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4 votes
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What is your favorite project that you worked on when first learning to code?
I went to university for computer science up until the pandemic started. It was great. I remember working on so many projects that were basic but a lot of fun and others that were a lot more...
I went to university for computer science up until the pandemic started. It was great. I remember working on so many projects that were basic but a lot of fun and others that were a lot more complex but still fun and rewarding. For example, one of the staples of beginner projects is Conway's Game of Life. I remember building that in HTML, CSS, and Java Script. One of my other favorite projects was a website for alum to visit to see alumni news and events, and also to lookup other alum.
What were your favorite projects when learning to code?
10 votes -
New moons of Uranus and Neptune announced
48 votes -
Out of the rabbit hole? New research shows people can change their minds about conspiracy theories.
14 votes -
What's an obelisk, anyway?
25 votes -
Study finds emojis are differently interpreted depending on gender, culture, and age of viewer
35 votes -
The blue LED was supposed to be impossible—until a young engineer proposed a moonshot idea
26 votes -
US Congressional budget gridlock leads to stunning NASA layoffs
21 votes -
Finnish study finds that people from different cultures reported the same bodily sensations when listening to the same songs
7 votes -
Analysis of a common preservative used to kill pathogens in food shows that it also affects beneficial bacteria
19 votes -
‘It’s insane’: New viruslike entities found in human gut microbes
30 votes -
The Hawthorne effect in human resource management is based on unreliable studies
17 votes -
What happened to David Graeber?
6 votes -
Can ‘micro-acts of joy’ make you happier? I tried them for seven days.
11 votes -
Embracing idiosyncrasies over optimization: The path to innovation in biotechnological design
3 votes -
Food scientists at Finnish startup SuperGround have found a way to make chicken nuggets and fish cakes out of otherwise discarded bones and hard tissues
28 votes -
Magpies swoop bald men more often, eight-year-old's viral survey finds
34 votes -
Astronomers make rare exoplanet discovery, and a giant leap in detecting Earth-like bodies
15 votes -
How crowded are the oceans? New maps show what flew under the radar until now.
27 votes -
Scientists attempt to explain “magic islands” on Saturn’s largest moon
6 votes -
Don't look so blue, Neptune: New study (re)reveals Neptune's blue hue to be very pale and similar to Uranus, unlike edited Voyager 2 images
17 votes -
Lisica - Weekly episodes of a scientist soap opera
6 votes -
I got my IELTS scores back and I need help
Overall band score 8. What's the next step? I am an Indian and wish to pursue a master's program in the US. Should I prepare for the GRE and apply for spring semester? Total newbie about all of...
Overall band score 8.
What's the next step? I am an Indian and wish to pursue a master's program in the US.
Should I prepare for the GRE and apply for spring semester? Total newbie about all of this university stuff.
Thanks in advance.
10 votes -
Coffee connoisseurs have long believed that adding a little water to beans before grinding them makes a difference. A new study by researchers at the University of Oregon seems to confirm exactly why.
35 votes -
Hacking the climate - 37c3
7 votes -
The origin of mysterious green ‘ghosts’ in the sky has been discovered
18 votes -
How much can forests fight climate change? A sensor in space has answers.
12 votes -
Course evaluations are garbage science
23 votes -
The strange clouds of alien worlds
6 votes -
I will be very sad when David Attenborough dies
I got teary eyed when my 5yo asked me about how baleen whales feed the other day, and I showed him a video narrated by David. Just today I saw another great video from David. There will never be...
I got teary eyed when my 5yo asked me about how baleen whales feed the other day, and I showed him a video narrated by David.
Just today I saw another great video from David. There will never be another like him (edit: David, not my kid), which is the saddest part of this post.
35 votes -
NASA mission excels at spotting greenhouse gas emission sources
23 votes -
What are the best intro books for different science fields?
I wish to know more about science in general and books are a good way to do that. We have a good assortment of science-minded people on Tildes, so I think it would be interesting to know what...
I wish to know more about science in general and books are a good way to do that. We have a good assortment of science-minded people on Tildes, so I think it would be interesting to know what everyone recommends. The one requisite is that the books must be adequate for a general audience. This means that the books must not require the reader to hold a STEM degree or even have a particular aptitude for STEM.
Just so it is abundantly clear: I am looking for books that people with an arts and humanities background can read. Laypeople. "Dummies".
I'm asking more about books that are intros to a specific field than introductions to science in general.
Thanks!
34 votes -
Denmark is building on the success of blockbuster drugs – the country's focus on reinvestment is feeding a stream of discovery
7 votes -
The Republican Revolution and how the party switch actually happened
13 votes -
NASA to launch NASA+, a free streaming service
73 votes -
First images of European Space Agency-telescope 'Euclid'
22 votes -
Earth is hiding another planet deep inside
24 votes -
What would happen if the Earth had rings?
4 votes -
A giant European telescope rises as US rivals await rescue
8 votes -
Supervolcano eruption on Pluto hints at hidden ocean beneath the surface
21 votes -
First malaria vaccine slashes early childhood mortality
12 votes -
Ohio embraced the ‘science of reading.’ Now a popular reading program is suing.
36 votes -
Scientists at the Askö research base in Sweden are investigating a methane mystery – levels in the atmosphere are rising rapidly and nobody is quite sure why
11 votes -
Humans have been predicting eclipses for thousands of years, but it’s harder than you might think
11 votes -
Americas’ first cowboys were enslaved Africans, ancient cow DNA suggests
24 votes -
We might have accidentally killed any life we collected in samples on Mars nearly fifty years ago
43 votes -
Appropriate for spooky season. Venus: Welcome to her nightmare
3 votes -
'Sports specialization' in young athletes can do more harm than good
8 votes -
More than twenty-year-old assumption about beer aroma disproved
12 votes -
Poverty, not the poor - a systematic analysis of the relatively high stable rate of US poverty using multinational data
21 votes