Odd Lots
- This stuff has been piling up. And I’ve been tired and perhaps a little grouchy. It’s just a phase I’m going through.
- From the People-Whom-I-Had-Once-Known-About-But-Then-Forgot Department: Annie Jump Cannon, who mostly eclipsed Edward Pickering while helping to complete the Harvard Classification Scheme for stars. Annie made it into the slightly snotty but very entertaining Rejected Princesses site. (Thanks to R. K. Modena for reminding me of Annie and pointing me to Rejected Princesses.)
- Alas, it sounds a lot like Nook is circling the drain.
- Huh? A scientific expedition to the Arctic to study how global warming is melting Arctic ice had to be postponed because…there’s too much ice in the Arctic.
- And you wondered why we just bought a house in Arizona.
- Here’s how NASA keeps “new telescope smell” from destroying new space telescopes. (Thanks to Frank Glover for the link.) One can only speculate what garlic breath would do to them.
- A half-klick diameter radio telescope is under construction in China.
- The Supreme Court just ruled that the Feds can’t just take a raisin farmer’s raisins and give them to other people. That would be, like, theft or something. Government wouldn’t do that, right?
- So you can now keep your raisins. But watch out for your kids: The National School Lunch Program bans whole milk from school lunches but allows sugar-sweetened skim milk. Government always knows best, even if it kills you.
- Cool optical hack: Project the image of the full Moon from a telescope onto a ping-pong ball and get a 3-D model of the Moon.
- This has been around for awhile, but it’s worth bookmarking: a very big list of all the things (supposedly, if often ludicrously) caused by global warming. Science journalism makes climate science look silly and dishonest, and science generally look bad. I used to think I should have gone to journalism school. Now I’m glad I didn’t. It’s starting to sound like a dumping ground for failed Polly Sigh majors.
- Evidence? A scientist hoaxed the media by inventing a study showing that you can lose weight eating chocolate bars…and the media bought it.
- Here’s a database of POP songs used in TV commercials. It does not list (as best I can tell) commercials that were later morphed into pop songs, like “She Lets Her Hair Down” and “Come to the Sunshine,” both originally hair product ads.
- In the new film Pixels, Pac Man attacks Manhattan. The concept reminds me of a very old and really bad TV movie in which an airplane gets stuck between two days of the week, and its passengers have to confront titanic Pac-Man like monsters that eat each expired day’s reality so that the new day can be constructed on a clean backdrop. (Or something.) But damn if I can remember what movie that was.
Posted in: Odd Lots.
Tagged: astronomy · ebooks · health · law · music · telescopes
I think the TV movie you’re referring to is The Langoliers – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Langoliers_(miniseries).
Yep, The Langoliers… It was bad enough that I thought it was funny. I think the original story was by one Mr. King, but I could be mistaken…
“Science journalism makes climate science look silly and dishonest.”
Did science journalists make multiple upward revisions in the temperature records for the last 15 years?
Climate science makes itself look silly and dishonest. The global warming scam has done enormous economic damage – but that harm may be dwarfed by the damage to science. Scientists have learned to prostitute themselves, and the public sees that the authority of science may be bought and sold.
Frauds and cranks will flourish as never before. This will be a calamity to science comparable to what the Borgia Pope did to the Catholic church.
That list of things caused by global warming at http://whatreallyhappened.com/ looks awfully like it was lifted without attribution from http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/warmlist.htm which is not nice of them.
Mr Brignell has a lot of interesting things to say there at http://www.numberwatch.co.uk