Curating the Internet: Science and technology digest for November 5, 2019

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Authored by @remlaps

Searching for universal principles of ecology; A code upgrade that can add smart-contracts to bitcoin; Surveying the comp-sci educational numbers; An argument that computational thinking is innate, and the onus is on computer science educators to harness the mind's natural desire to learn; and a Steem essay describing how to run partiko (and other android apps) on Windows or Mac OS


Fresh and Informative Content Daily: Welcome to my little corner of the blockchain

Straight from my RSS feed
Whatever gets my attention

Links and micro-summaries from my 1000+ daily headlines. I filter them so you don't have to.


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pixabay license: source.

  1. The Dawn of Universal Ecology - In this article, Mark Colyvan, John Damuth, and Lev R. Ginzburg discuss a debate that is in progress as to whether the field of ecology has universal truths that can be generalized throughout the planet, and even the universe, or whether the field is limited to understanding a multitude of special cases. Philosophically, the debate matters, because - if the field can't make universal predictions, then some say it doesn't actually qualify as a science. This article suggests a suite of candidates for universal ecological laws, including:

    • If resources are unlimited, populations grow exponentially
    • if resources are limited, population growth follows an 'S-curve'
    • many ecological variables vary allometrically with body mass, including: metabolism, abundances, productivities, and demographic characteristics
    • In contrast, at least two variables don't vary with body size - reproductive rate and energy usage (per population)

    The article doesn't claim to settle the debate, but it provides evidence that the field of ecology may, indeed, possess certain universal truths.

    h/t RealClear Science


  2. This Startup’s Upgrade Code Can Be Used by Any Bitcoin-Based Blockchain - On Monday, November 4, Nexus announced it's seventh "activation" - apparently their name for a "hard fork" - that will go live on November 11, adding the ability to use the legacy UTXO (unspent transaction output). According to founder, Colin Cantrell, any blockchain that's based on the bitcoin protocol can make use of their codebase to add smart contracts capabilities. Nexus has been self-funded through token creation since its 2014 launch. The Nexus protocol makes use of "two proof of work chains and a proof of stake system", and it can handle 2,000 to 25,000 transactions per second.

    Just for fun, here's a comparison of market capitalization between STEEM and NXS (with historical data from coinmarketcap.com and created in LibreOffice)
    image.png


  3. The Size of Computing Education Today, By-The-Numbers - Responding to a comment from link #4, Mark Guzdial observes that about 1.2 million school children in the US have learned to program using Scratch, whereas players of games like Minecraft and Fortnite draw orders of magnitude more. The unstated point being that if you want kids to learn, you have to meet them where they are. He also observes that enrollment numbers in high school computer science and physics education reveal that when given a choice of topics, computer science is nowhere near the mainstream for young learners. In conclusion he suggests that everything so far attempted to draw computer science education into the mainstream has basically failed, and a radically different approach might needed.

  4. Computational Thinking Should Just be Good Thinking - In this essay, Mark Guzdial, Alan Kay, Cathie Norris, and Elliot Soloway argue against a recent initiative to explicitly "develop a computational mindset" in children. Likening the idea to "changing the residents" when city planning fails, the authors say that there is little evidence that having knowledge about computation helps children in their every day lives. Instead, they say that children already think with computation, and it's the job of computer scientists and computationalists, "to improve the computing and use that to change our teaching". Arguing with examples from programming classes, academic research, and applications like TikTok and Fortnite, the authors say that learning to program teaches computational thinking, but there are also other ways, including a wide variety of activities that have nothing at all to do with programming. In short, they say that for kids today, "computational thinking is just thinking." and it doesn't need to be taught in any formal way in order to be learned. Finally, instead of casting computer science education as instruction in computational thinking, these authors argue that computer science is the science of processes, and to advance the field, education should be retooled to teach things like modeling and simulation in order to understand systems - all kinds of systems, and computer science shouldn't be a separate silo, but it should be integrated into learning all other fields, like reading, writing, math, and history. Reminds me of the Bruce Schneier essay, Security Design: Stop Trying to Fix the User. h/t link #3.

  5. STEEM How to Use Partiko on your Windows PC - Using partiko is just the beginning. This post by @leoneil describes the use of the BlueStacks Android emulator, which will let you run any of your android apps on a Windows or Mac OS PC. Even if you don't want to run partiko on your PC, you might want to check out BlueStacks. (A 10% beneficiary setting has been applied to this post for @leoneil.)


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About this series


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This post has been voted on by the SteemSTEM curation team and voting trail. It is elligible for support from @curie and @minnowbooster.

If you appreciate the work we are doing, then consider supporting our witness @stem.witness. Additional witness support to the curie witness would be appreciated as well.

For additional information please join us on the SteemSTEM discord and to get to know the rest of the community!

Thanks for having included @steemstem in the list of beneficiaries of this post. This granted you a stronger support from SteemSTEM. Note that using the steemstem.io app could have yielded an even more important support.

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Thank you for featuring my post, appreciated.

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You're welcome. And thank you for your post, too. I was not aware of BlueStacks, but now that I am, I look forward to playing around with it.

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