Archive for February, 2009
Tuesday, February 17th, 2009
- Is flying safe? (hint:yes)
The last fatal crash to occur within the United States was 2.5 years ago — the crash of a Comair Bombardier CRJ-100 near Lexington, KY that killed 47 people. The crash in January of US Airways flight 1549 into the Hudson River resulted in no fatalities.
According to the National Transportation Safety Bureau, which investigates air crashes, U.S. air carriers transported an estimated 770 million passengers in 2007, with a total of 44 fatalities in 62 air carrier accidents. In contrast, more than 44,000 people died in vehicle accidents in the United States in 2007.
- Turn your XBox into a Killer Media Center
- Hold on to your valuables, folks - the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies are on a collision course
While humanity eventually might need sunglasses and seat belts for the rocky cosmic ride, there’s no immediate need for panic. The smashup won’t even begin to occur for another 2 billion years.
But James Lombardi Jr., an associate professor of physics at Allegheny College in Meadville, Crawford County, has worked for years to develop a computer model to explain stellar collisions. That knowledge also has provided him insight into the dynamics of intergalactic collisions.
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Monday, February 16th, 2009
- (images) - Circuitry pr0n - close-up shots of fine circuitry
- IBM’s bullet dodging armor patent -
Now do you believe, Trinity?
IBM has filed a patent (US 7484451) for Bionic Body Armor, that could essentially allow us to dodge bullets like Neo in The Matrix. The armor would scan areas for incoming projectiles and when one is detected the system would deliver a shock to the muscles causing a swift reflexive action away from the projectile. Here’s what the patent describes the body armor as:
- (video) - Make your own cosmic nightlight, a resin topping over a lighted, simulated starry-night sky
- Kotaku talks a bit about
Make a game in 48 hours
game jam
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Sunday, February 15th, 2009
- Garmin hates you, makes you suffer when you want to use their software
- Because nothing could be smarter than letting untrained in-duh-viduals in to cages with live wild animals at the zoo. Full story details are a bit more scary than this snip leads you to believe:
An Egyptian family asked to play with the lions. Two dollars, said the zookeeper. The mother nodded and the zoo employee motioned to them to come to a side door away from the row of cages and mesmerized onlookers.
The zookeeper looked nervous, peering up and down the sidewalk. Seeing none of the authorities, he swung the door open and beckoned the family of four inside. By the time the family had entered, the zookeeper had grabbed a lion cub and hoisted it into the arms of the startled teenage son. Another lion cub looked on from a few feet away.
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Sunday, February 8th, 2009
- New York Police Department wants option to shut down cell phone networks in case of terrorist attacks. The benefit to the attacked of having cell coverage far outweights the benefit of shutting down terrorists’ cells - they will just choose different communication strategies. Comments veer in to 9/11 attack lessons, and poster Trev keeps showing wrongness there, too
- Hard to identify all the stupid here - man fired for scripting error that changed settings across multiple Unix servers (page 4, items #13), but allowed to work to end of day and his accounts were not immediately disabled (page 4, item #14 &15). He inserts a logic bomb in another script which would have wiped out 4,000 servers had it not been caught first. Now he is under indictment for his misdeeds (via Threat Level)
- Can parked in short-term parking spot in Austria accumulates $27,500 in tickets over 2 years
The second-hand Fiat Uno, worth around $6,500, was left in the spot when the two Romanian immigrants who had been using it were arrested and deported, reported the Austrian Times.
Although the owner, who now lives in France, refused to pay the fine, local laws prevent towing cars unless they block traffic.
- Paying $180,000 to clone a dog that died of cancer. I love my pets, but they are still just pets
Ed and Nina Otto are two rich crybabies that just couldn’t deal with the cancer death of their dog Sir Lancelot Encore in January, 2008. So what did the couple do? Be happy with their eight other dogs? Adopt another one from the pound? Hell no, that would be too logical. Instead, the Otto’s paid $155,000 to have Sir Crapalot cloned by South Korean company BioArts International.
- No matter your political views, threatening to assassinate the President is ALWAYS a bad choice
Instead, the 20-year-old Colorado man is staring down a maximum of 10 years in the slammer for his alleged recent e-mails sent directly to the Federal Bureau of Investigation threatening to “assassinate” President Barack Obama. Another message said he had “rigged 40 pounds of C4″ to blow up vehicles in the Mall of America in suburban Minneapolis, according to an indictment (.pdf).
