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7 votes
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'The perfect combination of art and science': Mourning the end of paper maps
18 votes -
Twenty new moons found orbiting Saturn, making it the planet with the most known moons
10 votes -
Is programming science?
There's no doubt computer science is indeed a science, but what about programming itself? Does it fulfill the basic requirements that make something a science? I'm not an academic, just trying to...
There's no doubt computer science is indeed a science, but what about programming itself? Does it fulfill the basic requirements that make something a science? I'm not an academic, just trying to start a conversation.
In many ways, programming is like Math: a means to an end. And Math is a science. Like math, programming has several fields with vastly different ideas of what constitutes programming. Because it is applied logic, programming is also provable and disprovable. There are many disputing hypothesis and, even though absolute truth is a distant dream, it is certain that some sentences are truer than others. Again, like Math, Programming has many practical applications, such as finances and engineering.
Some people consider Math a propaedeutics: not a science in itself, but a discipline that provides fundamentals to actual sciences such as chemistry and physics. The same reasoning could be applied to programming, as nothing more than a tool for computer science. I personally think there's something unique about programming and it's problem-solving methods that can be considered a field of its own.
What you guys and girls think?
6 votes -
Why can’t we agree on what’s true any more?
18 votes -
‘Planet Nine’ may actually be a black hole
20 votes -
Scott Aaronson's Quantum Supremacy FAQ
10 votes -
Unhappy meals - How 'food science' made us unhealthy
10 votes -
AI competitions don’t produce useful models
5 votes -
Inside the launch of the Cosmic Crisp apple, the “largest launch of a produce item in American history”
9 votes -
Could we terraform Mars?
6 votes -
Hubble reveals latest portrait of Saturn
7 votes -
Water found in habitable super-Earth's atmosphere for first time
17 votes -
What has NASA's Juno discovered around Jupiter so far? (three year update)
5 votes -
The science is clear; we've more to fear from baby monitors than 5G
12 votes -
India's Chandrayaan-2 mission ready for historic landing on the Moon
10 votes -
Sally Floyd, who helped things run smoothly online, dies at 69
7 votes -
Massive study of nearly 500,000 people shows there's no 'gay gene', but genetics and environmental factors are linked to same-sex behavior
14 votes -
New research finds that user affiliations on Reddit can be used to predict which subreddits will turn so toxic they eventually get banned
30 votes -
My life with face blindness
21 votes -
Was Sweden headed toward socialism in the 1970s?
6 votes -
Futurology: how a group of visionaries looked beyond the possible a century ago and predicted today’s world
6 votes -
Lab-grown dairy: The next food frontier
9 votes -
What are the ethical consequences of immortality technology?
9 votes -
The North Atlantic ocean current, which warms northern Europe, may be slowing
6 votes -
Scientists from the University of Borås are exploring the possibility of converting old pieces of glutinous waste into yarn
4 votes -
A conversation with the team that made bread with 4500-year-old yeast from ancient Egyptian pottery
13 votes -
The life and death of an Instagram fish - What one funny-looking fish taught us about evolution, the internet, and the monsters we create
7 votes -
The empty radicalism of the climate apocalypse: What would it mean to get serious about climate change?
13 votes -
A mathematician has resolved the Sensitivity Conjecture, a nearly thirty-year-old problem in computer science
24 votes -
Airborne concentrations and chemical considerations of radioactive ruthenium from an undeclared major nuclear release in 2017
13 votes -
Watch the Ridgecrest earthquake shatter the desert floor in stunning before-and-after images
12 votes -
Death dive to Saturn
3 votes -
Would you eat a burger made out of CO2 captured from the air?
9 votes -
Danish architecture firm COBE has won an international competition for a new science museum in Lund
5 votes -
So far cultured meat has been burgers – the next big challenge is animal-free steaks
6 votes -
NASA chooses Saturn’s moon Titan as its next destination as part of Project DragonFly—a drone mission to explore Titan's surface over two years
28 votes -
Becoming a data scientist: The career path for job changers
8 votes -
Zach Weinersmith, the cartoonist behind Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal and co-author of SOONISH, does a Q&A
12 votes -
Elite marathoners’ gut bacteria help mice run faster
15 votes -
NASA rover on Mars detects high amounts of methane gas, hinting at possibility of life
8 votes -
Ancient Babylonian astronomers calculated Jupiter’s position from the area under a time-velocity graph
7 votes -
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