Showing posts with label Nerdy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nerdy. Show all posts

7.1.11

Litmus Test...

If you realize why this is the greatest thing in history, we can definitely be friends forever:


Via 24 Free Dinners

If not, well...that's okay. I just have my work cut out for me.


Although I will point out its inaccuracy in that this is clearly the Death Star 2.0 in its half-completed state, as seen in Episode VI. However, the line which this painting references comes from Episode IV and is referring to the fully built Death Star 1.0. I hope you all imagined that in the voice of the Comic Book Guy from the Simpsons.

24.8.10

Super


I'm a sucker for anything retro or geeky, and these incredible posters by artist RoganJosh (or "modHero") are both! Some of them are even too geeky for me (I must admit I've never heard of Havok and Polaris), but they are all gorgeous and witty. See the whole collection here.

17.8.10

Awareness

Photo: Nick Waplington

This is a photograph of Cornell University's cafeteria. One question you might ask yourself when looking at it is "Exactly how uncomfortable are those benches?" But I bet you didn't wonder "Was this the birthplace of the concept of quantum electrodynamics?" 

Author, artist, drummer, shameless flirt, and -- oh yeah -- Nobel Prize winning physicist Richard Feynman was in this dining hall in 1946 when the idea came to him:
"I was in the cafeteria and some guy, fooling around, throws a plate in the air. As the plate went up in the air I saw it wobble, and I noticed the red medallion of Cornell on the plate going around. I went to work out equations of wobbles... Then I thought about how electron orbits start to move in relativity. Then there's the Dirac Equation in electrodynamics. And then quantum electrodynamics. It was effortless ... It was like uncorking a bottle: Everything flowed out effortlessly. I almost tried to resist it! There was no importance to what I was doing, but ultimately there was. The diagrams and the whole business that I got the Nobel Prize for came from that piddling around with the wobbling plate."(Excerpted from "Surely You're Joking, Mr Feynman!")
Don't worry -- I'm not going to delve into the subject of quantum electrodynamics (you can go here if you want to learn more). That's not the point I want to emphasize, nor is it the point Feynman wishes to make with this anecdote. But what I find interesting about his story is not merely that he was able to discover an essential and universal truth about the world around us just because someone was goofing off at lunchtime; it's the fact that he noticed the plate at all.

How often do you find yourself mindlessly going about your day, living your life focused solely on the task at hand, or filled with worry about any number of future tasks or potential stresses?

Now, what would happen if you became an active participant in your day? If you became fully cognizant of everything from the feeling of exquisite shock when moving from an unbearably sticky summer day into a deliciously air-conditioned building, to the metallic symphony of a city, to the small acts of genuine kindness that people commit daily but that usually go unnoticed and unappreciated.

It doesn't always have to be something profound:


I discovered this eggplant, which is basically the size of my head, at my local Trader Joe's. I was amazed and delighted by this massive veggie, which I might not have noticed if I were too intent on my mission to hunt and gather some milk from the refrigerated section (like they did in olden times).

And I can't tell you how many times I've been to this particular Trader Joe's without noticing the gorgeous and vibrant flower display they have right at the entrance:


I challenge everyone reading this to be more mindful as you go about the rest of your week. Granted, you may not discover the key to time travel or develop a new branch of mathematics or even find an unusually large piece of produce. But I can promise that, as you focus on the present and the incredible things surrounding you at all times, you will find creativity and inspiration around every corner.

11.8.10

Red, White, & Blue (& Black)


 Shirt: Old Navy
Skirt: Express
Belt: Target
Shoes: Target

How almost-patriotic of me today! I could pretend it's subtle social commentary, a way for me to stick it to The Man and Big Oil and the Wall Street "Fat Cats," etc, etc by not quite wearing my country's national colors. Or I could be honest and say it was completely unintentional. How about we make it like one of those Choose Your Own Adventure books?
 "You're walking down the hallway of a dark dungeon and you discover...A BLOGGER! She tells you that she is implementing social change by her subtly subversive style. You: a) Choose to believe her -- what reason would she have to lie to you? (turn to page 24) b) Call her bluff -- no one can even see her in this dungeon, so what's the point? (turn to page 316) c) Ignore her entirely and attempt to find the treasure chest that's probably somewhere around here since there's always a treasure chest or something in these books. (turn to page 71)"
 (Oh, and I hate to ruin it for you, but no matter what you choose, you end up being eaten by a grue.)



I've always liked Thursdays, and I hope yours is treating you swimmingly. Cheers!



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Stressed? Me Too!

I have a confession to make:

 I'm a nerd.
Source

Like, a huge nerd. Like, it's difficult to explain just exactly how nerdy I am. Once you think you've discovered the extent of my nerdiness, I'll make an obscure Battlestar Galactica reference or a pun off the name of a famous classical composer or an analogy based on the molecular structure of an atom.

So it should come as a surprise to exactly no one that I'm obsessed with the magazine Wired. Some girls model their lives after Cosmo, some girls obsess over Vogue, but this girl religiously reads a magazine devoted to science and technology.

The most fascinating article (in my opinion) in the August issue was written by Jonah Lehrer and was entitled "Under Pressure: The Search for a Stress Vaccine."
 
Photo: Elinor Carucci

Who among us doesn't get stressed at some point in their daily lives? Robert Sapolsky, a researcher at Stanford University, hopes to one day develop an injectable cure for chronic stress, and has already seen promising results in preliminary tests with laboratory rats. I urge everyone to follow the link and read Lehrer's entire article, but if you're short on time, I've added Wired's suggestions on how to proactively reduce stress in your own life (after the jump).