Saturday, May 31, 2008

Google's Data Centers

Amazing stuff. [Link]

To operate on Google's scale requires the company to treat each machine as expendable. Server makers pride themselves on their high-end machines' ability to withstand failures, but Google prefers to invest its money in fault-tolerant software.

"Our view is it's better to have twice as much hardware that's not as reliable than half as much that's more reliable," Dean said. "You have to provide reliability on a software level. If you're running 10,000 machines, something is going to die every day."

Breaking in is hard to do
Bringing a new cluster online shows just how fallible hardware is, Dean said.

In each cluster's first year, it's typical that 1,000 individual machine failures will occur; thousands of hard drive failures will occur; one power distribution unit will fail, bringing down 500 to 1,000 machines for about 6 hours; 20 racks will fail, each time causing 40 to 80 machines to vanish from the network; 5 racks will "go wonky," with half their network packets missing in action; and the cluster will have to be rewired once, affecting 5 percent of the machines at any given moment over a 2-day span, Dean said. And there's about a 50 percent chance that the cluster will overheat, taking down most of the servers in less than 5 minutes and taking 1 to 2 days to recover.

Friday, May 30, 2008

Military Exoskeleton

Pretty amazing. Most of these exoskeleton prototypes are usually tethered. [Link]

Dr. Hami Kazerooni spent years at the University of California, building prototype exoskeletons for the government. Now, he's got a private company, Berkeley Bionics, that's developing the super suits for the medical and military markets.

Human Universal Load Carrier (that's right, "HULC") is the latest model. It lets the wearer carry 200 pounds on his back, more or less effortlessly. It alleviates stress on the knees and on the back. And it reduces the energy required for someone to walk, the company claims -- boosting endurance by five to 12 percent.



Air Force Base That Lost Nukes Fails Retest

Keystone cops. [Link]
Perhaps you expected the crowd at Minot Air Force Base to get its act together, after it lost track of six nuclear warheads last fall. Think again.

The 5th Bomb Wing at Minot has "failed its much-anticipated defense nuclear surety inspection," Air Force Times' Michael Hoffman reports. Security personnel couldn't even be bothered to stop playing video games on their cell phones.

Cluster Bomb Replacement

Cluster bombs cause too many unintended casualties due to unexploded ordinance. [Link]

The Army's Multiple Launch Rocket System (pictured above) has a particularly serious problem when it comes to leaving dangerous duds. The standard missile contains 644 M77 grenades; a single salvo will involve three vehicles each firing their complement of twelve rockets – that's 23,184 grenades in the target area. The aim is a dud rate of two percent. But even at one percent, that's 200 potentially lethal bombs left scattered over a wide area, posing a threat to friendly troops and civilians. The missile cannot be used in Afghanistan or Iraq for this reason.

This is why the Army have developed an alternative warhead. It is based on the GPS-guided version of the MLRS rocket, so it is far more accurate than the earlier rockets. The warhead consists of thousands of small darts, or flechettes. (The Army calls them "kinetic energy rods.") Flechettes, from the French for "little arrow" go way back; aircraft used to drop them in World War I, though not with much effect.

As with the mine-busting darts I looked at last year, the key to its effectiveness is dispensing the payload evenly over a wide area. This involves a clever packing technique and a spinning warhead which breaks open at high altitude so that the darts are well distributed at the time of impact.

Penny Arcade plays D&D 4th

Cool, I'll be listening to this soon. [Link]
So, Wizards got Gabe and Tycho from Penny Arcade and Scott Kurtz from PvP to sit down at a table to play 4th edition. Gabe announces it on the Penny Arcade news for today, and gives it a generally positive impression. The best part though? They recorded the whole thing for a podcast. (And added some comics to boot.)

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Who is to blame for high oil prices?

Big Oil or Congress? Big Oil is an easy target. Too easy. [Link]

If any one entity should take the blame for high gas prices in the US, Mackubin Thomas Owens writes in today’s Wall Street Journal, it should be Congress. Instead of loosening restrictions on domestic supplies when increased future demand from Asia was easily predicted, Congress tightened them instead. They also increased the tax burden on producers at a time when prices had already begun to rise, amplifying the increase and adding to its inflationary effect:

Gasoline prices are through the roof and Americans are angry. Someone must be to blame and the obvious villain is “Big Oil” with its alleged ability to gouge consumers and achieve unconscionable, “windfall” profits. Congress is in a vile mood, and has dragged oil industry executives before its committees for show trials, issuing predictable threats of punishment, e.g. a “windfall profits tax.”

But if there is a villain in all of this, it is Congress itself. That venerable body has made it impossible for U.S. producers of crude oil to tap significant domestic reserves of oil and gas, and it has foreclosed economically viable alternative sources of energy in favor of unfeasible alternatives such as wind and solar. In addition, Congress has slapped substantial taxes on gasoline. Indeed, as oil industry executives reiterated in their appearance before the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 21, 15% of the cost of gasoline at the pump goes for taxes, while only 4% represents oil company profits.

Read the rest.

Until we start building more nuclear plants and opening up our own reserves, prices will keep going up.

Clicky Keyboard Return

For Corsair. [Link]
Today, buckling spring keyboards are never or almost never shipped with computers. Fortunately, Unicomp has accomplished what Matias couldn’t and produced an excellent keyboard in the Customizer, which is based on the actual IBM Model M design. Keystrokes are crisp and precise. The “shadow key” problem that bedeviled the Tactile Pro is absent, and the Customizer itself is solid, recalling a slab of stone (see the picture below), unlike the fragile, mushy keyboards most PCs ship with. It’s also been durable, and in the months I’ve pounded on it the only problem has been a backspace key that became slightly squeaky. I sent an e-mail to Unicomp and someone called me to recommend that I pop off the offending key with a butter knife to reseat it. If you know anything about modern tech support, reread that sentence and let the shock set in. An actual phone call? From a guy involved with the actual manufacturing of the product? Indeed, and I’ve now experienced my miracle. The squeak seemed to go away and I’m back to my normal pattern. Furthermore, the company is based in Kentucky and makes the Customizers there.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Lame

The Death Race remake will not have pedestrians getting mowed down for points. [Link]
The new Death Race movie can throw as many weapons-packed cars at us as it wants, but it still won't be half as entertaining now that they've done away with earning points for mowing down pedestrians. This remake of 70s classic Death Race 2000 is directed by Paul W.S. Anderson (Resident Evil, Alien vs. Predator) so there will be explosions, car flippery, and bad dialogue. But it still won't pack any of the kick of the original.
Why even remake it?

