Links and write-ups about beautiful things from around the web!
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Four QTLs that Influence Worker Sterility in the Honey Bee (Apis Mellifera)
I like the headline that ran in Nature better: “The Genetics of Anarchy”. Research into the fecundity of worker bees in ‘queenright’ colonies. Way out of my element, but interesting!
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First look: Mozilla Weave 0.2 puts Firefox in the cloud
As the title says, this new Firefox extension aims to help users synchronize their browser settings, including bookmarks, history, cookies, etc, between computers or on mobile devices. Sounds…
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Bleep Labs
New site, new Thingamakit (a DIY version of the Thingamagoop noise toy), and new t-shirts!
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Inspired by a Bunny Wabbit – WSJ.com
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Another Year, Another Cooking Mama
In the words of Mama: “Do not nine!” Hopefully it’ll have some online play.
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Official Google Webmaster Central: Improved Flash indexing
Googlebot will begin crawling Flash swf movies it finds looking for meaningful text data that it can add to its index. Biggest question for now: can it find files that have been embedded with…
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The International House of Mojo – The Secret of Monkey Island
Oh boy! Mix n Mojo’s posted their “secret history” article on Monkey Island. Immediately worth a link.
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Language Log: Parts of speech
For a moment I thought I had come across the most literate, intellectual post ever on Comics Curmudgeon. This Family Circus take is no where near insightful as Calvin’s “verbing weirds language”!
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Can past nuclear explosions help detect forgeries?
According to one source, at least, linseed oil produced after 1945 has a subtle difference that can help suss out phony or misdated paintings: the presence of cesium-137 and strontium-90 leftover…
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It Is Not Important at All to Me That You or
It is not important at all to me that you or anyone else should have this or that knowledge of anything written or recorded about my pictures of anyone else’s. It’s about experiencing the pictures, not understanding them. People now tend to think their experience of art is based in understanding the art, whereas in the past people in general understood the art and were maybe more freely able to absorb it intuitively. They understood it because it hadn’t yet separated itself off from the mainstream of culture the way modern art had to do. So I guess it is not surprising that, since that separation has occurred, people try to bridge it through understanding the oddness of the various new art forms. Cinema seems more of less still in the mainstream, as if it never had a ‘secession’ of modern or modernist artists against that mainstream. So people don’t trend to be so emphatic about understanding films, they tend to enjoy them and evaluate them: great, good, not so good, two thumbs up, etc. Although that can be perfunctory and dull, it may be a better form of response. Experience and evaluation – judgment – are richer responses than gestures of understanding or interpretations. Jeff Wall, excerpted from ‘An email exchange between Jeff Wall and Mike Figgis’, Contemporary, no. 65, 2005