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Books It's funny.  Laugh. Science

XKCD Author Finds Geeky Ways to Promote His New Book (xkcd.com) 65

Randall Munroe does more than draw the online comic strip XKCD. He's also published a funny new speculative science book (following up on his previous New York Times best-seller), promising "short answers, new lists of weird and worrying questions, and some of my favorite answers from the What If site."

From his blog: In What If 2, I answer new questions I've receieved in the years since What If? was released. People have asked about touching exotic materials, traveling across space and time, eating things they shouldn't, and smashing large objects into the Earth. There are questions about lasers, explosions, swingsets, candy, and soup. Several planets are destroyed — one of them by the soup.
But besides launching a new book tour, he's also found some particularly geeky ways to promote the new book. On Thursday Munroe went on a language podcast to ask his own oddball questions — like how to spot an artificial language, and what does the word "it" refer to in the sentence "It's 3pm and hot." He's illustrated a a science-y animated video, and released several self-mocking cartoons.

And of course — answered some more strange science questions.
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XKCD Author Finds Geeky Ways to Promote His New Book

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  • by iamnotx0r ( 7683968 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @01:06PM (#62892447)
    Thanks EditorDavid.
    • Fine by me, the xkcd guy has earned his notoriety and continues to do so.
  • Geeky ways? (Score:3, Funny)

    by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @01:17PM (#62892489)

    Is he capable of doing anything that *isn't* geeky?

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Is he capable of doing anything that *isn't* geeky?

      If so, quickly check his temperature. We don't want him catching Normalitis.

      Destroying planets via soup, got my curiosity up.

      • Destroying planets via soup, got my curiosity up.

        I'm guessing you would need quite a lot. Or maybe the soup is traveling really fast?
        My copy of What if 2 hasn't arrived yet. If your planet gets destroyed by soup it turns out it wasn't that difficult.

        Sorry in advance.

        • My copy of What if 2 hasn't arrived yet.

          Did you pre-order? I got mine a week ago.

          I haven't read it yet because my kids took it, so I don't know anything about the soup.

          • It arrived last night, so you can stop worrying now. Thanks though.
            I have put it aside as a birthday present for one of the offspring.
    • Is he capable of doing anything that *isn't* geeky?

      He had a GF and convinced her to marry him.

      How many geeks manage to do that?

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @01:21PM (#62892497) Journal
    We need an obligatory xkcd for this thread.
  • I hope he is at least paying

    I love XKCd and the books are really creative. Thing explainer is a masterpiece as far as I am concerned. But the promotion of the book is just the standard corporate crap.

    I see this in creative types as they try to push their career to the next level. Back in the 1990 three of my favorite indie bands joined various labels and created these hugely overproduced albums. Sacrificing all creative to the hope of massive sales driven only by corporate wisdom. It of course failed.

  • Oh, no! Someone's using Slashdot to promote a product or service for what must be the very first time! We'll need a name for this phenomenon running forward. Something like... slash... ad? Slashadvert? Hmm. Doesn't seem quite right.
  • In what way were any of those cartoons "self-mocking"?
  • Oblig... (Score:5, Funny)

    by LordHighExecutioner ( 4245243 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @02:00PM (#62892649)
    ...xkcd quote [xkcd.com] (ducks...)
  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @02:06PM (#62892665)

    Like what? Women? That's far too hypothetical a situation for the Slashdot crowd.

  • by votsalo ( 5723036 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @04:41PM (#62892963)
    Could we discuss the Soupiter question, "what if the solar system was filled out with soup out to Jupiter"? Wouldn't the Hydrogen in the soup start fusing to Helium, thus generating heat and outer pressure that staves off any further gravitational collapse for a while? He computes the mass of "Soupiter" to be 2 × 10**39 liters of soup. This is equivalent to about 0.5 billion suns. Wikipedia mentions that as the mass of a star grows to about 120 Suns, "the outward pressure of radiant energy generated by nuclear fusion in the star's core exceeds the inward pull of its own gravity". In layman's terms, if you start pouring soup into the sun, after about 120 Suns of soup, the soup would start evaporating away faster than it falls towards the Sun. I suppose that he did not consider the case of the solar system being filled with soup gradually, but instantaneously, thus forming a black hole, before any nuclear fusion has a chance to push matter out. I wonder what is the maximum radius of soup that would not produce a black hole, and what would happen to that soup for a radius smaller than that?
    • by mistergrumpy ( 7379416 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @05:31PM (#62893031)
      It might depend if the size of the ladle used to add the soup which would limit how quickly you can add it to the solar system. Doesn't the viscosity come into play? Chicken rice is much lower viscosity than something like navy bean and could be added more quickly. It raises more questions that it answers.
      • by votsalo ( 5723036 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @06:36PM (#62893163)
        The size of the ladle does not matter, since you can maintain the same flow rate with half the ladle at twice the speed. The viscosity of the soup has nothing to do with the problem at hand. All soup is mostly water, and it therefore has the same density and the same proportion of Hydrogen. These are irrelevant questions. Please get serious!
    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      I suppose that he did not consider

      Standard fair for that rag.

      • by quenda ( 644621 )

        Standard fair for that rag.

        Huh? Oh, you mean "fare".

        And if that chip on your shoulder gets any bigger, it may begin to sustain nuclear fusion itself.
        Did Randall sleep with your wife or something?

    • I did the computation and found out that the minimum radius of soup that would form a black hole (soup radius = Schwarzschild radius) turns out to be 2.7 AU, which is between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. That's why 5-year old Amelia specifically asked for Jupiter-radius soup, instead of say, something closer to home like soup enough to reach Earth. She wanted a black hole answer. A smaller soup would probably disintegrate or even explode like a Soupernova.
    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      The Schwarzschild radius of half a billion suns is about twice Jupiter's orbital radius. There's no collapse necessary. A blob of soup that big would be a black hole already.

      The "pouring the soup onto the sun" question would depend on how fast you poured it. If you pour fast enough it will just collapse into a black hole, radiation pressure or no. If you pour slowly enough, it would accumulate well past 120 solar masses because soup is much more dense, and less fusible than hydrogen and helium. If you poure

  • The ELI5 crowd on Reddit? The whole "use only these 1000 words" game becomes incredibly tiresome after a few pages.

  • what does the word "it" refer to in the sentence "It's 3pm and hot."

    Uh, is that supposed to be mysterious? Seems like simple english... "The day is 3pm and hot", it's the time and temperature of the day today, so clearly that's what "it" is... today or "the day".

  • Although the way to self-propaganda and not new, but rather interesting and unusual that can certainly attract attention. I would probably even try to put my work as an example on articles like https://studydriver.com/fix-my... [studydriver.com] to reach students who are looking for a similar thing. So to speak to promote their creativity through education.

"What is wanted is not the will to believe, but the will to find out, which is the exact opposite." -- Bertrand Russell, _Sceptical_Essays_, 1928

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