Author: Serkadis

  • In the Village, the Idiots are turning on each other

    Oh dear, for a couple weeks Dana Milbank and company have been writing pieces of how poor, sweet, innocent Rahm Emanuel cannot get the President to follow Rahm’s brilliant post-hoc advice. The Village shook.

    And now it shakes back as Matlock himself unleashes Broderian outrage, to impose social order like Sally Quinn defending her crab puffs from Roger Ailes.


    Emanuel, who left a leadership post in the House to serve his fellow Chicagoan, Obama, has worked loyally for the president and is not suspected personally by his colleagues of inspiring these Post pieces.

    But, as one White House staffer said to me, “Rahm likes to win,” and when the losses began to pile up, he probably vented his frustrations to some of his old pals in Congress. It’s clear that some of them are talking to the press.

    Oh, I’m sure no one would ever “suspect” Rahm of leaking stuff to the press, to make Rahm Emanuel look better, that would be f***ing retarded. It’s nice to see passive aggressiveness remains entrenched within the 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue — for 8 years I missed the passivity.

    I will not take sides in a Broder vs. Milbank battle, other than to cheer on the war. But there is a point in Broder’s column when you cannot help but utter the statement, “WELL THAT’S RICH”:

    From too many years of covering politics, I have come to believe as Axiom One that the absolute worst advice politicians ever receive comes from journalists who fancy themselves great campaign strategists.

    That Broder, he’s the comeback kid.


  • Website looks at pyramid building solutions

    PRWeb

    A new web page was created to reveal the secret of the pyramid builders. For centuries nobody knew how the Egyptians could lift blocs of several tons before steel was ever invented. The idea was simple but it took centuries to find it. The mystery may be solved by the combination of a rope and 3 pulleys. Drawings and all the details are available at www.pyramind.biz.

    The Great Pyramid of Giza used more than 2 million blocs of 2.5 tons each and that was done in 23 years. That means that every few minutes another bloc was cut out of the quarry, transported to the site, lifted and put into place. How could the Egyptians have done it?

    Most egyptologists agree that the ramp is not a satisfactory solution. Hollywood’s version with slaves and whips is even worse. Ramps may be justified for small buildings but becomes rapidly unpractical as the height of the pyramid increases. Slaves and whips were never used. It is well established today that the work was done by Egyptians who were well fed by Pharaoh and compensated for their labor.

    www.pyramind.biz let’s visitors choose the weight of the stone, the height of the pyramid and how hard somebody can pull on a rope…. The ‘3Wheel Device’ will figure out how many men will be needed and how long it will take.

  • Google Gets Starred Results

    Google is introducing a new way of personalizing search results, which should really come in handy for those who usually do a search instead of typing a URL to get to a site. With the new search ‘stars,’ users will be able to save the results they preferred for future reference, in a way bookmarking them so that they show up at the top of the results whenever they ma… (read more)

  • RealNetworks Agrees To Pay $4.5 Million In Legal Fees To Hollywood Over RealDVD; Gives Up

    We still can’t quite understand Hollywood’s crusade against RealNetworks over its RealDVD offering. The software presented a way for DVD owners to backup their DVDs. It didn’t allow for distribution — unlike pretty much every other ripping software. In fact, Real basically put a new DRM around each backup copy. Personally, this seemed to make the product less useful, but the MPAA still sued RealNetworks for daring to let people backup their movies, and amazingly won nearly every aspect of the lawsuit. The judge (the same one who shut down Napster, by the way) had already banned the sale of RealDVD, and now she’s agreed to a settlement that basically involves RealNetworks conceding every point, and paying $4.5 million to Hollywood to cover legal fees. It’s a full capitulation.

    So what did Hollywood accomplish here? It shut down a software product that allows people to backup the DVDs they legally own — not to distribute them. In the meantime, of course, there are a bunch of DVD ripping programs out there that have no such restrictions. In other words, Hollywood’s brilliant legal strategists just pushed anyone who wants to back up their movies to use solutions that make it easier for them to share those movies with others. It just made sure that such products will always be underground, rather than where the industry can actually work together with them. Congrats, guys, for killing yet another tech product you didn’t like, just because it made your products more valuable.