Bad Idea

New legislation for Global Warming: Warner-Lieberman. [Link]

The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that this meddling would cause a cumulative reduction in the growth of GDP by between 0.9% and 3.8% by 2030. Add 20 years, and the reduction is between 2.4% and 6.9% – that is, from $1 trillion to $2.8 trillion.

These estimates assume that electricity prices will increase by 44% above what they would otherwise be by 2030. They also assume that existing coal-fired power plants, which currently provide about 50% of U.S. electric power, will be shut down – to be replaced with at least 150% growth in new nuclear facilities, plus other "alternatives." Yet there are only 104 current U.S. nuclear plants, and the industry itself says it's optimistic to think even 30 more can be built by 2020.

In fact, it is pointless to project so far out over multiple decades, since no one knows how markets and consumers would respond, whether the rules would remain constant, or what new technologies might come along. While moralizing about America, most of Europe has failed to meet its mandatory cap and trade goals under the Kyoto Protocol. But the U.S. isn't Italy; we will enforce our laws. So our guess is that these cost estimates are invariably far too low.

In a bow to this reality, California Democrat Barbara Boxer last week introduced 157 pages of amendments to Warner-Lieberman. Most notably, she sets aside at least $800 billion through 2050 for consumer tax relief. So while imposing a huge new tax on all Americans, she vouchsafes to return some of the money to some people. Needless to say, the Senator will be the judge of who receives her dispensation.

Ms. Boxer's amendment shows that cap and trade is also a massive wealth redistribution scheme – all mediated by her and her fellow Platonic rulers. Oh, and she also includes an "emergency off-ramp," should costs prove too onerous. This is really a political "off-ramp" to make Warner-Lieberman seem less dangerous, but you can imagine her reaction if some future Republican President decided to take it.

The upshot is that trillions in assets and millions of jobs would be at the mercy of Congress and the bureaucracy, all for greenhouse gas reductions that would have a meaningless impact on global carbon emissions if China and India don't participate. And only somewhat less meaningless if they do.

We'll destroy our economy, but we'll be green.

The Navy That Cried Wolf

This doesn't sound good. [Link]

In discussions with dozens of naval professionals over several months, few questioned the Navy's commitment to fielding an effective fighting force. But on a wide range of issues, the ability of Navy leaders to manage programs and explain service direction is being questioned, doubted and in some cases challenged outright.

"They need to take a hard look at themselves," one former senior officer said.

An element of denial is apparent in many service calculations, which are typically based on perfect-world scenarios to make everything come out right.

"They're constantly using optimistic cost and schedule assumptions," said Bob Work, a retired Marine Corps artillery colonel who is a top naval analyst with the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington. "This continual optimism, the continually rosy assumptions, the effort to go too fast" have so eroded the service's credibility in Congress, Work said, that House lawmakers have difficulty even listening to the Navy.

One congressional source said he can't, at times, rule out deliberate deception.

"It's more a feeling rather than specific things," the source said. "An accumulation of a lot of little things which in and of themselves are perfectly explainable, but when you add them up, it doesn't work."

Space Plunger

The toilet on the ISS has been acting up. [Link]
The mission will deliver Japan's Kibo pressurized module to the station, as well as some last minute, very important equipment: parts to repair a balky toilet on board the space station. The pump that separates the solids from the gas wastes for the toilet has been working only sporadically. The replacement parts are being flown in from Russia today, hand-carried in a diplomatic pouch, and will be added to the payload on board space shuttle Discovery. "Clearly, having a working toilet is a priority for us," said NASA's Scott Higginbotham

Venture Bros. - The amazing Shirt of the Week Club

Looks cool. I'd like the Guild of Calamitous Intent one. [Link]

Smoking Gun

I hope the people responsible get the book thrown at them. [Link]
Meet Tracy Warren. NPR says she's not surprised by the mortgage meltdown because she was supposed to be in charge of preventing it. Tracy worked for a quality control contractor that reviewed subprime loans for investment banks before they were sold on Wall Street, and her company's biggest client was none other than Bear Stearns. Tracy says she found plenty of loans to reject. The trouble is, according to Tracy, after she rejected them... her bosses unrejected them.

The Conservative Case for Gay Marriage

Interesting. I say let them do it. [Link]

If you're a conservative who opposes gay marriage, do me the favor of considering a hypothetical, which I've long sought a response to:

An 8-year-old goes to play at the house of his friend, who is raised by two lesbian women. The environment is a loving one. So this playmate, whose straight parents are married, is going to absorb one of two possible norms.

1) My friend lives in a happy home. His parents are married. When people grow up and love each other, and want to have kids and a happy home, they get married. (I hope I get married one day.)

Or

2) My friend lives in a happy home. His parents aren't married. When people grow up and love each other, and want to have kids and a happy home, sometimes they get married like my parents. Other times they don't get married, like my friend's parents. (One day I may get married and have kids, but maybe I'll just have kids and live with the person I love.)

Conservatives should prefer the former scenario.
Yes, they should, but I don't think this will help. If their opposition is based in religious belief, then this scenario doesn't matter. God has declared this as wrong. That's the end of the story, whether they would like to support it or not.

Bionic Limb Controlled by Monkey

Neat. [Link]

His macaques controlled a robotic arm that moved at the shoulder and elbow and could clench and open its hand.

