Lego Fallingwater

August 28th, 2010

lego-fallingwater

Apparently Lego is now selling a model of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater. They’re making a few other architectural models, like the Guggenheim and the White House, though they’re much simpler.

I’d love to see them try to implement something by Frank Gehry, but I won’t hold my breath.

architecture, art+design, games | No Comments »

A Case for Careful QA

August 22nd, 2010

The unspeakable shame felt here by Asimo’s quality assurance team is the main reason that I don’t want to be a test engineer.

Also, orientation starts tomorrow. Woo!

computer science, science, video | No Comments »

Nixon In China

August 11th, 2010

nixon-in-china

Looks like everyone’s favorite contemporary opera is going to be performed in Manhattan this February.

So… is anyone free in six months? =)

music | 3 Comments »

Artisanal Pencil Sharpening

August 11th, 2010

artisanal pencil sharpening

Purported professional pencil sharpener David Rees invites you to “reacquaint yourself with the pleasures of a hand-sharpened pencil.”

art+design, cranks | No Comments »

A Mathematician’s Apology

August 11th, 2010

I finally read A Mathematician’s Apology, G.H. Hardy’s classic defense of a lifetime dedicated to the study of pure (“impractical”) mathematics. It’s a remarkably sad book, in which Hardy, near the end of his life, famously describes mathematics as a “young man’s pursuit”1 in which the elderly have little to contribute. However, it also contains some really well-composed thoughts:

A man who is always asking, “Is what I do worth while?” and “Am I the right person to do it?” will always be ineffective himself and a discouragement to others. He must shut his eyes a little and think a little more of his subject and himself than they deserve.

The mathematician’s patterns, like the painter’s or the poet’s, must be beautiful; the ideas, like the colours or the words, must fit together in a harmonious way. Beauty is the first test: there is no permanent place in the world for ugly mathematics. … It may be very hard to define mathematical beauty, but that is just as true of beauty of any kind — we may not know quite what we mean by a beautiful poem, but that does not prevent us from recognizing one when we read it.

1 The usual formulation of Hardy’s rule is that, “if a mathematician’s going to do any significant work, it’ll be done before they’re thirty.” This is true so long as we ignore the later work of Archimedes, Cauchy, Descartes, Euler, Fermat, Frege, Gauss, Hilbert, Newton, Peano, Poincare, Russell, von Neumann, Weierstrass, and most recently Andrew Wiles. I would guess that Hardy’s opinion on the matter was influenced by his relationship with the mathematical prodigy Ramanujan, who died at 33.

books, math, old dead white guys | No Comments »

The Oregon Trail: The Movie: The Trailer

August 3rd, 2010

“I’ll take four oxen, and all the bullets $1600 ‘ll get me.”

games, video | No Comments »

Above-Car Buses

August 3rd, 2010

crazy-bus
Beijing is getting ready to build tracks for a fleet of these double-decker bus-tunnel contraptions. They don’t interfere with traffic as much as regular buses since other cars can drive under them. There’s a pretty cool video if your Chinese is up to snuff.

art+design | No Comments »

Nerd Problems

July 28th, 2010

While conversing with an attractive lady, our chess-playing protagonist finds himself in the following situation:

He sat leaning on his cane and thinking that with a Knight’s move of this lime tree standing on a sunlit slope one could take that telegraph pole over there, and simultaneously he tried to remember what exactly he had just been talking about.

- Vladimir Nabokov, The Defense

books, chess, games | No Comments »

Powers of Ten

July 27th, 2010


This 1968 film zooms out by powers of ten from a picnic in Chicago to encompass the visible universe, then zooms back in to a proton in a carbon atom. Behold the power of logarithmic scales.

art+design, maps, science, video | 2 Comments »

Beards Beards Beards

July 26th, 2010

beards
So… I could get away with one of these as a computer scientist, right?

beards | 1 Comment »