Below are links to some science videos nifty for two reasons. 

1) They ask and answers a pretty cool question: What happens when you hold a
slinky out at shoulder height, so it is extended down (the bottom still off the
ground) and you let go. Think about it for a second. How does the top part of
the slinky move, how does the bottom part move, how does the center of mass
move? A good physics thought experiment! (If you are having trouble imagining
it, here is the question:
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wGIZKETKKdw&feature=relmfu>)

2) The answer illustrates the weirdness of trying to apply the term
'information' to all possible situations. At about 1:30, the physics prof
offers an explanation for what happens, and (for just a second) talks as if one
part of the slinky is transmitting 'information' about its movement to another
part of the slinky, which is bizarre way. The slinky itself is moving, it is
not transmitting information about the movement, it IS moving. Why would you
say that it takes time for 'the information to propagate', instead of simply
saying that 'it takes time for the slinky to move'. Weird, weird, weird. 

At any rate, Here is the cool answer:
<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eCMmmEEyOO0>
(and it continues here: <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oKb2tCtpvNU&NR=1>)

This seemed like the type of thing lots of people on the list would get a kick
out of... so... hope you do.  

Eric
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