@met2art: Thank the Lord I'm not the only one - first thought that I had when I read the headline "Oh, so we're living in William Gibson's future now?".
The designer could've at least oriented the letters accordingly so that it was akin to a clock, that way, rotating the entire chart would not be necessary. The standard periodic table is not hard to read or navigate. If you need to find anything from Alkali metals to halogens, it's all color coordinated and oriented in the most usable way possible. No thanks.
Having taken way too many Chemistry courses, I'd say this is pretty useless, at leased in my view. Maybe if the groups were better labeled... But the whole "it shows the sizes of the atom" - so does the current table. I thin kit's way less intuitive also, things like electro-negativity look a bit more confusing to figure out (I guess you just need a starting and ending point, but still.)
The regular periodic table gives you an idea of the size of the atoms too. Going from one row - or PERIOD - to another, the size of the atoms increases because you add an electron shell. All he's done is stuck the left and right ends of the standard periodic table together to suggest a nonexistent circularity in properties in each period.
I can't make head nor tail of the relationships this is supposed to imply. Why are the rare earth metals at the end of the period for the first two rows? Why do hydrogen and helium point at the transition metals? How does the atomic number change across the diagram?
@Kaiser-Machead: A friend of mine had a physics teacher who, when he didn't know the answer to a question, would say "because god made it that way." no joke. this was not a religious school.
@Kaiser-Machead: I had a science teacher in high school that berated me in front of the whole class because I made a reference to being able to see the sun and the moon in the sky at the same time. (she swore this was impossible)
Try looking up once in a while stupid bitch.
If it helps, in comparison, Simon Cowell is considered a futurist in the Music industry. Both he and Mundie have the uncanny ability to predict future popular trends in their respective fields. It's one part natural talent and two parts Rolodex.
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I can see it now, like a two player version of Moon Patrol. Just try and jump my craters!
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Take this concept, enlarge it to 24" by 18", build it as a seat cushion, and make it react to flatulence.
For the pro-user, build a 32" by 20" "16:10 Widescreen" model, and make the underside of the ferrofluid seat cushion reactive to Cheetos dust.
You're welcome, Microsoft Research Labs.
11/18/09
So.... put a hole in it?
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Also, when you put them in a circle like this, won't that put certain atoms adjacent to each other when they should actually be opposite each other?
10/09/09
I can't make head nor tail of the relationships this is supposed to imply. Why are the rare earth metals at the end of the period for the first two rows? Why do hydrogen and helium point at the transition metals? How does the atomic number change across the diagram?
10/09/09
Umm, we used this bad boy in my chemistry class:
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Try looking up once in a while stupid bitch.
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[emailsfromcrazypeople.com]
02/27/09
http://www.crimcheck.com/background-check-news/the-10-laws-of-computer-security
we will have a much bigger problem on our hands. I wonder what criminals and hackers could do with quantum computers :)
Then
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How does one land a job as a Futurist?
What education and training is involved?
And why are all the Futurists old folks?
Any reply is awesome, though sort of a direct question to Gizmodo.
Thanks!
02/27/09
If it helps, in comparison, Simon Cowell is considered a futurist in the Music industry. Both he and Mundie have the uncanny ability to predict future popular trends in their respective fields. It's one part natural talent and two parts Rolodex.
02/27/09