Stereo Means "Solid"
Turn your computer monitor into a really high-tech snow globe.
Turn your computer monitor into a really high-tech snow globe.
You can't make this stuff up.
Ex-physics teacher John Atkinson pays his kids $1 for each example of bad science they spot in the movies they see. For <I>The Day After Tomorrow</I>, IIRC, he instituted a $50 cap.
"Can you help me find more music I'll like?"
Yup, this is a colossal waste of time.
The Library of Congress has posted <I>Bound for Glory: America in Color</I>, an online exhibition of <I>color</I> images taken by the Farm Security Administration from 1935–1944. Amazing stuff.
It's not that I'm suffering from writer's block or anything queer like that, it's just that there's a lot going on in the office and in life. The difficult thing for me, when it comes to writing, is making sense of all these little red and white ideas hanging down from the ceiling like origami birdies. I'd prefer to spend my entire day writing.
Physicist Matt Sellars and his research team at the Australian National University's Laser Physics Center have "frozen" laser light—slowing it from 670 million miles an hour to 670 miles an hour, and <I>then</I> stopping it altogether.
"Complete with chasing, biting, grunting, and loads of heavy breathing." Sound familiar?
I do not listen to Christmas records. I just <I>don't</I>—a legacy of working in record stores over <I>waaay</I> too many holiday seasons. So, when I tell you that I can't stop listening to Dana Cunningham's <I>Silent Night</I>, you just have to believe that it's pretty special. It's quiet, ruminative, and deep—good sound, too.