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  • Graphene Boron Quilt

    What is happening is graphene research is continuing to gallop along as this piece shows.  In recent weeks we have also seen an item on graphene ribbons.  Obviously we are mastering the art of manufacturing these materials at a fast pace.
    The payoff is obvious as graphene is giving us the toolkit in the same way silica became the indispensible component of electronics for the past fifty years.  Now we are laying down layers of atoms on command almost.
    There is still much to do but the goal posts are very much in sight.
    The derived science coming out of this will keep folks busy for a long time.  The good news is that we have plenty of teams to work on it and I am sure the cost of participation is dropping quickly.
    The pending materials revolution is based on managing layers of atoms.  That is now happening with a vengeance,  We are still a long way from fabricating sheets with multiple layers of exotic elements and alloys, but we are now making the tools.
    Public release date: 1-Mar-2010

    Contact: David Ruth

    Rice researchers make graphene hybrid

    One-atom-thick sheet offers new microelectronic possibilities

    Rice University researchers have found a way to stitch graphene and hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) into a two-dimensional quilt that offers new paths of exploration for materials scientists.

    The technique has implications for application of graphene materials in microelectronics that scale well below the limitations of silicon determined by Moore‘s Law.

    New research from the lab of Pulickel Ajayan, Rice’s Benjamin M. and Mary Greenwood Anderson Professor in Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science and of chemistry, demonstrates a way to achieve fine control in the creation of such hybrid, 2-D structures.

    Layers of h-BN a single atom thick have the same lattice structure as graphene, but electrically the materials are at opposite ends of the spectrum: h-BN is an insulator, whereas graphene, the single-atom-layer form of carbon, is highly conductive. The ability to assemble them into a single lattice could lead to a rich variety of 2-D structures with electric properties ranging from metallic conductor to semiconductor to insulator.

    Because graphene is a conductor and h-BN is an insulator, the proportion of one to the other determines how well this new material conducts electrons. Lijie Ci and Li Song, both postdoctoral research scientists in Ajayan’s lab, found that by putting down domains of h-BN and carbon via chemical vapor deposition (CVD), they were able to control the ratio of materials in the film that resulted.

    Ci and Song are primary authors of a paper about the work that appeared in the online edition of Nature Materials this week.

    Ajayan said the discovery is thrilling for a materials scientist.

    “From a graphene perspective, it now gives us an opportunity to explore band-gap engineering in two-dimensional layered systems,” he said. “The whole phase diagram of boron, carbon and nitrogen is fascinating, unexplored and offers a great playground for materials scientists.

    “This is only the first instance showing that these structures can indeed be grown in 2-D like graphene,” Ajayan said. “I think the whole new field will be exciting for basic physics and electro-optical applications.”

    Graphene has been the subject of intense study in recent years for its high conductivity and the possibility of manipulating it on scales that go well below the theoretical limits for silicon circuitry. A layer of graphene is a hexagonal lattice of carbon atoms. In bulk, it’s called graphite, the stuff of pencil lead. Graphene was first isolated in 2004 by British scientists who used Scotch tape to pull single-atom layers from graphite.

    “Graphene is a very hot material right now,” said Song, who had teamed with Ci to investigate doping graphene with various materials to determine its semiconducting properties. Knowing that both boron and nitrogen had already been used in doping bulk graphite, they decided to try cooking it via CVD onto a copper base.

    Structurally, h-BN is the same as graphene, a hexagon-shaped lattice of carbon atoms that looks like chicken wire. Ci and Song found that through CVD, graphene and h-BN merged into a single atomic sheet, with pools of h-BN breaking up the carbon matrix.

    The critical factor for electronic materials is the band gap, which must be tuned in a controlled manner for applications. Graphene is a zero-gap material, but ways have been proposed to tailor this gap by patterning it into nanoscale strips and doping it with other elements.

    Ci and Song took a different approach through CVD, controlling the ratio of carbon to h-BN over a large, useful range.

    It remains challenging to produce single layers of the hybrid material, as most lab-grown films contain two or three layers. The researchers also cannot yet control the placement of h-BN pools in a single sheet or the rotational angles between layers – but they’re working on it.

    In fact, having multiple layers of the hybrid at various angles creates even more possibilities, they said. “For pure graphene, this rotation will affect the electronic properties,” said Ci, who moved with Ajayan’s lab from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute to Houston in 2007.

    The researchers are considering producing these materials on industrial-scale wafers. Graphene sheets several inches wide have already been synthesized in other labs, Ci said. And because graphene can be lithographically patterned and cut into shapes, the new material has great potential to be fabricated into useful devices with controllable electrical properties.

