“You fight like a girl.”
I’m sorry
I didn’t
realise
that
was
a
bad
thing
science news: another incredibly smart and driven woman who discovered really important things just died without receiving recognition in her lifetime for any of her groundbreaking crucial work after decades of brutally unfair sexism click through for even more in depth accounts of the monstrous amount of sexist bullshit she had to put up with every single day of her goddamn life
science news: girls today are hesitant to go into STEM fields for some reason
Casa Sperimentale’ Ruins
Architect: Giuseppe Perugini
Location/Year: Via Porto Azzurro, 57, 00054 Fregane RM (Rome) Italie / 1971
Pictures/Source: Oliver Astrologo + Google / designboom
The Gasoline Station is a proud partner of the Minuscule community network.
Artists + Bloggers + Sponsors = Stronger Together
Let's elect politicians who could pass a high school science class
I’m re-posting this comic because I live in America.
Here, the places I love most in the world are gripped by drought. I’m thinking of giving away my winter tracking guides because there’s never enough snow. Climate change is knocking on our door, and the fact that it’s already so evident is a bad sign: it means that we’re headed for a lot more warming.
But we can deal with this, people. We’re brilliant. We’re brave. What we need - besides some kinda magical cooling ray - is a batch of elected officials who are ready to be brave alongside us.
If climate change bums you out, don’t lose heart: it means you’re strong. You’ve personally confronted a huge issue. Why let yourself be governed by scared people who can’t face it, who equivocate and attack scientists and hide their heads in the sand?
My brave dear friends: let’s get our climate vote on.
Considering how much architecture can impact the way we interact with the world, it’s fascinating to look at some of the emerging schools of thought in the field
Mason gives a startling example of the decline of car-wash robots, to be replaced by, as he puts it “five guys with rags”. Here’s the paragraph that really made me think:
“There are now 20,000 hand car washes in Britain, only a thousand of them regulated. By contrast, in the space of 10 years, the number of rollover car-wash machines has halved –from 9,000 to 4,200.”
The reasons, of course, are political and economic and you may or may not agree with Mason’s diagnosis and prescription (as it happens I do). But de-automation – and the ethical, societal and legal implications – is something that we, as roboticists, need to think about just as much as automation.
Several questions come to mind:
are there other examples of de-automation? is the car-wash robot example atypical, or part of a trend? is de-automation necessarily a sign of something going wrong? (would Mason be so concerned about the guys with rags if the hand car wash industry were a well-regulated industry paying decent wages to its workers, and generating tax revenues back to the economy?)
Gaming, Science, History, Feminism, and all other manners of geekery. Also a lot of dance
243 posts