Dr. Seuss + Batman = The Caped Crusader of Whoville

starmclasen’s posterous reading list
January 5, 2012 4:52 PM

Dr. Seuss + Batman = The Caped Crusader of Whoville

  Posted by Annie Colbert

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Illustrator extraordinaire DrFaustusAU melded the universes of Dr. Seuss and Batman for a series of whimsical illustrations. If Cindy Lou Who hitchhiked out of Whoville, developed a fondness for pleather and whips, she might look a little something like a Suessical Catwoman, no?

Via Deviant Art.

Go ahead and have a little fun.

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What it’s like for a mathematician

read –>What it’s like for a mathematician

It’s hard to explain the experience of expertise. That’s why one of the first things they teach you in journalism school is to avoid questions like, “What’s it like to be a mathematician?” It’s hard for your interview subject to know how to respond and you seldom get a useful answer.

But not never.

On Quora, someone* asks, “What is it like to have an understanding of very advanced mathematics?” And the responses are surprisingly interesting. Especially the first, wherein an anonymous mathematician lays out a detailed account of how advanced mathematics have altered his/her view of the world and of being a mathematician.

• You are often confident that something is true long before you have an airtight proof for it (this happens especially often in geometry). The main reason is that you have a large catalogue of connections between concepts, and you can quickly intuit that if X were to be false, that would create tensions with other things you know to be true, so you are inclined to believe X is probably true to maintain the harmony of the conceptual space. It’s not so much that you can imagine the situation perfectly, but you can quickly imagine many other things that are logically connected to it.

• You are comfortable with feeling like you have no deep understanding of the problem you are studying. Indeed, when you do have a deep understanding, you have solved the problem and it is time to do something else. This makes the total time you spend in life reveling in your mastery of something quite brief. One of the main skills of research scientists of any type is knowing how to work comfortably and productively in a state of confusion.

These are only two bullets on a multi-bullet post. You really should read the whole thing.

Great find, noggin!

*I couldn’t tell who had asked the question. Maybe I’m just not familiar enough with Quora. If you can see a name for the thread’s original author, let me know.

Boing Boing by Maggie Koerth-Baker January 3, 2012 2:33 PM

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getglue >> macconsulting sent you a book from Glue!

Check out this book!

Ghost in the Shell

Ghost in the Shell ( , K?kaku Kid?tai , literally “Mobile Armored Riot Police”) is a Japanese multimedia franchise composed of manga , animated films , anime series, video games and novels . It focuses on the activities of the fictional counter-terrorist organization Public Security Section 9 in a futuristic, cyberpunk Japan.

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What is this symbol on the Remote App…: Apple Support Communities

I’m using the latest  beta version of iTunes. When using the Remote App, there is a symbol on the lower part of the GUI alongside the Genius symbol. It looks like a TV screen with a swirl in the centre. I can highlight it and it goes blue like AirPlay does when in use, but there is no obvious change to any output either via iTunes or when I use Apple TV. I haven’t been able to find any help via the Apple site. Can anyone out there enlighten me please?

So now you know

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