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Ian Guest

You Can Now Explore the Large Hadron Collider on Street View - 4 views

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    "Google's panoramic cameras were given access to CERN's Large Hadron Collider, letting anyone poke around the gigantic machinery and the facility's endless network of tunnels."
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    Time for a virtual field trip? Note to Google: Wouldn't it be fantastic if we could (virtually) 'label' the scenes with pop-ups in a similar way to how we do that on Google maps?
Ian Guest

32 Mesmerising GIFs That Will Make You Fall In Love With Science - 9 views

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    "The world in all its explosive, magnetic, and melting glory. Warning: You won't be able to stop staring at some of these."
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    (via @Denbigh_TSA) Don't think of it so much as a list, but a collection.
Ian Guest

Color schemes - Adobe Kuler - 0 views

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    Kuler from Adobe - interactive tool for creating colour themes. Upload an image and let Kuler pull out which colours work together.
Ian Guest

OpenRocket - 3 views

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    "OpenRocket is a free, fully featured model rocket simulator that allows you to design and simulate your rockets before actually building and flying them."
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    via @rmbyrne
Ian Guest

Electromagnetic Leak (update 2014) - 1 views

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    "If extra-terrestrials are monitoring our TV transmissions, this is what they're watching." Amusing graphic to illustrate the speed of light and astronomical distances.
Ian Guest

Molecular Workbench - 2 views

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    "Visual, Interactive Simulations for Teaching & Learning Science"
Ian Guest

GE GENIUS MAN: Which Super Power Would You Choose? - 4 views

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    A superhero with powers that are possible with current technology. Useful discussion starter?
Ian Guest

Travel at light speed from the Sun to Jupiter - 1 views

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    "Sit back and take a ride from the Sun to Jupiter, at the speed of light. Animator Alphonse Swinehart made this video to illustrate the sheer mind-boggling scale of the solar system."
trish dower

Khan Academy - 0 views

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    leran almost anything... for free Shared by Will Richardson and PLPconnectu
Roland Gesthuizen

things-babies-born-in-2011-will-never-know: Personal Finance News from Yahoo! Finance - 7 views

  • The separation of work and home: When you're carrying an email-equipped computer in your pocket, it's not just your friends who can find you -- so can your boss. For kids born this year, the wall between office and home will be blurry indeed.
  • Books, magazines, and newspapers: Like video tape, words written on dead trees are on their way out. Sure, there may be books -- but for those born today, stores that exist solely to sell them will be as numerous as record stores are now.
  • Fax machines: Can you say "scan," ".pdf" and "email?"
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • One picture to a frame: Such a waste of wall/counter/desk space to have a separate frame around each picture. Eight gigabytes of pictures and/or video in a digital frame encompassing every person you've ever met and everything you've ever done -- now, that's efficient.
  • Encyclopedias: Imagine a time when you had to buy expensive books that were outdated before the ink was dry. This will be a nonsense term for babies born today.
  • Forgotten friends: Remember when an old friend would bring up someone you went to high school with, and you'd say, "Oh yeah, I forgot about them!" The next generation will automatically be in touch with everyone they've ever known even slightly via Facebook.
  • Yellow and White Pages: Why in the world would you need a 10-pound book just to find someone?
  • Talking to one person at a time: Remember when it was rude to be with one person while talking to another on the phone? Kids born today will just assume that you're supposed to use texting to maintain contact with five or six other people while pretending to pay attention to the person you happen to be physically next to.
  • Mail: What's left when you take the mail you receive today, then subtract the bills you could be paying online, the checks you could be having direct-deposited, and the junk mail you could be receiving as junk email? Answer: A bloated bureaucracy that loses billions of taxpayer dollars annually.
  • CDs: First records, then 8-track, then cassette, then CDs -- replacing your music collection used to be an expensive pastime. Now it's cheap(er) and as close as the nearest Internet connection.
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    Huffington Post recently put up a story called You're Out: 20 Things That Became Obsolete This Decade. It's a great retrospective on the technology leaps we've made since the new century began, and it got me thinking about the difference today's technology will make in the lives of tomorrow's
Ian Guest

Exploriments - 1 views

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    Exploriments are simulation-based interactive learning units for enhancing conceptual understanding in Science and Math in an experiential manner. Useful for students and teachers alike, Exploriments provide a highly interactive, exploratory, and engaging experience.
Clay Leben

The Case for Videogames as Powerful Tools for Learning | PBS - 12 views

  • 1. Just-in-time learning. Videogames give you just enough information that you can usefully apply. You are not given information you'll need for level 8 at level 1, which can often be the case with schools that download files of information that are never applied. Videogames provide doable challenges that are constantly pushing the edge of a player's competence. This is similar to Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky's Zone of Proximal Development. Lev Vygotsky 2. Critical thinking. When you play videogames you're entering a virtual world with only the vaguest idea of what you are supposed to do. As a result, you need to explore the physics of the game and generate a hypothesis of how to navigate it. And then test it. Because games are complex, you are continually reformulating and retesting your hypothesis -- the hallmark of critical thinking. 3. Increased memory retention. Cognitive science has recently discovered that memory is a residue of thought. So what you think about is what you remember. As videogames make you think, they also hold the potential to increase memory retention. 4. Emotional interest. Videogames are emotionally engaging. Brain research has revealed that emotional interest helps humans learn. Basically, we don't pay attention to boring things. The amygdala is the emotional center of the brain and also the gateway to learning. 5. We learn best through images. Vision is our most dominant sense, taking up half of our brain's resources. The more visual input, the more likely it is to be recognized and recalled. Videogames meet this learning principle in spades as interactive visual simulations.
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    Article offers several examples of games designed for learning and 5 game qualities.
Ian Guest

The "Dance Your Ph.D." Contest - 0 views

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    Using the medium of dance to explain the complex concepts in PhDs.
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    How well would you need to understand a topic in order to be able to explain it through a completely different medium?! That's the underlying principle of John Davitt's Learning Event Generator (http://www.newtools.org/showtxt.php?docid=737), which in this site we see writ large.
Ian Guest

Society for Popular Astronomy - 1 views

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    "The SPA is for everyone. Whether you're young or old, a beginner or an experienced skywatcher, there's something for you. We aim to make stargazing fun! "
milesmorales

Homeschooling Tips That Will Really Help You Out - 0 views

Kids in public schools face many hurdles today, the bulk of which we never had to deal with when we were young. The best way to help your kids avoid these pitfalls is to homeschool them, and the he...

started by milesmorales on 19 Aug 14 no follow-up yet
Ian Guest

LLNL Flow Charts - 2 views

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    "Flow charts, also referred to as Sankey Diagrams, are single-page references that contain quantitative data about resource, commodity, and byproduct flows in a graphical form. These flow charts help scientists, analysts, and other decision makers to visualize the complex interrelationships involved in managing our nation's resources."
Addison Adam

Pharmaceutical Testing Laboratory - 1 views

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    Pharmaceutical testing has known a wide development in the last decades. Drug discovery became a very important industry in the last decades. Thus, multiple testing methods have been developed for chemicals in large special laboratories. The general method that we use for pharmaceutical products include Physical, Chemical, Instrumental & Microbiological. Dove Research & Analytics is the government approved pharmaceutical testing laboratory in Panchkula.
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