    Co-authors on the paper with Ci, Song and Ajayan are visiting students Deep Jariwala and Yongjie Li and visiting professor Anchal Srivastava, all at Rice; Chuanhong Jin of the Nanotube Research Center, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology in Tsukuba, Japan; Dangxin Wu, Z.F. Wang and Feng Liu of the Department of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Utah; Kevin Storr of the Department of Physics at Prairie View A&M University; and Luis Balicas of the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory in Tallahassee, Fla.

    Related materials:

    View the paper at:


    An image is available at:


    Image credit: Rice University/Ajayan Lab

    Image caption: A one-atom-thick layer of a graphene and boron nitride hybrid is visible to the naked eye when deposited on a glass slide. Researchers are able to achieve fine control of the new material’s conductivity.
  • NASA Finds 600 Million Tons Lunar Ice

    In terms of establishing a human presence on the moon, this is good news and not for the obvious need for a water supply.  Water is perfect for building radiation hardened habitats.  It only needs a source of energy in order to be sprayed on the inside of an inflated shell and built up to a safe thickness able to absorb most if not all incoming solar radiation.
    Since we will need such a source of energy long before we get serious up there, it should be no problem at the time and place.
    Without been too cute we can build an array of hardened habitats using simple materials brought out of Earth.  This is sufficiently cost effective that it is comparatively cheap and easy.  One inflates a simple dome and then sprays water onto the inner surface.  Once thick enough, one then sprays a layer of polyurethane foam on top of the ice to fully insolate the ice from inside heat.
    We should be able to do the exact same thing on Mars.
    It does not fit out the habitats but it surely provides a safe refuge that can then be built out internally, as materials arrive.
    I believe that ice at near absolute zero has good integrity and will be able to resist plastic deformation.  If that is not true it will be necessary to design remedies and work around the deformation.  A stand alone dome should still hold up for months if not years even when operating temperature is within fifty degrees of freezing.  Any fracturing should be self healing and internal humidity will easily supply water to recover losses due to sublimation.  The real trick is to figure out now to fit the insulation in.
    NASA Radar Finds Ice Deposits at Moon’s North Pole
    Additional evidence of water activity on moon



    Mini-SAR map of the Circular Polarization Ratio (CPR) of the north pole of the Moon. Fresh, “normal” craters (red circles) show high values of CPR inside and outside their rims. This is consistent with the distribution of rocks and ejected blocks around fresh impact features, indicating that the high CPR here is surface scattering. The “anomalous” craters (green circles) have high CPR within, but not outside their rims. Their interiors are also in permanent sun shadow. These relations are consistent with the high CPR in this case being caused by water ice, which is only stable in the polar dark cold traps. We estimate over 600 million cubic meters (1 cubic meter = 1 metric ton) of water in these features
    Using data from a NASA radar that flew aboard India‘s Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft, scientists have detected ice deposits near the moon’s north pole. NASA’s Mini-SAR instrument, a lightweight, synthetic aperture radar, found more than 40 small craters with water ice. The craters range in size from 1 to 9 miles (2 to15 km) in diameter. Although the total amount of ice depends on its thickness in each crater, it’s estimated there could be at least 1.3 trillion pounds (600 million metric tons) of water ice.
    The Mini-SAR has imaged many of the permanently shadowed regions that exist at both poles of the Moons. These dark areas are extremely cold and it has been hypothesized that volatile material, including water ice, could be present in quantity here.  The main science object of the Mini-SAR experiment is to map and characterize any deposits that exist.  
    Mini-SAR is a lightweight (less than 10 kg) imaging radar.  It uses the polarization properties of reflected radio waves to characterize surface properties.  Mini-SAR sends pulses of radar that are left-circular polarized.  Typical planetary surfaces reverse the polarization during the reflection of radio waves, so that normal echoes from Mini-SAR are right circular polarized.  The ratio of received power in the same sense transmitted (left circular) to the opposite sense (right circular) is called the circular polarization ratio (CPR).  Most of the Moon has low CPR, meaning that the reversal of polarization is the norm, but some targets have high CPR.  These include very rough, fresh surfaces (such as a young, fresh crater) and ice, which is transparent to radio energy and multiply scatters the pulses, leading to an enhancement in same sense reflections and hence, high CPR.  CPR is not uniquely diagnostic of either roughness or ice; the science team must take into account the environment of the occurrences of high CPR signal to interpret its cause.
    View a Larger version of the fresh crater CPR (537KB)