To train the monkeys, the researchers first recorded their brain activity as they controlled the robotic arm with a joystick. Once the monkeys had learned to feed themselves in this way, Schwarz's team secured their arms and made them rely on controlling the robot with their brain.

To avoid frustrating the animals during their first attempts, the researchers partially guided the robot themselves. Gradually, these training aids were dispensed with, and after three weeks the monkeys had mastered the robotic arm.

In tests where a monkey had to grab marshmallows or grapes and feed himself, one monkey succeeded 61% of the time, often reaching for another treat while still chewing on the last one. The animals manoeuvred the arm around obstacles and readjusted its path when researchers moved the food.



Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Comic Book Plot Cliches

Funny because it's true. [Link]
Ten "Arcs" that Most Superheroes Must Endure Even Though Almost None of Them Should

Spike in Space

James Marsters to play Buzz Aldrin in UK space movie for 40th anniversary of Apollo 11. [Link]
Marsters is apparently in talks with the UK's ITV network for an upcoming project called Moon Shot that will celebrate the 40th anniversary of the moon landing. The made-for-TV movie - which promises unnamed "big American" actors to play Neil Armstrong and forgotten third astronaut Michael Collins - will recreate the last 11 days before the launch of the Apollo 11 mission that changed the world, using a mixture of NASA footage, CGI effects and Marsters' unusual transatlantic accent.

Freeman Dyson on Global Warming

Interesting and long review of two books for the NY Review of Books. [Link]
The main conclusion of the Nordhaus analysis is that the ambitious proposals, "Stern" and "Gore," are disastrously expensive, the "low-cost backstop" is enormously advantageous if it can be achieved, and the other policies including business-as-usual and Kyoto are only moderately worse than the optimal policy. The practical consequence for global-warming policy is that we should pursue the following objectives in order of priority. (1) Avoid the ambitious proposals. (2) Develop the science and technology for a low-cost backstop. (3) Negotiate an international treaty coming as close as possible to the optimal policy, in case the low-cost backstop fails. (4) Avoid an international treaty making the Kyoto Protocol policy permanent. These objectives are valid for economic reasons, independent of the scientific details of global warming.
And

At this point I return to the Keeling graph, which demonstrates the strong coupling between atmosphere and plants. The wiggles in the graph show us that every carbon dioxide molecule in the atmosphere is incorporated in a plant within a time of the order of twelve years. Therefore, if we can control what the plants do with the carbon, the fate of the carbon in the atmosphere is in our hands. That is what Nordhaus meant when he mentioned "genetically engineered carbon-eating trees" as a low-cost backstop to global warming. The science and technology of genetic engineering are not yet ripe for large-scale use. We do not understand the language of the genome well enough to read and write it fluently. But the science is advancing rapidly, and the technology of reading and writing genomes is advancing even more rapidly. I consider it likely that we shall have "genetically engineered carbon-eating trees" within twenty years, and almost certainly within fifty years.

Carbon-eating trees could convert most of the carbon that they absorb from the atmosphere into some chemically stable form and bury it underground. Or they could convert the carbon into liquid fuels and other useful chemicals. Biotechnology is enormously powerful, capable of burying or transforming any molecule of carbon dioxide that comes into its grasp. Keeling's wiggles prove that a big fraction of the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere comes within the grasp of biotechnology every decade. If one quarter of the world's forests were replanted with carbon-eating varieties of the same species, the forests would be preserved as ecological resources and as habitats for wildlife, and the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere would be reduced by half in about fifty years.

Phoenix lander on the ground

Cool. [Link]
The HiRISE Camera Imaging Team for the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter keeps outdoing themselves. First, they imaged Mars' surface in such fine detail to help choose a safe yet interesting landing site for Phoenix. Then they beat the odds and actually captured Phoenix during its descent to Mars surface, which is completely incredible. And now, in very short order they've located and imaged Phoenix and all its accoutrements sitting on Mars north polar region. The parachute (lower left) is easy to identify because it is especially bright and the backshell is still attached to the parachute cords. The double dark marking at right is consistent with disturbance of the ground from impact and bouncing of the heat shield, which fell from a height of about 10 kilometers. The last object (upper left) is the Phoenix Lander whose two solar panels on either side of the lander are clearly visible.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Solar Powered Speedboat

Cool and quiet. [Link]
There aren't many sorts of vehicles that haven't been solarized, but it looks like Dutch company Czeers has managed to find one, with it now showing off what it claims to be the world's first solar powered speedboat. Dubbed the MK1, the solar panel-ensconced vessel can apparently reach a top speed of 30 knots (or roughly 35 miles per hour), all the while operating in relative silence.


Phoenix Lander during reentry

Photo of Phoenix lander during reentry taken by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. [Link]
NASA's Mars Phoenix Lander can be seen parachuting down to Mars, in this image captured by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. This is the first time that a spacecraft has imaged the final descent of another spacecraft onto a planetary body.

From a distance of about 760 kilometers (472 miles) above the surface of the Red Planet, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter pointed its HiRISE obliquely toward Phoenix shortly after it opened its parachute while descending through the Martian atmosphere. The image reveals an apparent 10-meter-wide (30-foot-wide) parachute fully inflated. The bright pixels below the parachute show a dangling Phoenix. The image faintly detects the chords attaching the backshell and parachute. The surroundings look dark, but correspond to the fully illuminated Martian surface, which is much darker than the parachute and backshell.

Phoenix released its parachute at an altitude of about 12.6 kilometers (7.8 miles) and a velocity of 1.7 times the speed of sound.

One Way Colonization

When we do set up permanent colonies they will of course be one way for most. [Link]

An article published on Universe Today back in March of this year detailing former NASA engineer Jim McLane's idea for on a one-way, one-person mission to Mars generated a lot of interest. The many comments on the subject posted here on UT and numerous other websites such as ABC News ranged from full support to complete disbelief of the idea. McLane's concept has literally gone around the world, and a journalist from Spain, Javier Yanes who writes for the newspaper Publico shared with me his correspondence with a US soldier stationed in Afghanistan, who says that battle-hardened soldiers would be the perfect choice to send on a mission of no return to a new world. SFC William H. Ruth III says he and the men in the 101st Airborne Division are ready and willing to go.

