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« An Interview with Steve of Omni Brain | Main | Little Grassroots »

An Interview with Steinn of Dynamics of Cats

Category: AnnouncementBlogsHumorScienceBlogs
Posted on: March 22, 2007 1:18 PM, by Virginia Hughes

steinnbeer.jpg

This time around, the 3.14 Interview tackles the "excessively outspoken and sardonic" Steinn Sigurdsson of Dynamics of Cats.

What do you do when you're not blogging?
Paperwork—proposals, forms and occasional actual research papers; herding and tending of kids and cats; in between I read and sleep, in that order.

What is your blog called?
Dynamics of Cats

What's up with that name?
Well, in about 1993, a colleague at CERN sent me an e-mail with a "heads-up" on this new network protocol called http, a significant improvement on previous distributed data protocols. He also said this group at the NCSA in Illinois had implemented a beta version of an application ("Mosaic") as an interface, and it was "killer." I had just spent part of the summer at the NCSA and thought this could be good.

So I got me some of that and shortly after decided to make my very own "web page" as they were called back then. The http protocol expected a "title tag" so I had to make one up. We had two cats, and I was doing a lot of dynamics of compact objects, so after rejecting "Dynamics of COATs" I came up with CATs as a somewhat contrived acronym.

It survived all subsequent net technology transitions as my title tag, though the acronym that motivated it is long gone.

How long have you been blogging, anyway?
Just about two years now. First on Blogger then after just over a year on ScienceBlogs.

Where are you from? Where do you live now?
Iceland, born and raised. Then split my time between Europe (mostly the UK and Belgium) and the US (California and Pennsylvania). Right now I am in the Bay Area on a long-term visit, but I live in Happy Valley, Pennsylvania, for most of the year.

Would you describe yourself as a working scientist?
I'd better.

Any educational experiences or degrees you'd like to mention?
Basic education in Iceland. I finished "high school" in England, taking the dreaded "A-levels" (c.f. Harry Potter) and went to the University of Sussex for a B.Sc. in Mathematical Physics (lovely place). I then went to Caltech for a Ph.D. in theoretical physics. Postdocs were at UCSC and Cambridge.

What are your main academic interests, in or out of your field?
Theoretical astrophysics; gravitational physics; astrobiology. Out of field I try to keep up with the broader theoretical physics, on the grounds that it is all relevant to astro, and of course with observational astronomy. I also try to keep somewhat current in as many of the fields relevant to astrobiology as I can, but that is a hopeless task. I have fun trying, though.

Last book you read?
Collapsium, by Wil McCarthy—fluffy science fiction, grabbed to read on the airplane. Before that I read Is Pluto a Planet by Weintraub and Old Man's War by Scalzi. Coming up next in the pile are a Pynchon, a Margulis and some random light science fiction book and medium-weight history book.

What is your idea of a perfect day?
Swimming with the kids in the morning; wrapping up a paper with hot new results; lunch with my wife (and kids...); hearing I got a proposal award or paper accepted; catching up on some research or hearing a good talk; quick evening swim, then good Mexican or Chinese food. Kids asleep early enough for a quiet evening with my wife, a book and a glass of good red wine.

Or we could just go to the beach or go skiing/sledding all day as seasonally appropriate.

What's your greatest habitual annoyance?
Paperwork. The contents of the current news.

Who are your favorite heroes of fiction?
Ivan Vorkosigan. C'Mell.

Your favorite heroes in real life?
Stephen Colbert. Kári Sölmundarson.

What's your fatal flaw?
Excessively outspoken and sardonic on inappropriate occasions.

What would you like to be?
A better paid professor of astrophysics, with enough long-term funding that I don't have to spend all my time applying for more new funding.

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What would you like to be?

A better paid professor of astrophysics, with enough long-term funding that I don't have to spend all my time applying for more new funding.

Then you could afford to drink better beer, too...

Posted by: Chad Orzel | March 22, 2007 2:02 PM

Good interview, Steinn Sigurdsson.

I look forward to your being interviewed on network TV when you are a better paid professor of astrophysics, and have made a really cool disovery, which you will analogize to a favorite science fiction novel.

Chad -- I rather like Budweiser, but that's partly from childhood memories of the giant flying winged Neon sign at its Newark, New Jersey area brewery.

Don't have a punchline in mind, but what beer should an astrophysicist drink?

Something with negative pressure bubbles that cause inflation?

Posted by: Jonathan Vos Post | March 22, 2007 10:56 PM


Oh my. I pointed Virginia to a web link with some pics.
Didn't think she'd choose the oldest...

See, at least 3 people have copies of this pictures. I knew hiding it was futile. The truth will out, and the truth will set you free.

It was a weak moment. I was a student. There was this party, see, and they had just launched "bud in the UK" (it is actually infinitesimally better than in the US) and I actually had a role in the launch, sorta. Anyway, there was a lot of bud floating around for a while in my social circle.

Clearly my beer of choice is Polar Beer, Viking or Egil's Gold; though I'd take Stella or Budvar in a pinch.

I suppose Stella is what an astrophysicist should really drink.

I don't suppose CBS Altoona counts, eh?
I'm holding out for Jon or Stephen, personally.
Already lost my chance at McNeil-Lehrer when a PR person decided to "help" arrange the details.

Posted by: Steinn Sigurdsson | April 9, 2007 12:38 AM

"...what beer should an astrophysicist drink?"

The brand doesn't matter, but it should be dark.

Posted by: Mark | May 17, 2007 4:12 PM

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