Wednesday is the day I historically post links.
* It all finally makes sense; Michele Bachmann says the crazy things she says because she comes from an alternate universe where Jimmy Carter was president in 1976.
* Also in alternate-universe news: South Korean scientists claim to have cloned glowing dogs.
* Tough times in the mother country.
* They're turning Margaret Atwood's (very good) Payback into a full-length documentary about debt.
* "Crazy" Joe Biden was a key figure in the Arlen Specter party switch. Now who's laughing?
* The headline reads: "Student, 11, steps up to lead school band when budget constraints leave PS 37 without band teacher." Get this kid a scholarship anywhere he wants to go, and pour some real money into public schools already.
* The eleven most endangered historic places.
* Classic science fiction film on the Internet.
* The Bush-Obama position on state secrets takes a much-needed hit.
* The Fight Club Theory of Ferris Bueller.
* An entity passes the Hofstadter-Turing Test if it first creates a virtual reality, then creates a computer program within that reality which must finally recognise itself as an entity within this virtual environment by passing the Hofstadter-Turing Test. So now we just need to get Skynet self-aware.
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Posted by Gerry Canavan at 9:03 AM
Labels: 1976, Arlen Specter, artificial intelligence, Barack Obama, Bush, debt, education, Ferris Bueller, Fight Club, history, Hofstadter-Turing Test, Ireland, Jimmy Carter, Joe Biden, mad science, many worlds and alternate universes, Margaret Atwood, Michele Bachmann, music, politics, recession, science fiction, Skynet, state secrets, Won't somebody think of the children?
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