the weird things year in review, 2018

As 2018 winds down, it's time to take a quick look back at what happened this year before we ring in the new one...

reentry humor

Even though the site has officially been back for a little over three months, it's been a very busy quarter. First, there was the complete design revamp and migration back from Medium. Then, there was a symbiotic transition from Rantt Politech. Then there was the launch of a podcast. Meanwhile, there was constant fine tuning and debugging to make sure the new midtier and UI worked as quickly and efficiently as possible, and with enough useful metadata for social media and user curated feeds. And as we get back to track and start thinking about the future, it might be nice to get back to some old traditions and open up the site's dashboard to see what articles were popular, starting with the top five in absolute views.

  1. Why We Need To Return To The Moon And Do The Other Things
  2. At The Mountains Of Political Madness
  3. The Billion Year Old Connection Between Tasmania And Arizona
  4. The State Of California vs. Coffee
  5. Oumuamua: The Galaxy,s Slowest Interstellar Spaceship

Of these articles, the third, exploring how the theory of plate tectonics not only explains how continents on Earth work and change, is also the most discussed on social media, primarily on Reddit, with the tale of how California's Proposition 65 has been undermined by needlessly confusing scientific bureaucracy of the IARC, a close second. And speaking of most discussed articles, one was even featured on Canadian national radio due to its subject matter's nearly perfect intersection of sex, artificial intelligence, and current events.

Almost needless to say, with the almost being specified because I am actually saying it, that was fun and we're hoping for more chances to talk weird science and technology with a bigger and more diverse audience. Meanwhile, an older primer on how scientific advancements of the past can look like primitive superstition to us today, became the most searched for article on Weird Things, perhaps as a sort of confirmation that since a lot of articles on this site aren't based on any specific breaking news item, they can be just as relevant years after they were written and are often created with this hope and purpose in mind.

Next year, with the podcast and some new ideas in the works for the first quarter of year, there should be many more fun data points to cover and many more articles from which to choose. So in the meantime, enjoy the return of Weird Things, and stay tuned in 2019 for more bleeding edge science, experimental technology, and much needed context and fact checks when it comes to both. And of course, subscribe to the World of Weird Things podcast on all major audio and music platforms to learn something new on your morning commute every Friday.

  archived from wowt
              
# tech // new year / science blogging / statistics / weird things


  show comments
latest reads

how to endanger the future of space flight for status and profit

CEOs and space faring powers are treating low Earth orbit as their personal playgrounds, much to the horror of space agencies.
how to endanger the future of space flight for status and profit

why your boss is obsessed with a.i. past the point of sanity

Not only is the C-suite not immune to AI psychosis, they seem to be primed to suffer the worst of it as their employees duck and cover.
why your boss is obsessed with a.i. past the point of sanity

why so many of us are just not that into chatbots

AI adoption is at an all time high, but opinion of AI keeps on tumbling with every poll and study on the subject.
why so many of us are just not that into chatbots

no, your chatbots aren't secretly marxists at heart

But they can and do detect and complain about unfair treatment when asked, according to an experiment by Stanford researchers.
no, your chatbots aren't secretly marxists at heart

how the right wing took over social media

Right wing content has a major advantage on social media. But we can do something about that with a very simple change in our habits.
how the right wing took over social media

no, we still don't know why t. rex had little arms

Popular science outlets continue to do a terrible job of explaining studies on primeval evolution and pretending we have answers we don't.
no, we still don't know why t. rex had little arms