Science

William Kamkwamba via Inhabitat


Green resource and all around interesting site Inhabitat has a really nice article up today about William Kamkwamba. Name doesn’t ring a bell? I’m not surprised. Positive press usually gets filtered out in favor of the horrific. I heard about him a little bit ago thanks to my close watch on the TED conference. William, without any training, taught himself all he could out of books borrowed from a school library. One of the things he learned was how to make a windmill, which he did, out of found materials. He used the windmill to support his family’s moderate power needs and continues to do so, improving the windmill whenever possible. His little project garnered him enough acclaim that he was invited to be one of 100 speakers at the international TED conference. Not bad for a poor kid from Malawi. Plus I think he’s wearing skate shoes in that photo, so we could definitely be bros.

William Kamkwamba on Inhabitat
William’s Windmill Blog

Ecology
Environment
Science

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Alyson Shotz


I am just enough of a nerd to think that My Living Room Rug In Hyperbolic Space by Alyson Shotz is rad to a factor of 10. See: me=nerd. That last sentence: also nerdy. Alyson’s other works are, in my opinion, not as cool, but are still cool and pretty to look at. They remind me of the time in high school when I went to the Museum of Arts and Sciences on mushrooms. Oh, to be young and fascinated with a prism that is shooting rainbows directly into your mind.

Alyson Shotz via VVORK

Art
Science
Sculpture

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Nikon Universcale


Did you ever want to compare the size of things in the universe, including the known universe itself? Even if you didn’t now you can thanks to Nikon and their Universcale site. It’s a flash project that allows you to scroll through a scale map of objects in the universe starting with the outer limits of the universe itself and going all the way down to the smallest objects measurable by science. Treat yourself to an ego-shattering look at just how unimportant you are.

Nikon: Universcale Project

Photograpy
Science

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