Kevin Kelly asks how much data a person generates during their lifetime, and what happens to it after the person dies? (Conceptual Trends and Current Topics)
Daily Archives: 30 Apr 08
Linking spiral arms…
“…two large colliding galaxies are featured in this Hubble Space Telescope view, part of a series of cosmic snapshots released to celebrate the Hubble’s 18th anniversary. Recorded in astronomer Halton Arp’s Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies as Arp 272, the pair is otherwise known as NGC 6050 and IC 1179. They lie some 450 million light-years away in the Hercules Galaxy Cluster. At that estimated distance, the picture spans over 150 thousand light-years. Although this scenario does look peculiar, galaxy collisions and their eventual mergers are now understood to be common, with Arp 272 representing a stage in this inevitable process.” (APOD)
Dumb as We Wanna Be
One of Denver’s ‘Most Wanted’
Why Things Cost $19.95
“What are the psychological ‘rules’ of bartering?” (Scientific American)
Bush pokes fun at his successors
“US President George W Bush poked fun at his potential successors during his last White House Correspondents’ Association dinner.” (BBC) And the petty little man’s jibes don’t display an ounce of wit.
Light at the End of the Tunnel?
| Howard Dean: Obama Or Clinton Must Drop Out In June (Huffington Post) | |
| (depictions by Julia Suits) |
Scientists link 17 living people to an aboriginal man found in glacier
PBS breaks ‘media blackout’ of NYT story on Pentagon propaganda
Does the Earth’s magnetic field cause suicides?
Study shows geomagnetic activity correlates with self-destructive behavior in Kirovsk, Russia. Speculation that magnetic flux contributes to depression by desynchronizing human circadian rhythms. (New Scientist)
R.I.P. Albert Hofmann
‘Father of LSD’ Dies at 102: “Dr. Hofmann first synthesized the compound lysergic acid diethylamide in 1938 but did not discover its psychopharmacological effects until five years later, when he accidentally ingested the substance that became known to the 1960s counterculture as acid.He then took LSD hundreds of times, but regarded it as a powerful and potentially dangerous psychotropic drug that demanded respect. More important to him than the pleasures of the psychedelic experience was the drug’s value as a revelatory aid for contemplating and understanding what he saw as humanity’s oneness with nature. That perception, of union, which came to Dr. Hofmann as almost a religious epiphany while still a child, directed much of his personal and professional life.” (New York Times)
R.I.P. Jimmy Giuffre
Adventurous clarinetist, composer and arranger dead at 86. His “50-year journey through jazz led him from writing the Woody Herman anthem “Four Brothers” through minimalist, drummerless trios to striking experimental orchestral works…Among the half-dozen instruments he played, from bass flute to soprano saxophone, it was the clarinet that gave him a signature sound; it was a dark, velvety tone, centering in the lower register, pure but rarely forceful. But among the iconoclastic heroes of the late ’50s in jazz, he was a serene oddity, changing his ideas as fast as he could record them.” (New York Times)
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