Saturday, September 26, 2009
The Squeeze
And now it is time for the Holding Tide horrifying underwater exploration vocabulary word of the day: the squeeze (on page 55) (yum).
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Cargo Cult Science
Richard Feynman's address on Cargo Cult Science. Starts off in deceptively simple language talking about general pseudoscience silliness (and also girls; this is Feynman after all), but then later goes into more serious discussion of some troubling shortcomings seen in big university research programs. The rat maze example in particular stuck with me the first time I read this-- it's a real reminder to think critically about the assumptions you make in designing experiments.
Labels:
on science
Monday, September 21, 2009
Swine Flu Aftermath in Egypt
Hmm, and Egypt is now dealing with the repercussions of their decision during last May's swine flu panic to cull over 300,000 pigs in the country: before the cull, the zabaleen were Christian pig-farmers living on the outskirts of Cairo and other cities who went door to door collecting trash, which they either sold to recycling facilities or fed to their pigs. Now that they've been driven out, the streets of Cairo are filling with excess garbage which the city lacks the infrastructure to handle properly, creating a health hazard far worse than the flu itself.
Computational Neuroscience Links
Computational Neuroscience on the World Wide Web-- a pretty comprehensive resource on comp neuro labs, tools, and conferences.
Labels:
compbio,
neuroscience
Friday, September 18, 2009
Ferrofluid Friday
An old video, but still fun. Dynamic sculpture using electromagnets + sound waves + magnetic fluid.
Labels:
art,
mad science
Monday, September 7, 2009
The New Settlers of Detroit
The economic recession has taken a particularly heavy toll on the American auto industry, and cities like Detroit which were once central to the industry have been gutted by job losses and home foreclosures in the past year. This effect has been so extreme that property in Detroit must practically be given away: Yahoo Real Estate shows dozens of homes around the city selling for mere hundreds of dollars. And still the population of Detroit, a city designed to support roughly 2 million people, has dwindled to less than a million, while the shutdown of many supermarket chains has created a food desert in the city.
Detroit's plight has been well covered in the news, and organizations are already forming to take advantage of the area's collapsed economy. Artists, sustainability enthusiasts, survivalists, and hippie-types in general are coordinating the mass purchase and transformation of land in and around the city. And since this recession coincides with a period of increased interest in locally-grown produce and sustainability, many efforts have a heavy focus on urban farming-- a fact which has received attention from Canada's Office of Urban Agriculture, the Beeb, and NPR among others.
Naturally there's a lot of hype surrounding the whole thing, and it will be interesting to see how this new influx impacts the culture of the city in coming years. For further reading, here are a few people and organizations currently involved in settling the area and documenting their impact:
- Andrew Kemp is a resident of East Detroit who has bought up five lots in his neighborhood and is now farming four of them
- Urban Farming is an NPO which farms vacant lots in Detroit and gives collected produce to the needy
- Detroit UnReal Estate Agency is a group which tracks cultural development in Detroit and inventories cheap property in the area
- the Yes Farm is a collective of artists and urban farmers living and creating in Detroit
- the Power House Project is a social art project attempting to develop an efficient, sustainable home in the city for under $99,000
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Lau Nau: Painovoimaa, valoa
I've got a couple posts brewing on augmented reality and architecture and modeling, but the days have been just packed lately. So here's this instead:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)