I’ve recently been selected to do two science things: see a rocket launch, and get my DNA analyzed.
Recent Reading
The Touch-Screen Generation. Young children—even toddlers—are spending more and more time with digital technology. What will it mean for their development? (The Atlantic)
In the Passover haggadah, enigmatic bunnies multiplied like rabbits (Washington Post, Menachem Wecker — a former coworker at US News)
As employers push efficiency, the daily grind wears down workers. Many businesses no longer want long-term relationships with their employees, who must now work harder without getting financial and psychological rewards that were once routine. (LA Times)
The 25 Least Visited Countries in the World (Gunnar Garfors)
Why Media Sites Should Adopt Responsive Design (PBS MediaShift Idea Lab)
The Chemistry of Kibble. The billion-dollar, cutting-edge science of convincing dogs and cats to eat what’s in front of them. (Popular Science)
Glass Works: How Corning Created the Ultrathin, Ultrastrong Material of the Future. (Wired)
Winter is Here: How Game of Thrones became the most important show on television (Grantland)
The Mad Men Account (Scathing Feb 2011 review of “Mad Men” by Daniel Mendelsohn for The New York Review of Books)
Why Dictators Don’t Like Jokes. Pro-democracy activists around the world are discovering that humor is one of the most powerful weapons in the fight against authoritarianism. (Foreign Policy)
Snapshots from Hong Kong: Photo Tour of 7-Eleven (Serious Eats)
Matt Groening’s Artwork for Apple (Vintage Zen)
Timeline of 10 Famous Fonts, an infographic (The Mines Press)
So you got a Raspberry Pi: now what? (Engadget)
Companion Kittens at 6 months
This was a kitten update I emailed to their foster mom and the adoption foundation, but I am reproducing it here in abridged form BECAUSE KITTENS:
Re-owning
The transient instability of social media serves as a reminder that I should refocus on my personal website as the core of my online presence.
Sidebar LifeStream Change
Until recently I was using a Friendfeed embedded badge for my Lifestream (a peripheral sidebar content freshener) but from March 8th onwards my Friendfeed stream simply stopped updating from any services or feeds. I don’t understand it, as other Friendfeed accounts still seem to be updating, but considering how support and innovation on the site have pretty much ceased since the Facebook acquisition, this seems a good time to switch Lifestream embed sources.
So I’ve replaced Friendfeed with Twitter and Flickr badges. The main loss is that my Tumblr, YouTube, and other feeds won’t show up anymore, but if the content is important enough I can either tweet a link, or post it to this weblog. (I refuse to auto-tweet from outside services.)
Really, over time I’d like to get rid of third-party sidebar badges and just make this weblog into a more tumbl-y stream of links and content; more “fireball” if you will. That’s how it used to be.
Recent Reading
More space-related reading from recent weeks:
Why can Hubble get detailed views of distant galaxies but not of Pluto? (Emily Lakdawalla for Planetary Society) Because galaxies are really big and planets are really tiny by comparison and Hubble was made to look at big things.
Up: the story behind Richard Branson’s goal to make Virgin a galactic success (Adam Higginbotham for Wired UK)
Swimming with spacemen: training for spacewalks at NASA’s giant pool (Lee Hutchinson for Ars Technica)
AmericaSpace Exclusive Interview With Golden Spike’s Dr. Alan Stern — former NASA scientist Alan Stern headed up the New Horizons mission to Pluto, and now is President and CEO of Golden Spike, a private lunar exploration company.
Space Launch System Truths and Misconceptions — another AmericaSpace interview, this one with Dan Dumbacher of NASA, whose agency title is a mouthful: Deputy Associate Administrator for Exploration Systems in the Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate. (Mostly meaning “person in charge of Orion capsules and the big rockets that launch them.”)
China’s Long March 5 Will Not Launch Until 2015 (Bradley Perrett for Aviation Week) On delays affecting China’s production of future rockets.
NASA’s LRO Sees GRAIL’s Explosive Farewell — As the GRAIL spacecraft crashed into the moon at the end of their mission to observe lunar gravitation, the Lunar Reconaissance Orbiter was able to observe the plumes of dust kicked up by the impact.
Comet PANSTARRS and the Moon
I got this picture of Comet C/2011 L4 PANSTARRS at 8PM on Tuesday, 12 March 2013, about 2 days after the comet’s closest approach to the sun. I couldn’t see it with the naked eye due to haze and glare from the sunset and bright suburban lights, but a six second exposure with a narrow aperture resolved the comet as a faint smudge to the left of the new moon.
Also check out thisisbossi’s shot of the comet and moon with Lincoln Memorial.
Green East Coast Meteor
Saw a bright green fireball in the sky tonight, low over the northern horizon (as seen from Fairfax) going west to east. I couldn’t get a photo in time, but I sketched it with Paper app on my iPad mini while the image was fresh in my head.
This fireball was nowhere near the intensity of the Chelyabinsk meteor, but was still high and bright enough to be seen all up and down the east coast. The CapitalWeather story on the event has a couple of videos, and the American Meteor Society’s update has an approximate ground track.
Looks like any fragments from the object probably landed in the Atlantic Ocean. (I wonder if the green color of the fireball was from oxidation of metallic compounds consistent with a spent rocket stage. The west-to-east track might be consistent with the angle of some past low earth orbit launch. This is all speculation, though.)
Recent Reading
“Sell Out,” a story by Simon Rich: Part One, Two, Three, Four. (New Yorker)
DuckTales invented a new animated wonderland — that quickly disappeared. (Onion AV Club)
The extraordinary science of addictive junk food. (NYT)
Your fat has a brain. Seriously. And it’s trying to kill you. (Outside Online)
Sunk: The Incredible Truth About the ‘Bounty,’ a Ship That Never Should Have Sailed (Outside Online)
The Professor, the Bikini Model and the Suitcase Full of Trouble. (NYT)
Meet the men who spy on women through their webcams. (Ars Technica)
Social work in the Tenderloin will kill something inside of you. (Vice Magazine)
Not your usual listening exercise: 6000 people’s perceptions of aid delivery (How Matters)
Photoshop is a city for everyone: how Adobe endlessly rebuilds its classic app. (The Verge)
How to Use Introversion for Career and Personal Success. (Lifehacker)
Pad Thai. (The Morning News)
Evgeny Morozov: ‘We are abandoning all the checks and balances.’ (Guardian)
Resenting Hipsters. (Jacobin Mag)
Why I left news. (Allyson Bird)
Why RSS still matters. (The Verge)
Twitter Archive
About a year after I complained about Twitter’s lack of archiving, they implemented a kind of backup solution involving a zipped tweet archive.
The Twitter archive is a bit of a headscratcher. It’s a searchable offline snapshot of tweets stored in JSON files organized into a year/month navigation UI — usable in any browser, but you must first request the archive from Twitter Settings and then retrieve it as a ZIP file after the server builds it and notifies you by email.
The nice part is that your full Twitter history comes to you as a portable web app that you own; a self-contained snapshot to store or upload to your preferred web host. On the down side, why decouple the archive from the stream in such a manner that you must return to the download page for a new snapshot every time you want an updated version? It seems like Twitter could have deployed the archive as a feature of every user profile, with the downloadable archive as backup. It seems a disjointed approach to what should be a simple archiving problem, which makes me wonder what kind of coding issues Twitter faces that would make a dated message log anything other than straightforward.
For now, my tweet archive lives in the history section, where I also keep backups of the embarassing older iterations of my web presence.