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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 16 declined, 3 accepted (19 total, 15.79% accepted)

Idle

Submission + - NASA Mission Madness (scientificblogging.com)

ghostlibrary writes: "March Madness for geeks-- NASA has up its Mission Madness stunt-- 6 rounds of head-to-head mission competition. This isn't to decide funding for new stuff, nor is it a robot war. Instead, it's a popularity contest, with the added plus of trying to predict beforehand which missions will will. Each bracket winnows out half the mission choices, to ultimately determine which was the most popular NASA mission.

Hubble versus the JWST? Mars rovers (MER) roll over Vikings? STS-88 out-obscures F8-SCW? Some of these are reaching a bit, but it is a nice bit of fun.

The first voting round is today, act quick to get in on the geeky action, or just browse it April 8th if you want to skip ahead to the results. I have my guess of how it well end up on my astronomy blog, but obviously seeing my predictions before you cast your own may skew the results. Remember, this isn't science, it's sociology."

Government

Submission + - Sean Tevis mimics xkcd to run for office

ghostlibrary writes: In a 'harness the internet' moment, Kansas candidate Sean Tevis is running in Kansas and has racked up more contributors than any in his state (over 6000) and raised more money then his opposition, all through small contributions. NRP reports on this, and his own page has his secret — the self-titled. Running for Office XKCD-Style". As a bonus, he cites xkcd intentionally (rather than just ripping it off without crediting it) and, well, it's actually funny. Is this a start of more IT people running for government?

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