    The fresh impact crater Main L (14 km diameter), which shows high CPR inside and outside its rim. SC is the “same sense, circular” polarization; CPR is “circular polarization ratio.” The histograms at right show that the high CPR values within (red line) and outside the crater rim (green line) are nearly identical.
    Numerous craters near the poles of the Moon have interiors that are in permanent sun shadow.  These areas are very cold and water ice is stable there essentially indefinitely.  Fresh craters show high degrees of surface roughness (high CPR) both inside and outside the crater rim, caused by sharp rocks and block fields that are distributed over the entire crater area.  However, Mini-SAR has found craters near the north pole that have high CPR inside, but not outside their rims.  This relation suggests that the high CPR is not caused by roughness, but by some material that is restricted within the interiors of these craters.  We interpret this relation as consistent with water ice present in these craters.  The ice must be relatively pure and at least a couple of meters thick to give this signature.
    View a Larger version of the Anomalous Polar Crater (627KB)

    An “anomalous” crater on the floor of Rozhdestvensky, near the north pole of the Moon. This feature shows high CPR within the crater rim, but low CPR outside, suggesting that roughness (which occurs throughout a fresh crater) is not the cause of the elevated CPR. This feature’s interior is in permanent sun shadow. SC stands for “same sense, circular”, OC stands for “opposite sense, circular” and CPR is the “circular polarization ratio.” The histogram of CPR values clearly shows that interior points (red line) have higher CPR values than those outside the crater rim (green line).
    The estimated amount of water ice potentially present is comparable to the quantity estimated solely from the previous mission of Lunar Prospector’s neutron data (several hundred million metric tons.)  The variation in the estimates between Mini-SAR and the Lunar Prospector’s  neutron spectrometer is due to the fact that it only measures to depths of about one-half meter, so it would underestimate the total quantity of water ice present.  At least some of the polar ice is mixed with lunar soil and thus, invisible to our radar.
    “The emerging picture from the multiple measurements and resulting data of the instruments on lunar missions indicates that water creation, migration, deposition and retention are occurring on the moon,” said Paul Spudis, principal investigator of the Mini-SAR experiment at the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston. “The new discoveries show the moon is an even more interesting and attractive scientific, exploration and operational destination than people had previously thought.”
    “After analyzing the data, our science team determined a strong indication of water ice, a finding which will give future missions a new target to further explore and exploit,” said Jason Crusan, program executive for the Mini-RF Program for NASA’s Space Operations Mission Directorate in Washington.
    The Mini-SAR’s findings are being published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters. The results are consistent with recent findings of other NASA instruments and add to the growing scientific understanding of the multiple forms of water found on the moon. The agency’s Moon Mineralogy Mapper discovered water molecules in the moon’s polar regions, while water vapor was detected by NASA’s Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite, or LCROSS.
    Mini-SAR and Moon Mineralogy Mapper are two of 11 instruments on the Indian Space Research Organization’s Chandrayaan-1. The Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md., performed the final integration and testing on Mini-SAR. It was developed and built by the Naval Air Warfare Center in China Lake, Calif., and several other commercial and government contributors.
    For more information about Chandrayaan-1, visit:
  • Cooking Shaped Human Development

    It has been clear for a long time that the advent of cooking was the necessary change that brought about modern humanity.  This item spells out the details for us.
    The pre digestion of food promoted and accommodated the advent of the infantile facial structures that make up the modern human.  The process began at least 1.8 million years ago and fits in with what we know of the advent of the human use of fire.  This allowed an accelerated development of fire using primates that fits normal breeding selection.  Less gut and more brain and accommodating changes in the jaw is obvious.
    The larger brain eventually supported a larger social group most likely in response to a large resource base that necessitated communal living.  I have suggested that this naturally occurred on the shores of the Indonesian archipelago and also encouraged adaption to aquatic conditions.
    It is very easy to use fire to prepare foods.  Yes one can roast a chunk of meat over a fire it one is in a hurry, but more likely raw meat can be simply gulped down.  More generally, one creates a water holding device, even with a skin set in sand and use hot stones to keep the water boiling.  Everything goes into this stew.
    The pots got better, but all hunter gatherers worked toward the nightly stew pot to the present.
    The only surprise is just how early this all began.  Modern humanity emerged as homo sapien sapien a mere hundred thousand or so years ago.  The change then was the increase in his social world which jumped from a band of twenty to a village of at least 150 to 200.  All the other changes had as much as two million years to develop, though I suspect the full emergence of modern man took half a million years in Indonesia.
    Did the discovery of cooking make us human?
    By Clare Kingston 