SFC Ruth wrote, "While reading Jim McLane and Nancy Atkinson’s thoughts on Space Colonization, I started to realize that we ‘ALL’ have lost our way. We have become so consumed by petty differences and dislikes of others that we all have forgotten our pre destiny of something better."

And what is the 'something better' that Ruth envisions? Military personnel from different countries joining together to make "the ultimate sacrifice" of forging the way to establish an outpost on another world, like Mars.

Damning with faint praise

The review of the A&E remake of Andromeda Strain. [Link]
Bottom line: If you think of it as "Mansquito with an A-list cast" (and the cast did a great job with what they were given) then you'll probably enjoy it a lot. Just don't compare it too much to Michael Crichton's best novel, or Robert Wise's taut medical thriller.
Ouch.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Search for Titanic was nuclear search cover story

A real life Tom Clancy like spy story. [Link]
"The man who located the wreck of the Titanic has revealed that the discovery was a cover story to camouflage the real mission of inspecting the wrecks of two Cold War nuclear submarines," the Times of London and others report.

Dr. Robert Ballard, an oceanographer, has admitted that he located and inspected the wrecks for the US Navy [in 1985] in top secret missions before he was allowed to search for the Titanic...

“I couldn’t tell anybody,” he said. “There was a lot of pressure on me. It was a secret mission. I felt it was a fair exchange for getting a chance to look for the Titanic...

The Phoenix has landed

NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander has just landed. I love watching this stuff on NASA TV. [Link]

Friday, May 23, 2008

What is Narrow?

To the L.A. Times it depends. [Link]

The L.A. Times reports that, according to a new poll, Californians slimly reject the idea of John McCain as their presidential candidate. By a small margin, it appears, Californians would vote for Barack Obama — but only by a bit! The poll reveals such a narrow margin of victory, it appears that Obama can’t even muster a bare majority against McCain!

Obama would beat McCain by only 7 points. This is far less than half the 19-point gap by which Californians would approve an amendment banning gay marriage — a finding that caused the paper to repeatedly trumpet how narrowly and slimly (we Californians are slim!) the anti-gay marriage argument is winning with voters.

And indeed, the margin of an Obama victory, as measured by this poll, is slimmer than the margin of victory enjoyed by any Democrat candidate since 1988. Including John Kerry and Al Gore. [UPDATE: And the margin is actually within the poll’s margin of error.]

Galactica Ratings Up For Season 4

This is unusual. Most continuity heavy tv series have declining ratings as there are fewer jumping on points. [Link]
Seven episodes into its fourth season, the show is up 4% among adults 18 to 49 (averaging 1.4 million viewers) compared to the show's "Season 3.5" 2007 run. When you factor only episodes that have full-seven days of DVR use available, the show is up 18%. Total viewers (2.1 million) are up even more. Also: Last season the show aired on Sunday nights, a night with higher audience levels. Why this is interesting: "Battlestar" been on a downward ratings trend the past few years. Serialized shows, as many have pointed out, do not usually gain in the ratings.
Good news.

My eyes! The goggles, they do nothing! (Donny and Marie do Star Wars)

Forwarded to me by Sarah. [Link]
Long before she was dancing with other stars, Marie played Princess Leia to Donny's Luke Skywalker. Kris Kristofferson plays Han Solo (and looks like he'd rather be someplace else), the voice of Darth Vader is Thurl Ravenscroft (Tony the Tiger!), and General Harkin is played by...Paul Lynde!

The most incredible part though is Redd Foxx, who hovers above and gives little bits of wisdom. The 70s were a very screwed up time. I also don't think that Donny & Marie would get very far if they tried out for American Idol. I used to watch this show though.

(Note, the first video after the jump is completely out of ;sync. Believe me, it wouldn't be any better if the sound and video were together.)







Wow. The dancing stormtroopers really push it over the top.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

I want one of each

Retropolis Transit Authority Very cool t-shirts.

OLPC 2.0

This looks neat and I would like one even with the touchscreen keyboard. [Link]
a start-up by former OLPC CTO Mary Lou Jepsen. These screens will be readable in direct sunlight, just like the OLPC.

I’m glad that the second generation OLPC is more of an ebook than a laptop. While the “laptop,” as a designed object, is an excellent tool, books are what define our early education and creating an electronic book that works and is actively useful seems far more intelligent than the original OLPC, which is a stab at a “less is more” mentality that eventually hobbles the very people it is designed to help.

I remember a very interesting statistic from Freakonomics: the single, traceable correlation between a child’s ability in school and his home life are the number of books a family has in their home. I’m paraphrasing, but I’ve taken it to heart and I believe it to be true. A laptop is an interactive tool. An ebook, even if it’s just a glorified, dual screen laptop, is a reading tool. That is why tablet PCs never took off in the mainstream: people don’t know what to do with a form factor that is clearly not a laptop yet is also clearly a powerful computer.

American Royalty

Literally. [Link]

Ted Kennedy has made clear to confidants that when his time is up, he wants his Senate seat to stay in the family - with his wife, Vicki.

Multiple sources in Massachusetts with close ties to the liberal lion say his wife of 16 years has long been his choice to continue carrying the family flame in the Senate. Kennedy won the seat in 1962; his brother John held it from 1953 to 1960.

"There's no question that he'd like Vicki to continue in his seat," said one Massachusetts Democrat with ties to the Camelot clan who spoke to Kennedy recently, before his health crisis.

"She's smart, and smart politically."

The 54-year-old Victoria Reggie Kennedy, a former hotshot Washington lawyer, is a Louisiana native and the daughter of a politically active judge.

