Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Monday, November 28, 2016

Impressive...most impressive!

Impressive...most impressive!

h/t John Bump​

Originally shared by HACKADAY

We love a good LEGO build as much as anyone, but Technics takes it to the next level in terms of creating working mechanisms. And nobody takes Technics as far as [Nico71], as evidenced by his super-fast Technics rope braiding machine. The last time we saw…
http://hackaday.com/2016/11/28/lego-technics-machine-produces-true-braided-rope

I don't usually promote things unless I can vouch for them personally.

I don't usually promote things unless I can vouch for them personally. I've relied on Shutterfly for over a decade now and they've always given me good prices and great service on the high-quality cards, books, and calendars we've ordered from them.
https://invite-shutterfly.com/x/nx0shN

Friday, November 25, 2016

"I'd like ten turkey sliders. Here's a dime...keep the change."


"I'd like ten turkey sliders. Here's a dime...keep the change."

Ha!


Ha!

Originally shared by Chris H.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

Trump's election could not only accelerate climate change, but also keep us from knowing as much about it happening.

Trump's election could not only accelerate climate change, but also keep us from knowing as much about it happening.

Originally shared by Yonatan Zunger

The news about Nazis in DC may have hidden some of the most important stories brewing about the new administration. This one may prove to have some of the most serious consequences. Trump wants to eliminate NASA's Earth Science division, one of the foremost institutions in the world studying the state of our planet. This team has key responsibilities in lofting the satellites which give us a view of what's happening around us – as well as being one of the world's best groups of climate modeling.

Eliminating the division would both disband one of the best such teams in the world, and eliminate nearly $2B of funding from the subject, costing hundreds (or more) of jobs across the field, and likely most affecting the careers of young researchers – with huge consequences for the field's future, just as it is becoming ever-more critical. (Remember that the Arab Spring was triggered by droughts in Asia and the Middle East, and the current massive surge in temperatures in the Arctic – it's currently 36°F above normal! – are going to have tremendous consequences. There's a reason the DoD considers this a top strategic priority.)

More chillingly still, the justification for this is that he calls their work "politicized science" – which is to say, "science which is politically inconvenient for him." We've seen a similar game in which Congress has banned any medical or epidemiological research on guns, because of the NRA's (probably justified) fear that the results of even the most trivial research would harm their political goals.* (Pro tip: if you know that anyone seriously looking at a question will come up with answers that hurt your goals, this may mean your goals are shady.)

There's actually a name for this sort of thing: Lysenkoism, named after Soviet agriculture director Trofim Lysenko. Lysenko considered genetics to be politically unfavorable to Communism, because if traits are inherent, then they can't be improved by the government, and that would make all sorts of parts of the Five-Year Plan obviously infeasible. With Stalin's enthusiastic support, all funding for research which disagreed with this was cut. (And this being Stalin, researchers who disagreed were shipped to Siberia) It was replaced by a rather bizarre official theory in which, for example, rye could be turned into wheat, and exposing wheat seeds to high humidity and low temperature would "teach" them and their descendants to grow in the winter.

The thing about science is that it's about asking questions and noting what's happening in the world around you. You don't get to make theories up and just say that the world is so; all you can do is describe what's actually observed, and try to figure out if you can predict what will happen next. That is, science is descriptive, it's not normative.

And that means that science is about things that keep happening, whether you believe in them or not. Unlike saying "I don't believe in fairies!," you can say "this wheat will grow in Siberia!" as often as you like, and the wheat still isn't going to grow there. That's the problem with Lysenkoism: it's based on pretending that nature works some way, and threatening anyone who dares to disagree with you, but nature doesn't really care. It will keep doing what it was doing before, and all that happens is that you've decided to be officially blind to it.

You do this with how crops work, and you end up with unexpected famines. You do this with how climate works, and you end up with unexpected droughts, floods, spreads of new diseases, and all sorts of fun and exciting things, because it turns out that the weather is still pretty important in our lives and you do not fuck with the laws of physics.

I say this with confidence: I was a physicist myself, am currently an engineer, and so if anyone is qualified to make a snappy answer to "Ye cannae the laws of physics, Jim!" it's probably me. But sorry: if your politics would be harmed by people being aware of reality, then all that means is that (a) your politics are apparently based on lying to people, and (b) at some point or another you are going to get a rude introduction to reality, which will not be good for either your politics or your constituents-slash-victims.

