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Friday, March 7th, 2008
I’m the founder of the Launch Pad Astronomy Workshop for Writers, which I run annually each summer in Laramie, Wyoming. This year the workshop will run from July 30 to August 5th, the week immediately prior to Denver Worldcon. Denver is only a two-hour drive from Laramie, and this will allow interested participants to attend […]
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Friday, February 29th, 2008
The students in my Science and Science Fiction course are getting into the concept of alien worlds and building star systems, but if you want humans involved, you have to have some idea about how to get off the Earth, around the solar system, and across interstellar space. My favorite single resource for this is […]
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Wednesday, February 27th, 2008
The Earth is toast. New and improved calculations make a strong case that when the sun expands into a red giant several billion years from now our planet will spiral into the sun’s photosphere and disintegrate. The space.com article also suggests that there is a way to save the Earth, at least for a while. […]
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Tuesday, February 26th, 2008
The public isn’t as well educated about science as they should be. That’s pretty much always been true, and will likely remain true given the quick pace of science and its effect on our lives, but we can do a lot better than we are now. But there’s also been growth in the spread of […]
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Monday, February 25th, 2008
There are a lot of myths, many perpetuated by movies with directors looking for more explosions, about what happens when someone is tossed out the airlock by Vogons or whatever nasty aliens are crewing the spaceship of doom. I did a little research about this last year for my science and science fiction class, but […]
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Thursday, February 21st, 2008
I’ve been invited to participate in another sfsignal.com Mind-Meld event. I like these. They’re fun, and the spectrum of answers to the interesting science fiction questions make for fascinating reading. The question for next week is: Which SciFi movie ending do you wish you could change? Well, there are a lot. I decided I’d take […]
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Tuesday, February 19th, 2008
Recently a friend of mine pointed me at this story. The issue of contention is that English has become the de facto language of science. In most fields, almost every paper is published in English, and all conferences use English. This didn’t use to be the case (and most graduate programs in the sciences had […]
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Monday, February 18th, 2008
Yesterday I blogged about the evolution vs. intelligent design “controversy” in the guise of bashing Ben Stein for falling prey to sloppy thinking and misdirection. There is no scientific controversy about evolution in general, although we continue to study the process and learn more about it. Most creationists don’t actually understand it, or many other […]
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Sunday, February 17th, 2008
I blogged about an article a few weeks ago I considered somewhat bogus, misrepresenting a tenuous connection to real science. Interestingly, a publicist for the movie, involved in setting up a promotional event for the movie at MIT with some physicists, did a drive by post that was pretty funny. He assumed I wasn’t a […]
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Friday, February 15th, 2008
Science just keeps marching on, this time with the military in lock step. Soldiers are being given “laser eyes.” No, it isn’t Superman’s heat vision, but it’s still interesting. Basically, binocular set-ups with GPS, thermal imaging, and laser ranging allowing for precise location of enemies or other objectives, up to miles away. The technology is […]
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Wednesday, February 13th, 2008
I was thinking today about the “Reals” of the Heroes Network and what superpowers are now within the reach of our science and technology. Most superpowers are ridiculously unphysical, as described in the really fun book, Physics of Superheroes, which the author James Kakalios fashioned after a class he teaches at the University of Minnesota. […]
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Friday, February 8th, 2008
Last month I wrote about the ten best science-based science fiction movies, which was fun and made me think a lot about all the average to decent movies that still fail to make the science grade in one or more ways. It’s too easy to make a list of dozens of movies with the worst […]
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