[BLOG] Some Tuesday links
- At Antipope, Charlie Stross announces (among other things) that his series The Laundry Files has been options for television development.
- D-Brief notes more evidence for the idea that regular exercise can help psychologically, this study suggesting help to long-term memory.
- At the Everyday Sociology Blog, Karen Sternheimer writes about sociologists who study subjects that matter to them, subjects that might personally involve them, even.
- Gizmodo notes that astronomers have detected the formation of dark spots on Neptune, akin to those seen by Voyager 2 in its flyby in 1989, for the first time.
- JSTOR Daily considers how humans can live alongside crocodiles in peace.
- Language Log considers gāngjīng 杠精, a new Chinese word that may well denote “troll”.
- Erik Loomis writes at Lawyers, Guns and Money about beers that can serve industrial purposes like film development.
- The Map Room Blog notes new maps of a modern Westeros created by designer Jamie Shadrach.
- Marginal Revolution notes regulatory controversy in Alexandria, Virginia, regarding a potential halal butchery facility for chickens.
- Roads and Kingdoms interviews writer L. Kasimu Harris about the inequalities of New Orleans.
- Starts With A Bang’s Ethan Siegel shows readers what the galaxy would look like in electromagnetic frequencies other than those of visible light.
- Arnold Zwicky writes about progress in education.
Written by Randy McDonald
March 26, 2019 at 5:00 pm
Posted in Assorted, Demographics, Economics, History, Politics, Popular Culture, Science, Social Sciences
Tagged with alcohol, alexandria, astronomy, beer, blogs, chinese language, education, environment, food, game of thrones, health, human beings, islam, links, louisiana, maps, neptune, new orleans, popular culture, psychology, racism, science fiction, social sciences, sociology, solar system, space science, television, united states, virginia