Robinson Meyer

Robinson Meyer is a writer and musician based near Chicago and a regular contributor to TheAtlantic.com.

(Long) Picture of the Day: Protons Dance on a Solar Sensor

(Long) Picture of the Day: Protons Dance on a Solar Sensor

This little film, taken by the Solar Dynamics Observatory, at first looks like a relic of the early film era. More »

The Awesomeness of Singing About Frogs, Toads, and Newts

The Awesomeness of Singing About Frogs, Toads, and Newts

How do you celebrate the 7,000th amphibian species? You stomp your feet and clap your hands! More »

64 Nations Can Watch the Olympics Free and Live on YouTube, and the U.S. Isn't One of Them

64 Nations Can Watch the Olympics Free and Live on YouTube, and the U.S. Isn't One of Them

Why America can't watch the Games live for free, and why it's exciting that other countries can More »

Picture of the Day: The Nebula Formerly Known as a Star

Picture of the Day: The Nebula Formerly Known as a Star

Unlike many astronomical images, this image of the Tarantula Nebula pictures only visible light. More »

Just the Headlines, Ma'am: The Summarized Simplicity of the Reddit Edit

Just the Headlines, Ma'am: The Summarized Simplicity of the Reddit Edit

All the benefits of summary, all the benefits of social selection. More »

Earth from Space: London and the Olympic Sites

Earth from Space: London and the Olympic Sites

London and the surrounding towns hosting the games, as seen from space More »

'Coincidences,' and not a Super Villain, Took Down Twitter Today

'Coincidences,' and not a Super Villain, Took Down Twitter Today

Nothing to see here. More »

The History of Drone Music Culminates in 'Now That's What I Call Drone'

The History of Drone Music Culminates in 'Now That's What I Call Drone'

Drones in music long predate drones in warfare. More »

The 17th-Century Paper Social Network

The 17th-Century Paper Social Network

It's snarky, constrained and incomprehensibly social! So, like, basically, Twitter for the 1670s. More »

Earth from Space: What's Floating Down the Fjord Today, Dear?

Earth from Space: What's Floating Down the Fjord Today, Dear?

As part of Greenland's 'extreme melt event,' this ice island broke off a glacier and began floating down a fjord. More »

Studies Trickle In on How Mindfulness Meditation *Actually* Improves Multitasking

Studies Trickle In on How Mindfulness Meditation *Actually* Improves Multitasking

Meditation training makes multitasking more peaceful, but not necessarily more productive. More »

Picture of the Day: Swirling Haze on Saturn's Moon

Picture of the Day: Swirling Haze on Saturn's Moon

A mysterious formation on the sixth planet's moon More »

Why to Love (and Hate) London's New Cabs

Why to Love (and Hate) London's New Cabs

Some London cabs are getting a high-tech, corporate make-over before the Olympic games. More »

Today's Status Report on Making All the World's Knowledge Accessible

Today's Status Report on Making All the World's Knowledge Accessible

Slowly, more and more information comes online. More »

Earth from the Space: The Chunking Petermann Glacier

Earth from the Space: The Chunking Petermann Glacier

The massive glacier on Greenland broke apart again. More »

Picture of the Day: The Moons of Earth and Jupiter

Picture of the Day: The Moons of Earth and Jupiter

On a hazy night, Jupiter and its moons almost kiss ours. More »

Earth From Space: The 'Black' Sea, Turned Blue

Earth From Space: The 'Black' Sea, Turned Blue

Thanks to summer plankton, the body of water appears conspicuously cyan. More »

MIT Economist: Here's How Copyright Laws Impoverish Wikipedia

MIT Economist: Here's How Copyright Laws Impoverish Wikipedia

Using a little-known copyright rule and a trove of baseball-related trivia, an MIT economist figured out how current copyright laws specifically affect one online community. More »

What It's Like to Teach a MOOC (and What the Heck's a MOOC?)

What It's Like to Teach a MOOC (and What the Heck's a MOOC?)

They're the future of higher education. But what do people who've, um, educated with them think? More »

Picture of the Day: A Hole in Mars That May Nourish Life

Picture of the Day: A Hole in Mars That May Nourish Life

The hole was discovered by the still-flying, still-operational Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. More »

The Biggest Story in Photos

Finland in World War II

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