Net

  • Blogrolling

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    Thanks to The Telegraph‘s digital chief, Ian Douglas, for his pointer to me as one of “Five Great Physics Blogs“. Despite its usually, erm, detestable politics, The Telegraph has usually had excellent science and technology coverage, and I’m happy to be picked in such good company: the four other blogs are Peter Coles’ In the…

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  • iCosmo

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    A quick pointer to Initiative for Cosmology (iCosmo). The website brings together a bunch of useful calculations for physical cosmology — relatively simple quantities like the relationship between redshift and distance, and also more complicated ones like the power spectrum of density perturbations (which tells us the distribution of galaxies on the largest scales in…

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  • Blog life

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    Welcome to anyone one led here from Physics World’s Blog life column. This is a blog — so comments are encouraged (or you could click on the advertisements)!

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  • Not Cuil

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    There’s a new Google-competing search engine called Cuil (which I guess is meant to be pronounced as slacker-speak “kewl” or something). If I search for myself on it, my Imperial homepage comes up first, but for some reason accompanied by this picture. I promise that’s not me. Just as strange, a picture that is of…

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  • Invitations

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    Over the last few weeks, I’ve managed to get hold of invitations to a few semi-private (semi-public?) beta versions of interesting bits of software. OK, they’re not for Royal Ascot or even a posh dinner party, but I have to take what I can get. So be prepared for some serious geekery — sorry. Evernote…

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  • Google Sky

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    Google has just released a new version of its Google Earth software — one that lets you look up to the sky instead of down to the ground. It’s essentially a consumer-grade Virtual Observatory, like the UK AstroGrid, the US National Virtual Observatory and the Euro-VO project. It’s not so obvious when you fire it…

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  • Crowdsourcing Astronomy

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    One of the tenets of the so-called Web 2.0 is that it’s about an “architecture of participation”, allowing users (i.e., everyone) to contribute their knowledge and expertise — or just enthusiasm — to harness our “collective intelligence”. That’s why Wikipedia is about as good as the Britannica — and why you can look up photos…

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  • Technology: help or harm?

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    My mobile rang this afternoon, but as usual at work, I missed the call. I didn’t recognize the number (02920368701 in the UK), but on a whim I googled it. Lo and behold, it’s a cold-call mobile spam number. Good thing I didn’t answer it, after all…

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  • Sounds from the Tenement Museum

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    My favorite small museum is the Tenement Museum down in New York’s Lower East Side. It was built in the late 19th Century, housing a steady stream of immigrants until it was boarded up in the middle of the 20th. Different apartments in the building have been recreated as they might have been during different…

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  • Things I’m not going to blog about

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    The blogosphere is in echo-chamber mode with advice and admonition for how bloggers should behave (don’t be rude), and how scientists should spread the rational word (don’t be boring).

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