Today is the centennial anniversary of the province of Alberta. I should make a cake or something.
The Regenerating Rodent
An interesting look at regenerating mice and the potential for the science to be applied to humans.
3D Printing by Mail Order
Creating a design in 3D space and then having it printed in the material of your choice is something I’ve been hearing about for years; even the design class at my high school had a 3D lathe, but reading this Wired Article on 3D Printing, it seems they’ve taken things to a new level.
Oh and while I’m on the topic of Wired Articles, you should probably check out the expose on the clone capable claiming religious group the Raelians.
“Two amateur documentary makers say they’ve infiltrated the UFO cloning sect known as the Raelians and come away with candid videos they hope will further tarnish the group’s reputation and even help shut it down.”
I found it kind of funny (funny strange, not funny – haha) because the guy making the video said he became suspicious of the group after learning they ask their members for a whopping 1% of their annual income; nope his suspicions didn’t come from the sex parties or their claim of aliens cloning humans – but when he found out they want money?! Well it must be a cult based on the 1% donation request.
Plastic’s Perfect Album: The Follow-up
Two weeks ago I posted about Plastic.com’s story on the perfect album. Some guy has tabulated all the albums mentioned in the comments and placed them online.
White Water Kayaking
My brother scanned some old photos he took of me kayaking down the Kananaskis white water and posted them on Flickr. I’m still cold.
Helvetica Vs. Arial
As a fan of both typefaces and silly time wasting flash games, I feel a certain responsibility to show you Helvetica Vs. Arial.
Start A Fire Using Coke and Chocolate
I stumbled upon an interesting site that explains how to start a fire using a pop can and some chocolate. I’ll have to try this sometime.
I Am 8 Bit
Even though it’s kind of old news, I stumbled upon a selection of photos from the i am 8-bit video game art show opening. Too bad all the cool stuff happens in California.
Snopes on NPR
The NPR has a short interview with David Mikkelson, the co-founder of Snopes.com. (Snopes is my favorite site for information about Urban Myths and other rumours).
Implicit Attitude Demo
While reading Malcolm Gladwell’s bestselling book, Blink, I learned that sometimes we have subconscious biases that are not exactly politically correct. A research team at Harvard University has come up with what they call the Implicit Association Test, or IAT for short. The IAT measures implicit attitudes and beliefs that people are either unwilling or unable to report.
Take the test and it may surprise you what your subconscious mind thinks about:
- Age (‘Young – Old’ IAT)
- Gender – Science
- Race (‘Black – White’ IAT)
- Presidents (‘Presidential Popularity’ IAT)
- Sexuality (‘Homosexual – Straight’ IAT)
- Gender – Career
- Arab-Muslim (‘Arab Muslim – Other People’ IAT)
- Weight (‘Fat – Thin’ IAT)
- Religion (‘Judaism – Other Religions’ IAT)
- Disability (‘Disabled – Abled’ IAT)
- Native American (‘Native – White American’ IAT)
- Asian American (‘Asian – European American’ IAT)
- Weapons (‘Weapons – Harmless Objects’ IAT)
- Skin-tone (‘Light Skin – Dark Skin’ IAT)
I took the tests both on Age and Gender and it was calculated that I do not appear to have either an age bias or a gender bias. Sometimes a person’s results can indicate a bias and in retaking the test it may still be hard to correct that bias even though you know you have it and are trying to avoid it from showing.
