If you liked Saturday's pix, you might also like Bryan Chan's "Time-lapse video: Space shuttle Endeavour’s trek across L.A."
It's a bit less than three minutes long.
(h/t: Ars Editor's Picks)
If you liked Saturday's pix, you might also like Bryan Chan's "Time-lapse video: Space shuttle Endeavour’s trek across L.A."
It's a bit less than three minutes long.
(h/t: Ars Editor's Picks)
Apparently, there is this thing, started by the Southern Poverty Law Center, called Mix It Up At Lunch Day, in which "schoolchildren around the country are encouraged to hang out with someone they normally might not speak to."
Which, I have to say, sounds like one of the better ideas I've heard in a while, and not just because it's a principle I have been pitching to young people ever since I got old enough to discover it for myself.
But how does the "American" "Family" "Association" feel about it? Oh yeah. It's all about Teh Ghey:
Here is a link to the above page, if you would like to wallow in hate for some reason.
Here is a picture from tolerance.org, from the link at the top of the page, to cleanse your mind.
And just because I can't let you go feeling all better, here is a link to the NYT's story about this. It is a masterpiece from the Shape of Earth: Views Differ* crowd.
Eight days ago, we met Paul Broun (R-Obvs). And wasn't that a treat!
Here's a related note.
Aside from their political affiliations, what do Akin and Broun have in common? Membership on the House's Committee on Science, Space, and Technology. And they're in good company there. Take the Committee's chair, Texas' Ralph Hall. When asked about the evidence that humans were altering the climate, Hall replied, "I don't think we can control what God controls." When it was pointed out to him that the National Academies of Science disagreed with his position, Hall basically accused them of being in it for the money. "They each get $5,000 for every report like that they give out."
His evidence? "That's just my guess. I don't have any proof of that."
It's a hell of a thing to have science policy for the Greatest Nation On Earth™ being decided by a bunch of clowns in thrall to religious wingnuts and the oil industry, isn't it?
(pic. sources: Republican ass | Republican asses)
So says the caption.
My first reaction: the other parts of North Korea have electricity?
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[Added] Probably you remember seeing a picture like this:
I would have gone 10 for 10, but I misclicked one, and I was too lazy to do the mental arithmetic on another. </alibi-ike>
Image: enhance . . . . . .
Hey, wait. It didn't work like this on CSI.
Oh, well.
Anyway, what's HE doing in a New York airport, hmmm?
(little help?)
From an Ars article, "Android users: These may be Droids you’re looking for," down in the section covering the Samsung Galaxy Note II:
Is it a phone, or is it a tablet? Or is it a phablet?
I say, let's wait until the Galaxy Note IV, probably due to excessive childhood exposure to the Beatles.
_____________________
Strictly speaking, I suppose Mr. Carroll would have had me say portmanteau word. (via)
The NYT has a slide show called "Endeavour Arrives in Los Angeles," featuring shots of the shuttle in the air, riding a 747 in Los Angeles and San Francisco. The accompanying article sent me in search of a larger version of the image above, which you can click, to see the success.
I ended up at the PJStar's photo blog, The Eye, which has a big bunch of fun shots of the shuttle on the ground and a bunch more of it in the air.1
Yes, yes. The Shuttle program had its flaws. But I still get a thrill from looking at, you know, actual spaceships.
1. Answering, to my mind at least, the age-old question.
No, really. I was impressed and pleased. Here's a (slightly edited) CC of an email I just sent off to InfoQ, a site I just learned about. I'm posting it here just in case any of you also like to watch video presentations online. (And also to show that it is possible to write just three times in one and a half sentences.)
I just finished watching Steve Vinoski's talk, "Innovation: What Every Developer Absolutely Needs to Know." I have never watched a talk on InfoQ before, so maybe I'm about to mention something you've had in place for years. If so, I apologize.
In any case, I really enjoyed the way the slides automatically advanced with the progress of the video. It made for a significantly better viewing experience than watching a video and trying to deal with the slides myself, whether in-browser or as a separate download. Thanks and kudos to whoever came up with the concept and implemented it so smoothly.
Brendan Keefe
P.S. If you're wondering about the utm_source in the subject line, that refers to an email newsletter I get, called Status Code. Here's the web version of the email.
“Nones” on the Rise
The number of Americans who do not identify with any religion continues to grow at a rapid pace. One-fifth of the U.S. public – and a third of adults under 30 – are religiously unaffiliated today, the highest percentages ever in Pew Research Center polling.
In the last five years alone, the unaffiliated have increased from just over 15% to just under 20% of all U.S. adults. Their ranks now include more than 13 million self-described atheists and agnostics (nearly 6% of the U.S. public), as well as nearly 33 million people who say they have no particular religious affiliation (14%).
But let's not make it a habit.
h/t: NYT | The Norse Mythology Blog
image credits: Anita Kunz, "Girls Will Be Girls," via The New Yorker | "Fuzz," via DelStrange
joke credit: Australiana
Oh, also, you will be glad to know that Rep. Paul Broun, like Rep. Todd Akin, is a member of the the House Science Committee.
More details from the Guardian and Wonkette, the latter of which is especially worth checking out, since a longer clip from this speech has somehow vanished from YouTube.
Still think elections don't matter?
... but I just can't help myself.
Think of it as Bloggy Jeopardy. What several paragraphs could have led to this?
….Also, while we lack concrete evidence that Glenn Reynolds bought the wine for this UT Young Republican night of pranks, it would be irresponsible not to note that we also can’t rule it out.
