Fat Knowledge
Rated • 1 review • futurism, technology, science, blogs, weblogs • blogspot.com
Science and technology blog--I haven't yet dug too deeply into it, but it looks good at first glance.
Last seen: 25 months ago
Bill is a 42 year old guy from Rural, Michigan, USA
del.icio.us page, last.fm page, online hangout, another online hangout, LiveJournal, Furl page, GooglePage, pseudonymous nonsense
Rated • 1 review • futurism, technology, science, blogs, weblogs • blogspot.com
Science and technology blog--I haven't yet dug too deeply into it, but it looks good at first glance.
Rated • 1 review • travel, new zealand, photographs • blogspot.com
This site has some nice photographs of New Zealand.
Rated • 1 review • sports, fencing • fencingonline.com
This site will tell you a lot about fencing, if for some reason you want to know a lot about fencing.
Rated • 1 review • painting, art • gandygallery.com
A few paintings by William Whitaker. He likes pretty girls in flowing clothes, mostly. Classic style.
Rated • 2 reviews • politics, blogs, immigration • blogspot.com
This is a smart young guy.
Rated • 3 reviews • software, computers, hardware, reviews • chaosmanorreviews.com
Jerry Pournelle has moved his Computing at Chaos Manner column from Byte to its own site. It remains the most useful computer column that I know about.
Rated • 1 review • business, corporations, politics, sociology, elite • ucsc.edu
Sociologist G. William Domhoff has made a career of tracing the connections between America's ruling elite. This is a companion site for his well known book, Who Rules America? He appears to be a lefty, but that doesn't necessarily imply that his data are bad.
Rated • 1 review • writing • nexi.com
This would be useful for generating names and other words when one is writing fiction, especially fantasy or science fiction.
Rated • 2 reviews • health, exercise, injury, fitness, health fitness • saveyourself.ca
I was originally attracted to this site by a heretical article on stretching. It answered some questions that I've had on the back of my mind. How can stretching a muscle warm it up? How can stretching prevent soreness? How can it prevent injury? It's nice to know that there isn't any good evidence for any of this. The site has lots more stuff besides that article, and it looks like the author at least sometimes keeps an evidence-based outlook, which puts him ahead of most people.