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7 votes
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Trump's latest government overhaul aims to cut advisory panels by one-third
3 votes -
How almonds went from deadly to delicious
5 votes -
C.S. Peirce on science and belief
4 votes -
The long-awaited upgrade to the US weather forecast model is here
7 votes -
Quantum computing is a marathon, not a sprint
5 votes -
Researchers strapped video cameras on sixteen cats and let them do their thing. Here’s what they found. (Q&A with Maren Huck about her recent study in Applied Animal Behaviour Science)
9 votes -
Science institute that advised EU and UN 'actually industry lobby group'
10 votes -
The hidden heroines of chaos
5 votes -
The 'forbidden' planet has been found in the 'Neptunian Desert'
4 votes -
The birth of science in a darkened room: The father of modern optics could not have succeeded had he not feigned madness
6 votes -
Defeating the voters: Across the United States, state autocrats are spurning democratic majorities
15 votes -
The methane detectives: On the trail of a global warming mystery
6 votes -
Inside NASA’s race back to Neptune’s icy moon Triton
5 votes -
New batlike dinosaur was early experiment in flight
4 votes -
Bad evidence: Ten years after a landmark study blew the whistle on junk science, the fight over forensics rages on
7 votes -
The new film "The Race Is On" tackles climate change. Its filmmaker is Dr. James Dyke, who's crossed the line that separates academia from activism.
7 votes -
A psychedelic renaissance
12 votes -
Quantum computing for the very curious
6 votes -
A new approach to multiplication opens the door to better quantum computers
7 votes -
#DataScience Hive mind: I’m writing an article about the career path for job-changers who want to get into data science fields. I’d love your input.
It’s no secret that data science is a good career path. The jobs are in demand, the salaries are compelling, and the work is interesting. So how does someone break in? In particular, I’m...
It’s no secret that data science is a good career path. The jobs are in demand, the salaries are compelling, and the work is interesting. So how does someone break in?
In particular, I’m interested in how an experienced IT professional can move into data science. What advice would you give to someone with, say, five years of computing experience, who wants to break into the field? Tell me about the skills required, where you’d tell your friend to go to acquire them, and how to get a job without a specialized degree. What would make you say, “I want to hire this person, even if the individual lacks the relevant schooling”?
6 votes -
Science-themed board games are an increasingly popular way to learn about everything from atom building to colonising space
9 votes -
Pop science
5 votes -
Biosphere 2 - The lost history of one of the world’s strangest science experiments
13 votes -
The data all guilt-ridden parents need: What science tells us about breast-feeding, sleep training and all the agonizing decisions of parenthood
15 votes -
Will we find extraterrestrial life on ice worlds? Why Europa is the place to go for alien life.
4 votes -
Mars methane hunt comes up empty, flummoxing scientists
6 votes -
What does internationalism actually mean?
7 votes -
Why 'Worthless' Humanities Degrees May Set You Up For Life
20 votes -
Something on Mars is producing gas usually made by living things on Earth
9 votes -
Conspiracy theories can't be stopped
10 votes -
WFIRST faces funding crunch
4 votes -
Vice President Pence gives NASA five years to put Americans back on the Moon
14 votes -
Venus is not Earth's closest neighbour
17 votes -
Can anyone help me remember a sci-fi short story about disintegrating weapons and nuclear winter?
I'm trying to recall a short story I read about 10 years ago in English class in school. It would probably be fair to call it "sci-fi", but I'm not sure how important that is. What I remember: the...
I'm trying to recall a short story I read about 10 years ago in English class in school. It would probably be fair to call it "sci-fi", but I'm not sure how important that is.
What I remember: the story was set in the midst of an escalating arms race, Cold War-style, and the characters were chiefly military personnel (I think).
At some point, a chief actor obtains technology that is designed to (from memory) "disintegrate all weapons (certain materials/metals?)" within a vicinity.
I believe the technology is then used, and what ensues is a world-enveloping nuclear winter. I'm not sure how the weapons disintegration tech leads to a nuclear winter. It's also quite possible that I'm conflating two separate stories I read in that class.
Anyone have any idea what short stories I could be thinking of? This would be at the very latest pre-2010 stuff, and knowing my English teacher (old bloke from Yorkshire) probably 20th century. Probably.
7 votes -
Inorganic chemistry: What exact color does ozone gas have?
11 votes -
Engineers still studying problem with InSight heat flow probe
6 votes -
Mozilla releases Iodide, an open source browser tool for publishing dynamic data science
14 votes -
Halving warming with idealized solar geoengineering moderates key climate hazards
7 votes -
Science’s Pirate Queen
13 votes -
Cracking the mystery of egg shape
5 votes -
Why is your wine crying? Scientists say shock waves likely play a role
3 votes -
What are the best science fiction short stories, novellas, and novelettes you have ever read?
I developed a taste for short science fiction and would love to know which stories you lovely Tilda Swintons like the most!
29 votes -
Breathtaking new NASA images show Jupiter’s otherworldy storms
5 votes -
After stinging Presidential loss, Popular Vote Movement gains momentum in states
21 votes -
Meet Hippocamp! Neptune's smallest moon has a name (and a violent past)
11 votes -
"Insectageddon" is a great story. But what are the facts?
13 votes -
How ontologies help data science make sense of disparate data
3 votes -
The status of vertical farming at the end of 2018 - a summary
13 votes -
Leo Tolstoy on finding meaning in a meaningless world
9 votes