I missed last week’s installment of Short Story Club while traveling, but want to get caught up again with this week’s story, “Miguel and the Viatura.” I’m not sure this will be posted in time to get into the discussion post, but we’ll see. The title character, Miguel, lives in a future city that is… Continue reading Short Story Club: “Miguel and the Viatura” by Eric Gregory
Author: Chad Orzel
SteelyKid’s Book Hour
This is a couple weeks old, but I only just got around to uploading it. It should give you some idea of what it’s like reading books with SteelyKid, though: That’s Kate and SteelyKid going through some of Richard Scarry’s Cars and Trucks and Things That Go. SteelyKid is big into pointing things out in… Continue reading SteelyKid’s Book Hour
Save Science Friday
Via Sheril, Science Friday on NPR needs money: We at SciFri are facing severe financial difficulties, i.e. raising money. NSF [National Science Foundation] has turned us down for continuing funding, saying they love what we do, we are sorely needed, but it’s not their job to fund us. At the same time, NPR has said… Continue reading Save Science Friday
Links for 2010-10-09
Goodnight to Goodnight Moon? « Easily Distracted “When experts in education, childhood, psychology, economics, what have you, venture forth into the public sphere to say that our schools are failing to do something utterly essential, or that tomorrow’s children must absolutely have some skill that they do not have now, or that oh my GOD… Continue reading Links for 2010-10-09
Get Out the Vote
With Halloween coming up, some scary stuff seems appropriate: Boo!
Know Your Prefixes, Baseball Edition
On the way to get SteelyKid from day care last night, I flipped on ESPN radio in the vain hope of getting a baseball score, but wound up listening to former Mets manager and freelance jackass Bobby Valentine talking about how difficult batting is, which included the statement: And the whole thing is over in… Continue reading Know Your Prefixes, Baseball Edition
Links for 2010-10-08
A Nobel prize for levitating a frog – The Dayside “Unlike the graphene discovery, frog levitation hasn’t begotten a vast worldwide research effort whose fruits include thousands of research papers and scores of patents. Nevertheless, as Novoselov recounted in an interview with ScienceWatch, the two projects have something in common: ‘The style of Geim’s lab… Continue reading Links for 2010-10-08
Thursday Beloved Arthropod Blogging 100710
SteelyKid has a new friend, who she shows off in this week’s Toddler Blogging: She’s a huge fan of Goldbug in Richard Scarry’s Cars and Trucks and Things That Go, so when we found out that there’s a plush Goldbug toy available on the Internet, it was a real no-brainer. She recognized it immediately, despite… Continue reading Thursday Beloved Arthropod Blogging 100710
Who Is the Velvet Underground of Science?
I’m shamelessly stealing this question from James Nicoll, who asked it about science fiction. The question is a play on the famous comment that only of order a thousand people bought the first Velvet Underground record, but every one of them went on to start a band. So, the question is, who is the Velvet… Continue reading Who Is the Velvet Underground of Science?
How to Teach Quantum Physics to Your UK Dog
Between travel and general work craziness, I completely forgot to note that the UK version of How to Teach Physics to Your Dog has gone on sale: The title for this edition is How to Teach Quantum Physics to Your Dog, and the vanity search keeps turning up mentions to it in the Guardian Bookshop,… Continue reading How to Teach Quantum Physics to Your UK Dog