Monday, April 11, 2016

Newly Listed: Turquoise and Pink Pi Bracelet

Finally, spring is here! Put away your neutral, muted colors and break out some color! Turquoise and pink is a combination I've been loving for a while now, so I featured it in my latest pi bracelet:

This bright turquoise pink pi sciart bracelet is the perfect jewelry gift for math nerds.
Turquoise and Pink Pi Bracelet by Kokoba
I haven't done any memory wire bracelets in a while, so it was quite fun to string this little guy together. The colors strike me as being very mermaid-ish...or maybe that's just because a mermaid-obssessed acquaintance of mine has just gotten married in Hawaii and it's been beaches and mermaids all up in my news feed for the last couple weeks!

This bright turquoise pink pi sciart bracelet is the perfect jewelry gift for math nerds.

The Czech glass beads in this and other recent bracelets have been a new-to-me discovery in the last few months. The color is a wax coating, but it stands up to abuse quite well. I'm looking to get some larger ones soon so I can start putting out more necklaces again. If you look at the shop, I have a tendency to favor bracelets. They're quick and short, but there are also lots of reasons people avoid wearing bracelets—so the selection for them is a bit skimpier, and that's not fair. 

I think I also need to curb my habit of using pi as my default number in a project. I love pi, and pi day, and tau day, but it gets a disproportionate amount of the nerdy accessory love, and that's not fair either.

The SciArt Tweetstorm has been over long enough that someone's been able to do what scientists do best: crunch and analyze the numbers! Also, you may have also noticed some errant porn bots thrown in the mix this year. It's actually kind of a funny story, and it all has to do with M. melolontha.

Courtesy Wikimedia Commons and Mario Sarto
Or you can get lost in the winners of the 2016 Vizzies—awards for science and data visualizations run by Popular Science.

Happy Monday!

Saturday, April 9, 2016

Skeptical Saturday: Autism Speaks? Not For Autistics

Image courtesy The Autistic Beekeeper


This is your annual April reminder that Autism Speaks is a misguided at best and loathsome at worst organization. I realize that the "light it up blue" event touches a lot of feel-goody nerves, but if you're interested in helping autistics, consider some alternatives.

1. Participate in, or just signal boost, the #RedInstead hashtag and Internet event. Autism Speaks routinely dismisses or marginalizes the reality of autistic girls and women; #RedInstead works to combat that. In a similar vein, #ActuallyAutistic features....people who are actually autistic, as opposed to celebrities in blue t-shirts. There are lots of great thoughts and blog links to be had in both.

2. For charitable donations, please direct your money to the Autistic Self-Advocacy Network or the Autism Women's Network. You can also make sure to vote for local, state, and federal representatives who support things like funding education (to pay for 1-on-1 classroom aides and special education teachers) and disability (kind of self-evident). Charities shouldn't be filling in all the gaps.

3. Check out some biographies by adults on the spectrum. Temple Grandin's is a popular one, as is John Elder Robison's. Autism is a spectrum disorder and every autistic person experiences it differently, so neither Grandin nor Robison should be considered to be speaking for the population at large. But Autism Speaks, and consequently the "light it up blue" event, focus almost exclusively on autistic children. But autistic children grow up into autistic adults—at which point we seem to forget about them.

4. "People-first" language is gaining traction among a number of communities, but when it comes to autism, by and large "identity-first" is preferred. Naturally some people will prefer the "person with autism" model, and of course you should respect their preferences, but by and large, members of the autistic community see autism as an inherent part of themselves, not something separate from.

Friday, April 8, 2016

Five Fandom Friday: Fandom Guilty Pleasures

Image courtesy Katelyn Jade
5 Fandom Friday is hosted by The Nerdy Girlie and Super Space Chick. This week's theme is Fandom Guilty Pleasures. It sounds familiar because we tackled this one less than a year ago. My old answers still apply, but I want to add one more item to the list:

Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home


BUT THE WHALES! I hear you say. THEY TIME TRAVEL TO SAVE WHALES IT'S SO CONTRIVED.

