WELCOME!
(yeah, yeah ... so what's NEW?)
Have you seen Mad or Rad? at abcnews.com? If not, check it out.. If you're coming from there, have a look at
Interested in some , maybe?
Wondering what the web can show you that it would be difficult or impossible to see otherwise? Try:
- San Diego Zoo Panda Cam ... (be patient, its a video, not a photo; so realistic that its JUST like being there: "is it alive, mommy?"; contributed by Alice Longobardi Givan via Suzanne Spain, 12/16/99)
- Miniature Golf ... (a good course, a little easier than you remember, but still frustrating enough; contributed by Kyle Antoian via Jed Grobstein, 12/17/99)
- Terra Server ... (a nice spatially organized database of aerial photographs, satellite images, from Microsoft; Serendip is in the northeast wing of the building here; contributed by Paul Grobstein, 12/23/99).
- Cyberatlas ...("Begun in the spring of 1996, the Cyberatlas project is the first concerted effort to chart the cultural terrain of cyberspace"; often disorienting (perhaps sometimes necessarily so), but interesting efforts to "map" cultural relatedness, mostly though not entirely in the artistic realm, and a good place to see how artists are exploring possibilities on the web; "Best Online Exhibition" from Museums and the Web 1999, 1/9/00)
- Happy Valentine's Day - Pictures of Eros (from a NASA spacecraft which went into orbit around the near Earth asteriod today, 2/14/00)
... an exhibition space and resource base for the art of Keith Haring and his work involving children in art; contributed by Lucy Kerman, 2/28/2000
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Serendip is a gathering place for people who suspect that life's
instructions are always ambiguous and incomplete. Originating in interactions
among neurobiologists, computer scientists, business people, and educators,
Serendip is both an expanding forum and a continually developing set of
resources to explore and support intellectual and social change in education,
in social organization... and in how one makes sense of life.
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Come on in. You'll find interactive exhibits, articles, links to other
websites, and places to read the thoughts of other visitors and to leave
your own. Browse around.
If it fits, you are welcome to think of Serendip as home and to join us
in contributing to its further (serendipitous) development. In any case,
send us your comments and thoughts, either by Serendip
or by posting them in our forums
area.