Here's a cool video from showing an aluminum block falling inside an MRI.
This is an example of the Lorenz Force. There's some discussion in the comments, but essentially the MRI creates an electric charge in the aluminum block (which is conductive but non-magnetic), which in turn creates a magnetic field, which interacts with the magnetic field in the MRI. I got a magnetic experiment kit from Lee Valley for Christmas last year which demonstrated the same effect using a magnetic sphere and a piece of copper tubing. It's eerie!
(Via Ovablastic)
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Mark your calendars: Cult Case lists seven great meteor showers to watch in 2009, including dates, frequency, parent comet, and some pretty pictures. They go into some pretty good detail, too.
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
If you're looking for blog ideas, Prompt-a-Day will provide you with a daily writing topic and suggested amount of time to spend on it. Vox was doing this for a while, and I thought it was a great idea. Too bad I'm not posting on Vox.
Landscape + Urbanism Blog has a picture of an explosion that took place after someone that didn't check for underground pipelines ruptured a high-pressure gas pipe with an automated post hol digger. The scale of this is amazing!
Monday, January 12, 2009
If you're at all confused about familial relationships, like I am, then you'll appreciate this chart showing how cousins are related. Surprise everyone at your next family reunion!
The Eyeballing Game has you trying to construct shapes and bisect angles just by eyeballing it.Great fun, especially for geeks like me who think they have a good eye for this sort of thing.
Friday, September 05, 2008
It appears that in early 2007, researchers at the University of Alberta found that a compound called dichloroacetate, or DCA, kills cancer cells while leaving healthy cells alone. DCA is common, inexpensive, non-toxic, and available at chemistry stores. CTV covered this story in January 2007.
The catch is that DCA isn't patented, so drug companies can't make any money off it. And this makes them reluctant to invest in research, leaving it to universities and private labs. I'm not much for the conspiracy theory, but it is interesting to ask why this hasn't gotten more media play.
(Via Health Salon)
The catch is that DCA isn't patented, so drug companies can't make any money off it. And this makes them reluctant to invest in research, leaving it to universities and private labs. I'm not much for the conspiracy theory, but it is interesting to ask why this hasn't gotten more media play.
(Via Health Salon)
Wednesday, September 03, 2008
A very cute picture of a spider on a frog on a turtle. You may also wish to read the children's story that sprang from this picture, or the shorter, and much better, account of the rescue.
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
This has been around for a while, but it can't be overstated that Johnny Lee is a freaking genius. What he's accomplished with the Wii remote in this video is mind blowing. He has a few more interesting projects on his website at johnnylee.net.
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
YouTube user Levinater25 found what appeared to be a glitch in the Tiger Woods PGA Tour 08 game, allowing Tiger to chip a shot into the hole while standing on water. He dubbed this the "Jesus shot".
In a brilliant marketing move, EA Sports made a video response to Levinator25, letting him know that it wasn't a glitch after all.
The thing to note about this isn't so much EA's video, which is awesome, but the web-savviness of the company. Responding to Levinator25's video this way was a great piece of damage control, showed the company was not going to be heavy-handed toward its users, and practically ensured the video would go viral, creating a small but effective marketing phenomenon.
In a brilliant marketing move, EA Sports made a video response to Levinator25, letting him know that it wasn't a glitch after all.
The thing to note about this isn't so much EA's video, which is awesome, but the web-savviness of the company. Responding to Levinator25's video this way was a great piece of damage control, showed the company was not going to be heavy-handed toward its users, and practically ensured the video would go viral, creating a small but effective marketing phenomenon.
Monday, August 25, 2008
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Paul Hunt is a comedian and women's gymnastic coach who has some amazing comedy gymnastic routines on YouTube. As colour people say in one of the videos, you have to be very good to make things look so bad. They're literally laugh-out-loud funny, and a nice coda to the end of the Olympics.
There's a video for a floor routine and the beam, but my favourite is the uneven parallel bars. I think he's better when he has an apparatus to work on.
There's a video for a floor routine and the beam, but my favourite is the uneven parallel bars. I think he's better when he has an apparatus to work on.
Friday, August 22, 2008
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Gizmodod says this video of slow-motion lightning is the coolest thing they've seen. And they're right -- it's pretty damn cool.
If you watch it enough, you'll see that the path the lightning takes to the ground is the same one traced out by the "feelers" at the start. Amazing.
If you watch it enough, you'll see that the path the lightning takes to the ground is the same one traced out by the "feelers" at the start. Amazing.
Flickr user KCIvey has pictures of former Saturday Night Live writer and funnyman Al Franken at a fundraiser where he draws freehand a map of the US from memory while answering questions about healthcare and other topics. For the skeptics, there's also a video on YouTube of him doing the same thing. I've always liked Al Franken, and I'd buy one of these in a heartbeat.
We're one step closer to the invisibility cloak, people: researchers at the University of California, Berkeley, have created a material with a negative refractive index which causes light to bend around it.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
At the risk of changing the focus of this blog entirely to energy/alternative fuel source news, I will be pushing out a few links in that direction. Not only will this give me an opportunity to keep up on news in this area, but I feel it's important because I'm really concerned about peak oil and the energy crunch. I think there's still a window to do something about it, but North America needs a comprehensive alternative/renewable fuel program today. Everything from food production to the strength of the economy to personal freedoms are threatened by massive oil shortages, and it's questionable if we'll have the 10-15 year window we need to implement the sweeping changes necessary to prevent a sweeping society collapse.
Anyway. Onward and upward. EcoGeek has a couple of interesting posts about potential biofuels that aren't soy and corn. One plant, Jatropha (wikipedia), is being farmed heavily in India, producing nearly 10 times the biodiesel of corn and growing in areas that were previously unusable for farmland.
The other post was about camelina sativa (wikipedia), also known as false flax. While the article says there hasn't been a lot of long-term study surrounding this plant, over 40,000 acres have been planted in Montana, and the company Great Plains has been working with it for over a decade. Like jatropha, camelina has an oil content of approximately 40%, and can produce up to 100 gallons of oil per acre. It's also a good rotational crop for wheat, and can be grown in fields that would typically be left to fallow.
Anyway. Onward and upward. EcoGeek has a couple of interesting posts about potential biofuels that aren't soy and corn. One plant, Jatropha (wikipedia), is being farmed heavily in India, producing nearly 10 times the biodiesel of corn and growing in areas that were previously unusable for farmland.
The other post was about camelina sativa (wikipedia), also known as false flax. While the article says there hasn't been a lot of long-term study surrounding this plant, over 40,000 acres have been planted in Montana, and the company Great Plains has been working with it for over a decade. Like jatropha, camelina has an oil content of approximately 40%, and can produce up to 100 gallons of oil per acre. It's also a good rotational crop for wheat, and can be grown in fields that would typically be left to fallow.
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
At Victoria Falls in Zimbabwe, there is an area called the Devil's Swimming Pool that allows people to swim safely right next to the vertical drop of the falls. It looks ridiculously frightening, but is apparently completely safe.
The blog Fogonazos collected some pictures and videos from around the internet of people swimming in the Devil's Pool. Snopes also says this is the real deal.
The blog Fogonazos collected some pictures and videos from around the internet of people swimming in the Devil's Pool. Snopes also says this is the real deal.
A 25-year-old man named Israel Sarrio had his arm severed in an accident. Doctors managed to reattach it, but were forced to amputate it again once infection set in. In an effort to keep the arm alive, the doctors attached it to his thigh for nine days to ensure the wound was clean, then reattached it to his shoulder.
Sounds like bullshit -- but no. The money shot is here, but the full story, and more pictures, can be found here.