    Learning to cook created ‘big brains’
    Cooking is something we all take for granted but a new theory suggests that if we had not learned to cook food, not only would we still look like chimps but, like them, we would also be compelled to spend most of the day chewing.
    Without cooking, an average person would have to eat around five kilos of raw food to get enough calories to survive.
    The daily mountain of fruit and vegetables would mean a six-hour chewing marathon.
    It is already accepted that the introduction of meat into our ancestors’ diet caused their brains to grow and their intelligence to increase.
    Meat – a more concentrated form of energy – not only meant bigger brains for our ancestors, but also an end to the need to devote nearly all their time to foraging to maintain energy levels.
    As a consequence, more time was available for social structure to develop.
    ‘Accident’
    Harvard Professor Richard Wrangham believes there is more to it than simply discovering meat.
    He thinks that it is not so much a change in the ingredients of our diet, but the way in which we prepare them that has caused the radical evolution of our species. “I think cooking is arguably the biggest increase in the quality of the diet in the whole of the history of life,” he says. “Our ancestors most probably dropped food in fire accidently. They would have found it was delicious and that set us off on a whole new direction.”
    To understand how and when our bodies changed, we need to take a closer look at what our ancestors ate by studying the fossil records.
    Our earliest ancestor was the ape-like Australopithecus.
    Australopithecus had a large belly containing a big large-intestine, essential to digest the robust plant matter, and had large, flat teeth which it used for grinding and crushing tough vegetation.
    None the less, it was Australopithecus that moved out of the trees and onto the African savannah, and started to eat the animals that grazed there.
    And it was this change of habitat, lifestyle and diet that also prompted major changes in anatomy.
    Bigger brain
    The eating of meat ties in with an evolutionary shift 2.3 million years ago resulting in
    more human-looking ancestor with sharper teeth and a 30% bigger brain, called Homo habilis.
    The most momentous shift however, happened 1.8 million years ago when Homo erectus – our first “truly human” ancestor arrived on the scene.
    Homo erectus had an even bigger brain, smaller jaws and teeth.
    Erectus also had a similar body shape to us. Shorter arms and longer legs appeared, and gone was the large vegetable-processing gut, meaning that Erectus could not only walk upright, but could also run.
    He was cleverer and faster, and – according to Professor Wrangham – he had learned
    how to cook.
    “Cooking made our guts smaller,” he says. “Once we cooked our food, we didn’t need big guts.
    “They’re costly in terms of energy. Individuals that were born with small guts were able to save energy, have more babies and survive better.”
    Professor Peter Wheeler from Liverpool John Moores University and his colleague, Leslie Aiello, think it was this change in our digestive system that specifically allowed our brains to get larger.
    Energy transfer
    Cooking food breaks down its cells, meaning that our stomachs need to do less work to liberate the nutrients our bodies need.
    This, says Wheeler, “freed up energy which could then be used to power a larger brain. The increase in brain-size mirrors the reduction in the size of the gut.”
    Significantly Wheeler and Aiello found that the reduction in the size of our digestive system was exactly the same amount that our brains grew by – 20%.
    Professor Stephen Secor at the University of Alabama found that not only does cooked food release more energy, but the body uses less energy in digesting it.
    He uses pythons as a model for digestion as they stay still for up to six days while digesting a meal. This makes them the perfect model as the only energy they expend is on digestion.
    His research shows that pythons use 24% less energy digesting cooked meat, compared with raw.
    So being human might all be down to energy.
    Cooking is essentially a form of pre-digestion, which has transferred energy use from our guts to our brains.
    According to Professors Wheeler and Wrangham and their colleagues, it is no coincidence that humans – the cleverest species on earth – are also the only species that cooks.
    Horizon: Did Cooking Make Us Human? will be shown on Tuesday, 2 March 2010, at 2100 GMT on BBC Two. It will be available for seven days after that from the BBC iPlayer
  • Mitac Mio Moov 380 features Win CE 6.0, WIMAX and keyboard carry-case

    Mitac has shown off its 7 inch MID which runs Windows CE 6.0 R3.  The screen is a capacitive WVGA number, and runs a custom user interface. The software features flash support and the hardware supports WIFI, HSDPA and and DVB-T and WiMAX.

    Most interesting is this carry-case which transforms the device into a smartbook, an accessory which I wish the HTC HD2 had.

    mio_moov380_keyboardThe device supports H.264, H.263, WM9/VC1, DivX, MPEG4, MOV video and can output this via the built-in HDMI port at up to 720p.