I know and I don't even care!! Is Wrath of Khan a better movie? Sure, probably. If you don't cry at the end of that one you might actually be a Vulcan. But Chekov running around San Francisco asking for "nuclear wessels" is also amazing, and it's time that people give this movie the credit it deserves.

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

What I Read: Giovanni's Room

At one point during my trek through the TIME Top 100 novels, I picked up Go Tell It On The Mountain. But for some reason I never finished it? I don't know why. I remember enjoying it. But I forgot about picking it back up until my Internet book club decided on another James Baldwin novel, Giovanni's Room, for April. So that's one off the list!

Giovanni's Room is a really sort of all-purpose read. Have you been in a funk and need something quick and snappy (yet still satisfying) to read? Have you decided to read more "classics" but don't know where to start, or are intimidated by the prospect of long books and complicated language? Are you looking for alternatives to straight white males? Are you looking to brush up on the gay literature canon? If you answered "yes" to any of those questions, then Giovanni's Room is the book for you.

Courtesy Signet
I'm really tempted to summarize the entire plot, as the book is quite short, but then I suppose that would be quite spoiler-y, and this is a book that I think can be spoiled (though it does a whole lot of foreshadowing). Instead I'll just discuss what happens in the most general sense.

This novel is a story within a framing story. Our frame is simple enough: the narrator, David, is cleaning out his rented house in southern France. It's his last night there, and while he cleans, he reflects on the last year or so of his life: his relationship with Hella, a fellow American abroad, and the alluring Italian Giovanni. 

I've started and deleted a review here multiple times. I guess I don't know what to say about Giovanni's Room. Did I like it? Yes. I loved it, actually. Baldwin does a really great job drawing out the tension, keeping you wondering about what will happen next—or rather, about what exactly happened. But to imply that the best thing about Giovanni's Room is the plot is to do a great disservice to the language of the novel, and the great many themes it tackles. It's part of the gay literature canon, but for me it was also a novel about expatriation and belonging. David has been in France for some time by the time we meet him in the novel: he can speak French and he has befriended at least one Frenchman, and yet no one forgets, or lets him forget, that he is American—the American, sometimes. It's not his taste for men that his company finds strange, it's his nationality. Giovanni's Room certainly a novel about sexual identity, but national identity is a prominent and important secondary issue.

Also, Giovanni himself has probably the most beautiful dialogue I've read recently. Beautiful because Baldwin captures all the music of an accent without it being hackneyed or awkward. For that alone, writers should takes notes from this text. Here's just one of many examples:

"You do not," cried Giovanni, sitting up, "love anyone! You never have loved anyone, I am sure you never will! You love your purity, you love your mirror—you are just like a little virgin, you walk around with your hands in front of you as though you had some precious metal, gold, silver, rubies, maybe diamonds down there between your legs! You will never give it to anybody, you will never let anybody touch it—man or woman. You want to be clean. You think you came here covered with soap and you think you will go out covered with soap—and you do not want to stink, not even for five minutes, in the meantime...You want to leave Giovanni because he makes you stink. You want to despise Giovanni because he is not afraid of the stink of love. You want to kill him in the name of all your lying little moralities. And you—you are immoral. You are, by far, the most immoral man I have met in all my life. Look, look what you have done to me. Do you think you could have done this if I did not love you? Is this what you should do to love?"
It's enough to make me wonder if Baldwin ever had a Giovanni of his own. (To my chagrin, I didn't know until I read Giovanni's Room that Baldwin was gay. Funny how some things get glossed over in biographies...)

Monday, April 4, 2016

Newly Listed: Black and Silver Speed of Light Wrap Bracelet

As I said on Twitter, I want to call this wrap bracelet "disco physics sciart." The silver-colored cubes are flashy (literally—they're quite reflective) and funky, and spell out the speed of light (in a vacuum) (in m / s). The black Czech glass beads act as muted, understated spacers between each digit. It's a look that's aggressive and futuristic.
This silver and black sciart physics wrap bracelet would be a great gift for physics teacher, grads, and fans.
Black and Silver Speed of Light Wrap Bracelet by Kokoba
This one is actually pretty appropriate for my mood today. I have been jamming out to Rihanna's "Bitch Better Have My Money" over the last few days—in case you couldn't tell by my tweet earlier today:




Maybe I'm just in a Rihanna sort of mood, but I think this bracelet would totally suit her glam eclectic look. Wouldn't it though?