Sounds like bullshit -- but no. The money shot is here, but the full story, and more pictures, can be found here.
Monday, July 28, 2008
Flickr user Dean Allen has kindly posted a mouth-watering set of pictures showing how he made bacon from, uh, scratch, I guess. It's amazing, thoroughly interesting, and makes me want to go eat bacon.
The Boston Globe has posted some breathtaking pictures of Jupiter and its moons from various NASA space missions dating back to 1979. A few of the pictures try to give a good sense of just how big Jupiter is, but I don't think the human mind can really comprehend it fully. One photo, for instance, shows the Great Red Spot, saying it's 20,000 km across. The diameter of the Earth is roughly 12,756 km, meaning you could almost fit two Earths side-by-side in it. The picture itself was taken from over two million km away. Crazy.
Sunday, July 27, 2008
Hotspot Shield VPN is free, and allows in people in countries from outside the US -- like me -- to access services that only broadcast to the US -- like Hulu. These kinds of broadcasting sites are really making me question the continued usefulness of my TV.
(Via Chipbit.com)
(Via Chipbit.com)
We used to make oobleck all the time in high school, though we didn't have a name for it. We just always called it non-Newtonian fluid. For creative kids, we could have done better. Part of the appeal is that it's pretty weird stuff, and it's insanely easy to make. You literally combine the cornstarch and water, and you're done -- no need to let it set, no cooling, just mix and go.
And, once you've made it, you can do some cool things. Check out this crazy video of oobleck on a subwoofer. And, because it's every kid's fantasy once you've fooled around with this stuff, this video of people playing with a whole frigging pool of it.
And, once you've made it, you can do some cool things. Check out this crazy video of oobleck on a subwoofer. And, because it's every kid's fantasy once you've fooled around with this stuff, this video of people playing with a whole frigging pool of it.
Monday, July 14, 2008
In preparation for the Dark Knight, Scientific American talks with E. Paul Zehr, associate professor of kinesiology and neuroscience at the University of Victoria, about the possibilities of there really being a Batman. Zehr's literally written the book on this topic. This is great stuff.
Tuesday, July 08, 2008
This is a very cute, very fun, and very addicting game about launching a hedgehog into outer space. Kottke managed four days, but my best is nine.
(Via Kottke)
(Via Kottke)
Monday, July 07, 2008
Saturday, July 05, 2008
Men's Health has a list of the 20 worst foods in America, and they are staggering. I won't give away #1, but here's their worst dessert (because most health-conscious people would skip dessert anyway):
9. Worst Dessert
Chili's Chocolate Chip Paradise Pie with Vanilla Ice Cream
1,600 calories
78 g fat
215 g carbs
Would you eat a Big Mac for dessert? How about three? That's the calorie equivalent of this decadent dish. Clearly, Chili's customers get their money's worth.
Friday, July 04, 2008
Fans of the sitcom WKRP don't need to wonder anymore about the song lyrics over the closing credits.
Thursday, July 03, 2008
Work Friendly disguises your browser as Microsoft Word, allowing you to read websites at work without having to suspiciously look over your shoulder every two seconds to see if you've been caught.
If you're as tired as everyone else in the word of carrying around a separate club card for every store you frequent, try Just One Club Card and combine eight bar codes on a single card. There are options for a number of Canadian and American stores, as well as an advanced mode to create bar codes for stores not already featured.
Wednesday, July 02, 2008
The bar is a fun game that has you working in what appears to be a British establishment, tending bar and serving a variety of drinks to customers.
Tuesday, July 01, 2008
The bad news: it looks like climate change will have its most pronounced effect this year, as the North Pole becomes free of ice for the first time in human history.
The good news: Russia and Canada get to fight over the oil below it, estimated to be almost 18% of the world's reserves.
The good news: Russia and Canada get to fight over the oil below it, estimated to be almost 18% of the world's reserves.
Tags:
Canada,
Climate Change,
Energy,
Environment,
Guardian,
Oil,
Russia,
The Independent
This is a short but very cool collection of photos showing how the army corps of engineers changed an airplane factory to a rural subdivision during WWII in order to hide it from the Japanese.
Monday, June 30, 2008
CNN Money compares the platforms of McCain and Obama, and Obama hits all the right notes, especially on Point #2 (Gravest threat to the US economy: Islamic extremism vs. US energy policy). But the best part for me, and the most telling, is Point #7: Who do you admire:
McCain The ones I admire the most are those that have been on the leading edge of the information technology revolution. Bill Gates, obviously, springs to mind. Paul Allen.So now it all comes together: Obama's a Mac, McCain's a PC.
Obama Steve Jobs is somebody who is an example of the kind of entrepreneurial spirit that we have to build on as part of what makes America such a great country.
It turns out Rambo gets exponentially tougher with every movie that comes out.
Now, to be fair, he wasn't in a good frame of mind in the first film -- all PTSD. But once they got him squared away for the second film, he's been almost parabolic. If they release a fifth film, we can expect about five people killed per minute.
Now, to be fair, he wasn't in a good frame of mind in the first film -- all PTSD. But once they got him squared away for the second film, he's been almost parabolic. If they release a fifth film, we can expect about five people killed per minute.
Friday, June 27, 2008
Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo
Wikipedia says this sentence is grammatically correct for all sentences consisting of at least one "buffalo" (using Chompskyan theories of grammar).
Bonus linguistics post: Yuen Ren Chao's poem "Lion-Eating Poet in the Stone Den"
(Thanks lonelysandwich!)
Wikipedia says this sentence is grammatically correct for all sentences consisting of at least one "buffalo" (using Chompskyan theories of grammar).
Bonus linguistics post: Yuen Ren Chao's poem "Lion-Eating Poet in the Stone Den"
(Thanks lonelysandwich!)
Thursday, June 26, 2008
A cool new skyscraper in -- where else -- Dubai, will have 80 independent rotating floors. But check out this green hotness:
The slender building would be energy self-sufficient as the turbines would produce enough electricity to power the entire building and even feed extra power back into the grid, said the Italian architect at the unveiling of the project in New York. (Via BBC News)The Huffington Post has a video and some more conceptual drawings, while the Wall Street Journal does its bit by covering the whole hard-on for skyscrapers Dubai seems to have these days.
EcoGeek raves about Nanosolar, a new startup developing the so-called "Third Wave" of solar technology. Founded by two Stanford Ph.D. candidates, Nanosolar offered to bring the cost of solar energy down cheaper than coal. And now, after raising $150 million in capital and building a factory in Germany, they're talking $2/Watt -- squeeking just below coal's $2.1/Watt.
This is big news. And important news. The real alternatives to fossil fuels rely on renewable energy sources. And the real answer to re-greening the planet comes from developing countries switching from coal-fired plants to something sustainable. If the cost of solar power drops below that of coal, we'll see countries like China and India moving away from fossil fuels, and this is where the huge environmental gains are going to be made.
You can read more about Nanosolar in this New York Times article, this National Post article, and on the company's website.
This is big news. And important news. The real alternatives to fossil fuels rely on renewable energy sources. And the real answer to re-greening the planet comes from developing countries switching from coal-fired plants to something sustainable. If the cost of solar power drops below that of coal, we'll see countries like China and India moving away from fossil fuels, and this is where the huge environmental gains are going to be made.
You can read more about Nanosolar in this New York Times article, this National Post article, and on the company's website.
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
An interesting article in Scientific American on the evolution of the English language, and a nice contrast to this one in Wired.
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
I blogged about this before, over two years ago. But I recently read a frightening article in Maclean's called After Cheap Oil that brought this back to my attention. Some of the gems:
But the most important thing is acting now. We have to lobby our governments to support energy reduction and research into alternative energy sources.
That is, if there's any window at all to be acting in.
- High oil prices are causing a downturn in the auto industry, forcing Ford to cut jobs
- Rising prices will turn suburbs into ghost towns and drive Wal-Mart out of business
- At $200/barrel, someone making $12/hour would work roughly a day and a half to fill their tank (my own car would cost about $100 to fill at this price)