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Friday, February 6th, 2009
- (video) Sodium and Potassium react with water quite impressively. Rubidium, not so impressively. Until, that is, you release it under water! The why and how of this as explained by elements collector Theodore Grey
- (video) Rednecks at play - bottle rocket fights and tricycle backflipping
- In an apparent attempt to ease their future uprising, robots are now working as medic-like workers, treating injured soldiers on the battelfield. Dubbed snakebots to hide their nefarious purpose, they look like a cyborg/larval form of an alien- yes, that kind of alien
Now researchers at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) are developing technology to give battlefield medics a helping hand–literally. Howie Choset, an associate professor of robotics at CMU, has engineered a snakelike robotic arm equipped with various sensors that can monitor a soldier’s condition. The robot can be wirelessly controlled via a joystick, so that a doctor at a remote clinic may move the robot to any point on a soldier’s body to assess his injuries as he’s being carried to a safe location. The robot’s serpentine flexibility allows it to maneuver within tight confines, so that, in case a casualty can’t be extracted from the battlefield immediately, the robot can perform an initial medical assessment in the field.
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Thursday, February 5th, 2009
- FDA considering ban on 50-year-old painkiller Davron, best known as a component of Darvocet along with acetaminophen
n a separate analysis, the FDA office that handles painkillers said Darvon is a weak pain reliever. Most studies show that in Darvocet, the widely used combination drug, the Darvon component appears to contribute “little or no” additional pain relief beyond that provided by the acetaminophen component, reviewers said.
Wolfe presented the advisory panel with new data from the government’s Drug Abuse Warning Network, which tracks emergency room visits and deaths. It said that Darvon-related deaths rose to 503 in 2007, from 446 in 2006. In both years, about 20 percent were suicides. The network covers only about one-third of the U.S. population.
- (images) - Ghost towns of North Dakota
- Rolling Stone magazine interviewed Steve Jobs in 2003, talking about the digital music industry. See how dead-on Jobs was back at the beginnings of the portable media player age. Now if Apple could just make iTunes not suck
Jobs correctly predicted that attempts by the major labels to find a technological solution to piracy would fail. When it came to subscription music services, he said the public would reject them. He foresaw a day when iTunes would sell 1 billion tracks a year–a bold statement, considering that at the time, iTunes had only sold 20 million songs.
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Wednesday, February 4th, 2009
- India’s $10 laptop neither $10 nor laptop
The Sakshat is a 10″x5″ plastic box which, despite an official unveiling at India’s Sri Venkateswara University yesterday, still contains only mystery parts. There’s another disappointment, too. The $10 laptop is no longer $10 — the expected price is closer to $30.
- Building a custom steampunk keyboard
It was coming straight at me!!!
British military attempting to shoot down UFOs since the mid 1980s
Pope said pilots only fired upon UFOs in cases where the objects appeared threatening.
In the case of UFOs, whether the object is causing a threat is very much a pilot’s judgment call. The public won’t know unless it comes down in a heavily populated area,
he said.
- Data mining for terrorists doesn’t work (but you already knew that if you listen to my security and privacy views)
But the authors conclude the type of data mining that government bureaucrats would like to do–perhaps inspired by watching too many episodes of the Fox series 24–can’t work. “If it were possible to automatically find the digital tracks of terrorists and automatically monitor only the communications of terrorists, public policy choices in this domain would be much simpler. But it is not possible to do so.”
- Zombies in Area! Run! (thanks TimG)
Austin drivers making their morning commute were in for a surprise when two road signs on a busy stretch of road were taken over by hackers. The signs near the intersection of Lamar and Martin Luther King boulevards usually warn drivers about upcoming construction, but Monday morning they warned of “zombies ahead.”
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Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009
- Looks like she can swallow anything put in her mouth (yes - safe for work)
- Seeing both sides of the sun at the same time!
Scientists aren’t content to get just half of the picture, so they’ve launched the STEREO (Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatories) mission, a pair of NASA spacecraft that will orbit the sun simultaneously to provide a complete view of all sides of the star at once.
. . .
The perfect spherical view will come on Feb. 6, 2011. Right now the satellites, which were launched in October 2006, are about 90 degrees apart, which allows a picture of about 270 degrees of the sun — the fullest view yet.
- The easy way to solve sliding puzzle games
- Build the best paper airplane in the world
During the summer of 1950, on the outskirts of Harrisburg Pennsylvania U.S.A., my sister’s boyfriend “Skip” was sitting on the glider on the front porch of our house. He said to me - “Hey Mike… bring me a sheet of paper.” I answered why? and he responded with his make believe impatience “Just bring it!” I obeyed and he said that he was going to build the best paper airplane in the world. I was eight years old at the time and my meager knowledge of paper airplanes was the traditional flying wedge that spiraled into tight loops and fell head first to the ground.
When he started folding the paper, I knew this was something different, something special. He never explained how he did it but every move, every fold, every detail was burned into my memory. After he finished, we walked the porch handrail and he gently tossed it horizontally towards the street. It glided like no paper airplane I have ever seen before, it was acting like a REAL airplane. It gently curved into the slight breeze and began to rise vertically without moving forward. The craft then began to lower as if it were a helicopter and gently came to rest on the asphalt below.
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