Under New York
Text and photos by Bob Sacha. "Looking beneath a city street is like peeking under your skin: the terrain upon which your well-being depends is so close, yet so full of secrets."
Text and photos by Bob Sacha. "Looking beneath a city street is like peeking under your skin: the terrain upon which your well-being depends is so close, yet so full of secrets."
This time <I>Science News</I>' late-summer science reading list. Lots of good stuff here, and, other than <I>Blink</I> and <I>The Wisdom of Crowds</I>, I haven't even heard of any of them.
<i>Your <a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/stephenmejias/080806expert/">enthusiastic response</a> has inspired Kristina to come out of blog-retirement. She could only stay away for an evening. Ladies and gentlemen, it seems she may be hooked. Any suggestions for an amp and CD player?<br></i>
–SM
My buddy Jeff Wong sent this little video along and I initially resisted posting it, primarily because I used to work in a light show that featured strobe light effects (ah, the '60s, I'm told I enjoyed them). We used to create lots of chaos with unsynchronized strobes moving in different planes, so I was blasé about <I>The Time Fountain</I>'s reversing time schtick.
<I>Good Math, Bad Math</I> says phi is more fun. After all, "if you write φ as a continued fraction, it's [1;1,1,1,1...]; and if you write it as a continued square root, it's 1 + sqrt(1+sqrt(1+sqrt(1+sqrt(1...))))."
I'm fascinated by how tiny little things affect world history—take the malaria parasite for instance. Forget the Black Death or the Influenza outbreak of 1917, Malaria has had a bigger impact on humanity than any other rampaging pathogen—yet, we still don't completely understand how it works.
As a fan of Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey/Maturin romances and Bernard Cornwell's <I>Sharpe's Rifles</I> novels, I'm a sucker for this type of collection.
<i>In her final blog entry, Kristina asks for your expert opinion. The girl needs a new pair of speakers. I think she's looking for something "wicked cute," as they say in Boston.</i><br>
–SM
Need I say more? And, unlike many parodies, these are ha-ha funny, not simply funny strange.
Hilarious send-up of Internet advice columns: An "expert" advises great photographers on how to improve their iconic images.