Archive for the ‘science!’ Category

Webcomics Wednesday (and an apology)

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

Well, it’s Wednesday again and I haven’t posted a damn thing since last Wednesday.  I realize this is ultimately my fault, but let’s blame my new girlfriend anyway.  I vow to post more original content in the future, while continuing to allow her to (delightfully) monopolize my time.

I started this blog at a very low time in my life and since things are much, much better these days I’ve been neglecting it.  I may even shut this one down and create a shiny new blog with selected content from this one.

Don’t forget to click on the ‘toons to see the full-sized originals and show the artists a little love!

First, Matt Bors.  Admit it, he’s totally right about this:

I don’t think I’ve linked to any Wonderella here before, but here’s a timely one:

Obligatory nerd humor from Toothpaste for Dinner:

Now that the new girlfriend’s in the picture, I have to meet her friends and family.  They seem like okay folks so far, but Cyanide and Happiness describes the situation’s existential dread pretty well:

Even more nerdy humor from Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal:

And speaking of other new girlfriend considerations…

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Webcomic Wednesday (on Friday)

Friday, July 9th, 2010

Wow, have I ever been a negligent blogger.  Here are a few more from the usual cartoonists.  Click for full-sized…

Cyanide and Happiness:

Toothpaste for Dinner:

xkcd:

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal:

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Reverse perspective animation

Monday, June 14th, 2010

Originally posted on Boing Boing:

True Reverse Perspective from JMS on Vimeo.

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Webcomics Wednesday

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

Not a lot to post this week.  Click the images for the full-sized originals.

Matt Bors:

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal:

Toothpaste for Dinner:

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Green design competition – grand prize $10K USD

Sunday, May 9th, 2010

Designboom is hosting a new design competition, this time focusing on green design for Incheon Metropolitan City, Korea.  The main criteria:

1 – green design for humans

- life style design which help realize ways to consider the environment in daily life

- daily goods, home appliances, lighting, furniture, stationery, home devices, car, packaging, etc.

2 – green design for the city

- innovative and effective public design which suggests the possibility of an eco-friendly city

- architecture, interior design, road, public area, park, urban planning, urban infrastructure, etc.

3 – green design for communication

- design taking lead in social communication for the diffusion of green design and green life style

- poster, video, advertisement, illustration, campaign, software, mass media, networking, etc.

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Webcomic Wednesday

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

This weeks brings a bigger edition, but mainly because I’m including a couple of ‘toons I skipped last week.  I’ve reconsidered and decided they ought to have made the cut.  Remember to click the images for the full-sized ‘toons, author commentary (in some cases), and sweet, sweet advertising.

Lulu Eightball:

Big Fat Whale:

Toothpaste for Dinner (x2):

Matt Bors, addressing the fake controversy which lead to the hilarious Boobquake Experiment:

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal (x2):

Spleenal (site is frequently NSFW, funny as hell):

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Teach more nonfiction? Yes, please.

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

I originally posted this on the Teacher’s Tackle Box blog.

Dana Goldstein’s Daily Beast article has an interesting take on how a greater emphasis on studying nonfiction might positively affect students’ reading and writing skills, as well as later job prospects.

I tend to agree with this line of thought. The vast majority of literature studied at any grade level is fiction, which requires a very different set of dissection tools than nonfiction does, and isn’t necessarily useful to students who plan to study and work in areas of science or business. Even though I started out as an English geek, I ended up being an IT geek — meaning that my professional livelihood depended upon my ability to absorb, process, and apply significant quantities of technical information. Alright, I’m still an English geek, but an amateur one — it’s never really paid my bills.

From the article:

“People don’t really understand the nature of reading. They feel that reading is a skill, that it’s transferable, so once you’re a good reader, you can read anything that’s put in front of you,” says Daniel Willingham, a University of Virginia cognitive psychologist who focuses on K-12 education. “But that’s only true for decoding—what you learn until grade three or four. After that, when you see good readers versus poor readers, what you’re looking at is mostly differences in the knowledge that kids bring to the reading. It’s easy to read something when you already know something about the topic. And if you don’t know about the topic, it’s utterly opaque to you.”

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Nature by Numbers – Cristobal Vila

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

Via Boing Boing, here’s a short animation demonstrating mathematical expression in nature, beginning with the Fibonacci Sequence.  I’m a huge fan of all things Fibonacci Sequence’d, as is Cory Doctorow.  I hope his daughter likes this stuff too, since Fibonacci is one of her middle names.

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Recyclables design contest – grand prize ~ $3400

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Core 77 has announced the fourth annual Recycling Design Prize contest.  This year the focus is on small, practical consumer items likely to enter production and stimulate employment, although said items cannot currently be commercially available.  Registration closes at the end of August and the grand prize is 2500 euros, or about $3400 USD.

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Skinput – your body as touchscreen

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

This pretty damned cool, but the projection display looks like you’d need low-light conditions for it to be of any use.  A heads-up display might be a workaround.  I wonder if it would make using phone/MP3 player while driving safer.

Via i09:

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