    The full specs are below:

    • Processor — 600MHz
    • Memory — 512MB of RAM and 4GB or 8GB of flash storage
    • Expansion — microSD slot
    • Display — seven-inch capacitive touchscreen with 800 x 480 pixel resolution
    • Wireless:
      • WLAN — 802.11b/g
      • WAN — 3.5G, WiMAX (optional)
      • GPS (optional)
      • DVB-T receiver
    • Other I/O:
      • mini-USB 2.0
      • Headphone jack
      • HDMI
    • Battery — 2300mAh; life n/s
    • Dimensions — 8.03 x 4.37 x 0.56 inches (204 x 111 x 14.35mm)
    • Weight — 15.69 ounces (445g)

    Read much more about this interesting device at WindowsforDevices here.

  • IW’s former heads file suit against Activision

    We now have more information as regards to the sudden departure of Infinity Ward heads Vince Zampella and Jason West. After they’ve been sacked by Activision, they’re now gearing up for battle in court, slapping the publisher

  • Is The Commerce Department Really Ready To Regulate The Internet?

    Larry Strickling, the head of the National Telecommunications and Information Agency (a division of the Department of Commerce), gave a speech last week where he outlined, in broad strokes, a vision for “Internet Policy 3.0”, which suggested a much more hands-on approach to regulating the internet. This got some attention online, with some claiming that the US was “rescinding” its “leave internet alone policy.” That may be a stretch from what was actually said, but a lot of people are wondering what this really means. What Strickling was really talking about was rethinking the general policy towards some of the bigger internet challenges.

    In his mind, “Internet Policy 3.0” would be about ensuring users of the Internet are able to trust others that they deal with. This is certainly an issue to be dealt with. And he then lists out five areas where such concerns should take precedence: Privacy, Child Protection and Freedom of Expression, Cybersecurity, Copyright and Internet Governance. Obviously, I’m not convinced that things like copyright really need much more government intervention (there’s been plenty, thank you very much), but some of the other ones are interesting issues where you could see a government role.

    The problem, of course, is what happens when you actually open these up to regulatory interference. Suddenly, they become political footballs. We’ve seen this with copyright, where it’s become a case of regulatory capture — laws are pushed to protect entrenched interests, rather than to support what copyright is supposed to do (promoting the progress).

    Rather than adopting some of the more hysterical responses to this speech, the CDT put out a well-thought-out response, that suggests that Strickling hopefully misspoke, or really meant to say something slightly different, along the lines of admitting that there are real policy issues impacting the internet, and the government has always needed to deal with those challenges. But, in doing so, it may need to rethink how it approaches some of those issues.

    Indeed, in reading the speech, it doesn’t sound like he’s really pushing for a change towards suddenly massively regulating the internet. Instead, I read it as him realizing that these issues — which, for the most part, the government is already active in regulating — now present some different challenges due to the nature of what’s happening on line. Given that, the US needs to think carefully through its policies and how they impact the internet. At least, I hope that’s what he meant.

    While there are certainly problems online, opening them up directly to regulatory control risks turning them into tools of special interests, rather than letting things develop in the most efficient manner. There are risks and dangers online, but if there needs to be any policy towards online activities, it should use a very light touch.

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  • Insomniac: We havemore than just one game cooking

    Last January, the Internet was abuzz as Insomniac posted a job listing for a FX artist for their new, unrevealed PS3 game. And while it’s got everyone hyper and excited with the guess that it’s for Resistance

  • Climate snow jobs by Peter Foster, National Post

    Article Tags: Peter Foster

    Snow in the east, no snow in the west: Eureka! Al Gore and Gordon Campbell see the connection

    This past week has seen two wonderful examples of that psychological phenomenon known as “confirmation bias,” that is, interpreting whatever evidence presents itself as proof of what you believe. On Sunday, in The New York Times, Al Gore deemed it disgraceful that “deniers” were suggesting that this year’s East Coast Snowmageddon had undermined the Inconvenient Truth of man-made global warming. More snow was clear evidence of the pernicious hand of industrial man. The next day, B.C. Premier Gordon Campbell told The Globe and Mail that the lack of snow at the Vancouver Olympics was due to … man-made global warming.

    These deliciously inconsistent claims also spring from the growing desperation of policy entrepreneurs and politicians in the face of greater public skepticism, which is in turn based in mounting evidence of scientific manipulation by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the IPCC.