Getting reelected to Congress once there is nearly automatic as it is. How soon til it is effectively hereditary? Should we be turning an elected office into a dynasty?

Clinton: Florida like Zimbabwe

Wow, this seems like a dumb move. [Link]

Desperation leads to foolishness, and Hillary Clinton is not immune from that process. In a campaign appearance in Florida, Hillary tried to play into the anger that Democrats there feel over their exclusion from the Democratic National Convention by comparing their plight to Zimbabwe. If that wasn’t bad enough, she made a statement that Barack Obama supporters will likely find even more outrageous (via Memeorandum):

Desperate to get attention for her cause to seat Florida and Michigan delegates, Hillary Clinton compared the plight of Zimbabweans in their recent fraudulent election to the uncounted votes of Michigan and Florida voters saying it is wrong when “people go through the motions of an election only to have them discarded and disregarded.”

“We’re seeing that right now in Zimbabwe,” Clinton explained. “Tragically, an election was held, the president lost, they refused to abide by the will of the people,” Clinton told the crowd of senior citizens at a retirement community in south Florida.

Er, Zimbabwe? Did Democratic leadership send armed thugs to beat Hillary voters? We haven’t seen this kind of hysterical paranoia in politics since …. well, since Florida 2000. Either Hillary hasn’t got a foggy clue about what happened in Florida, or what is happening in Zimbabwe right now, or both. No one stole the election in Florida; the state did not follow the rules, and Howard Dean idiotically stripped the state of all its delegates, not half as the Republicans did.

The Contra Hearings

Funny. [Link]
In 1989, Lieutenant William “Mad Dog” Rizer was called before the Senate Military Investigations Committee to discuss his statements regarding the effectiveness of military operations in response to the Red Falcon invasion of the previous year. The following is a transcript of his testimony before Congress.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

To Protect and Serve?

I don't want these people doing it. [Link]

D.C. Police Chief Kathy Lanier rehires 17 police officers previously fired for misconduct.

Then she decides the city will arm them with semiautomatic weapons.

Sounds like a fantastic couple of ideas. What could possibly go wrong?

Meanwhile, a coda to the Kathryn Johnston botched drug raid case in Atlanta: Arthur Tesler was the only officer on the raid who didn't take a plea bargain. Despite admitting that he lied, helped cover up Johnston's murder, and stood watch outside while other officers handcuffed the bleeding 92-year-woman—allowing her to die while they planted marijuana in her basement—he was convicted today only on the charge of lying to investigators. He'll face a maximum of five years in prison.

New Crew attacked by Muslim School Officials

Iraq? Afghanistan? Minnesota. [Link]
Katherine Kersten first brought the story to our attention, for which local journalists have begun petitioning the Star Tribune to fire her. The state department of education found several potential issues for violation of laws intending to keep public schools from providing religious instruction, and notified the school today that it had to make changes to its Friday prayer efforts and the lack of transportation service for students who opt out of prayers, among other issues.

Local ABC affiliate KSTP has also continued to update the reporting on this story. Today they went to the school to determine how TiZA would respond to the state’s demand for corrective action. Instead, they found themselves at the center of the story as two TiZA officials attacked the news crew and stole their camera:

In an attempt to report about the new findings from the Department of Education, 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS went to TiZA. While on school grounds, our crew was attacked by school officials. The two men were able to grab our camera and kept it until police arrived.

Our photographer was treated by paramedics after suffering minor injuries. …

Tarik ibn Zayad Academy, which focuses on Middle Eastern culture and shares a mosque with the Muslim American Society of Minnesota, came under fire after a teacher alleged that the school was offering religious instruction in Islam to its students.

KSTP has a video report on their website. The tape starts off pleasantly, as the children run up to the camera to smile and wave, just like children anywhere would do. One man walks rapidly towards the camera and grabs it, while another unseen man assaults the cameraman. Later, the police would retrieve the camera, and the video shows the police cars responding to the emergency call from the news crew.

Too Many Remakes

Now Highlander is getting a remake. [Link]
Having conquered the world of science with Iron Man, screenwriters Art Marcum and Matt Holloway are moving into the world of... well, a kind of magic. Apparently feeling so confident that anything else will be easy after managing to make Tony Stark seem cool, the two writers are heading up a Highlander revival. Yes, their new project, announced yesterday, will be a new movie in the franchise about sword-wielding immortals in the city.
So now we have Highlander, Robocop, Buck Rogers, Flash Gordon, Red Dawn and Star Trek be remade. Are there no new ideas?

Apparently not.

Supernova Caught in the Act

Cool. [Link]
The Swift satellite has made another fortuitous observation. This time, and for the first time ever, astronomers have caught a star in the act of going supernova. These stellar explosions have been observed before, but always after the fireworks were well underway. "For years we have dreamed of seeing a star just as it was exploding, but actually finding one is a once-in-a-lifetime event," says Alicia Soderberg, from Princeton University, who is leading the international group studying this explosion. "This newly born supernova is going to be the Rosetta Stone of supernova studies for years to come."

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Bad Bosses by way of Starfleet

Funny and true. [Link]
They yell at you and fire you twice a day. They insist that a five-day job should only take five hours. They flip-flop and then blame you for their mistakes. Star Trek's captains model all kinds of bad boss behavior, but luckily they also show us what to do with a boss who's out of touch with reality.


We already covered the 7 kinds of highly effective leadership as demonstrated by space captains. But captains can also model some pretty awful management, and noplace is this more apparent than in dear old Trek.

Saying Sorry Works

Why is this a surprise? [Link]
In recent years, doctors have discovered that a simple apology can have a great effect in preventing malpractice lawsuits. According to the New York Times, Dr. Das Gupta, the chairman of surgical oncology at the University of Illinois Medical Center, mistakenly removed the wrong rib from one of his patients. Instead of using the classic "deny and defend" strategy, he promptly acknowledged his error and apologized to the patient. While the patient did accept a settlement from the hospital, she decided not to sue.

