Kevin Kelly is executive editor of Wired magazine, the ultra-hip organ of the computer generation, known for its screaming graphics and esoteric nerd-speak.
Comets, stars, and rock ‘n roll
An e‑mail query from a young acquaintance: “One of my favorite songs in all of explored space is ‘Jupiter Crash’ by The Cure.”
Computer graphic
Dear Mr. Computer…
Getting down to bedrock
In 1989, President’s Bush’s “America 2000” agenda set the goals of making US students first in the world in science and mathematics and ensuring that every adult American knew enough about science to participate responsibly in national debates about scientific issues.
The lore of the flowers
Every now and then a book comes along that finds a place on the bedside table and stays there. So it has been with Richard Mabey’s “Flora Britannica.”
Galileo gets the last laugh
Spacecraft Galileo, a 2½-ton hunk of human ingenuity, has been orbiting Jupiter since it arrived there in December 1995 after a six-year voyage from Earth.
Adventure yes, breakthrough no
John Glenn’s proposed return to space in October at age 77 is pure grandstanding on the part of NASA and the senator. The ostensible justification for the trip is a bit of a stretch: to study aging.
The moment we became different
For more than two decades, Donald Johanson has searched the Great Rift Valley of East Africa for bones of our early ancestors.
The end: clearer but not nearer
Scientists are pretty sure how the universe began. They are less certain how it will end.
Beauty bare on the spiral staircase
Tucked away among the exhibits of Boston’s Museum of Science is a ten-foot-high model of a segment of DNA.