M82 and Microwave Popcorn – Deep Sky Videos: http://youtu.be/X0PgDIHBs7s
Messier 82, the Cigar Galaxy, or NGC 3034 —- Professor Paul Crowther discusses its similarity to a
M82 and Microwave Popcorn – Deep Sky Videos: http://youtu.be/X0PgDIHBs7s
Messier 82, the Cigar Galaxy, or NGC 3034 —- Professor Paul Crowther discusses its similarity to a
Everything Wrong Is Right Again
If I wait long enough I bet being as overweight as I am will be considered a boon. Live long enough and things once considered dross will be shined up as sparkly nugs of worth.
I wonder if they will perscribe some Lil Fluffy Clouds with this.
Companies and clinicians turn to ketamine to treat mental-health disorder as pipeline of new drugs dries up
Play As A Vector In Learning..Even At The Worst Of Times
My kids and I play games. We are unabashedly self labeled gamers. The benifits of free play as well as more structured play is well proved in our house. This bit then opens the conversation to how others have used games in some of the most brutal of situations.
" One game of their own devising was modeled after the camp's daily roll call and was called klepsi-klepsi, a common term for stealing. One playmate was blindfolded; then one of the others would step forward and hit him hard on the face; and then, with blindfold removed, the one who had been hit had to guess, from facial expressions or other evidence, who had hit him. To survive at Auschwitz, one had to be an expert at bluffing — for example, about stealing bread or about knowing of someone's escape or resistance plans. Klepsi-klepsi may have been practice for that skill."
On a strong recommendation from Meg, I have been reading Peter Gray’s Free to Learn: Why Unleashing the Instinct to Play Will Make
Who says we are all Charlie? Not Sandip Roy. Or Jeffrey Goldberg. Or, um, the Financial Times.
The Flitch of Bacon
Citation Needed has quickly become a welcome addition to my feed. 
http://techdif.co.uk – This week, we delve into obscure British traditions, and Gary gets points for