why is the aperture scale logarithmic?
I’m not sure how true this is (I thought it had more to do with inescapable limitations of optical geometry), but it’s an interesting correlation regardless.
why is the aperture scale logarithmic?
I’m not sure how true this is (I thought it had more to do with inescapable limitations of optical geometry), but it’s an interesting correlation regardless.
It’s like Big Loader, Mouse Trap, Rube Goldberg, and Japan had a megababy. (HD)
Really cool animation, when the 3D isn’t ruining things. Song not so much.
Very interesting talk (and animation) that touches on some of my issues with the social web evangelism I see out there constantly.
Plaque on the moon commemorating astronauts and cosmonauts who died in the line of duty (NASA)
how the internet gets inside us
“When the electric toaster was invented, there were, no doubt, books that said that the toaster would open up horizons for breakfast undreamed of in the days of burning bread over an open flame; books that told you that the toaster would bring an end to the days of creative breakfast, since our children, growing up with uniformly sliced bread, made to fit a single opening, would never know what a loaf of their own was like; and books that told you that sometimes the toaster would make breakfast better and sometimes it would make breakfast worse, and that the cost for finding this out would be the price of the book you’d just bought.”
(interesting read at The New Yorker)
How interesting. A trip down Windows memory lane. Many scenes from my youth.
http://www.flickr.com/apps/video/stewart.swf?v=71377
A prominence captured by NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory
The blog Pages to Pixels asked me some questions and I answered them as best I could.
Look at that, people will throw away anything. I’m going to install these.
How blind to beliefs should employers be?
Richard Dawkins: “My colleague takes the view that this [young-earth creationist] is entitled to a job as a professor of astronomy, because he keeps his private beliefs to himself while at work. I take the opposite view. I would object to employing him, on the grounds that his research papers, and his lectures to students, are filled with what he personally believes to be falsehoods. He is a fake, a fraud, a charlatan, drawing a salary for a job that could have gone to an honest astronomer. Moreover, I would regard his equanimity in holding two diametrically opposing views simultaneously in his head as a revealing indicator that there is something wrong with his head.”
“The mark of superior people, in Ortega’s sense, is that they consider themselves inferior to what they may become. Self-improvement, for all that it smacks of the self-help shelf at Barnes & Noble, is also, in this way, the rallying cry of the only kind of elite worth having.
…
The resentful right, under the banner — hoisted alike by Beck, Huckabee, and Palin — of common sense, flatters deprivation as wisdom by implying to the uneducated that an education isn’t worth having. The violence this bigoted proposition has done to the talents and capacities of millions of people is incalculable, unforgivable.”