That's not Kosher!

There was a meth lab found in the country's largest Kosher meat packing plant during a raid that for illegal workers. [Link]
According to KCRG, officials discovered a methamphetamine lab within the AgriProcessors meat processing facility in Postville, Iowa during a large-scale immigration raid. 389 arrests were made by federal agencies from what is thought to be one of the largest immigration enforcement actions ever taken in the United States. Details, inside...

AgriProcessors, founded by Aaron Rubashkin, an Hasidic Orthodox Jewish butcher and rabbi from Brooklyn, supplies over half the kosher meat sold in the United States. On May 12th agents executed criminal search warrants for aggravated identity theft and the use of fraudulent Social Security numbers. There were 697 warrants and 389 arrests. Currently, officials aren't certain as to who exactly was operating the meth lab.

One former plant supervisor alleged that over 80% of the floor employees were illegal aliens from Mexico, Guatemala and Eastern Europe. Additionally 3 of their rabbis, whose job it is to supervise the kosher slaughter of livestock, were Israelis who were also illegally employed.

I don't have anything else, just the "That's not Kosher!" joke.

Nanosoccer

Cool. [Link]
This weekend, the National Institute of Standards and Technology will host RoboCup 2008's nanosoccer exhibition right here at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. It'll include several events to be battled out by teams from the U.S. Naval Academy, the University of Waterloo in Ontario, and CMU itself.

The 2-Millimeter Dash: Each nanobot chooses the optimal time for a goal-to-goal sprint across the playing field.
-Slalom Drill: Robots race from goal to goal while avoiding “defenders” (polymer posts) that block the path.
-Ball-Handling Drill: Robots “dribble” as many microdisks as possible into a goal within a 3-minute period.


"Secret" data in pdf available through spy tool: Ctrl-C

Wow. [Link]
Once again, supposedly sensitive information blacked out from a government report turns out to be visible by computer experts armed with the Ctrl+C keys -- and that information turns out to be not very sensitive after all.

This time around, University of Pennsylvania professor Matt Blaze discovered that the Justice Department's Inspector General's office had failed to adequately obfuscate data in a March report (.pdf) about FBI payments to telecoms to make their legacy phone switches comply with 1995 wiretapping rules. That report detailed how the FBI had finished spending its allotted $500 million to help telephone companies retrofit their old switches to make them compliant with the Communications Assistance to Law Enforcement Act or Calea-- even as federal wiretaps target cellphones more than 90 percent of the time.

This isn't the first time the Justice Department has made such an error. In 2007, a U.S. attorney referred to Threat Level's own David Kravets (then at the AP) as a hacker for discovering similar hidden information in a Balco steriod case filing. As far back as 2003, a report on minorities in the Justice Department was also vulnerable. The gaffes may seem humorous, but tell that to confidential informants, for whom such a slip-up could be fatal.

In fact, all one needs to do is open the Calea report with Adobe Reader or Foxit reader, and highlight the tables and cut and paste them into a text editor, something Blaze discovered accidentally when trying to copy a portion of the report into an e-mail to a student.

There does seem to be a tendency to classify everything they can get away with. If they want to continue, they may want to follow this advice:
Professor Matt Blaze suggests following NSA's technical recommendations (.pdf) on how to redact documents. Threat Level merely suggests that report writers start telling the classifiers to stop acting like censors from WWII carrier groups.

Monday, May 19, 2008

Wolverines?

Does Red Dawn really need to be remade? [Link]
"Red Dawn," John Milius' 1984 tale of a group of American rebels fighting Soviet forces, is a candidate for a remake, studio toppers Harry Sloan and Mary Parent revealed Saturday at the American Pavilion in Cannes.
The villains can't be the Russians, and I don't see the Chinese doing it. I figure Holly wood will make it a Red State/Blue State kind of thing where those evil Red Staters swarm out of flyover country with their guns and pickup trucks and take over the Blue States. The Military can't stop them cause they're all Red Staters themselves. So, it'll be a Starbucks barista, a Silicon Valley tech worker, an English professor and a surfer all join forces to take America back from the Red Menace. With Larry the Cable Guy as Red Leader.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Space Property Law

Who owns space? No one right now, because of the Outer Space Treaty Of 1967. It bans nuclear weapons from space as well as denying national claims to space property. At the time, it was mostly academic and designed to make sure no one could claim space, but we are moving into an era of independent entrepreneurial space travel. How are we going to adjudicate claims? [Link]

Better, some suggest, to rely on individual avarice to spur exploration, by allowing private explorers to stake a claim, like celestial Sooners, to the lands they reach. Giving extraterrestrial property rights could be a powerful force, not only for exploration, but for the efficient development of the discovered and undiscovered resources of space. Celestial bodies such as the moon and the thousands of near-Earth asteroids may prove to be highly lucrative pieces of property - as sources of minerals and clean energy, venues for scientific experimentation and high-end tourism, or simply as open space for refugees from an increasingly crowded planet.

"Property rights will provide the only economic incentive that will possibly justify entrepreneurial space exploration," says Alan Wasser, chairman of the Space Settlement Institute and the former CEO of the National Space Society. The exploration and settlement of space "benefits all mankind, but all mankind doesn't want to put up the money."

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Libeartarian

What declaring the Polar Bear an endangered species could do for Libertarians. [Link]

Normally libertarians are not a litigious bunch, but if they are willing to adopt some new tactics, Section 7 of the ESA could provide them the tool they need to end federal government interference in the economy forever. See the polar bear will be the first animal ever listed as endangered on a global warming theory. Normally, species are listed due to harms to their habitat from local factors like logging, farming, or hospital building. So when the Army wants to build a firing range to train troops to protect our country, environmentalists can sue to stop the activity since it will harm local endangered bird populations.

But global warming is just that: global. Virtually every federal government action anywhere in the country can be connected to increased greenhouse gas emissions, which after all, are the cause of the destruction of the polar bear’s habitat according to the Interior Department.

