The Science of Success

These dandelion children–equivalent to our “normal” or “healthy” children, with “resilient” genes–do pretty well almost anywhere, whether raised in the equivalent of a sidewalk crack or a well-tended garden. Ellis and Boyce offer that there are also “orchid” children, who will wilt if ignored or maltreated but bloom spectacularly with greenhouse care…. Gene variants generally considered misfortunes (poor Jim, he got…

Mathematical Notation Gets an Upgrade

I can’t say I understand, but someone invented every symbol and bit of notation that we use from emoticons to the alphabet.  It’s cool to see the story of the need to invent new symbols.  via Wired. Similar:Understanding 9/11: A Television News ArchiveStunning collection of thousands of hour…CultureLearning How to Love My Daughter Image description:…

digital digs: the future of the magazine? or the textbook?

Alex Reid offers his commentary on this Sports Illustrated promotional video, that imagines how the magazine experience might work on a color tablet reader. In this YouTube video, the WonderFactory and Time present the “future of the magazine” (including more interactive advertisements, oh goody). Hmmm…. I wonder if the future of Sports Illustrated (the magazine)…

freedomhouse.org: Freedom of the Press > Methodology

From the explanation of a map showing differences in press freedom around the world. We recognize cultural differences, diverse national interests, and varying levels of economic development. Yet Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights states: Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions…

Pittsburgh School District Leads Nation In Ability To Spell 'Roethlisberger'

Pittsburgh teachers said that in 2005 they noticed an alarming trend: Students stopped using Roethilsberger’s last name in essays and papers, instead referring to the quarterback by his easy-to-spell nickname, “Big Ben.” That summer, the Pittsburgh school board took action, eliminating various art courses, American history, and Advanced Placement calculus in favor of a rigorous…

Lego Matrix Nerdgasm

Similar:The Skin of Our Teeth Panel Discussion (Seton Hill University, October 2021; Carolyn Jerz,…https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k03kQ7Ot…AcademiaI touched up an intro to hypertext essays from 2000.When I initially wrote this introduction…CybercultureIn-home schooling popularity slipping across stateWe were on our way out the door to see A…CultureMicrosoft is once again asking Chrome users to try Bing through unblockable pop-ups…

Atari Video Games

Atari Arcade is the place to find beloved Atari classics including Asteroids and Lunar Lander. You can play them all here online, any time and free of charge. —Atari.com My kids came over to my laptop, attracted to the chirps and beeps of these games.  My 11yo son shooed me away from the keyboard and…

Death to the file, long live the URL

Part of an Ars Technica review of Google’s new operating system. Longtime Ars readers may be familiar with my periodic rants about the increasing disutility of the “volume/directory/file” metaphor for modern networked machines. Saving files, copying them, syncing them–this is all pointless clerical work that I want my computer to do for me. Bravo. Similar:Getting…

New York Times Link Generator (presented by reddit)

I guess I won’t be linking to any many more NYT articles. NYT has disabled their special access for webmasters Similar:Unmarked assignments in my queue: 0This app, which sports a little red noti…AcademiaAnti-Semitic Times Square Elmo admits to Girl Scout extortion attemptThe headline made me click the link, and…EthicsMy Father's Day adventure included replacing the…

Listening to the Kindle

I’ve had a Kindle DX for a few weeks now. I’ve been using it as I read The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland to my daughter. I haven’t yet used the Kindle to buy any books, but I’ve stuffed it with out-of-copyright classics and academic PDFs. It takes maybe 5-10 minutes to set up the text…

Top 10 Bad Messages From Good Movies

Wired gives Star Wars a good drubbing, focusing on the ending: There are somewhere between 20 and 30 one-man fighters in the assault, right? And of all of those guys, only Luke, Wedge and some guy in a Y-wing make it back (and Han and Chewie, of course, but they weren’t part of the original…