One Hundred Years of E=MC2
Eric Ward writes "To mark the one hundredth anniversary of Einstein's
famous equation, E=mc2, NOVA has gone live this month with a Web site that features exclusive content and podcasts from ten of the worlds top physicists. This once-in-a-lifetime gathering of top scientists such as S. James Gates, Jr., Brian Greene, Neil deGrasse Tyson and Nobel Laureate Sheldon Glashow simplify what the equation means to our world today and the effect it has had on their careers. NOVA online also details how Einstein grappled with the implications of his revolutionary theory of relativity and came to a startling conclusion: that mass and energy are one,
related by the formula E=mc2.
Viewers will also find lesson plans through the
award-winning NOVA Teacher's Guide and a special
library resource kit."
It is not podcasting.
There seems to be an endless need in the Apple Kingdom to reaffirm their decisions by finding like-minded acceptance via astroturfing.
Calling "making media available on the internet" is not "poscasting".
Apple users read reviews on Apple Computers, for instance, after they bought their computer just to
reassure themselves that they made the right decision. When they read a bad things about or criticism of Apple,
they get mad.
This continues to happen decade after decade. Insecurity seems to be pandemic among Macphiles.
This phenomenon is the only thing that explains Mac users still getting so adamant.
If Apple had 90 percent market share you wouldn't hear a peep out of Mac users, since the
market itself would have given them the affirmation they need.
Mac users style themselves as non-conformists; in reality, they insecure and utterly intolerant.
Notice how they mod down reasonable criticism around here. Notice how they can handle being corrected.
While we are at giving credit where it is due, why not give Nikola Tesla credit for his work with electricity.
The USA has a bad habit of stealing technology and breakthroughs from other countries and then saying they invented it. There is no way that Benjamin Franklin invented everything from bifocal eyeglasses to a furnace, and still had time to fly kites and discover electricity.
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
Einstein's failure to cite other scientists for that work was simply unethical.
Seastead this.