Entry tags:
- alternate history,
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[BLOG] Some Tuesday links
- In an extended meditation, Antipope's Charlie Stross considers what the domestic architecture of the future will look like. What different technologies, with different uses of space, will come into play?
- Bad Astronomer Phil Plait looks at the new SPECULOOS exoplanet hunting telescope, specializing in the search for planets around the coolest stars.
- The Crux looks at the evolutionary origins of hominins and chimpanzees in an upright walking ape several million years ago.
- D-Brief notes the multiple detections of gravitational waves made by LIGO.
- The Dragon's Tales looks at the development of laser weapons by China.
- Karen Sternheimer at the Everyday Sociology Blog looks at the gap between social theory and field research.
- Gizmodo shares an interesting discussion with paleontologists and other dinosaur experts: What would the dinosaurs have become if not for the Chixculub impact?
- Hornet Stories notes the ways in which the policies of the Satanic Temple would be good for queer students.
- io9 notes how the Deep Space 9 documentary What We Leave Behind imagines what a Season 8 would have looked like.
- Joe. My. God. reports that activist Jacob Wohl is apparently behind allegations of a sexual assault by Pete Buttigieg against a subordinate.
- JSTOR Daily takes a look at the uses of the yellow ribbon in American popular culture.
- Language Hat shares an account of the life experiences of an Israeli taxi driver, spread across languages and borders.
- Scott Lemieux at Lawyers, Guns and Money makes deserved fun of Bret Easton Ellis for his claims to having been marginalized.
- Marginal Revolution considers, briefly, the idea that artificial intelligence might not be harmful to humans. (Why would it necessarily have to be?)
- The NYR Daily considers a British exhibition of artworks by artists from the former Czechoslovakia.
- Peter Rukavina looks at gender representation in party caucuses in PEI from the early 1990s on, noting the huge surge in female representation in the Greens now.
- The Signal looks at how the Library of Congress is preserving Latin American monographs.
- Starts With A Bang's Ethan Siegel explains how Einstein knew that gravity must bend light.
- Window on Eurasia explains the sharp drop in the ethnic Russian population of Tuva in the 1990s.