- Increasing fuel prices puts more emphasis on alternative fuels like ethanol, which in turn strains the global food supply
- The airline industry will fall apart, resulting in a 90% reduction in the number of airports by 2025
"What can I do to prepare?"But there may be a slim upside. Savinar writes that some combination of alternative fuel sources could be used to delay the inevitable, but it's not some kind of magic bullet. And Curtis Rist wrote in Discover that natural gas can be turned into fuel, and estimates suggest that could provide up to 60 years of fuel. There have also been a couple of recent discoveries I've blogged about which will have some impact.
Attempting to prepare for a catastrophe of this magnitude is daunting to say the least. What you can or will do to prepare for this situation will depend on your age, health, marital status, geographic location, financial situation and other factors too numerous to mention. About the best I can do is point you to some articles and resources you might to be profitable reading in terms of generating your own options and plans. I maintain a continually updated repository of such articles at the LATOC Prepare page.
Best of luck,
Mattthew David Savinar, Esq.
But the most important thing is acting now. We have to lobby our governments to support energy reduction and research into alternative energy sources.
That is, if there's any window at all to be acting in.
Monday, June 23, 2008
Science fiction once again becomes science fact as LS9, a research company in Silicon Valley, genetically engineers a strain of E. coli to eat biomatter and excrete crude oil. Honest to God crude oil. And the reaction is carbon negative, so more carbon will be taken out of the atmosphere by creating the fuel than will be put in by burning it.
This is amazing news, and definitely an interesting development in meeting rising energy demands, even if its current spacial needs are a little taxing:
This is amazing news, and definitely an interesting development in meeting rising energy demands, even if its current spacial needs are a little taxing:
The closest that LS9 has come to mass production is a 1,000-litre fermenting machine, which looks like a large stainless-steel jar, next to a wardrobe-sized computer connected by a tangle of cables and tubes. It has not yet been plugged in. The machine produces the equivalent of one barrel a week and takes up 40 sq ft of floor space.
However, to substitute America’s weekly oil consumption of 143 million barrels, you would need a facility that covered about 205 square miles, an area roughly the size of Chicago.
Friday, June 20, 2008
This training program suggests that, with a little dedication, you can be doing 100 perfect push ups in six weeks -- even if you can't even do 10 right now. The best part? The training is only 30 minutes a week.
Push ups can be performed no matter where you are, and best of all, they are completely free - no expensive equipment or annual gym fees required! If you're looking to develop a great chest and shoulders, you could do much worse than follow along with the hundred push ups plan. Your core strength will also go through the roof too!(Via BuzzFeed)
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Rod Hilton at the Editing Room has a script posted lampooning Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. As I hated the movie, I think this version is bang on -- and decidedly better.
Wired has a post today highlighting the many accomplishments of Eratosthenes, who estimated the circumference of the earth on July 19, 240BC (amongst other things).
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Researchers at Rensselaer and Rice University have created the darkest man-made material ever, absorbing over 99.9% of light. The secret: a thin coating of vertical carbon nanotubes.
All materials, from paper to water, air, or plastic, reflect some amount of light. Scientists have long envisioned an ideal black material that absorbs all the colors of light while reflecting no light. So far they have been unsuccessful in engineering a material with a total reflectance of zero.A completely non-reflective surface would look like a two-dimensional, featureless, black shape.
The total reflectance of conventional black paint, for example, is between 5 and 10 percent. The darkest man-made material, prior to the discovery by Lin’s group, boasted a total reflectance of 0.16 percent to 0.18 percent.
Lin’s team created a coating of low-density, vertically aligned carbon nanotube arrays that are engineered to have an extremely low index of refraction and the appropriate surface randomness, further reducing its reflectivity. The end result was a material with a total reflective index of 0.045 percent — more than three times darker than the previous record, which used a film deposition of nickel-phosphorous alloy.
Ping.fm is an aggregating service for your social networking sites. Now you can post to Twitter, Pownce, Brightkite, and Plurk (amongst others) all from one convenient interface. This is just what I needed!
Sunday, May 25, 2008
After testing out a few tools from the 140+ Twitter Tools post on Mashable, I decided to post my favourites so far:
Twitter Karma - Displays your followers and the people you follow on a single page, in a better format than Twitter provides.
Twitter100 - Displays all the people you follow and their latest posts.
TwitBuzz - Shows links posted to Twitter in a Digg-like interface.
Tweetstats - An amazing site that analyzes your profile and provides you with a wealth of statistical information about your tweeting habits. It even includes a tweet cloud!
Twitter Karma - Displays your followers and the people you follow on a single page, in a better format than Twitter provides.
Twitter100 - Displays all the people you follow and their latest posts.
TwitBuzz - Shows links posted to Twitter in a Digg-like interface.
Tweetstats - An amazing site that analyzes your profile and provides you with a wealth of statistical information about your tweeting habits. It even includes a tweet cloud!
August Zachrisson used GPS and a suitcase to make the largest drawing in the world. For someone so tech-savvy, I'm surprised that his site is all graphics. But whatever.
These are the kinds of artistic projects I like to see: ideas that really push the envelope of what technology can do, or that bend the expected uses of that technology. Who would think to use a parcel delivery service to affect a drawing on a world map?
These are the kinds of artistic projects I like to see: ideas that really push the envelope of what technology can do, or that bend the expected uses of that technology. Who would think to use a parcel delivery service to affect a drawing on a world map?
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Mike Sacks takes pictures of his TV. I thought this was something that might get pretty old pretty quickly, but there are some good ones (Cheryl Tyler, Head of Hooters Girl Casting). I mostly like how it points out all of the garbage they put on TV that passes for news (Joe Winiecki - Forced to change shirt).
(Via Kottke)
(Via Kottke)
Here's an inspired page in what I think is Russian, where individuals have photographed themselves acting out childrens' drawings. Delightful!
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Because I find all kinds of boob technology interesting, I'm posting this link to Maidenform's new Breakthrough Backless Bra. But the real story is how Elaine Cato set about making it because she wanted to look good in a sexy, backless dress.
Michael Moore is telling people to vote for a Democrat in the election. He also says some bad things about Clinton and some nice things about Obama:
There are those who say Obama isn't ready, or he's voted wrong on this or that. But that's looking at the trees and not the forest. What we are witnessing is not just a candidate but a profound, massive public movement for change. My endorsement is more for Obama The Movement than it is for Obama the candidate.
That is not to take anything away from this exceptional man. But what's going on is bigger than him at this point, and that's a good thing for the country. Because, when he wins in November, that Obama Movement is going to have to stay alert and active. Corporate America is not going to give up their hold on our government just because we say so. President Obama is going to need a nation of millions to stand behind him.
Tags:
Clinton,
Michael Moore,
Obama,
Presidential Election,
US Politics,
USA
The Toronto Star reports on a Canadian and Japanese team that has successfully removed gas from methane hydrate. This by itself isn't news -- the gas releases itself at room temperature. What is news is how the team has managed to get a sustained flow of gas from the material, making it usable.
Heat or unsqueeze the hydrate and gas is released. Hold a core sample to your ear and it hisses.I'm reminded of Curtis Rist's Discover article in 1999 about how we'll never run out of oil. Hilariously, oil is now more than $100 a barrel.
More significant is the fact that gas hydrates concentrate 164 times the energy of the same amount of natural gas.
And gas hydrate fields are found in abundance under the coastal waters of every continent. Calculations suggest there's more energy in gas hydrates than in coal, oil and conventional gas combined.
Yet more reasons to hate Coke:
Dangerous levels of the known carcinogen cadmium have been found in the sludge produced from the plant in the southern state of Kerala.The BBC did their own analysis of the "fertilizer", and found out it was worthless.
