25 Greatest Science Books of All-Time – Discover Magazine – science news articles online technology magazine articles 25 Greatest Science Books of All-Time
25 Greatest Science Books of All-Time – Discover Magazine – science news articles online technology magazine articles 25 Greatest Science Books of All-Time:
In 1543, the same year that Copernicus’s De Revolutionibus appeared, anatomist Andreas Vesalius published the world’s first comprehensive illustrated anatomy textbook. For centuries, anatomists had dissected the human body according to instructions spelled out by ancient Greek texts. Vesalius dispensed with that dusty methodology and conducted his own dissections, reporting findings that departed from the ancients’ on numerous points of anatomy. The hundreds of illustrations, many rendered in meticulous detail by students of Titian’s studio, are ravishing.
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some good ones.
November 21, 2006 No Comments
Memories for Life
Memories for Life:
Memories for Life is a unique project, funded by the EPSRC, bringing together a diverse range of academics in a bid to understand how memory works and to develop the technologies to enhance it.
We are our memories. Our memories underpin every thought we have, every fact we learn and every skill we acquire.
In today’s technology-rich society this human memory is now supplemented by increasing amounts of personal digital information; emails, photographs, Internet telephone calls, even GPS locations and television viewing logs.
We believe bringing together psychologists, neuroscientists, sociologists and computer scientists will lead to a more effective use and management of both the human and computerised memory. It will place the technology in the context.
The challenges that lie ahead include the development of prosthetic memories, the storing and retrieval of a lifetime’s worth of memories and the issues of trust and privacy such databases will entail.
We aim to produce an understanding of what is common in memory systems and use that knowledge to improve efficiency, recall and information management across human, personal, social and work domains.
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The memories for life project seems very interesting. It is amazing that they don’t have more humanists and behavioural scientists.
November 21, 2006 No Comments
Wikipedia Brown and the Case of the Captured Koala
November 21, 2006 1 Comment
Do you have a useful skill?
Do you have a useful skill?:
Lauren’s starting a wiki called Help Us Help Ourselves, a compilation of how-to articles created by us in the feminist community. If you’ve got a useful skill, and particularly if you have specialized professional knowledge you can share, please consider writing up a contribution. Read more about the project here.
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people helping people do whatever people want…. that’s one bonus of living in the information age… peer to peer knowledge.
November 21, 2006 No Comments
One Laptop per Child category
I made a new category and re-categorized my one laptop per child posts so that people can find them. In general, I am against the principles of OLPC on many grounds, mostly to do with lack of technical support, educational purpose, and the general lack of awareness or outright willful dismissing of prior work in regards to projects like this.
November 21, 2006 No Comments
Notebooks dropping to $99 | CNET News.com
Notebooks dropping to $99 | CNET News.com:
Circuit City will try to best Wal-Mart Stores and Staples in notebook pricing this holiday season with a Compaq notebook for $299 after rebates, or $99 with rebates and a 12-month subscription to Vonage, according to bargain-hunting Web site Black Friday Ads.
The site posts scans of Sunday newspaper inserts before they get delivered in papers. The deals can change, but history shows that the prices reflected in the ads become a reality. Steve Baker at NPD Techworld earlier this month predicted that $99 laptops, after all rebates and specials, would appear this holiday season.
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of course…. this is already there.
November 21, 2006 No Comments
A $100 laptop prototype for $150 | CNET News.com
A $100 laptop prototype for $150 | CNET News.com:
The One Laptop per Child project on Thursday showed off the latest prototype of what’s widely known as the $100 laptop for school children in developing nations. The only hitch is that the computer costs $150 to make.
Walter Bender, president of software for the Massachusetts-based nonprofit OLPC, said that higher-than-expected costs for the laptop’s display and battery (made of nickel-metal hydride) hiked up the price.
“The goal is to get it to $100 by 2008,” Bender said at the Silicon Valley Challenge Summit, being held at Santa Clara University.
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It is partly to the right price point…
November 21, 2006 No Comments
The extraordinary story of Rupert the rhino | the Daily Mail
The extraordinary story of Rupert the rhino | the Daily Mail:
As pets go, Rupert the rhino fulfilled everything expected of him.
Faithful, friendly and a fearsome ‘guard dog’, like so many beloved household creatures he simply became one of the family.
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ahhh, a nice animal interest story… of course, the animal dies in the end…
November 21, 2006 No Comments