with policies like that, no wonder nothing gets done:
The Clean Power Plan aims at getting US power plants to use less coal, but we’re still subsidizing coal companies to produce more of it.
Sapere Aude
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with policies like that, no wonder nothing gets done:
The Clean Power Plan aims at getting US power plants to use less coal, but we’re still subsidizing coal companies to produce more of it.
This past April, the FBI made an admission that was nothing short of catastrophic for the field of forensic science. In an unprecedented display of repentance, the Bureau announced that, for years, the hair analysis testimony it had used to investigate criminal suspects was severely and hopelessly flawed.
As teeth whitening improved, smiles changed to show more teeth.
2017-05-16: This isn’t very good as it assumes perfect dentistry.
FaceApp is a smartphone app that can add a smile to an unsmiling person’s face. Olly Gibbs used the app at Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum to improve the paintings on display there.

insane.
In every refurbished building we visit, there is a peculiarly consistent style of preschool color schemes and shiny synthetic surfaces, the pastel palettes and axial symmetry giving an eerie feeling of walking into a Wes Anderson film set, or a life-size Polly Pocket toy… kindergarten kitsch is the logical next step for a regime intent on projecting an image of carefree prosperity. It is architecture as anaesthetic, a powerful tool for the state to infantilize its people.
design has suddenly become nk’s best export.
Middle east continues to over-compensate. it looks like the middle east will continue to host the tallest buildings in the world: Kingdom Tower (2019): 1008 m, Bride of the Gulf (20??): 1152 m. i’m giving the bride project ~10% chance of success.
i give this 50% chance, but the ui affordances are very elegant.
this is a documentary i’m particularly looking forward to:
The Miracle of Feeding Cities will bring to life the often-invisible, always intricate food system–a system that operates non-stop with remarkable reliability despite myriad disruptions, capricious consumer behavior and rogue weather events. And, underlying this fast-paced, globally integrated supply chain, you’ll see plain old barter economics and a service-based industry run by the most unexpected and captivating characters you could hope to encounter.
We have 20 papers published as a result of our work on the Jamaican Symmetry Project. We began in 1996 with 285 rural Jamaican boys and girls with an average age of 8. 1 reason we chose rural Jamaica is that it is economically disadvantaged, and since we paid all families we recruited for the study, we got an extraordinarily high participation rate. We measured their symmetry from head to toe, including everything from ear length to foot length to their teeth, we X-rayed their hands. We measured them again for symmetry in 2006.
In 2010, we measured their sprinting speeds and – bingo! – knees stood out. There it was, it was incredible, knee symmetry alone strongly predicted sprinting speed. Not ankles, not feet, nor any other part of the body. If your knees were symmetrical when you were 8 years old, then you ran faster when you were 22 years old. That was true for males and females, and for 90m and 180m sprints alike.
This was such a striking finding that we raised the money to study elite sprinters in Jamaica. They are the best in the world. The same variable we isolated in rural Jamaicans held true for elite athletes. Knee symmetry predicted the best of the best runners. We looked at Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, the current top female sprinter in the world, and her knees are so symmetrical we can’t tell them apart.
Just about any processed food with a shelf life of more than a couple of days probably has its origins in the Natick Center