Saturday 3 February 2018

Some completely different things

1. Interesting (slightly repetitive?) piece by Stephen Wolfram about how to send messages to alien civilisations - and what messages we have already sent. Even if you are not interested in this at a theoretical level, it's worth scrolling down to the pictures: why has humankind decided to send Lego to Jupiter? And what about this, apparently left on the Moon attached to the Apollo 12 lander:

Seriously? There's a chance that the sole record of human civilisation that will remain for aliens to discover is a schoolboy drawing of a willy?

2. Two nice videos, each about 3 minutes long and enjoyable to watch.

3. Man bites dog.

4. This is brilliantly done - all the holiday photos all at once. I was impressed by the winglets moving back and the egg moving round the bowl.

5. These (downloads at the right of the page) could be interesting. They are part of a Royal Society scheme to develop primers to help judges handling scientific evidence in the courtroom. The first two are on DNA and gait analysis. I'm sure they are a good source of authoritative scientific information aimed at the intelligent layperson.

6. Why we should have money that “rots like potatoes” and “rusts like iron”.

7. "Nigel lived for years on his own on uninhabited Mana Island off the north of the country, surrounded by concrete replica gannets." Poor Nigel.

2 comments:

  1. Poor Nigel indeed.
    On the matter of alien contact, the Science Fiction story that has stayed with longest in this genre is the one that has aliens guessing that lemmings will be the likeliest form of intelligent life on earth. Arrival was a fun film, however basic the presentation of linguistics 101 was.

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    1. I enjoyed Arrival too. I've got a lot of respect for Deborah Ross as a film critic: "Arrival is a big budget sci-fi film with a smaller, more pensive, cleverer film trying to get out, which has to be an improvement on a dumb film with an even dumber film trying to get out, as in the manner of Interstellar, say." https://www.spectator.co.uk/2016/11/tongue-twister/ Not that I've seen Interstellar.

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