Yesterday I published this detailed article arguing that women are simply not safe around men. I cited history, data, legal analysis, and meaningful solutions to combat the systemic violence men commit against women.
It is currently approaching 500,000 reads.
Plenty of insecure men have sent me angry messages. But also, plenty of men have sent gratitude for better understanding the systemic violence men impose on women. Read here:
https://t.co/5wfpPNbkfS
Hamilton helped popularize the term “software engineering” to argue that software deserved the same seriousness as hardware.
Apollo had a terrifying problem:
The spacecraft depended on software before software was treated as a serious engineering discipline.
Hardware had weight, budgets, schedules, and prestige.
Software was still new, strange, and easy to underestimate.
Margaret Hamilton led the MIT team that built Apollo’s onboard flight software.
During Apollo 11, when computer alarms appeared before landing, the software’s priority handling helped the system keep essential tasks running instead of collapsing under overload.
Wired reports Hamilton describing early software work as a world with no courses, no established discipline, almost like the Wild West.
Noether’s theorem is one of the deepest bridges ever built between pure mathematics and physical reality.
Her theorem says that every continuous symmetry gives a conservation law.
If the laws of physics do not change with time, energy is conserved.
If they do not change from place to place, momentum is conserved.
If they do not change under rotation, angular momentum is conserved.
After Noether’s death, Albert Einstein wrote:
“In the judgment of the most competent living mathematicians, Fräulein Noether was the most significant creative mathematical genius thus far produced since the higher education of women began.”
This was published in The New York Times in 1935.
(📷Kate LaVoie/ Alamy)
I live and work with three basic assumptions:
1) There is no problem in science that can be solved by a man that cannot be solved by a woman.
2) Worldwide, half of all brains are in women.
3) We all need permission to do science, but, for reasons that are deeply ingrained in history, this permission is more often given to men than to women.
- Vera Rubin
(📷Vera Rubin around 2000/ Carnegie Science.)
Iranian girl won two gold medals. Gold medal in the International Invention Olympiad in Malaysia and a gold medal in Honor and Humanity for keeping the memory of the students of Minab School alive.
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Great to interview @DanJarvisMBE about why cybersecurity is more important than ever.
We even talked about prime numbers!
Full video coming very soon.
@NCSC@CYBERUKevents
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Western media wonders how Iranians make these Lego-style animations.
“Do they even have AI?”
They don’t get this:
We don’t stop learning—even under bombs.
"In honor of Dr. Zarei, the Sharif University professor who held his class even in a bombed lecture hall."
So grateful to @BBCBreakfast for allowing me to discuss the Artemis II mission and the role it’s playing in inspiring young girls and boys around the world ❤️
Major pinch me moment!
Astronaut Christina Koch, aboard the powerful Orion spacecraft on the Artemis II mission, officially became the woman to complete the longest spaceflight, breaking barriers and records as she soared into the unknown!
This incredible achievement not only makes history but also paves the way for future generations of women in space exploration. Her remarkable journey is a testament to human determination and the relentless pursuit of discovery.
Dr. Zarei, a Sharif University math professor, held his "Randomized Algorithms" online class from the ruins of the classroom.
Sharif University in Iran, a top engineering University in the Middle East, was bombed by the #US yesterday.
Artemis Mission Route in 3D
- This animation visualizes the Artemis mission trajectory in a dynamic 3D perspective, showing how the spacecraft travels through the Earth–Moon system while all celestial bodies are in motion. Instead of a static path, the Sun, Earth, and Moon move simultaneously, revealing the true complexity of orbital mechanics. The result highlights how the Artemis route is not a simple curve, but a constantly shifting trajectory shaped by gravity and motion. This view provides a clearer understanding of how modern space missions navigate through space in real time. Right now, Artemis is on its return path to Earth and is expected to arrive back soon as it completes its mission. The sizes and distances of the Sun, Earth, and Moon are not to scale and are adjusted for visual purposes.