Non-Dorky Polls: Travel Day

I’m going to be spending the bulk of today in transit between Albany and Houston, with a layover in Orlando (whee!), so here’s a pair of related poll questions for you to consider: The most enjoyable way to travel between two cities in the continental US is:customer surveys The least enjoyable way to travel between […]

Links for 2010-05-25

…My heart’s in Accra » The Partisan Internet and the Wider World “I think the comparison between ideological isolation in media and in face to face encounters is more like comparing apples and hedgehogs. They’re thoroughly different types of interactions and we should have very different expectations for diversity and ideological isolation in each set. […]

What Every Dog Should Know About Quantum Physics (2.0)

This is the presentation I gave to the International Baccalaureate class from Schenectady High School today. I tend to re-use talk titles a lot, but this is substantially different than the last talk with this title, as the previous group had read How to Teach Physics to Your Dog first. For this group, I spent […]

Links for 2010-05-24

Sunday Function : Built on Facts How hash functions can keep you safe if you find yourself part of the French underground fighting the Nazis. (tags: math science blogs built-on-facts) “Heretical” Copernicus Reburied as a Hero – CBS News “”There is no indication that Copernicus was worried about being declared a heretic and being kicked […]

Links for 2010-05-23

Every Hug, Every Fuss – Scientists Record Families’ Daily Lives – NYTimes.com “[T]he U.C.L.A. project was an attempt to capture a relatively new sociological species: the dual-earner, multiple-child, middle-class American household. The investigators have just finished working through the 1,540 hours of videotape, coding and categorizing every hug, every tantrum, every soul-draining search for a […]

Links for 2010-05-22

News: Questioning Endowment Losses – Inside Higher Ed “High-risk, high-reward policies heavily influenced by Wall Street helped some college endowments grow to several times their original sizes, but they also did damage to employees, local communities and the global financial system, a new assessment of investment practices at Harvard University and five other New England […]