Syndication

Google’s homepage goes amazing to celebrate Pac-Man’s 30th anniversaryEngadget

Google launches Google TVBoing Boing

From the Official Google blog:

googtvth.jpg Google TV is a new experience for television that combines the TV that you already know with the freedom and power of the Internet. With Google Chrome built in, you can access all of your favorite websites and easily move between television and the web. This opens up your TV from a few hundred channels to millions of channels of entertainment across TV and the web. Your television is also no longer confined to showing just video. With the entire Internet in your living room, your TV becomes more than a TV -- it can be a photo slideshow viewer, a gaming console, a music player and much more.
Guidelines for developers who wish to optimize their sites for Google TV are here. Google is working with Sony and Logitech to integrate TV sets, Blu-ray players and companion boxes with the offering, and compatible devices will go on sale this fall, at Best Buy stores throughout the USA. During today's launch event, Google execs showcased how Google TV will use the next generation of Adobe's Flash, which has been the subject of much controversy with Apple.

The 10 Best-Paying College MajorsThe Consumerist

This is probably a little too late for those of you who will be graduating from college in the coming weeks, but might be quite helpful to anyone getting their high school diploma soon. A new study lists the 10 college majors that will net you the most income right away. And if you thought your thesis on Emily Dickinson was going to translate into paycheck poetry, you were mistaken.

In fact, not a single major that would be considered strictly liberal arts is on the list. Seven of the top spots are taken up by engineering gigs, with economics, physics and computer science filling the three remaining slots.

Of the 10 majors listed, Chemical Engineering has the biggest immediate payoff, with a starting median salary of $65,700/year. But it's Aerospace Engineering that pays off better in the long run, with a median mid-career salary of $109K/year.

Economics, the least "scientific" major on the list (in that you don't wear a lab coat), has the lowest starting median salary in the top 10, at $50,200/year. Meanwhile, among the top majors, Environmental Engineering has the lowest median mid-career salary -- $94,500, still more than I'll probably ever earn.

Here's the whole list, in graph form:

DegreesDegrees
Methodology
Annual pay for Bachelors graduates without higher degrees. Typical starting graduates have 2 years of experience; mid-career have 15 years. See full methodology for more.

Best Undergrad College Degrees By Salary [Payscale.com]

Color perception among XKCD readersBoing Boing

Randall Munroe subjected readers of his XKCD webcomic to a fun and informative survey on color perception and categorization. The results are both informative and extremely XKCDish.

Basically, women were slightly more liberal with the modifiers, but otherwise they generally agreed (and some of the differences may be sampling noise). The results were similar across the survey--men and women tended on average to call colors the same names. So I was feeling pretty good about equality. Then I decided to calculate the 'most masculine' and 'most feminine' colors. I was looking for the color names most disproportionately popular among each group; that is, the names that the most women came up with compared to the fewest men (or vice versa).

Here are the color names most disproportionately popular among women:

1. Dusty Teal
2. Blush Pink
3. Dusty Lavender
4. Butter Yellow
5. Dusky Rose

Okay, pretty flowery, certainly. Kind of an incense-bomb-set-off-in-a-Bed-Bath-&-Beyond vibe. Well, let's take a look at the other list.

Here are the color names most disproportionately popular among men: 1. Penis
2. Gay
3. WTF
4. Dunno
5. Baige

I ... that's not my typo in #5--the only actual color in the list really is a misspelling of "beige". And keep in mind, this is based on the number of unique people who answered the color, not the number of times they typed it. This isn't just the effect of a couple spammers. In fact, this is after the spamfilter. I weep for my gender.

Color Survey Results (via @ossington)