The chemicals were traced in an investigation by BBC Radio 4's Face The Facts programme and prompted scientists to call for the practice to be halted immediately.
However, Vice-President of Coca-Cola in India, Sunil Gupta, denied the fertiliser posed any risk.
"We have scientific evidence to prove it is absolutely safe and we have never had any complaints," Mr Gupta said.
Monday, April 21, 2008
Virgins! If you support internet neutrality, Tania Derveaux wants to sleep with YOU! Furthermore, she'll do it on her own dime, and she's got a pretty nice rack. The terms of service are pretty good, too. Adobe, you should think about adopting them.
(P.S. - You should support internet neutrality anyway, even if you're not getting laid.)
(P.S. - You should support internet neutrality anyway, even if you're not getting laid.)
Flickr user Sean (Ajka_Hungary) posts a very powerful request from his step-father to please stop smoking.
Monday, April 14, 2008
Wired reports that brain scanners can now detect your free will. Freaky.
In a study published Sunday in Nature Neuroscience, researchers using brain scanners could predict people's decisions seven seconds before the test subjects were even aware of making them.
The decision studied -- whether to hit a button with one's left or right hand -- may not be representative of complicated choices that are more integrally tied to our sense of self-direction. Regardless, the findings raise profound questions about the nature of self and autonomy: How free is our will? Is conscious choice just an illusion?
Friday, April 04, 2008
Here's a fun little game that has you naming as many elements of the periodic table as you can in 15 minutes. An even better game, in my opinion, involved US presidents.
(Via Kottke)
(Via Kottke)
Accelerating Future has ten futuristic materials that seem more suited to science fiction than science fact. #9 on the list reminded me of this while my jaw was dropping:
"Transparent Aluminum?"
"That's the ticket laddie."
"Oh, it'd take years to figure out the dynamics of this matrix."
"But you'd be rich beyond the dreams of averice."
"So. Is it worth something ta ya...or should I just...punch up clear?"
Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
Sunday, March 30, 2008
I didn't really find Wired's Top Ten April Fools Pranks for Nerds that interesting, but the video they posted for #3 is hilarious! I would love to see the return of creative computer viruses, and not just a bunch of code that eats data. Come on, people, that's been done to death.
Tim Harford writes in Reason Magazine about why poor countries are poor. The short answer? A corrupt government creates corruption all the way down the line.
The corruption is not only unfair; it is also hugely wasteful. Gendarmes spend their time harassing travelers in return for modest returns. The costs are enormous. An entire police force is too busy extracting bribes to catch criminals. A four-hour trip takes five hours. Travelers take costly steps to protect themselves: carrying less money, traveling less often or at busier times of the day, bringing extra paperwork to help fend off attempts to extract bribes.It's a long article, but very informative. I really liked how he tied all the pieces together, and how surely the rot of bad government will reach into practically every aspect of its peoples' lives.
The blockades and crooked police officers comprise a particularly visible form of corruption, but there are metaphorical roadblocks throughout the Cameroonian economy. To set up a small business, an entrepreneur must spend on official fees nearly as much as the average Cameroonian makes in two years. To buy or sell property costs nearly a fifth of the property's value. To get the courts to enforce an unpaid invoice takes nearly two years, costs more than a third of the invoice's value, and requires 58 separate procedures. These ridiculous regulations are good news for the bureaucrats who enforce them. Every procedure is an opportunity to extract a bribe. The slower the standard processes, the greater the temptation to pay "speed money."
Jason Kottke has some interesting links to the New York Times and NPR on cooking with food from 99 cent stores -- including a cookbook!
To bypass the NYT registration, you may wish to use a service like BugMeNot.
To bypass the NYT registration, you may wish to use a service like BugMeNot.
CDNN ran a story on the sex life of the giant squid. And while it's interesting, it's interesting mostly for this comment here:
But having such a big penis does have one drawback: it seems that co-ordinating eight legs, two feeding tentacles and a huge penis, whilst fending off an irate female, is a bit too much to ask, and one of the two males stranded on the Spanish coast had accidentally injected himself with sperm packages in the legs and body. And this does not seem to have been an isolated incident since two of the eight males that had stranded in the north-east Atlantic before had also accidentally inseminated themselves.(Via BoingBoing.)
The Morning News has a great post that takes famous song lyrics and puts the words in alphabetical order. I've only done half so far, because it's fun and I want to devote a good amount of time to it.
5. 9 a all american amusement an and are at baby back be beach beyond bold bones born boulevard boys break broken but cages can ’cause chrome-wheeled comb come could ’cross day death die don’t down dream dreams drive drones drop engines everlasting everybody’s feels four friend from fuel-injected get girl girls glory go gonna gotta guard hair hands hard hemi-powered heroes hide highway highway’s how huddled i i’ll i’m if in is it it’s jammed just kids kiss know last-chance left legs let like line live lonely look love machines madness mansions me mirrors mist my n never night no of oh on one ooh out over palace park place power rap real really rearview ride rider rims rips rises road ’round run runaway sadness scared scream so someday soul sprung stark steppin’ strap streets suicide sun sweat that the their then there’s these this three through till to together tonight town tramps trap try two us velvet visions walk wanna we we’ll we’re wendy were when where while whoa wild will wire with wrap you young yourLike all good on teh intarwebs, it's from the delightfully kooky mind of Matt Baldwin. (Thanks, Tamara!)
Monday, March 17, 2008
I loves me some Star Wars parody. This magnificently awful (read: Sweded) version of A New Hope is a masterpiece! (via BoingBoing)
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Maximum PC employs a few audio "experts" to see if compressed MP3 files make a big difference to sound quality.
With the possible exception of the USB Key that survived a washing and drying cycle, no other Maximum PC Challenge has ever surprised us as much as this one. It’s downright humiliating, in fact, that in many cases, we were unable to tell the difference between an uncompressed track and one encoded at 160Kb/s, the bit rate most of us considered the absolute minimum acceptable for even portable players.They also come out pretty solidly in favour of variable bitrate encoding, which I'm sure is no big surprise to anyone.
Israelis are suing their government for laser cannons. It sounds like something out of science fiction, but there is a working laser cannon in storage in New Mexico, and the Israelis want it. The hell?! When did we get laser cannons?
Monday, March 10, 2008
A new study suggests that Daylight Savings Time is actually worse for the environment. Up yours, Bob Hughes. Now can we finally put this debate to rest?
"There is a reason we continue to get daylight savings under the rubric of energy conservation because as a policy, it costs individual consumers nothing and asks them to conserve nothing. So it's wildly popular," he says.
"Unfortunately, it's entirely ineffective."
Previous studies on daylight savings have had similar findings. But most have been based on simulation models, not concrete data. An exception was a study on the extension of daylight savings in two Australian territories for the 2000 Summer Olympic Games, which showed more electricity used.
"Unfortunately, it's entirely ineffective."
Previous studies on daylight savings have had similar findings. But most have been based on simulation models, not concrete data. An exception was a study on the extension of daylight savings in two Australian territories for the 2000 Summer Olympic Games, which showed more electricity used.
Monday, March 03, 2008
Discover lists 14 different distributed computing applications that use extra processor cycles for other purposes. I've been using the SETI@Home client for over 10 years, but there are other projects that are a bit more personal, like Folding@Home, FightAIDS@Home, and the Help Defeat Cancer Project.
BBC News has a brief eulogy for Netscape Navigator. I started using Mosaic early in 1994, and migrated to Netscape almost as soon as it was released. Those were heady times, where platform choice was less about using an efficient tool and more about being on the side of everything good and wholesome. It was a sad day when the mighty Netscape, who once stood toe-to-toe with Microsoft, was sold to AOL. We should have known that the good guys only win in the movies.
There's more on Netscape at Wikipedia.
There's more on Netscape at Wikipedia.
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Joe Mathlete Explains Maramduke