This guy, if you didn't already know.
(h/t: Substance McGravitas | pic. source)
Ken Singleton just pointed out Hiroki Kuroda's uniform number and said that since the 1990s, it has been a tradition in Japanese baseball for the team's best pitcher to wear #18.
(pic. source: Pinstriped Bible)
Did you know that you can subscribe to a subset of posts on your favorite Blogger blog? Here are three examples to illustrate.
Just posts tagged "science:"
http://bjkeefe.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default/-/science
Just posts tagged "cool:"
http://bjkeefe.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default/-/cool
Just posts tagged both "cool" and "science:"
http://bjkeefe.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default/-/cool/science
If you click those links, you'll see a rather spartan representation of the posts corresponding to those tags. (Or "labels," as Blogger insists on calling them.) If you want to subscribe to one of them, right-click the link and choose Copy Link Location, or whatever the exact wording is for your non-Firefox browser.* (screenshot)
What's that you say? THIS IS NOT YOUR FAVORITE BLOG? Sigh. Okay.
But seriously, you can follow the examples above to zero in on any Blogger blog. For example, if you want to be sure you never miss Mr. Riley's commentary on Mitch Daniels, grab this link.
http://doghouseriley.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default/-/Midwestern%20States%20Governed%20By%20Surly%20Megalomaniacs%20With%20Napoleonic%20Complexes
That should all be on one line, if you're not seeing the fancy horizontal scroll bar. Also, don't be put off by the repeated appearance of %20. That's just what you get when a URL has spaces in it.
You can play around to get the feeds you want just by typing into the address bar of your browser. The URLs are all going to start with http://BLOGNAME.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default/-/, and then you add on the tag or tags you want to narrow in on.
Thanks, David Kutcher!
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If you really want to geek out, you can use a little jQuery to rearrange feeds, such as those above, in all sorts of amazing ways.
And more generally, if you have a Blogger blog and want to get into some serious fiddling, have a look around Blogger Xpertise, which showed me the above. That is a cool site.
* Terminology equivalents:
Firefox: Copy Link Location
Safari: Copy Link
Chrome: Copy Link Address
Opera: Copy Link Address
SeaMonkey: Copy Link Location
Maxthon: Copy Shortcut
Internet Explorer: Copy Shortcut
Can you guess what it is?
No, not the sad result of a child whose parents were too stern about nail-biting, although that's not a bad guess.
Right-side up version is #10 in a really great slide show of skeletons and skulls, which accompanies a short article, "Skulls Engineered for Hard Knocks."
Apart from the above, my faves were the Argentine horned frog (#2), which has none that I can see, and the Chinese water deer (#6), which … wait, what? Tusks?
Yep. And you thought Lyme disease was their biggest threat. Canadians will tell you different!
[Update 2013-09-12 10:37] See also.
You will be unsurprised to learn this about Farhad Manjoo's editor:
I asked [him] if he’s willing to consider making the single-page view the default on Slate. He said: “We should certainly consider making single-page views our default for articles below, say, 1200 words. That’s probably a good idea. I suspect it makes sense to keep paginating long articles.”
Eh, whaddya expect from a guy named Plotz.
(h/t: Smashing Magazine)
Here Is Your Gif Of Elizabeth Warren Trying And Failing Not To Laugh At Scott Brown
(bigger here (also, context))
Oliver Sachs has taken twenty tabs of Artane. We join his story, already in progress . . .
I went back into the house and put on the kettle for another cup of tea, when my attention was caught by a spider on the kitchen wall. As I drew nearer to look at it, the spider called out, "Hello!" It did not seem at all strange to me that a spider should say hello (any more than it seemed strange to Alice when the White Rabbit spoke). I said, "Hello, yourself," and with this we started a conversation, mostly on rather technical matters of analytic philosophy. Perhaps this direction was suggested by the spider's opening comment: did I think that Bertrand Russell had exploded Frege's paradox? Or perhaps it was its voice—pointed, incisive, and just like Russell's voice, which I had heard on the radio. (Decades later, I mentioned the spider's Russellian tendencies to my friend Tom Eisner, an entomologist; he nodded sagely and said, "Yes, I know the species.")
Wonder if he ever partied with E. B. White.
(h/t: LO, via TC, via email)(previously)
Once upon a time there was a radical president who tried to remake American society through government action. In his first term he created a vast network of federal grants to state and local governments for social programs that cost billions. He set up an imposing agency to regulate air and water emissions, and another to regulate workers’ health and safety. Had Congress not stood in his way he would have gone much further. He tried to establish a guaranteed minimum income for all working families and, to top it off, proposed a national health plan that would have provided government insurance for low-income families, required employers to cover all their workers and set standards for private insurance. Thankfully for the country, his second term was cut short and his collectivist dreams were never realized.
His name was Richard Nixon.
-- Mark Lilla
... but the choice of adjective in this NYT headline, about Willard's decline in the polls, speaks volumes:
Tired Cries of Bias Don’t Help Romney
It's worth reading the whole thing, although approximately zero of the people who most could benefit from it won't. In any case, I can't resist passing along this gem from near the end:
A senior adviser, meanwhile, said the Romney campaign now has a “no-whining rule” about news coverage. (Mr. Ryan apparently missed the memo.)
(pic. sources: Boston Sports Then And Now, American Method)
Probably a good thing the In sign is ready for replacement.
Click to enlarge, if you haven't already. And no, that wasn't me who tried to claw it off the door.
Latest piece of spam had this subject line:
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