These are my links for November 10th 2011 through November 11th 2011:
- A View of a Chess Genius – Slide Show – NYTimes.com – A photographic study of Bobby Fischer
- Sir Timothy Raison: Tory minister who also co-founded ‘New Scientist’ – Obituaries – News – The Independent – An obituary of @newscientist co-founder Sir Timothy Raison, who died last week >
- In Pictures: Moving the Mail Rail | London Reconnections – Unearthing the legendary Post Office Railway
- The Architect Has No Clothes | On the Commons – "Laboratory results show conclusively that architects literally see the world differently from non-architects. Not only do architects notice and look for different aspects of the environment than other people; their brains seem to synthesize an understanding of the world that has notable differences from natural reality."
- The Fly-Pitchers of Spitalfields | Spitalfields Life – "pavement traders have been pushed further and further out until they find themselves at the very edge of the territory now, crowded together along the Bethnal Green Rd upon a narrow strip of pavement beside the site of new a shopping mall."
- into time .org by rafaël rozendaal, 2011 – the pretty the pretty
- BarTab v3 – Works with FF 8
- One-Pot Winter Warmers: Shakshuka –
- The Cloud – Percy Bysshe Shelley –
- I saw his round mouth’s crimson deepen as it fell | First World War Poetry Digital Archive –
- Baby apes’ arm waving hints at origins of language – life – 10 November 2011 – New Scientist – Hand-waving explanations for the origins of language >
- Gotham Gets a Bee of Its Own – NYTimes.com – I ♥ NYB >
- Briefing: Can ecosystems show how to fix the euro? – science-in-society – 10 November 2011 – New Scientist – Want to fix the euro? Think ecosystems, not economics > #SCIENCE
- BBC iPlayer – Newsnight: 09/11/2011 – .@GrahamLawton talks about cognitive enhancers on Newsnight (~29min) > < inc. a rare glimpse of @NewScientist Towers
- William Burroughs and the strange demise of London’s first espresso bar | The Great Wen – RT @peter_watts: How William Burroughs closed down London's first espresso bar.