Unraveling the Drama of Science

When writing Copenhagen, playwright Michael Frayn saw science only as a metaphor.  But the play fanned the flames of a smoldering debate among science historians about the events surrounding the invention of the atomic bomb. —Unraveling the Drama of Science (Wired) Similar:Connecting with the BoyToday my son asked me to take him shoppi…CultureThe Comic Sans…

Death Critiqued: An Obituary Reviewed

“[H]is predictable language and trite sentiments lend the piece an incredible tedium. Formulaic phrases like ‘the cause of’ and ‘is survived by’ sound like they’re straight out of a Microsoft Word obituary template…”  Noam Weinstein [Thanks, Matt!] —Death Critiqued: An Obituary Reviewed (Modern Humorist) Similar:Headlines matter. Were they migrants, people who happened to be at…

Gray’s

See 1,247 vibrant engravings—many in color—from the classic 1918 publication, as well as a subject index with 13,000 entries ranging from the Antrum of Highmore to the Zonule of Zinn. —Gray’s b>Anatomy of the Human Body (Bartleby.com) Similar:Code is not literatureA literate programmer describes his atte…CybercultureNgram for "postpartum depression," "rest cure" and "yellow wallpa…Filing this…

Learn the Text Adventure Programming Language Inform

A follow-as-you-go tutorial, the Inform Beginner’s guide creates three small games of increasing depth. No previous experience of computer programming or interactive fiction design is assumed. This book (available for free as a PDF)  concludes with helpful summaries and reference tables. Firth and Kesserich (edited by Jerz). —Learn the Text Adventure Programming Language Inform(IF Library)…

Blue Moon e-zine is looking for a literary blogger.

—Blue Moon e-zine is looking for a literary blogger. Similar:In the Salary Race, Engineers Sprint but English Majors Endure Since new technical skills are a…AcademiaBooks vs. Kindles: The Choice No One Made Ever”I bought a Kindle. I didn’t immediately…BooksWho needs the Metaverse? Meet the people still living on Second LifeYears ago I spent some time…

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

>open curtains As you part the curtains, you see that it’s a bright morning, the sun is shining, the birds are singing, the meadows are blooming, and a large yellow bulldozer is advancing on your home. —The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (DouglasAdams.com) Similar:Industriousness. Self-improvement. Thrift. And orange slime. The girl amusing herself on our…

eBunintheOven.com

is — besides being further evidence that the Internet spells the end of society as we know it — a novelty service that allows customers to e-impregnate a person of their choice.  The recipient will receive an e-impregnation notice and learn who e-impregnated them, as well as an update on their virtual pregnancy every two…

Broken Links: Just How Rapidly Do Science Education Links Disappear?

“Although Internet resources may be freely available, there is a lack of certainty that they will be available for students next month, next semester or next year.” Markwell and Brooks —Broken Links: Just How Rapidly Do Science Education Links Disappear?via Wired) Similar:Amazon’s Tactics Confirm Its Critics’ Worst SuspicionsThis week, as part of a contract dispute…BooksProud…

Asking a Girl on a Date

(autistics.org)  This web page is a step-by-step set of instructions advising autistic boys how to manage an important social ritual.  Janet Villar —Asking a Girl on a Date Similar:Younger friends, can you write or read cursive? I’m curious.CulturePower Play (#StarTrek #TNG Rewatch, Season 5, Episode 15) Troi, Data and O'Brien Take Host…Rewatching ST:TNG The Enterprise…

Faking It: Sex, Lies, and Women’s Magazines

Women’s magazines regularly fabricate stories about you-know-what: “Many writers, editors and fact-checkers involved with these sex articles (most of whom asked that their identities be protected with the top-secrecy accorded CIA sources) agreed that the editorial standards for them are abysmal.” —Faking It: Sex, Lies, and Women’s Magazines (Columbia Journalism Review) Update, 13 Oct 2005:…

The Skeptical Environmentalist

: Is environmentalism a science or a political movement?  “The world’s ecosystem is breaking down. We are fast approaching the absolute limit of viability, and the limits of growth are becoming apparent. We know the Litany and have heard it so often that yet another repetition is, well, almost reassuring. There is just one problem:…

Stop! Look Before You Click!

Online waiver forms are not very useable. “Real users, not lawyers, need to write the forms. Then they need to redesign the sites so that the consent forms are visual, not legalese text blocks.” Interview with readability expert Mark Hochhauser.  —Stop! Look Before You Click! (C|Net) Similar:Why Study Humanities? What I Tell Engineering FreshmenScience writer…

A Second Helping of Spam

“We have recently become aware of the fact that our previous list management service erroneously failed to oversee certain remove requests. We deeply apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused and would like to offer all of our valuable customers another chance to unsubscribe from our services.” A Second Helping of Spam That message…

The Elements of [UNIX] Style

The geekiest, most elite programming language, UNIX, seems to be associated with a love of words.  “Working on the command line, hands poised over the keys uninterrupted by frequent reaches for the mouse, is a posture familiar to wordsmiths (especially the really old guys who once worked on teletypes or electric typewriters). It makes some…

Did I Miss Anything?

“Everything. A few minutes after we began last time a shaft of light descended and an angel or other heavenly being appeared and revealed to us what each woman or man must do to attain divine wisdom in this life and the hereafter…” Tom Wayman —Did I Miss Anything? (Question frequently asked by students after…

The Art in the Popular

“[A]t the University of Virginia today I regularly teach the introductory comparative literature survey, which begins with the Iliad and the Odyssey and runs through all the traditional great authors, such as Virgil, Dante, Cervantes, Goethe, Austen, and Dostoevsky… why am I now writing about GilliganĀ“s Island and Star Trek?” Paul Cantor —The Art in…