After a mean blizzard and meaner times at O’Hare, I finally arrived in Tulsa. So we’re all set for my lecture Sunday evening. See you there.
Originally published March 29, 2009. Copyright 2009 Carl Zimmer.
Author: Matt Kristoffersen
After a mean blizzard and meaner times at O’Hare, I finally arrived in Tulsa. So we’re all set for my lecture Sunday evening. See you there.
Originally published March 29, 2009. Copyright 2009 Carl Zimmer.
ERV informs me there’s some snow between me and my delivery of this year’s John Wesley Powell Memorial Lecture on Sunday in Oklahoma ( details here ). But if Powell could paddle down the Grand Canyon one-handed, the least I can do is hang out in airports a few extra hours. I look forward to seeing any Loom readers around Tulsa.
Originally published March 27, 2009. Copyright 2009 Carl Zimmer.
Last year I took part in a talk about biology, terrorism, and art during the World Science Festival. One of the best things about the experience was getting to talk with people before and after the actual event. The crowd was loaded with artists (for example, the wonderful photographer Justine Cooper) giving serious, interesting thought to how we think about science, and how science changes how we think about the natural world.
The vision did not come from angels or mushrooms. I was sitting at my desk, looking at the saucer-sized screen of a MacIIsi. I was not gazing at actual black holes, but a two-dimensional simulation. And it was not the simulation that astonished me. I was stunned instead by the fact that my Mac was communicating with another computer 800 miles away.
Last summer I had a great time revisiting my geek childhood by watching old episodes of Carl Sagan’s Cosmos on iTunes. As I blogged here, it may be as badly dated as a disco ball, but it’s still wonderfully captivating to my twenty-first century daughters.
Well, if you didn’t fork over $1.99 per episode then, here’s a new recession-era deal you can’t refuse. Cosmos is now on Hulu. Here’s episode one…
Originally published March 24, 2009. Copyright 2009 Carl Zimmer.