• Entertainment & Gaming

    Playing Games With Science: N3wton

    By Adam Weiner Posted on 9.26.2008 7 Comments

    Newton's Third Law is often quoted as "For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction." As N3wton's title suggests, the Third Law is at the heart of this little physics-oriented computer game. Click to play. (Warning: there's music.)

    Article Rating:
    9.27.2008 at 07:35pm - Comment by sonnytiger

    Oh, found the mute button

  • Entertainment & Gaming

    Playing Games With Science: N3wton

    By Adam Weiner Posted on 9.26.2008 7 Comments

    Newton's Third Law is often quoted as "For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction." As N3wton's title suggests, the Third Law is at the heart of this little physics-oriented computer game. Click to play. (Warning: there's music.)

    Article Rating:
    9.27.2008 at 07:35pm - Comment by sonnytiger

    Oh, found the mute button

  • Entertainment & Gaming

    Playing Games With Science: N3wton

    By Adam Weiner Posted on 9.26.2008 7 Comments

    Newton's Third Law is often quoted as "For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction." As N3wton's title suggests, the Third Law is at the heart of this little physics-oriented computer game. Click to play. (Warning: there's music.)

    Article Rating:
    9.27.2008 at 06:55pm - Comment by sonnytiger

    It's Interesting, but I wished there was a mute button!

  • Entertainment & Gaming

    Playing Games With Science: N3wton

    By Adam Weiner Posted on 9.26.2008 7 Comments

    Newton's Third Law is often quoted as "For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction." As N3wton's title suggests, the Third Law is at the heart of this little physics-oriented computer game. Click to play. (Warning: there's music.)

    Article Rating:
    9.27.2008 at 06:55pm - Comment by sonnytiger

    It's Interesting, but I wished there was a mute button!

  • The Environment

    The Explosive Nuclear Question

    By Posted on 2.16.2008 15 Comments

    It's going to be at least another two decades before any commercial models are built, but researchers are at work designing the Generation IV nuclear reactors. Unlike the generation II and III models now in use that use water to cool and control the fission (preventing runaway reactions, subsequent meltdowns and the environmental apocalypse that would result), the leading contender for cooling material for the Gen IV reactors is molten sodium. Not sodium chloride (plain, unreactive table salt), but sodium metal.

    2.18.2008 at 12:29pm - Comment by sonnytiger

    But molten sodium would already be pretty hot, right? It would make sense to use something else that is cooler. What tempurature does sodium melt at anyways?

  • Science

    Microsoft Makes Bid to Buy Yahoo

    By Posted on 2.1.2008 1 Comments

    It has been rumored for a while, and just became official. Microsoft made a bid to buy Yahoo. The price tag? A measly $44.6 billion.

    2.1.2008 at 01:13pm - Comment by sonnytiger

    Google should buy them



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