Marmaduke has finally died, thus completing the 2006 American Icon Yuletide Expiration Hat-Trick that James Brown and Gerald Ford kicked off several days ago. It remains uncertain whether he committed suicide, was murdered by his owner-girl (who did a fantastic job at making it look like an accident), or simply lost his balance in one of his frequent auto erotic asphyxiation binges.
Like any comic strip that reached its nadir about two decades ago but whose shambling bulk nevertheless marches on zombie-like through newspapers world-wide, Marmaduke is ripe for a send-up. Joe Mathlete combines just enough sarcasm, dry wit, and profane, disturbingly sexual content to make you remember how badly this sucks, and why doesn't God just let it die already. Now if he would only do the same for Family Circus, Garfield, and Dennis the Menace, he could probably quit his job. I'm sensing the beginning of a cottage industry here.
Link
Sony's Aibo is Returning

That's the rumour, at least. Aibo was always a neat looking toy -- maybe a little too cute, but hellishly robust in features: camera, visual recognition, wifi, voice recognition, and a solid AI. Now, according to the totally reputable Stuff magazine, Sony is going to give Aibo another chance and have it interface with your PS3 and PSP.
The old Aibo was totally drool-worthy for anyone with an interest in robotics -- the new Aibo, with redesigned, cooler body and proposed interface options, is even moreso. I mean, it's no voice-command R2-D2, but that's only because I have a real dog.
Link to story on Engadget
Link on Wikipedia to more Aibo sites
Splashback

