Jan 03, 2017 14:15
- Eating red meat will not hurt your heart. This
is not news to people who've been paying attention. Alas, meat has
been slandered as deadly for so many years that we're going to be
shooting this lie in the head for decades before it finally bleeds
to death.
- There are at least two efforts underway to back-breed the
aurochs, a very large and ill-tempered ruminant that
went extinct in 1627. I made use of aurochs in The Cunning Blood; the Moomoos (basically,
cowboys on Hell) had difficulty herding them until they
domesticated the mastodon and rode mastodons instead of
horses.
- Who will fact-check the fact-checkers? In
truth, there is no answer to this question, which heads toward an
infinite regress at a dead run. Nobody trusts anybody else in
journalism today. To me, this means that journalism as an industry
might as well be dead.
- Even the New York Times is willing to admit
that cold weather is 17 times deadlier than warm weather. This
is one reason we moved to Arizona: Winters have been nasty in
Colorado for several years, and I have an intuition that flatlining
solar activity may make things a lot colder before they
get warmer.
- Russian scientists evidently agree with me. And
y'know, the Russians might just know a few things about
cold weather.
- The Army is accelerating development of a railgun
compact enough to fire from something the size and shape of a
howitzer. 10 rounds per minute, too. With one of those you
could poke a lot of very big holes in very big things in a very big
hurry. (Thanks to Glenn Reynolds for the link.)
- Can't afford a howitzer railgun? How about a snowboard powered by ducted fans? The idea
is cool. Watching the guy put it together in fast-motion is
cooler.
- SF writer Paul Mauser suggests that publishing's gatekeeper function has been
crowdsourced on the indie side, and I agree. You can't always
tell if an indie book is good before you buy it. Guess what? You
can't always tell if a print book is good before you buy it.
Manhattan's imprints can barely pay the rent and want interns to work in editorial for free.
Warning: It's handy to have gatekeepers who know how gates work,
and why.
- Gatekeepers? Where were the gatekeepers when Kaavya Viswanathan allegedly cribbed a whole
novel together from other authors' work and then sold it to
Little, Brown for half a million bucks?
- Pertinent to the above: There's a very
nice site devoted to plagiarism, which is evidently a far
bigger problem than I would have guessed.
- An obscure author (of three memoirs) claimed that indie publishing is "an insult to the written
word." Watch Larry Correia lay waste to her essay.
Don't be drinking Diet Mountain Dew while you read it, now. Green
stuff pouring out of your nose is generally embarrassing.
- This item is probably not what you think it is.
The manufacturer could probably have used a little gatekeeping on
the product design side.
health,
food,
humor,
weather,
making,
writing,
science,
publishing