Interesting Links for 19-05-2021
May. 19th, 2021 12:00 pm- The Limits Of Humanity - The Final Border We Will Never Cross
- (tags:space video thefuture viaSwampers )
- Another media acquisition? This one would involve Amazon, MGM, and ~$9B
- (tags:Amazon movies business )
- St James Quarter: Edinburgh's new skyline revealed as the last cranes come down after five years
- (tags:Edinburgh construction photos )
- If you're in Scotland and think you should have had your vaccination invitation then this is the form to fill in
- (tags:vaccination Scotland viaLizzieCassMaran )
- Working in Television is just horrific
- (tags:tv work working_hours OhForFucksSake )
- Why are all my weather apps different?
- (tags:weather apps thefuture forecast viaClare )
no subject
Date: 2021-05-19 04:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2021-05-19 04:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2021-05-19 05:44 pm (UTC)(I also wonder whether data quality overall has changed since 2016, which was the year the study used. Weather is competitive business right now because of global warming drought and storm issues affecting agriculture so a lot of work is going into forecasting software.)
no subject
Date: 2021-05-30 09:19 pm (UTC)Secondly, saying "only three stars are born a year in our galaxy" is carefully crafted language to make the number seem small. Big stars last millions of years, smaller ones billions of years. A star-forming region keeps making stars for (I think) tens of thousands of years. So three a year isn't a bad rate - for all I accept the point that star-forming is nearing its end, albeit with a very long tail.
It looks as if this is a general sciency YouTube channel. I think an astronomy-focused one would have been more nuanced on the subject.
no subject
Date: 2021-05-30 09:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2021-05-30 10:53 pm (UTC)I generally think Phil Plait is good, and he has a "Crash Course Astronomy" series on YouTube that includes this. [Goes off to watch videos for a while.] He covers the subject in a two-part cosmology talk, parts 42 and 43:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9B7Ix2VQEGo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gzLM6ltw3l0
And then he comes back to the subject, and leaves it behind in the distance, in part 45:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jDF-N3A60DE
I think part of what I didn't like about the original was the way it expressed it as a "human limitation". I kind of worry about humanity, but not because of that. Frankly, I doubt we'll ever leave the solar system (which they do acknowledge). And that means I think of space expansion as essentially nothing to do with us. That's just a perspective.