Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Isaac Asimov

The Relativity of Wrong

This is a great article by a great mind. If anyone ever complains that science always needs correcting, that everything we think we know turns out to be wrong, here is an awesome and well thought answer.

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Better camo than you'd see at Monster Truck shows:

As a bird flies overhead, two insects freeze, hoping not to be noticed. If one of the insects is just the slightest bit more difficult to see, the other will be more likely to be eaten. This rule of nature is best summed up: "I don't have to outrun the bear, I just have to outrun you." So in the constant struggle to hide better than the competition, the result is near invisibility.

The mimics

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Galaxy Zoo

Did you ever want to be an astrophysicist, working with the top names of astronomy in solving the most pressing questions of how and why our universe behaves the way it does, but think, "Gee golly, that's a lot of school"?

Well fret no more, you pseudo-nerds! With Galaxy Zoo you, too, can spend hours of your precious life going cross-eyed staring at blurry snapshots on your computer hoping to get better results than some crappy $78 billion computer.

Seriously, though. This is real science that you can take part in. You can classify galaxies and run galaxy collision models on your computer. You will be doing real science, with real results. You're just a few clicks away from helping the next generation understand, and benefit from, the universe more than ever before.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Intelligence Squared

A series of debates from IQSquared US. It helps to see how our own arguments are being treated by the knowledgeable. Plus, debates can be very, very entertaining: intellectual football.

IQ Squared Debates

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Global Warmooling?

So is the globe warming or cooling? The science is clear, but only, it seems, to scientists. "Conspiracy!" claims the right, funded by coal and oil. "Danger!" cries the left, funded by nature groups and donations. When both sides are in such extreme disagreement, what do we do? Decide the truth is in the middle? No! Of course not. One side may be completely wrong. We educate ourselves. What does the science say without the propaganda? Listen to the scientist.

David Archer's Understanding the Forecast:
A free online "class" from the University of Chicago.

You can claim he's part of the Conspiracy, but if the only truth we accept is the truth we already think we know, we were never really after the truth, were we?

Images and Beyond!

Nasa has been having a grand time with cameras, both still and video. It's like first time parents. I'm serious, they take a picture of everything. "Oh, look, the shuttle is landing late in the second week of August instead of early in the second week of August, get a picture!"

Okay, but in their defense, most of these pictures are stunning: Pillars of Creation stunning. What's more, they tell stories spanning a 13.75 billion year epic of the violent and destructive tearing apart of nothingness that created in all its insignificant mass and paltry relevance that which we call "something." And this "something" is beautiful, and grows in beauty the more we understand about it.

Nasa Picture Pages
(...time to get your picture pages, time to get your crayons and your pencil.)

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Elemental

Just a great little help for those of you plugging through a science class, those of you plugging through a science career, or those of you as dorky as I am and just curious:

An interactive table of the elements with some pretty handy tools.