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Links to Science and Technology websites

Tarantulas

Vice Admiral
Admiral
Prepared in advance - hee hee!

Here are some science and technology-related websites:

ABC News Technology & Science - A mainstream media science page.

BBC News - Science/Nature - Scientific news topics from the Beeb. Also check BBC News - Technology.

BrightSurf.com - "Science news and Current Events: Latest Research News in Science, Health, the Environment, Space and Technology."

CNET.com - Technology news and reviews. Want a new cellular phone but don't know which one's the best? CNET is the place to check.

CNN Science & Space news - From CNN's website. Also check CNN Technology News.

Discover Magazine - Website of the popular magazine.

eWeek.com - "Enterprise Technology News and Reviews."

Google Sci/Tech News - News about science and technology.

I4U News - "The Technology News Magazine and Gadget Shopping Guide," featuring "booth babes" from the trade shows.

Internet Week - "Your Pipeline to the Business and Technology of the Internet." I subscribe to this at work.

Kim Komando - Companion website to her popular radio show (broadcast from Phoenix) about computers.

Live Science - News about science in several categories.

MSNBC Tech/Science - News from MSNBC.

NASA science news - "Aimed at the general public."

news@nature.com - From the popular magazine Nature.

NewScientist.com - Website of New Scientist magazine.

New York Times science news - From "The Old Gray Lady," who also hosts a Technology News page.

Popular Science - My grandfather subscribed to this magazine and loved it.

Science Daily - News about recent scientific research in several categories.

Science Magazine - published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science - check their companion news website EurekAlert!

Science News - Excerpts from the weekly science magazine. I used to subscribe to this one many years ago.

Scientific American - Website of the popular science magazine. I used to subscribe to this one too.

Slashdot - "News for Nerds. Stuff that matters." I've been told I would have to turn in my Geek Card if I don't check Slashdot periodically.

SPACE.com - News about space in several categories. Companion website to Live Science.

TechWeb - "The Business Technology News Network."

Wired News - Computer and Technology related news.

Yahoo science news - Along with Yahoo Tech news, an extensive sub-menu for each major category and an impressive listing of articles.

EDIT - To add Internet Week
 
Here's an interesting link, I don't know if any of you have heard of Clifford Pickover but he writes a bunch of books about all sorts of things including sci and tech. This is one of the pages on his website, updated often with tons of links. Some are interesting, some aren't :p

Reality Carnival
 
Very cool! Thanks for the links! I have a lot of new sites to check out now ;)

Here's my contribution:

SciFi Tech - hard to find on the SciFi.com website, but worth it; plenty of interesting gadgets and ideas.

RedOrbit - a broad spectrum of science, space, health, education and entertainment, all in one spot.
 
My favourite websites relating to space exploration (and mostly to the Apollo program):

Moonbase Clavius
The ultimate Apollo hoax debunking website

ApolloHoax.net
Despite the misleading title, an anti-hoax website with a very good discussion board

NASA History Division
The gateway to lots of fascinating resources... if only you can find them.

Manned Spaceflight PDF Documents
A better way to find those resources. An absolutely massive collection of scanned documents that go all the way from Mercury to the ISS. The real deal.

Apollo Story
The website for the best book ever written on the space program.

Spacecraft Films
Source for highly detailed DVDs focusing on individual missions and on the development of particular pieces of hardware.

JSC Oral Histories
The story of the history of the space race... told by the people who made it. I can't recommend this enough.

NASA TV
As if anything intereresting is going on these days. But sometimes they have good documentaries.
 
Naraht said:
My favourite websites relating to space exploration (and mostly to the Apollo program):

You are such an Apollo whore, my dear... perhaps you and Glynn Lunney should get a room? ;) (ducks)

But seriously...

One of my favorite sites is:
www.spaceflightnow.com

The site has the most comprehensive and easy to use (as well as updated) launch schedule I have found lately online, covering not just NASA/Air Force but also Russian, ESA, and private firms planning to launch. A great vacation planning tool if you are a rocket-whore, like me.

Rob+
 
Naraht said:
FatherRob said:
You are such an Apollo whore, my dear... perhaps you and Glynn Lunney should get a room? ;) (ducks)
You know me so well. :o

May I quote you on that?

Go ahead, my dear, but wait till you have read my Ode to you elsewhere in this forum... perhaps I'll break you of your Glyn Lunney obsession...

Rob+
 
Wow, I can't believe Naraht didn't post this:

Encyclopedia Astronautica - This is an excellent resource for information about just about anything that's ever been launched. It can be hard to navigate, but it's incredibly extensive.
 
Its a sin to post up a link for Slashdot and not include

Ars Technica.

This website is awesome. They have reviews, guides, and a forum full of enthusiasts for electronics. The guides are incredibly detailed and I'm very surprise they don't charge for membership! Great website for beginners and experts.
 
The Apollo Image Archive.

APOD (I can't believe this one hasn't been posted already).

JPLs' Cassini homepage (check out the raw images from Cassini in particular).

The Planetary Photojournal.

The ESA homepage.

HubbleSite & The Hubble Heritage Project.

NewScientistSpace.com

Those are all the spacey ones that I can think of right now that haven't been already posted.

EDIT: But wait! There's more!

The NASA Earth Observatory.

SpaceWeather.com

NASDA, Japan's national space agency.

British National Space Centre.
 
I'm just a 'science interested', not knowledgeable or studier, so sorry for limited contribution.

I quite like this site:

How stuff works - everything explained in more or less detail, and plenty of links to more specialised sites on the subject you want
 
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