This is one of my favourite games, and it's strange it didn't manage to get posted sooner. Maybe because I was never really any good at it, I don't know.
You start the game with 10 drops of liquid and a board filled with blobs. You can click in any square to add a drop of liquid to a blob. Too much liquid and the blob will explode, sending a drop in all four directions and adding an extra drop of liquid to your tank. The object is to clear all the blobs from the screen.
I find this game interesting because there's often a chance for good strategy, adding drops in such a way as to get the largest chain reaction. It's also fun to watch the screen clear as blob after blob explodes. I'm not sure about the whole alien and little girl thing, though. She's got this kind of knowing look on her face like we're down with something. Are we supposed to be down with the alien? I'm not. He's got a gut like my old man.
Link
Shuffle

In Shuffle, both you and your opponent start with a row of marbles, with the object being to knock your opponent's marbles off the board. Each round you win shortens your supply by one marble and moves you a step toward the center of the board. The first person to win four rounds wins the set.
Anyone good at pool will be good at this game. I'm not good at pool, and lasted only ten rounds before finally getting clobbered.
Link
Poloroid-o-nizer
Tuesday, December 25, 2007
Peanuts by Charles Bukowski
Rose and Camellia

You play Reiko, newly widowed and shunned from her home by the aristocratic members of the family. In order to secure her place in the house, she must defeat the other family members in a slap fight -- or what the game refers to as "the elegant art of feminine conflict".
The game is easy to play, but takes some time to get used to. Fortunately, it's also just silly enough to hold you attention, without being so silly as to lose credibility. I had great success on the Easy level; the harder levels require more patience than I was willing to put in.
Link (via Memepool)
Hypnotist Puts Man in Video Game
Thanks to the always delightful BoingBoing, I was reminded of an incredible video they'd posted about two years ago. In it a hypnotist named Derek Brown manages to hypnotize a man playing a video game about shooting zombies. He's then moved across the street to a warehouse set up to look just like the game he was playing -- including roaming undead. The result is that the man thinks he's been put in the game.
Like Cory, I don't know if this is real or not, but the man looks horrified enough to make me believe it's the real deal. It's certainly a great video either way.
Link to video
Link to BoingBoing post about video
Like Cory, I don't know if this is real or not, but the man looks horrified enough to make me believe it's the real deal. It's certainly a great video either way.
Link to video
Link to BoingBoing post about video
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Picnik