This silver and black sciart physics wrap bracelet would be a great gift for physics teacher, grads, and fans.
Pay no attention to the manicure in need of a touch-up.
I don't know why I have Rihanna on the brain in this post. I don't really care for more than a handful of her songs. I guess I've just been itching for really angry, aggressive songs about money in the face of CSN arbitrarily and without notice pushing back my study stipend deposits. "BBHMM" is a pretty good way to scratch that itch. So is Barrett Strong:



I try to take an attitude of mindfulness and gratitude: there's so much that I do have and I shouldn't lose sight of that. But I do not appreciate my money being jerked around for no good reason that I can find or that they can give. Hopefully it'll be sorted by this week, though.

What are your favorite songs about being broke?

Saturday, April 2, 2016

Skeptic Saturday: Pantene Shampoo Burning Colored Hair?

Another one from Facebook. This time, you shouldn't use budget shampoo and get your hair colored. OR SHOULD YOU?!

If the text is too small:
PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT!!!!!!! 
For the love of anything holy.......PLEASE stop using this crap in your hair! 
I had a client wanting to do a light blonde ombre..... I can do this in my sleep! (And on my [sic] occasions, I have,lol) the application was finished and it was time to sit a [sic] process......
After only ten mins. 
She came up to me telling me her hair is burning..... I felt the foils and... Damn, nearly burned my fingers!!!!!! I opened the packet an smoke comes billowing out........ 
Mind you I have done this clients color for several years with no issue ever.......Iasked the usual questions i.e. Well water, medication etc. the only thing that was there she used Pantene shampoo and conditioner.......
This crap had plastic and silicones in it and when it comes in contact with a bleach or hi-lift color it reacts and the bleach will melt off the build up and becomes a very hot liquid and if it come [sic] in contact with skin it will cause a burn. 
I had two other clients in the past 7 years that this crap called Pantene was the key factor in a serious situation. 
If you are using it and plan to get color done, please throw it away and have your stylist do a detox to get rid of the deposits. 
There is a difference between cheap and salon quality. Do not let anyone lie to you and try to say anything more....... 
Namaste!!!!!!

Refinery 29 did all the legwork for me on this one: when events like this occur, it's not due to the ingredients in Pantene or other budget shampoos—rather, it's most likely a reaction between ammonia (the coloring agent), sodium hydroxide (an ingredient in hundreds, if not thousands, of shampoos and soaps), and aluminum (the foils), or the result of heavy metals or henna lingering in the hair.

As the cosmetics blog The Beauty Brains pointed out, Pantene and salon brand shampoos have nearly identical ingredients. What's more, they both contain the silicones so roundly denounced in the original post. (Also note that there is nothing in Pantene that would be considered a plastic or would function in the way that the post is implying, i.e. leaving a flammable residue of some kind on your hair. Nor does it contain, or leave behind, wax.)

Buy your budget haircare products without fear!

Friday, April 1, 2016

Friday Five: Into The Lens


What was your first camera like?

Oh, man. It was a Crayola-branded 110 mm camera for kiddos.

Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons
I forget how old I was, but I was fairly young. For a short while I had ~~artistic aspirations and took some really not-good photos. (Bless the photo tech who developed them. I hope my mad Dutch angles and stuffed animal portraits cheered them up, whoever they were!)


What kinds of accessories have you purchased for a camera?

None.


When did you last shoot photos on film, and how many rolls of unshot film do you have in your house?

Oh, probably in...2008? I had purchased a heavy-duty SLR and wanted to justify the purchase, but I think I only ever shot one or two rolls with it. There is zero unshot film in this apartment—or film at all.


Digital photography has all kinds of advantages over film photography, but what’s better about shooting on film and having to get it developed and printed?

I guess it keeps photo techs employed?


How do you manage your digital photos?

I have them organized by year, and that's about it. Once in a while I do a huge system backup to an external hard drive.