Sci/Tech Web Awards 2003
Roland Piquepaille writes "This is the third year that Scientific American gives these awards. This is a collection of 50 sites which have something really neat to offer: science. "It's a jungle out there. With more than three billion Web pages to sift through, finding great science sites is harder than ever. The good news is the editors at Scientific American have once again trawled the Internet for the best the Web has to offer. We think our list of winners has something for everyone." These 50 sites are classified in ten categories, like anthropology & paleontology or astronomy & astrophysics. In this column, you'll discover my personal four favorite sites, including a great one featuring optical illusions (the link is too complex to be included here)."
Fp?
I'm not addicted to cocain, I just like the smell of it...
They left off my favourite astronomy website, the Joint Astronomy Centre's Birthday Stars website. It's really informative and fun!*
* Disclaimer: I work for them.
The link was to complex to be included here? They look pretty regular to me. You've maybe heard of the A tag? Was it Great Archaeological Sites, Exploring Mars, Earth As Art, or Archimedes' Lab; _OR_ did you just want some traffic to your site? ;)
Reinard
Google U.S. Puzzle Championship
For all those of you who use Google search everyday but missed out the fact that currently, Google is running Google U.S. Puzzle Championship, a national online competition to identify America's most logical minds.
Two winners receive slots on the US Puzzle Team and all expense paid trips to the Netherlands for the World Puzzle Championship in October. The top 25 finishers receive prizes as well as the satisfaction of knowing that what they know is well, pretty remarkable.
There's no entry fee. No special equipment is required. And the questions don't favor a specific cultural background. To get a feel for what you'll be up against, try the puzzles on this page. Solve them and you may find a slot for you in Google's engineering department (they love logical thinkers)....
If Nature is too technical, and PopSci is too plebeian for your scientific tastes, then please use the New Scientist as your source of scientific news. This way, when I meet you on the street, I won't be forced to punch you in the face when you start spouting pseudoscientific crap from between your gums.
Thank you,
It's pretty easy to come up with an arbitrary list of cool science websites, considering there are in excess of 3,083,324,652 pages on the web nowadays.
But in my opinion, cutting science news sites have to have the edge, and there are times when science on slashdot is not as fast as the news on eureka alert or for that matter, the science and tech areas of the bbc news site. Of course, Nature has had a leading role for scientists in the news area for years.
But I guess that there are as many favourite groups of science sites as there are readers of science sites! (Can such a conjecture be proved, though?)
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Fermat? Is that you?