Picnik is one of the internet's coolest utilities. I didn't think I'd end up using it too often when I first heard about it, but I end up using it several times a week. It's just too convenient and too cool not to.
Picnik is a photo editing utility. The program itself is all flash-based, and the interface is smooth, fun, and very easy to grasp. It's not really geared toward top-end photoshop users, but it's more than sufficient for minor photo editing, and there's lots of room for novices to expand into. They're also adding more features all the time, so I suspect any digital scrapbookers out there might also find this to be very valuable.
All the regular editing features are provided, like resizing, cropping, levels, and colour adjustments. There's also a "pro" account you can upgrade to for $25/year which adds access to all kinds of fonts, shapes, photo frames, and digital effects like turning your photo into a pencil sketch and creating HDR images. Again, probably not really worth it to the gearheads, but way, way worth it if you're looking to ramp up the fun level of your image editing.
There's way too much great stuff about the site to mention here. But for me, the true convenience is how it can access your photos from Flickr, Webshots, Picassa, Photobucket, and even Facebook -- so you can load, edit, and save all through the Picnik interface, without having to download anything. And that's how it should be.
Link to Picnik
Vector Magic

Vector Magic is an awesome utility developed at Stanford that turns ordinary bitmapped photos or line art into vector graphics. It's fast, it's free, and it apparently outperforms Adobe Live Trace and Corel PowerTRACE -- which also makes it wicked.
You can see pretty much what it's capable of in the picture above. There are some more great samples to view on the Vector Magic site. The bitmap I played with didn't come out perfectly, but it was pretty darn close, and any modifications it needed could be done easily in Illustrator. This is a really handy site for anyone doing a lot of desktop publishing. I'm looking forward to playing with it as the software develops.
Link to Vector Magic
Monday, December 10, 2007
Word to Your....

You gotta know that a site featuring a giant caricature of Vanilla Ice is going to have some good stuff on it.
It's a collection of funny/goofy/strange pictures with the phrase "Word to your..." written on them. They're funny because the phrase overstates the obvious. Kind of like this description.
Anyway, I think this one here with Virgil, Wrestling Superstar is my favourite.
Link
Proxy.org
I've been looking for a good anonymous proxy for some time now. Mostly so I could watch streaming video of Grey's Anatomy online. But it turns out proxies have another use -- and this is protecting your privacy.
You may not realize it, but websites capture a lot of information about who's visiting them. There may be times, such as when you're surfing from work or some other registered domain, when you don't want people to be able to trace your referrer or your IP address. You should be using an anonymous proxy at times like these.
Proxy.org is a site that sends any URL you enter through an anonymous proxy, so you can surf those sites with confidence. It chooses a proxy randomly from a list of over 4000 proxies; unfortunately, quality does vary a little, so you may not be able to post to someone's blog or run scripts through the proxy you're given. In those cases, I recommend hitting the service a few times until you get a good proxy assigned to you. Or -- what the hell -- find a proxy you like and stay with it!
Link to Proxy.org
You may not realize it, but websites capture a lot of information about who's visiting them. There may be times, such as when you're surfing from work or some other registered domain, when you don't want people to be able to trace your referrer or your IP address. You should be using an anonymous proxy at times like these.
Proxy.org is a site that sends any URL you enter through an anonymous proxy, so you can surf those sites with confidence. It chooses a proxy randomly from a list of over 4000 proxies; unfortunately, quality does vary a little, so you may not be able to post to someone's blog or run scripts through the proxy you're given. In those cases, I recommend hitting the service a few times until you get a good proxy assigned to you. Or -- what the hell -- find a proxy you like and stay with it!
Link to Proxy.org
Friday, November 16, 2007
Multibabel
Lost in Translation is a fun little tool, held together with a Perl script and powered by Altavista's Babelfish translator. It takes the text you enter and translates it through several languages before returning it to English.
It's described on the site as the game of Telephone, but I think it's a lot more like Engrish. The one big fault is that sometimes a word will be translated which is not easily translated back, so you will end up with foreign language artifacts in your final English text.
Some examples:
Link to Babelfish
It's described on the site as the game of Telephone, but I think it's a lot more like Engrish. The one big fault is that sometimes a word will be translated which is not easily translated back, so you will end up with foreign language artifacts in your final English text.
Some examples:
- I think we're alone now, there doesn't seem to be anyone around. translates to Nontask that we are only hour, I look like here, all same that one to be around.
- She's buying a stairway to heaven. translates to Stairs of purchase one with the sky.
- You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave. translates to They can control, when it appreciates, but you cannot never go.
Link to Babelfish
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Calvin and Hobbes

Is there anything better than a complete listing of Calvin and Hobbes cartoons?
How about a comic strip search engine so you can find the exact strip you're looking for?
Link to Calvin and Hobbes archive
Link to Calvin and Hobbes Extensive Strip Search (C.H.E.S.S)
Saturday, July 28, 2007
True Porn Clerk Stories
As soon as I start sharing websites with friends, I ought to start putting them up here.
The prologue to this website says that the stories were collected starting in 2002. It seems to me that I learned about it before then, but even a usenet search doesn't pull up anything prior to 2002.
Anyway. Some good writing here, interesting insights, and a great read.
Link
The prologue to this website says that the stories were collected starting in 2002. It seems to me that I learned about it before then, but even a usenet search doesn't pull up anything prior to 2002.
Anyway. Some good writing here, interesting insights, and a great read.
This is the one porn impulse that I honestly don't get. (Oh, all right. I don't get peeing on each other or hurting each other, but I think I understand intellectually how one might get there.) I don't understand the need to degrade someone. But that need is definitely, sadly out there. One of our best-renting titles of long standing is called Grudge Fuck.* It rents right back out as soon as we can replace the tag. Every time.
Much as I hate to say it, it seems to be a straight guy thing.
There's definitely a Captain Kirk-style exploration up and down the imaginary social ladder in both the straight and gay sections. In addition to the dozens of variations on (oddly - or sadly) still taboo interracial pairings, we have More Dirty Debutantes and White Trash Whore on the straight side, Straight off the Street and The Other Side of Aspen on the gay side. You can fuck rich or fuck poor on either side of the invisible barrier between the straight and gay sections. But you can only fuck lesser in straight.
I think it's because there's not enough otherness in gay porn. There's still bondage and S&M stuff, plenty of dominance and submission, but even the most submissive sub is still a man just like the dom, just like the viewer. How much separation can there be?
Much as I hate to say it, it seems to be a straight guy thing.
There's definitely a Captain Kirk-style exploration up and down the imaginary social ladder in both the straight and gay sections. In addition to the dozens of variations on (oddly - or sadly) still taboo interracial pairings, we have More Dirty Debutantes and White Trash Whore on the straight side, Straight off the Street and The Other Side of Aspen on the gay side. You can fuck rich or fuck poor on either side of the invisible barrier between the straight and gay sections. But you can only fuck lesser in straight.
I think it's because there's not enough otherness in gay porn. There's still bondage and S&M stuff, plenty of dominance and submission, but even the most submissive sub is still a man just like the dom, just like the viewer. How much separation can there be?
Link
Thursday, July 12, 2007
50 States Game