    Premier Campbell has been coming under mounting pressure — ahead of yesterday’s provincial budget — to ditch burdensome carbon taxes. As for Mr. Gore, both his reputation and green investments are on the line, hence we can take his avowal that he would be delighted if the IPCC were wrong as pure baloney.

    Source: network.nationalpost.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • GTTV teases Sony surprise announcement tomorrow – is it MotorStorm 3?

    SCEE may have attempted to splash cold water on the rumor that a MotorStorm 3 announcement is imminent, especially after a domain registration under their name has been found out, but this does not in any way

  • 2011 Ford Mustang V6 rated 31 mpg highway, most efficient 300+ HP car ever

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    2011 Ford Mustang V6 at the 2009 LA Auto Show – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The pony car wars are about one-upsmanship if nothing else. The Ford Mustang held court for years while Chevrolet and Dodge had their horses on hiatus, but times have changed. The new Camaro has been whaling on the Mustang ever since its return, beating the Ford in sales for nine months straight and offering a range engines that are at once more powerful and efficient than the Blue Oval’s aging mills. Advantage: Camaro.

    The Mustang, however, received a nicely executed redesign for its 2010 model year and, as is Ford’s way, the automaker waited another model year to introduce its new range of engines. You already know all about the return of the storied 5.0 moniker on this year’s new Mustang GT. You also know that the V6 model is replacing its Civil War era 4.0-liter engine with a more powerful and efficient 3.7-liter. Powerful as in 305 horsepower, but how efficient? We didn’t know before but we do now. The 2011 Ford Mustang V6 will achieve 19 miles per gallon in the city and, more noteworthy, 31 mpg on the highway.

    The V6 model’s rating of 30 mpg highway (when paired with the six-speed auto mind you, the manual version achieves 30 mpg) is noteworthy because, well, it’s 2 mpg more than the slightly less powerful 304-hp Camaro V6. Also, it’s a record for being the first 300+ hp vehicle to be officially rated at 30 mpg or more. Wow, think about that. It’s never been done before. Sure, the new Mustang V6 is only marginally more powerful and efficient than its Camaro counterpart, but clawing above that 30 mpg mark will no doubt get Ford’s thoroughbred some extra ink in the press.

    Follow the jump for Ford’s official press release on the matter, in which it explains a little more how those magic numbers were achieved (Spoiler: aerodynamics, super smart six-speed auto and electric power assisted steering).

    [Source: Ford]

    Continue reading 2011 Ford Mustang V6 rated 31 mpg highway, most efficient 300+ HP car ever

    2011 Ford Mustang V6 rated 31 mpg highway, most efficient 300+ HP car ever originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 04 Mar 2010 00:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Ron Paul: If the Fed didn’t exist there would be no deficits

    Ron Paul spoke with Bob Schieffer of CBS News about his primary victory and his allegations against the Federal Reserve.

    Channel: CBS News
    Date: 03/03/2010

    Transcript coming soon

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  • Itagaki: My new game will sell four million copies

    The settlement of his suit against Tecmo might jst have been what Tomonobu Itagaki was waiting for before he moves forward and openly talks about his new game. The proud developer has now broken his silence on

  • Dear Macmillan, You Don’t Embrace The New By Trying To Protect The Old

    Lots of people have been sending over the blog post by the CEO of book publisher Macmillian, John Sargent, trying to explain the company’s ebook plans, following all the hubbub over its fight with Amazon. I was going to write up a long blog post about how backwards-facing Sargent’s viewpoint is, but frankly, Mathew Ingram, over at GigaOm, already wrote up the post I would have written (eerily, almost word for word). Go read that post.

    In addition to Mathew’s points, however, I’d add that Sargent seems to think that pricing is done by producers, rather than the market — and historically when companies in competitive markets think that way, they end up being in line for a very rude awakening. Economic forces don’t work the way they do because someone wants them to work one way — they work because that’s how markets function. And if you price something too high, the market lets you know. But Sargent doesn’t seem to get that. Instead, he’s trying to set up totally artificial and made up pricing — which becomes really evident in his idea that “hardcover” ebooks will get one price, while “paperback” ebooks will get another. It’s not difficult to understand Sargent’s thinking here. He’s still thinking in terms of protecting the traditional windows and the traditional profit margins, and that means high-priced hardcover books for a year or so, then lower cost paperbacks later, in an attempt to segment the market. But with ebooks, that’s going to lead to frustration and confusion. As someone named CM Harrington noted in a comment on Sargent’s own blog post:


    So how much more expensive is hardcover e-ink over paperback e-ink?

