These are my links for January 15th 2012 from 12:29 to 22:55:
- Beautiful Garden Swings Chairs – Myburgh Designs –
- The Mathematics of Lego | Wired Science | Wired.com – "…as the number of pieces in a set grows, so do the number of piece types. However, the number of piece types grows sublinearly: while a larger set uses more piece types, as sets becomes larger, they use progressively fewer additional piece types (so larger sets actually use fewer types per piece). This is similar to other sublinear curves, where larger animals use less energy per cell for metabolism or larger cities actually need fewer gas stations per capita. Essentially, larger sets become more efficient, using the same pieces that smaller sets do, but in a more complex and diverse way."
- New Facebook app lets you choose your last words. –
- Peruvian recipes from Ceviche London –
- Martin Morales’s ceviche | Life and style | The Guardian – and anticuchos
- White fish, grapefruit and fennel ceviche, plus fried piquillo peppers recipe | Yotam Ottolenghi | Life and style | The Guardian –
- Ancestral Voices: the Earliest English Literature (Online) – Oxford University Department for Continuing Education
- Blackboard Academic Suite – Learning materials for history course
- Two hoards and one unknown Viking ruler « British Museum blog – "Among the many stand-out objects is a coin type none of us had seen before. One side of it reads DNS (Dominus) REX, the letters arranged in the form of a cross […] On the other side, the inscription reads AIRDECONUT which appears to be an attempt to represent the Scandinavian name Harthacnut, a ruler not previously known."
- Certificates and short courses: 2011/2012 entry: Culture and Society in Anglo-Saxon England –