DSD

Page 2 of 3123
0 Comments

LED Sheep Art

This video is truly awesome.

Posted in Humor, News, Photoshop
1 Comment

Selena’s On-Air Debut

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:

This is Canine Public Radio Morning Edition, I'm Tasha.  Grrr... Ruff.  Achoo! That's my bone!

This is Canine Pub­lic Radio Morn­ing Edi­tion, I’m Tasha. Grrr… Ruff. Achoo! That’s my bone!

Con­grat­u­la­tions, Selena! You’re fol­low­ing in Tasha’s foot­steps. And you’ll pull ahead as soon as she stops to sniff something.

Posted in Music, News
0 Comments

Singing With Blue Heron

linderpix-20599jpg

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…

0 Comments

Interview with a Wolf

A hilar­i­ous post from Edith Zimmerman.

0 Comments

Walker Wants a Walk

Let me out!  I have to pee.  On the rebel alliance.

Let me out! I have to pee. On the rebel alliance.

One of many, via Neatorama. I now have two sep­a­rate posts about AT-ATs on this blog. This may be bad.

0 Comments

Fluffy’s Armor

1236697484jpg
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.

Posted in Nerdiness, News
0 Comments

Redesigning Flight Patterns

ff_airspace_fjpg

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.

Con­tinue reading…

0 Comments

Hockey Skating Crossover Machine

The best part of this video may not be the ridicu­lous crossover machine, but the hilar­i­ous reporter with min­i­mal skat­ing skills (via Neatorama):

0 Comments

When You Hear That Something’s Nano

Via Neatorama, comes this swingin’ entry by Berke­ley grad­u­ate stu­dents Patrick Ben­nett and Ryan Miyakawa in the “What is Nano?” com­pe­ti­tion:

0 Comments

10 Things You Didn’t Know About the Sun

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.

Page 2 of 3123