While it isn't the most amusing game in the world, it's good to reference every now and then, just to keep my US geography fresh.
Link
Guess-the-Google

There are some tricky ones sometimes, but the game is really as easy as it seems. It's also a lot more addictive than it seems. Be prepared to spend a lot of time here.
Link
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Have a Slogan

If you're really looking for a slogan for something, I suggest you bounce on over to Sloganizer. It's a lot more serious and a lot less fun, unless you sloganize a word like poop, or assholes.
Link to Have a Slogan
Link to Sloganizer
Sunday, May 27, 2007
The Juggernaut, Bitch!

The video starts to drag about four and-a-half minutes in, so you may wish to stop it there and read about the ending on Wikipedia.
Link to Juggernaut, Bitch video
Link to Juggernaut, Bitch on Wikipedia
* Those who know me know this to be a long-time career option
Strangest Disaster of the 20th Centruy
Things like this story is what this blog was originally about.
I used to do a remaindered link section on my other blog on Sundays, where I'd round up the interesting links I wanted to share with people. I do a lot of surfing: more than any of my friends, and, some of them tell me, more than anyone they know. Because of this, I end up with a lot of interesting sites that I want to share with people. And because I don't do e-mail forwards, it all led to this.
Anyway.
This is a great story about a natural disaster that resulted in the death of nearly 1,800 humans and thousands of animals. I'm not going to say what it is here, because the story is very well-written; but it's not earthquakes, floods, tsunamis, viruses, or exploding tanks of molasses (which was my original guess on what the disaster was). It's even stranger than when Lake Peigneur got sucked into that salt mine (and if you're not going to read about it, at least watch the video)!
Link
I used to do a remaindered link section on my other blog on Sundays, where I'd round up the interesting links I wanted to share with people. I do a lot of surfing: more than any of my friends, and, some of them tell me, more than anyone they know. Because of this, I end up with a lot of interesting sites that I want to share with people. And because I don't do e-mail forwards, it all led to this.
Anyway.
This is a great story about a natural disaster that resulted in the death of nearly 1,800 humans and thousands of animals. I'm not going to say what it is here, because the story is very well-written; but it's not earthquakes, floods, tsunamis, viruses, or exploding tanks of molasses (which was my original guess on what the disaster was). It's even stranger than when Lake Peigneur got sucked into that salt mine (and if you're not going to read about it, at least watch the video)!
Link
LOLPresidents!!1one

It probably helps the humour if you're already familiar with (and enjoy) LOLCats, but there are still some great pictures there even if you're not a fan.
Link to LOLPresidents
Bonus: Link to LOLCats site I Can Has Cheezburger
Bonus: Link to LOLCat Builder
Desktop Tower Defense

Your goal is to arrange your defenses to prevent the Creeps from crossing the screen. You start with a limited amount of money, but you get more with each Creep you kill. You get to register your name if you survive 50 levels. If you survive 50 levels.
Link
Juggler

Not as much fun as juggling in real life, but easier to do at your desk.
Link (via Darren Barefoot)
Monday, January 08, 2007
Scott Adams's Blog
Scott Adams is well known for drawing Dilbert, but he also keeps a blog. Two posts in particular that are worth reading are how he's "In Over [his] Head" and "Good News Day", when he talks about losing his ability to speak. He's an interesting guy. You should also check out the comments on that speech one just to keep some perspective on what he went through.
Link to In Over My Head
Link to Good News Day
Link to In Over My Head
Link to Good News Day
Friday, January 05, 2007
Extreme Resolution Photography

xRes is a consortium of digital artists dedicated to exploring the creative opportunities available through gigapixel digital photography. And this site is extremely cool: in addition to some absolutely beautiful photography, they also have some QTVRs of gorgeous panoramas, and my favourite part, incredibly high resolution pictures you can actually pan around and zoom in on. The picture above is from one of those: a high resolution shot of Chaco Canyon in New Mexico. If you look closely at the bottom of the left picture, you can just make out two specks that turn out to be the people pictured on the right side.
The photos are all lovely, but the real interest is the incredible detail captured in these shots.
Link
Cool Stop-Motion Video

As the always link-worthy BoingBoing showed in a subsequent post, Tony vs. Paul is not breaking any new ground. But the video is very well done with a number of jaw-dropping moments -- that is, if your jaw's not already dropped by the staggering amount of work that went into this. The part where Tony briefly levitates over the swimming pool is amazing!
Also of interest is that the video linked to on BoingBoing wasn't the one posted by Tetricide, the video's creator. It looks like there's some furor over this in the comments, but so far it doesn't look like BoingBoing has issued a correction.
Link
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