Vice President of Newfangled.com, Writer for PRINT and F+W Media, blogger, infrequent designer, reader, science fiction enthusiast...

Wow. Nimoy with a mustache! But this is fun…

Posted at 12:52pm and tagged with: video, space, time-travel, time,.

Posted at 3:27pm and tagged with: video, time,.

One example of a map showing “Deep Time

Posted at 9:04am and tagged with: maps, time,.

One example of a map showing “Deep Time”

What a difference 70 days make!

Posted at 1:32pm and tagged with: weather, time,.

What a difference 70 days make!

from Cartographies of Time

Posted at 4:30pm and tagged with: design, art, time, maps,.

from Cartographies of Time

Posted at 12:17pm and tagged with: time, education, quote,.

Mesofacts are the facts that change neither too quickly nor too slowly, that lie in this difficult-to-comprehend middle, or meso-, scale. Often, we learn these in school when young and hold onto them, even after they change. For example, if, as a baby boomer, you learned high school chemistry in 1970, and then, as we all are apt to do, did not take care to brush up on your chemistry periodically, you would not realize that there are 12 new elements in the Periodic Table. Over a tenth of the elements have been discovered since you graduated high school! While this might not affect your daily life, it is astonishing and a bit humbling.

For these kinds of facts, the analogy of how to boil a frog is apt: Change the temperature quickly, and the frog jumps out of the pot. But slowly increase the temperature, and the frog doesn’t realize that things are getting warmer, until it’s been boiled. So, too, is it with humans and how we process information. We recognize rapid change, whether it’s as simple as a fast-moving object or living with the knowledge that humans have walked on the moon. But anything short of large-scale rapid change is often ignored. This is the reason we continue to write the wrong year during the first days of January.

Our schools are biased against mesofacts. The arc of our educational system is to be treated as little generalists when children, absorbing bits of knowledge about everything from biology to social studies to geology. But then, as we grow older, we are encouraged to specialize. This might have been useful in decades past, but in our increasingly fast-paced and interdisciplinary world, lacking an even approximate knowledge of our surroundings is unwise.

via The Long Now Foundation:

Art project in progress A History of the Sky features lots and lots of time-lapse videos of the sky that are synchronized so that they’re all showing the same time of day.  Ken Murphy is the artist that created it and he hopes to one day manifest all the data he’s collecting as a video installation that’s always displaying the skies of the last 365 days.  The project was recently featured at the Exploratorium, but it’s still in a need of a home for the installation.

Posted at 11:14am and tagged with: video, time,.

SEED:

Signal-to-noise ratio is the relationship between meaningful information (a signal) and external factors (background noise). In a broader theoretical sense, it can refer to seeking out meaning from complexity. We do this in our daily lives, constantly and without thought, each time we take mundane actions and, ultimately, whenever we attempt to make sense of the world we live in. The young Scottish artist Katie Paterson toys with this balance. Whether it’s hacking a mobile phone and burying it deep in the Arctic to capture the dying murmurs of a melting iceberg, or working with astronomers to capture the earliest known light of the universe, Paterson’s work—with a nod to scientific research—explores the curiosities within some of our universe’s infinite blips: remote ones, old ones, ones long gone.

Posted at 3:03pm and tagged with: time, space, art, sound,.

Posted at 9:50am and tagged with: time, music,.

Scientists have built a clock which is 100,000 times more precise than the existing international standard.

Posted at 9:01am and tagged with: science, time,.

Scientists have built a clock which is 100,000 times more precise than the existing international standard.

Arthur Harsuvanakit designed this alarmless alarm clock that mimics sunlight as a means of “naturally” waking you up…

Posted at 7:08pm and tagged with: video, design, time,.

BibliOdyssey has a post collecting victorian infographics that is worth checking out…

Posted at 1:33pm and tagged with: infographic, time,.

BibliOdyssey has a post collecting victorian infographics that is worth checking out…

via GOOD:

The Life Clock, according to PSFK, is “a standard mechanical clock slowed by a factor of 61320, with a face that is broken down by year into 80 years.” On the one hand, it’s a tad morbid—I can imagine pouring a tumbler of bourbon and sitting down for a nightly staring contest with its cursed face. On the other hand, it’s a great way to keep things in perspective, and a clever means of slowing down.

Posted at 11:42am and tagged with: time,.

via GOOD:
The Life Clock, according to PSFK, is “a standard mechanical clock slowed by a factor of 61320, with a face that is broken down by year into 80 years.” On the one hand, it’s a tad morbid—I can imagine pouring a tumbler of bourbon and sitting down for a nightly staring contest with its cursed face. On the other hand, it’s a great way to keep things in perspective, and a clever means of slowing down.

The Crypt of Civilization

An incredible time capsule! It’s plaque reads:

This Crypt contains memorials of the civilization which existed in the United States and the world at large during the first half of the twentieth century. In receptacles of stainless steel, in which the air has been replaced by inert gasses, are encyclopedias, histories, scientific works, special editions of newspapers, travelogues, travel talks, cinema reels, models, phonograph records, and similar materials from which an idea of the state and nature of the civilization which existed from 1900 to 1950 can be ascertained. No jewels or precious metals are included.

We depend upon the laws of the county of DeKalb, the State of Georgia, and the government of the United States and their heirs, assigns, and successors, and upon the sense of sportsmanship of posterity for the continued preservation of this vault until the year 8113, at which time we direct that it shall be opened by authorities representing the above governmental agencies and the administration of Oglethorpe University. Until that time we beg of all persons that this door and the contents of the crypt within may remain inviolate.

It’s inventory is strange…

Posted at 4:12pm and tagged with: time, time-capsule,.

The Crypt of Civilization
An incredible time capsule! It’s plaque reads:
This Crypt contains memorials of the civilization which existed in the United States and the world at large during the first half of the twentieth century. In receptacles of stainless steel, in which the air has been replaced by inert gasses, are encyclopedias, histories, scientific works, special editions of newspapers, travelogues, travel talks, cinema reels, models, phonograph records, and similar materials from which an idea of the state and nature of the civilization which existed from 1900 to 1950 can be ascertained. No jewels or precious metals are included.
We depend upon the laws of the county of DeKalb, the State of Georgia, and the government of the United States and their heirs, assigns, and successors, and upon the sense of sportsmanship of posterity for the continued preservation of this vault until the year 8113, at which time we direct that it shall be opened by authorities representing the above governmental agencies and the administration of Oglethorpe University. Until that time we beg of all persons that this door and the contents of the crypt within may remain inviolate.

It’s inventory is strange…