Speed Racer

I just saw it this afternoon. I thought it was great. It was a live action cartoon. The colors were so super saturated, I felt like I was getting a sugar rush from watching the screen and everything was in focus. The story was good, with enough twists and turns to keep me interested and the performances were good as well.
Plus, John Goodman beats up on a Ninja, or as he puts it "More like a Non-ja." along with a disparaging comment about how they don't make ninjas like they used to.
For a theater filled with children it was dead silent. There were no bored children (or adults) there. I don't understand why it isn't doing as well at the theater. This would seem like a perfect family film, parents as well as kids can enjoy it.
I will be buying this on DVD when it comes out.
Run, don't walk to see this before it leaves theaters.

Casting Call of Cthulhu

Funny film. [Link]

Friday, May 16, 2008

New Computer

I've been building a new computer. It's been a while since I did this and I forgot how much I like tinkering around with this stuff. I had an old case from my really old P3 750 machine, but I got all new parts.
  • Motherboard: ASUS M2N-SLI Deluxe
  • Processor: AMD Phenom 9500 Quad-Core 2.21GHz
  • Hard Drive: Western Digital Caviar 500GB SATA
  • Memory: 4GB Crucial DDR2 memory
  • Video card: XFX GeForce 8600 GT 512MB
  • Monitor: Soyo 22in widescreen LCD
  • DVD Writer: LITEON 20x writer with Light Scribe
  • Keyboard/Mouse: Logitech S510 cordless keyboard and mouse

I ended up making 5 trips in all.
  1. Initial trip
  2. CPU fan. The sales guy gave me the wrong fan on the first trip
  3. I forgot to buy memory
  4. The power supply was too old and did not match the motherboard.
  5. New keyboard. The really cheap keyboard I had laying around was not quite worth what I had paid for it.
I initially tried installing Vista 64, but I got a bluescreen on the first reboot of the install and tried Vista 32 instead. I got a free version of Vista from Microsoft for taking part in a software usage program they started last year. So far, I'm pretty happy with the setup. My only problem appears to be with the NVidia networking chipset. The motherboard has two ethernet ports and it seems to get confused on some reboots. Switching which port the cable is plugged in fixes it. Disabling one of the network interfaces doesn't seem to stop this from happening. This is still an issue in progress.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Alternative to Gastric Bypass

Interesting. [Link]
A doctor implants this gizmo from EnteroMedics just under the skin, and hooks up its two electrodes that can electrically block the nerve that makes you hungry. The result? A slimmer you. This could be a sane alternative to the barbaric and permanent gastric bypass surgery.

That sweet spot is the vagus nerve, a 4mm-wide pipe that connects directly to your brain, with no spinal cord involved. The vagus is the traffic cop for food. It controls the characteristics of hunger, such as those gnawing hunger pangs, and also the expansion of the stomach and the satisfying feeling of fullness. So if the stomach doesn’t expand while you’re eating, you start feeling full after taking a just a few bites.

Great for an initial loss of weight, but if you don't change your eating habits permanently it will be for naught. Although, if it is permanent, then it might work long term.

More than you ever wanted to know about DC's Crisis'

I had not realized how many of these company wide events there were. [Part 1] [Part 2]

Time is a funny thing. I can recognize that Crisis On Infinite Earths happened in 1985 and know that it was twenty-three years ago. However, it wasn’t until I jotted down some thoughts on each of DC’s line-wide crossover events, and realized that Final Crisis would be Event No. 20* (!!) that it started to sink in. I’ve lived through the main parts of every one of these things, with varying degrees of reward — and where has it gotten me?

Well, at least a couple of posts. Here’s Part 1 of my pocket guide to those post-Crisis crossover events, done up bullet-point style for your reading convenience.

* * *

1. Legends (1986, 6 monthly issues, 22 tie-in issues)

Why? DC had just reorganized its spice rack; time to start cookin’!

How? Darkseid sends Glorious Godfrey to Earth to make the superheroes look bad. When that doesn’t work, it’s time to release the robot hounds.

So? After he realizes the public’s against him, Cap surren– sorry. At the end of Legends, a parade of adorable children, led by a pre-gritty Jason Todd, tries to convince an angry mob that the superheroes are A-OK. When Godfrey slaps one of the kids, his hold over the crowd is broken. The miniseries was therefore a little too earnest for its own good. (Godfrey does accidentally lobotomize himself with the Helmet of Fate, but still.)

After? A better marketing tool than a story, Legends launched such successes as Justice League International, John Ostrander’s Suicide Squad, and the current Flash series.

2. Millennium (1987, 8 weekly issues, 37 tie-in issues)

Why? To bring part of his ’70s Justice League run into Steve Englehart’s master plan for Green Lantern.

How? A Guardian of the Universe and a Zamaron want to protect the next step in cosmic evolution from the Manhunters. However, a Manhunter sleeper-agent may be Someone You Know!!

So? The Manhunter-exposing didn’t go too much further than this event. A mind-controlled Lana Lang was the highest-profile Manhunter agent, and it didn’t stop her from becoming First Lady of the U.S. Wally West’s dad was more unrepentant about his Manhunter work, but that just seemed to confirm what a manipulative bastard he’d turned out to be. Also, although Joe Staton was well-suited for Green Lantern, his work was a little too quirky for the “stylebook sensibility” a big event seems to require.

After? The New Guardians got their own short-lived series (12 issues) and the Old Guardians went back to Cosmic Stud Farm (the all-male Guardians were the Zamarons’ once-estranged mates) for a few more years. As for the next next step in cosmic evolution, I suspect only Geoff Johns knows for sure.

And 18 more.

Old School CGI Cylons

From a guy who works on the show's effects. [Link]

It’s no secret that I’m the biggest fan of the original Battlestar currently working on the new incarnation; you could almost say I’m the “ambassador” of the 1979 version, always looking for opportunities to include classic Galactica material on the current series. It was maybe two years ago that I was talking to [writer/producer] David Weddle and hypothesized, “you know, if we ever did a flashback to the first Cylon war (maybe something that showed us what Adama was like as a young pilot), it would showcase the original hardware! Remember the miniseries museum scene?” He thought about it for a second and said, “yeah, I suppose you’re right.”

