Tuesday, February 20, 2007

cream bun day

Yesterday it was cream bun day here in Iceland. This means everyone eats as many cream buns as they possibly can (we had some very good buns which were homemade by a student in our group). Today it is explosion day (that is the literal translation). The idea is to eat so much food you explode (if you haven't done so already from all the cream buns the day before!). Although not just any food, apparently. It's supposed to be some pea soup with salty meat. Still, I like the idea.

Sunday, February 18, 2007

physicists have eyes too

Once upon a time it was easy to spot the physics/maths department on a university campus. You just found a decent vantage point, looked for the ugliest building you could see, and there you go. One (nameless) department I visited was not only ugly, but so dusty that I spent my whole visit with my nose streaming, my eyes watering, and sneezing every few minutes. The people there commiserated with me on all the flu going around that winter. I didn't have the heart to tell them I felt fine until I walked into their building, and sure enough an hour or two after leaving I was back to normal.

But things are changing. Last week I was at a conference at the Alba Nova Centre in Stockholm. On a good day this building could do a passable impression of a (modern) art museum. Here's a piccie of the interior


Nice, but as a colleague pointed out, it does bear a passing resemblance to a prison block. Another cool building I've been to is the Perimeter Institute in Waterloo, Canada. This place is equipped with a gym, squash court, and even a snooker table (I guess it helps when a multi-millionaire hands over a huge wad of cash!). Here's the back view


The summer I was there a duck decided to raise her young ones on the pond, and very cute they were too. There was an unfortunate incident when some of them fell into a shaft thing sticking out of the pond, but some enterprising soul managed to hoist them back up by constructing a duckling elevator device out of a CD and some string (eat your heart out Blue Peter!)

Where was I? Oh yes, physics buildings. I was lucky enough to be at Cambridge when the maths department there first moved into their new buildings. They were supposed to be of the intelligent sort, with blinds that closed automatically, lights that switched themselves on and off, that sort of thing. But in the beginning they were having a few teething problems. So you would be sitting in a seminar, and the blinds would randomly decide to start moving down. Then back up a bit. Then down again. Eventually they found a position they liked and settled down, only to begin the whole process again ten minutes later. Very spooky!

Okay, so it's going to be a while before a physics or maths department wins an award for architecture. But at least we're moving in the right direction.

Thursday, February 08, 2007

South of the Border ...

I just finished reading South of the Border, West of the Sun by the Japanese author Haruki Murakami. A couple of years ago I tried reading another of his books called A Wild Sheep Chase - I have to say, I didn't really get it. I mean it started okay, but kept getting more and more surreal, until it was so utterly bonkers I couldn't see the wood for the trees, so to speak. But I was looking for a new book in my second home, Heathrow airport, I spotted this one and decided to give it a go. A big theme of the book is reality, and the way we perceive reality - that reality is distorted by the person observing it. Okay, I'm saying this like I'm oh so clever, but I admit it helps that Murakami actually points this out in the book, 'To what extent facts we recognise as such really are as they seem, and to what extent these are facts merely because we label them as such, is an impossible distinction to draw.' It seems strange now, but somehow it never occurred to me before that a book doesn't have to stick to one true version of reality. Maybe I should reread A Wild Sheep Chase in my more enlightened frame of mind!