Archive for the ‘Science’ Category
My favorite fringe theory: we evolved from aquatic apes
We are we so different from the chimpanzees? We are naked bipeds. Why? The Savanna theory has recently been found to be quite unlikely. So what are the alternatives?
TED: Ideas worth spreading
Sometimes I browse the Interweb in search for something that is interesting, quick and enlightening and it often seems an impossible task. It’s easy to find lolcatz and stupid kids in YouTube, but not something with more essence.
I’m still not sure how but I found my fountain of interesting videos in TED. I think I found them in Google Video.
These are the ones I like the most so far:
David Bolinsky: Fantastic voyage inside a cell.
An amazing CG work that shows the mini-world of a cell, and how complicated and beautiful it is.
Hans Rosling: No more boring data.
This is what people mean when information is power.
Malcolm Gladwell: What we can learn from spaghetti sauce.
Food leads to happyness and Malcom shows us the way to happiness on the future.
Emily Oster: What do we know about the spread of AIDS?.
A different point of view on the problems in Africa that makes complete sense.
Cameron Sinclair: Open-source architecture to house the world.
Another step for OpenSource to world domination.
Ken Robinson: Do schools today kill creativity?
A funny talk that shows us what we already know; schools are doing a poor job.
Eva Vertes: My dream about the future of medicine.
The future is in the next generation, and this girl proves that we really need to forget what we think we know.
Richard Dawkins: An atheist’s call to arms.
Let’s all stop being so damn respectfull.
Nick Bostrom: Humanity’s biggest problems aren’t what you think they are.
We are so near the wall that we don’t see what you real problems are as humanity.
Kevin Kelly: How does technology evolve? Like we did.
Is technology a new way of life?
Seth Godin: Sliced bread and other marketing delights.
We are in a new era of communications; marketing should adapt accordingly.
Links for 08.05.07: Slashdot stuff, Open Source releases
Phew, I have quite a lot of links to post this time.
-
Map: Welcome to the Blogosphere
A very interesting map of the blogosphere, with a nice analysis. I just hope I could find myself
(tags: article blogosphere web2.0 interesting) -
Mathematician suggests extra dimensions are time-like
George Sparling says “My approach is bottom up: take the existing four-dimensional theory seriously and try to build up from it. This is very tough to do. Hopefully my ideas work. Note that my work only constitutes a possible beginning at a more inclusive theory.”
This makes much more sense to me.
(tags: interesting article science physics) -
SPACE.com: Out-of-This-World Hypothesis: Cosmic Forces Control Life on Earth
I hope we are not near that 64 million cycle where we are no the cosmic north receiving those bow shock waves… weird.
(tags: article evolution interesting science space) -
xkcd: Conspiracy Theories
Great one!
(tags: comics funny humor) -
Nanoscale ‘Coaxial Cables’ for Solar Energy Harvesting
(tags: research nanotechnology environment article
interesting) -
Next-generation, high-performance processor unveiled | Science Blog
These babies process 16 instructions per cycle with up to 1,024 instructions in flight simultaneously.
(tags: article future technology hardware) -
New project: Empathy
Go Telepathy clients!
(tags: gnome desktop instant.messaging) -
Axl Library (Another XML Library), XML Library, XML, XML Software, XML Parser
Competition is good, specially since I have not found an XML Library that I really like.
(tags: xml open.source library software.development) -
Computerworld – AI will surpass human intelligence after 2020
Interesting article about the future. A little far-fetched, but great ideas.
(tags: ai article future world web2.0 technology fiction) -
Conduit 0.3.0
Sync/Export/Backup Flickr, Tomboy, iPod, gnomevfs, FSpot. Very interesting project. -
buzztard 0.2 sunrise is out
The buzztard team has release version 0.2 “sunrise” of its buzz-alike music composer. -
A Guided Tour of Hotwire 0.333
Hotwire is an innovative way of working with the “command line”, bash is so passé. -
xkcd: Online Communities
Another great one from xkcd! A very funny map of the Internet. -
What If Iran Had Invaded Mexico?
Noam Chomsky on “the Iran Effect”. Interesting points.
(tags: politics war society article)
Waves almost as fast as light
Physics Buzz has a interesting post of the fastest moving waves ever photographed.
This might lead to tabletop particle accelerators, which sound very promising.
How experts are made
BoingBoing points to a very interesting article from Scientific American about studies of the mental processes of chess grandmasters that revealed clues to how people become experts in other fields.
Also, the Stephen Colbert’s version on Wired.
Free TV episodes: Penn & Teller: Bullshit! (fun and enlightening)
I found this Links to free episodes of Penn & Teller: Bullshit!.
I watched a few of them and I must say I love them.
They’re simple, straight, fun, honest, and obvious.
I specially liked the one about the War on Drugs; very enlightening.
I like to respect other people’s opinions, but in this case, I will say that if somebody don’t believe what these guys are saying, that somebody is nuts.
powered by performancing firefox
Be young again? At least mentally
Here is a post about a study that provides insight into how the brain loses plasticity of youth.
I find interesting how this might enable patients with brain damage to have a more receptible brain in order to improve as if it was young again. They haven’t reached that point, but it might be possible to do that.
Also I wonder if in a distant future we will be able to decide if we want this “plasticity”, maybe because we want to learn something new, relearn something or maybe because we are plainly dumb.
powered by performancing firefox
