
The popular internet magazine Wired has a science blog that offers interesting choices from the science press, along with videos and links to the originating sources.
This science blog from Seed Magazine editor Jonah Lehrer is chock full of delightful posts that aren't too long, aren't too confrontational, and aren't too technical while still managing to be interesting and often humorous.
Journalist Eric Berger covers science news with the sensitivity of a comedy writer for SNL, while still managing to convey the details of real scientific research and offering links to those who want to take things a lot more seriously than he's able to muster.
The New Scientist science news blog is written by various editors, editorial assistants, managers, consultants and contributors to the magazine and offers short-ish posts about a variety of subjects in the science news.
Ph.D. student Karen Ventii's expertise in biochemistry has not overshadowed her considerable skills in science journalism. She writes deftly and succinctly without omitting the most interesting details or skewing the perspectives, demonstrating the value of good communications skills as teaching device. Ventii covers science news across the spectrum, but shines most brightly on subjects of biology and medicine where her understanding adds real depth to the raw material. Science To Life deserves to be among Seed's most popular SciBlogs, but Ventii's style is so accessible that you won't find the hundreds of sniping comments the most popular ones boast. Which is nice if you're looking to learn something useful instead of pick a fight. Highly recommended.
Science news written for with the everyday person in mind.

art blogging business cars celebrity culture design education entertainment fashion finance food football gadgets gardening google gossip health humor internet investing marketing money music news nfl parenting personal photography politics programming real estate relationships religion reviews science seo shopping soccer software sports tech technology travel tv video web 2.0 women wordpress writing