    Your model is doomed.

    One of the reasons why economic forces work the way that they do, and the reason why infinite goods with zero marginal cost get pushed in price towards zero, is that buyers implicitly understand the difference between scarce goods and abundant goods. They implicitly recognize the marginal cost of making another good, and they mentally price products accordingly. Pretending that consumers don’t do that is assuming that consumers are stupid. And that’s an even bigger mistake than looking backwards instead of forward.

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  • Katzenhohle: Handmade German Cat Caves

    Katzenhohle1

    These incredible pieces of functional art are called Katzenhoehle, or cat caves. Each is handmade of felted wool by German artist Dornroeschen Filzunikate. There are several styles and sizes to choose from and the caves are apparently washable. They look so delicate, but very cozy, too.

    Available via what appears to be the German version of Etsy, DaWanda.

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    via OhMyCat

  • Micromeritics to Showcase New Instruments and Instrument Options at Pittcon 2010

    Pittcon, a premier annual conference devoted to laboratory science and instrumentation, takes place from February 28 through March 5, 2010, at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando, FL. Micromeritics, located in Booth 1721, will introduce significant developments in material characterization instrumentation.

    The new generation Saturn DigiSizer® II High-Definition Digital Particle Size Analyzer measures particle size in a range of 40 nanometers to 2.5 millimeters and utilizes a state-of-the-art CCD detector containing over three million detector elements, Mie theory, and unique design and data reduction features to provide an extremely high level of resolution and sensitivity not available in other laser particle sizing systems.

    The MicroStar Residual Gas Analyzer features a quadrupole mass spectrometer that complements the Micromeritics AutoChem 2910, 2920, and 2950 dynamic chemisorption analyzers and is ideally suited for pulse chemisorption studies and temperature-programmed reactions.

    Micromeritics’ ASAP 2020 is now available with new vapor and water vapor options. This added versatility provides researchers and formulators the capability to characterize the surface area and porosity of materials both before and after exposure to vapors or moisture.

    Micromeritics’ ASAP 2420 enhanced micropore option extends the low-pressure measurement capabilities of the instrument and allows enhanced performance for characterizing microporous materials. The ASAP 2420 features six independently operated ports for adsorption analysis and twelve automated independently controlled sample preparation stations.

    Micromeritics Particulate Systems brand has added a number of new products. The HPVA-100 High-Pressure Volumetric Analyzer uses the static volumetric method to measure high-pressure adsorption isotherms with hydrogen, methane, carbon dioxide, and other gases. The operating pressure of the HPVA ranges from high vacuum to 200 bars. Sample temperatures during analysis can range from cryogenic to 500 oC. The Magnetic Analyzer MA-1040 detects minute quantities of iron in a wide range of materials with sensitivity as low as 0.00001% magnetic content.

    A strategic collaboration of Particulate Systems with Surface Measurement Systems Limited gives distribution rights to Particulate Systems for key Surface Measurement Systems products including the DVS Dynamic Vapor Sorption Systems in selected regions of the world.

  • Linear ServoSlides – Turn-Key Linear Servo Motor Actuators

    IntelLiDrives, Inc. released a new Linear ServoSLide – pre-engineered linear servo motor actuator, designed to eliminate backlash, friction and wear problems associated with the mechanical transmissions, such as ball/lead screws, rack & pinion and gearboxes

    Linear ServoSLide features brush-less non-contact linear motor design with forces 100 N to 2000 N and low cogging for fast and accurate positioning

    Double rail bearing system is integrated into the slide to support moving carriage and to provide dynamic stiffness and precise straightness of travel.

    Precision non-contact linear position feedback with selectable resolution from 0.1 to 10 microns is mounted in the carriage to minimize thermal drift

    Limit Sensors are incorporated to establish end of travel and “home” positions

    Slide components are mounted in the high strength extruded aluminum housing precisely machined to provide outstanding straightness and flatness for installation in horizontal or vertical orientations with travels up to 5 m.

    Linear ServoSLide incorporates connector panel to provide “plug-in” connectivity and quick disconnect for all signal and power requirements as well as cable transport module with high flex robotic cable installed and pre-wired to the connector panel.

    Multi-axes systems – gantries and XYZ robotic arms – can be easily constructed using multiple Linear ServoSLides.