LED Sheep Art
This video is truly awesome.
This video is truly awesome.
My sister Selena had her on-air debut on NPR Morning Edition yesterday, as the translator voice of a Chinese woman whose family recently sought asylum in the United States. Listen in at about 0:55.
Where did she get that exceptional radio voice? It couldn’t have been here. Or here. Hmm… It must have been here:
Congratulations, Selena! You’re following in Tasha’s footsteps. And you’ll pull ahead as soon as she stops to sniff something.
Tonight I had the amazing experience of singing a concert with Blue Heron, one of the premier early music choirs in the country.
I had an unusual week, attending lectures on topological field theory and writing about neutrinos by day, getting into the 1430’s groove in rehearsals by night. And the music wasn’t easy. Many of the pieces were thick with cross-relations, rhythmically complicated, and generally funky. I’ve had a few nightmares where I stop concentrating, and either I sing an incorrect B-flat, or the seesaw mechanism stops working. Continue reading…
A hilarious post from Edith Zimmerman.

Via yayeveryday,
Jeff de Boer is a Calgary-based multi-media artist with an international reputation for producing some of the world’s most original and well-crafted works of art. With an emphasis on metal, he is best known for such bodies of work as suits of armour for cats and mice, armour ties and sword-handled briefcases, rocket lamps and pop culture ray guns, and exquisite high art, abstract works called exoforms.
Wired Magazine has an interesting article about redesigning North American flight paths to improve efficiency. (via Rachel Maddow)
It’s sort of what you’d expect: flight patterns were originally drawn up decades ago, and have been added to haphazardly and chaotically since then, like the streets in Boston.
The redesign creates a kind of airborne suburbia, paving the skies far out into what was the countryside. The idea is that the controllers can get planes off the intercity highways sooner, keeping them clear for through-traffic.
The best part of this video may not be the ridiculous crossover machine, but the hilarious reporter with minimal skating skills (via Neatorama):
Via Neatorama, comes this swingin’ entry by Berkeley graduate students Patrick Bennett and Ryan Miyakawa in the “What is Nano?” competition:
Phil Plait over at Bad Astronomy has a great post featuring some awesome facts about everyone’s favorite star. Alright, you probably know some of them. But there’s some good stuff in there. A couple of my favorites:
Usually, damage to the eyes from looking at the Sun happens during a total solar eclipse. The eclipse itself doesn’t hurt you — after all, the point of the eclipse is that the Sun is covered by the Moon! — but the damage happens in the moments right after the eclipse. While the Sun is blocked, your pupil dilates to let in more light, so when the first sliver of the brilliant Sun reappears your eye is flooded with light. This can cause damage to your retina called solar retinopathy. It’s actually not heat damage, but photochemical; the flood of UV light actually alters the chemistry of your cells, damaging them.
In general, the damage is minor and can heal well, though there can be some permanent though relatively minor effects (in other words, you still shouldn’t stare at the Sun). Usually the damage is worse in children because their lenses let in more blue light (the lens yellows with age, acting as a natural filter for UV light). […]
Incidentally, using sunglasses to look at the Sun can actually make things worse, since they block visible light and your pupil dilates to compensate. If you want to observe the Sun — and I recommend it, because it’s fascinating and utterly beautiful — then read Mr Eclipse’s guide to safe solar viewing. It’s a site for sore eyes.
The Sun is not an average star […] As with most things in nature, the number of objects depends on the size. There are very few high mass stars, more intermediate mass stars, and gazillions of low mass stars. Roughly 10% of all stars by number in the Milky Way Galaxy are like the Sun, which means that very few are more massive. Even being conservative, I’d say that the Sun is more massive than 80% of the stars in the Galaxy.