Archive for July, 2008

Video of the day: Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog now on Hulu

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Video of the day: starfield

Night passes quickly in Sweden.


Starfield from Oskar Sigvardsson on Vimeo.

For best effect, strap your monitor to the ceiling and lie on the floor.

From Vimeo’s Slowmotion and Timelapse Theater channel.

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Savaging “The Franklin”

Karen Heller has a few words to say about The Franklin Institute‘s Rebranding efforts. I’ve been less fond of the Franklin’s Curious campaign. Its a great concept that fails in execution, giving the institute’s marketing a split-personality feel. Heller perpetrates some nasty snark here, some a bit unfairly, in my opinion.

I haven’t seen The Pirates exhibit yet, but I can’t imagine a National Geographic-built traveling exhibit to be so totally irredeemable. Sure, some of the marketing surrounding it has been on the cheesy side, but the museum has to compete.

I’ve been working on a post full of unsolicited advice for The Franklin (we used to call it “The Frankie” when we went to laser shows in the early 90s), so I’ll put it up as soon as I can get to it. The Franklin has made some quesitionable choices as of late, but I still think it is on the right track. Their willingness to host ScienceDebate 2008 earned them a lot of points in my book.

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Video of the day: Bullsh!t

While I’m in a skeptical mindset, here’s one of my fave episodes of Penn & Teller: Bullshit!

Penn and Teller – Bullshit! – End of the World

Love that opening theme. I miss Penn’s old radio show.

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Tierney’s top 10 things you oughtn’t worry about

In today’s NYTimes, John Tierney stirs up trouble with a list of popular scaremongering tactics you shouldn’t really be concerned about. Hysteria sells politics and papers.

Tierney’s fun and often polarizing. His blog is fun to follow, especially the comments.

A quick response:
1: Killer hot dogs. I wasn’t worried.

2: AC in the car. I’ve had this debate with the neighbor. At highway speeds, it makes sense that, with all the newfangled car designs kids have today, rolling the windows down would increase drag. Scooting around town, however, you should suck it up and roll down the windows. Tierney neglects that side of the equation.

3: Foreign fruit. I hadn’t even really considered it before.

4: Cellphones causing cancer. I wasn’t worried. A woman I went to grad school with swore up and down her father’s neurosurgeon friend was seeing huge masses of huge masses in the skull above the ear. It never made sense to me (Why worry about non-ionizing radiation? I’m no expert of course, but nobody can explain to me how it works other than raising their voice that it must be so) and I chalked it up to the general EMF hysteria (that’s so unbelievable, Oh!). Later when I worked for neurosurgeons at Penn, I heard nary a peep about a supposed onslaught of cellphone-induced brain tumors. (In a somewhat related note, I met Ron Herberman this Spring while meeting with legislative types. I thought he was a nice fellow, but I think he’s talking before the science is in on this issue.)

5: Evil plastic bags. Sure, vs. paper, as Tierney states, “They generate less air and water pollution. And they take up much less space in landfills.” But they tend to look nasty as they hang from trees all winter long. Ick. I’m for plastic, my big reusable plastic IKEA bags. Cheaper than the wussy bags they sell at Trader Joe’s and about 8 times the volume.

6: BPA in bottles. I was worried. But to quote Tierney “Dose makes the poison.” I miss my Nalgene bottle.

7: Sharks. Yes, I know that, statistically, you’re more likely to die from dog bites and bee stings…but hell, I’m afraid of crap in the ocean that will eat me. I take pride from the fact that I recognize my fears are irrational. That is, at least I admit I’m nuts.

8: Melting ice. I wasn’t worried. Well, I was a little, but I was skeptical. Not of global warming, but skeptical of how it is reported.

9: The universe’s missing mass. I wasn’t worried. I figured if the universe collapses it’ll take it a little while. To be honest, I’d prefer the universe to contract on itself in the Big Crunch. The idea of the universe just petering out is almost more frightening. Gives me chills…which I guess is natural given all the entropy.

10: Unmarked wormholes. I wasn’t worried, but I am now. Thanks John.

Where’s the CERN Large Hadron Collider hysteria? (I asked the same in his comments section.) I guess John was looking for things that might happen this August, the first collisions aren’t supposed to happen until October. I do hope that I make it to my anniversary before the earth is sucked into a supermassive black hole…I’m looking forward to a dinner alone with the missus.

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Daytrip…recap later, maybe

Lack of Wi-Fi at home (well, inability of my Mac to get the Wi-Fi) means no weekend blogging, which then means no recap of the Friday Shoobie experience in Ocean City, NJ.

Let’s just say it was beautiful and, at the end of the day, Julia rode the flying elephants at Wonderland.

We spent about 7 hours here on 58th Street:
58th Street, Ocean City

I flew a kite. I saw a toad. I went for walks.

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Video of the day: Funktronic cornstarch

Water + Cornstarch + Subwoofer = science project for when the kids are a little older.

Cool video that could be made substantially better by the addition of Parliament.

Water + lots of cornstarch + giant pool = miracle reenactment

The word of the day is oobleck, which was originally coined by Dr. Seuss.

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Where are the Amish Dwarfs?

Or Dwarves, for you Tolkein fans.

I was reading Victor McKusick’s obit in the NYTimes when I saw this bit regarding is study of genetic disorders:

Dwarfism, which was unusually common in the Amish population, was the first one that he studied in detail. He then went on to discover previously unrecognized inherited disorders.

Now, I know the Amish have their problems…I used to see quite a few Amish kids while working as a clerk in a children’s hospital ER, but the only physical disorders I ever saw was polydactylism.

Not to be an Amish basher (although the chances of them reading this are…erm…small), but it makes me wonder where the Amish dwarfs are hidden (especially after reading this tale of the harsh realities of growing up Amish).

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Shrink ray

Weird description of nanotechnology on Marketwatch:

Nanotechnology — the science of reducing materials to tiny sizes with new properties — already has been used in more than 600 products in the U.S. market…

Just an odd way of phrasing it. Over the years*, I’ve written bunches** of press releases about nanotechnology and never have I described the field as the science of shrinking things.

* is there a phrase more likely to stimulate a yawn response?
** roughly, lots.

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Video of the Day: Space-based solar power

How topical!

From the National Space Society (as opposed to the Space Frontier Foundation of the Space Solar Power Association or…well, how big are these groups, really?).

Beware the giant pulsating rings of doom, oh ye farmlands, and repent! Music by Tangerine Dream…erm…maybe.

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