidents or even dreams are also considered a kind of serendipity. Some examples (coincidentally all are regarded with suspicion by science historians):

Other examples of serendipity

Stories of accidental discovery in exploration abound, of course, because the aim of exploration is to find new things and places. The principle of serendipity applies here, however, when the explorer had an aim in mind and found another unexpectedly. Some classical cases were:

 
 

Friday, March 23, 2007

Trees

The Ten most Magnificent Trees in the World.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

3D doodling set

The MoMA isn't a place I'd think of first as a place to get innovative toys, but here's a counterexample
Put on the bi-colored glasses, pick up the red/blue pencil holder, and doodle away in 3D!

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Tom Lehrer's "The Elements" song

Although Christine Lavin has sung about amoebas and the planet(oid) Pluto (with the extra-special honor of being the only known song with a proper URL in its lyrics,) if you want the periodic table you've got to go to the original, as sung by Tom Lehrer.

Friday, March 16, 2007

A somewhat less inconvenient truth

His monthly energy bill is $0

Of course, his capital investment is $500,000, which makes the solution a bit less universal.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

March 14th

Happy Pi Day!


Ficlets

Little bitty chiclet-sized bites of fiction waiting to be devoured.  Or, if you'd rather, preceded or followed by another one of your own making. The most time-absorbing bits of progressive stories, chain letters, and blogs, all wrapped into one silly-but-seductive mess.

Friday, March 09, 2007

Things one can do with a VW Bug

Many things, some very odd.

Feeding America

An amazing online collection of historical recipe books, archived as both scanned images and text.
 
Old favorites such as Fanny Farmer's "Boston Cooking-School Cookbook" are here, as well as goodies such as an 1896 copy of "Manual for Army Cooks", just in case you were wondering how long to roast 60 lbs of beef.

Music that can not, or perhaps should not, be played.

Rather difficult scores.

Top 10 most curious states of equilibrium

Balance a pencil on your fingertip?  Why bother, when you can try two pencils, two knives, and two sharp-pointed pens, all dangling off a thread?

Thursday, March 08, 2007

The Cliche Rotation Project

"a drive to replace old and worn out sayings with new ones of roughly equivalent meaning."

Unless you're Enrolled in the Paris and Nicole Academy, you'll see that Everyone gets Ice Cream here.

"Hamlet is Back"

The trailer for the movie that answers the unasked question, "is there enough action in today's interpretation of Shakespeare?"


Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Conan O'Brien and Jim Carey talk Quantum Physics

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqJRwtCeR2s

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Jen Stark paper sculptures

Very, very pretty.  By all means follow the links to "sculpture", "drawings", and "sketchbook", as all are worth it.