how weird things is getting ready for a fresh new hell in 2019

Weird Things has returned, but because this hiatus was so different, so is the comeback. This site is changing in new and very important ways to tackle the year ahead.

chrome t-rex game jurassic park parody

Between the two years of adventures with Rantt Politech and the hiatus then resurrection of Weird Things instead of the plans laid out in 2016, it might seem foolhardy to make definitive plans for the future. But a lot has happened to clear up where we need to head, so I feel more confident in making and sharing a potential roadmap for next year. After all, this site has been redesigned from the midtier up, every article's graphics updated, and its front end stripped down for speed and ease of use for a reason.

In the past, hiatuses were created by major interruptions in daily life and a desire to reinvent the wheel when it comes to content management. But what I learned over the past few years is that content comes first and the technology has be a distant second to the actual delivery of it. I'm actively recruiting new voices and soliciting new opinions. I'm partnering with Rantt Media for additional resources. Weird Things isn't just being brought back, it's being reinforced for future resilience and continuity.

It's no longer just a passion project, although to an extent is still is and always will be, it's being steadily transformed into a media outlet. Its goal? To be the place to provide the proper context and fact checking of new, bleeding edge studies and discoveries, to have in depth discussions on important issues in science and technology you need to know, and to put you ahead of the curve as the word around you is rapidly changing. We don't just want to tell you what's on the horizon, we want to give you a guide and game plan to take full advantage of whatever's next.

This is why I sped up and modified the design and underlying code, to improve search placement and the site's responsiveness and ease of use. This is why I upgraded and enhanced all the graphics to fit with the new layout. This is why we're recruiting and syndicating new voices, to offer more ideas and information. This is why we started the podcast, to give you weekly deep dives into topics that really matter, if not today, then tomorrow. And this is why we're doing more social media outreach, to ensure sure this information makes it to you consistently and on every useful channel there is.

In its early days, Weird Things was intended to cover the newest conversations in research and development, to promote skepticism and rational inquiry, to examine extraordinary claims with a critical, evidence-based eye, and promote not just good science and education, but the tools to wield them. In the decade since, the need for all this hasn't went away. On the contrary, it's intensified by at least a few orders of magnitude. And we're here to answer that call in the coming year.

  archived from wowt
              
# tech // blogging / science blogging / weird things


  show comments
latest reads

the people evolution keeps leaving behind

In their commitment to rejecting science, creationists refuse to even update their arguments over the last two decades.
the people evolution keeps leaving behind

my neighbor, the supermassive black hole

What would really happen to Earth if we put the universe's most massive black hole on our stellar doorstep as a viral graphic imagines?
my neighbor, the supermassive black hole

giving up on fixing the planet one panic at a time

People want to save the planet, but only if they feel like they can.
giving up on fixing the planet one panic at a time

engineered super-children vs. agi

From the "what in the cyberpunk dystopia am I reading files" comes a new Silicon Valley stroke of lunacy...
engineered super-children vs. agi

how nihilism became pundits' favorite scapegoat

Across media, both social and legacy, commentators bemoan nihilism as the force that got us into today's mess. It's not.
how nihilism became pundits' favorite scapegoat

fear, loathing, and an imaginary pandemic

The same terrible people who made COVID worse for all of us are already railing against a hantavirus pandemic that isn’t happening.
fear, loathing, and an imaginary pandemic