The Atlantic Monthly and Amazon/Kindle are hoping so…
PS Note that the “Bestsellers in Kindle” (look in the right column of linked page) all currently cost $0.00.
The Atlantic Monthly and Amazon/Kindle are hoping so…
PS Note that the “Bestsellers in Kindle” (look in the right column of linked page) all currently cost $0.00.
The Teaching Company has posted online a free video lecture that focuses on what happens in our brain when we learn — something that should pique the interest of pretty much any reader here. (Just what happens with those synapses when you come here every day?) The lecture (watch here) comes from a larger course called Understanding the Brain and is presented by Jeanette Norden, a professor in Cell and Developmental Biology at Vanderbilt University.
Side Note: The Teaching Company is also offering free access to another lecture (this one in audio) that surveys the “Masterpieces of Classical Holiday Music,” including Bach’s Christmas Oratorio of 1734, Handel’s Messiah of 1741; and Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker Suite of 1892. Listen or download here.
On Friday, I mentioned that you can now visit the Roman ruins at Pompeii, Stonehenge and Versailles via Google Street View. What I didn’t realize is that this looks to be part of a larger initiative, a larger attempt to provide digital tours of important world heritage sites. According to this UNESCO announcement, 19 historical sites will be included, and I’ve listed them below. The video above offers more details.
“Spain: Santiago de Compostela (Old Town); Old Town of Cáceres; Historic Walled Town of Cuenca; Old City of Salamanca; Old Town of Ávila with its Extra-Muros Churches; Old Town of Segovia and its Aqueduct; Historic City of Toledo France: Palace and Park of Versailles; Paris, Banks of the Seine Italy: Archaeological Areas of Pompei, Herculaneum and Torre Annunziata; Historic Centre of Siena; Historic Centre of Urbino; Historic Centre of San Gimignano Netherlands: Mill Network at Kinderdijk-Elshout Czech Republic: Holy Trinity Column in Olomouc; Historic Centre of Český Krumlov; Historic Centre of Prague United Kingdom: Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites; Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew”
The story of Pompeii is well known. Back in 79 AD, Mount Vesuvius erupted and covered the neighboring Roman city with 60 feet of ash over the course of two days. The city was wiped out and then entombed for centuries, until archaeologists started unearthing the ruins in the 18th and 19th centuries, offering the modern world an amazing window into the finer details of ancient Roman life. (Just for the record, digging continues there today, and I even got to do some this past summer.) Today, Google is helping deepen the modern connection to the ancient world. Using Google Street view, you can tour Pompeii in 3D from the comfort of your own home. To begin walking through the ancient city, just click here.
As a side note, this isn’t the first time Google has used Street View in such a way. You can also find tours of Stonehenge and Louis XIV’s Versailles. Plus, you can also use Google Earth, another Google program, to tour the ancient city of Rome.
Finally, to dig deeper into ancient history, I’d recommend looking through our previous post, Learning Ancient History for Free. This will point you to some of the best free courses available on the web.
via Mashable and the National Post
The University of Michigan now offers a course designed to help students turn their iPhones into musical instruments. The video above shows footage from one of their practice sessions held in November. A final concert will be held on December 9. You can read more about this project here. Also see Stanford students playing the iPhone here.
What do natural magnetic fields look like? This extraordinary footage from NASA’s Space Sciences Laboratory (UC Berkeley) gives you a glimpse and reveals their “chaotic, ever-changing geometries.”
What if people behaved like banks? Or, more precisely, what if individuals holding “underwater” mortgages stopped following the social norms of ‘personal responsibility’ and ‘promise-keeping’ and instead acted like capitalist players in a free market? Most would dump their sinking mortgages and walk away. That’s the finding of Brent White, a law professor at the University of Arizona, who has published a new paper called “Underwater and Not Walking Away: Shame, Fear and the Social Management of the Housing Crisis.” (PDF) The bottom line is that homeowners and banks play by two different sets of rules. Main Street accepts the “emotional constraints … actively cultivated by the government, the financial industry,” and they hold the bag. Wall Street acts in its own self interest and gets a fresh start. The only thing they have in common these days are (you guessed it) guns.
Just for the record: I’m not advocating a position here, and I don’t hold an underwater mortgage…
Werner Herzog, one of Germany’s finest living directors, has a new film out, The Bad Lieutenant (watch trailers here), which has a loose relationship with Abel Ferrara’s own Bad Lieutenant from 1992. The new film, starring Nicolas Cage and Eva Mendes, gets reviewed by A.O. Scott in the New York Times. And now a former Times film critic, Elvis Mitchell, sits down with Herzog and talks about his “anarchist” noir film set in New Orleans. The interview was aired by KCRW in LA and can be downloaded in several formats here, or streamed right below. And, film fans, don’t forget to check out our new collection of free movies online. (It now includes about 120 individual films, and lists 35 sites where you can watch free movies online.)
Last week, we waded into the best of TED debate. What’s the best TED Talk out there? It’s hard to say. Purely subjective. But we can say one thing. Jill Bolte Taylor’s “Stroke of Insight” talk reaches the top of many lists. What happens when a neuroanatomist experiences a massive stroke and feels all the brain functions she has studied (speech, movement, understanding, etc) suddenly start to slip away? And how do these losses fundamentally change who we are? You’ll find out in a crisp (and at times emotional) 18 minutes and 40 seconds. You can also read her book that elaborates on her life-altering experience. See My Stroke of Insight: A Brain Scientist’s Personal Journey.