* Before anyone uses this as an excuse to go on a rant: I'm not anti-gun at all, and rather enjoy shooting. But there's a huge space between the Second Amendment and the sort of lunacy that the NRA has gotten infatuated with, where any restriction on a person's right to own a GBU-31 JDAM is tantamount to treason. And things like legally barring doctors from asking people if they have a gun in the house – even though, for example, that's a serious risk factor of death if anyone in the house is suffering from serious depression or similar illnesses – is just sacrificing human lives on the altar of their own political expediency. Seriously, fuck those guys.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/nov/22/nasa-earth-donald-trump-eliminate-climate-change-research?CMP=twt_gu

Thursday, November 17, 2016

New business idea: Hand-generated electricity producing artisanal electrons.

The last line makes this worth it.


The last line makes this worth it.

Originally shared by James Mathew

o.O

oh, come ON!


oh, come ON!

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Rocco Buttliere is back with another architectural masterpiece.

Rocco Buttliere is back with another architectural masterpiece.

This model consists of approximately 1,900 pieces.

About this creation:
Built between 1907 and 1909, the University Club of Chicago has been the home of its namesake organization for more than a century. Located at 76 East Monroe Street along Michigan Avenue, the University Club was designed by Holabird & Roche and is arguably the first neo-gothic skyscraper ever built.


http://www.moc-pages.com/moc.php/434439

Monday, November 14, 2016

Saturday, November 12, 2016

#NSS


#NSS

#grammar


#grammar

This makes me happy.

This makes me happy. As a kid, I remember begging my parents to buy me a copy of the red boxed Dungeons & Dragons Basic Set. The box said "Ages 10½ and up," so my mom made me wait until I was 10½...she was a little concerned by all the hysteria, but relented after realizing that role-playing games are a far better drug for an adolescent than, well, actual drugs. I played pretty intensively through junior high and high school, mostly making adventures and playing as DM (dungeon master, the person who narrates/guides the players' experiences). I really loved it. Then, I went to college, where people just weren't into it, so I boxed up my stuff and stopped playing. I still have all my original materials from the early and mid-1980s, waiting for the day when my kids are old enough to appreciate a nice virtual romp through a dark keep or a haunted forest. And RPGs are among the most popular forms of gaming today, with the Internet making it incredibly easy for fans to get (and publish) innovative gaming materials, so, happily, there's no threat to the genre's existence.
http://arstechnica.com/gaming/2016/11/dd-rolls-a-20-makes-it-into-the-toy-hall-of-fame-this-year/

Thursday, November 10, 2016

RIP Leonard Cohen, a songwriter and singer for the ages.

RIP Leonard Cohen, a songwriter and singer for the ages.

Here's Jeff Buckley's studio version of "Hallelujah" (a Cohen song), about as moving a track as I know of.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8AWFf7EAc4

Monday, November 7, 2016

Looks like Scottrade ($7/trade) will be acquired by TD Ameritrade ($10/trade).

Looks like Scottrade ($7/trade) will be acquired by TD Ameritrade ($10/trade). For Scottrade customers, that represents a 43% price increase.
https://about.scottrade.com/updates/announcement.html

Thursday, November 3, 2016

There's something comfortingly familiar about these...


There's something comfortingly familiar about these...

h/t Laura Gibbs

Originally shared by Polynomial -C

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

♪ ♫ We all live in a tiny, brick-based, not-really-submersible, plastic model... ♪ ♫

♪ ♫ We all live in a tiny, brick-based, not-really-submersible, plastic model... ♪ ♫

Originally shared by Carl Draper
http://www.nme.com/news/music/beatles-yellow-submarine-lego-set-released-today-1814329

"Benghazi! Foundation! Email!"

"Benghazi! Foundation! Email!"
The scream of the Trump-loving male.
He shouts and he brays,
"The blacks and the gays
Should all go with Killary to jail!"
http://www.salon.com/2016/10/31/donald-trump-supporter-who-chanted-jew-s-a-at-media-says-were-run-by-the-jews-ok/

Apples.


Originally shared by Chris Hallbeck

Apples.

Now I'm doubly intrigued!

Now I'm doubly intrigued!