Having trouble falling asleep? The Japanese word ‘Kaizen’, which means ‘change’, could transform your bedtime routine and help tackle insomnia.
Source: How to Sleep: Try Japan’s Kaizen Method to Cure Insomnia and Sleep Anxiety
Having trouble falling asleep? The Japanese word ‘Kaizen’, which means ‘change’, could transform your bedtime routine and help tackle insomnia.
Source: How to Sleep: Try Japan’s Kaizen Method to Cure Insomnia and Sleep Anxiety
https://kitaabworld.com/blogs/news/diverse-stem-books
A great list! How to Weigh an Elephant, Why is the Sky Blue?, bio of Ibn Al-Haytham, etc
https://audio.mcsweeneys.net/transcripts/against_access.html
As Robert Sirvage, a DeafBlind architect, put it in a recent conversation, the question we begin with is not “How do we make it more accessible?” Instead, we start by asking, “What feels beautiful?” When hearing and sighted people join us, they pick up Protactile and learn how to work and socialize with us in our space. They often find themselves closing their eyes, either literally or by dimming their visual processing, because sight isn’t necessary. Bodies in contact become as normal to them as they are to us.
When we feel fatigued most of us focus on sleep problems. But proper relaxation takes many forms. I spent a week exploring what really works
Breathless headlines of artificial intelligence discovering or restoring lost works of art ignore the fact that these machines rarely, if ever, reveal one secret or solve a single mystery.
Source: How AI Is Hijacking Art History
Your brain does not process information, retrieve knowledge, or store memories. In short: Your brain is not a computer.
Embodiment ftw
Source: The Empty Brain
Programming requires much more than the cut and dry language taught in children’s books.
Source: I’m a Developer. I Won’t Teach My Kids to Code, and Neither Should You.
Learning STEM via lovely daily life examples like baking.
Here are a few lucky words that have been preserved in common English expressions.
Source: 12 Old Words That Survived by Getting Fossilized in Idioms