Of course, a flashback like that would be a wet dream for any fan of the original series, but would it ever happen?

Eighteen months later, Mr. Weddle came up to me in commissary and said, “Mojo, you’re going to get your wish.”

I loved seeing the old ships in Razor.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

25,000 Polar Bears are Threatened

The Polar Bear is now a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act. [Link]
The Endangered Species Act operates in a very unaccountable fashion, and if the polar bear is listed as a "threatened" species, every federal action --the grant of a permit, the award of a grant-- that leads even indirectly to the emission of greenhouse gases will come under at least the theoretical review of the United States Fish & Wildlife Service pursuant to Section 7 of the ESA. MSM continues to report the controversy as though its impact will be limited to the arctic region, when in fact it is as likely to delay or destroy economic activity in any part of the lower 48 as it is in Alaska.

The immediate response of impacted industries and consumers should be a series of test cases to force the delineation of the reach of the Act's application to the polar bear and the gases allegedly causing the destruction of its ice habitat, test cases brought in jurisdictions most reasonable on such matters. Allowing the ESA to slowly ensnare industries previously unregulated by its commands via suits in jurisdictions cheryy-picked by environmental activists would be the worst possible result.
But is it really threatened? [Link]
The polar bear is classified as a vulnerable species. Of the 19 recognized polar bear subpopulations, 5 are declining, 5 are stable, 2 are increasing, and 7 have insufficient data.[3][4] For decades, unrestricted hunting raised international concern for the future of the species; populations have rebounded after controls and quotas began to take effect. For thousands of years, the polar bear has been a key figure in the material, spiritual, and cultural life of Arctic indigenous peoples, and the hunting of polar bears remains important in their cultures.

The $4 problem and the $99.99 problem

Many old gas pumps can't record gas prices higher than $3.99 a gallon or a total greater than $99.99. [Link]
Mom-and-pop service stations are running into a problem as gasoline marches toward $4 a gallon: Thousands of old-fashioned pumps can’t register more than $3.99 on their spinning mechanical dials.

The pumps, throwbacks to a bygone era on the American road, are difficult and expensive to upgrade, and replacing them is often out of the question for station owners who are still just scraping by.

Many of the same pumps can only count up to $99.99 for the total sale, preventing owners of some SUVs, vans, trucks and tractor-trailers to fill their tanks all the way.

As many as 8,500 of the nation’s 170,000 service stations have old-style meters that need to be fixed — about 17,000 individual pumps, said Bob Renkes, executive vice president of the Petroleum Equipment Institute of Tulsa, Okla.

It's Y2K for gas.

Low Expectations

How is passing failing students helpful? [Link]
it is clear that he was denied tenure for one reason: failing too many students. The university documents portray Aird as unwilling to compromise to pass more students.

A subtext of the discussion is that Norfolk State is a historically black university with a mission that includes educating many students from disadvantaged backgrounds. The university suggests that Aird — who is white — has failed to embrace the mission of educating those who aren’t well prepared. But Aird — who had backing from his department and has some very loyal students as well — maintains that the university is hurting the very students it says it wants to help. Aird believes most of his students could succeed, but have no incentive to work as hard as they need to when the administration makes clear they can pass regardless.

“Show me how lowering the bar has ever helped anyone,” Aird said in an interview. Continuing the metaphor, he said that officials at Norfolk State have the attitude of “a track coach who tells the team ‘I really want to win this season but I really like you guys, so you can decide whether to come to practice and when.’ ” Such a team wouldn’t win, Aird said, and a university based on such a principle would not be helping its students.

Sharon R. Hoggard, a spokeswoman for Norfolk State, said that she could not comment at all on Aird’s case. But she did say this, generally, on the issues raised by Aird: “Something is wrong when you cannot impart your knowledge onto students. We are a university of opportunity, so we take students who are underprepared, but we have a history of whipping them into shape. That’s our niche.”

The question raised by Aird and his defenders is whether Norfolk State is succeeding and whether policies about who passes and who fails have an impact. According to U.S. Education Department data, only 12 percent of Norfolk State students graduate in four years, and only 30 percent graduate in six years.

Aird points to a Catch-22 that he said hinders professors’ ability to help students. Because so many students come from disadvantaged backgrounds and never received a good high school education, they are already behind, he said, and attendance is essential. Norfolk State would appear to endorse this point of view, and official university policy states that a student who doesn’t attend at least 80 percent of class sessions may be failed.

The problem, Aird said, is that very few Norfolk State students meet even that standard. In the classes for which he was criticized by the dean for his grading — classes in which he awarded D’s or F’s to about 90 percent of students — Aird has attendance records indicating that the average student attended class only 66 percent of the time. Based on such a figure, he said, “the expected mean grade would have been an F,” and yet he was denied tenure for giving such grades.

Other professors at Norfolk State, generally requesting anonymity, confirmed that following the 80 percent attendance rule would result frequently in failing a substantial share — in many cases a majority — of their students. Professors said attendance rates are considerably lower than at many institutions — although most institutions serve students with better preparation.

One reason that this does not happen (outside Aird’s classes) is that many professors at Norfolk State say that there is a clear expectation from administrators — in particular from Dean Sandra J. DeLoatch, the dean whose recommendation turned the tide against Aird’s tenure bid — that 70 percent of students should pass.

The school is lying to those students. They think they have a college degree, but they just have a piece of paper that will not provide them the skills needed to succeed.

Presidential Candidates in Gamer Terms

From Dork Tower

The Vatican and Extraterrestrials

Belief in aliens is no conflict with belief in God. [Link]

The Rev. Jose Gabriel Funes, the Jesuit director of the Vatican Observatory, was quoted as saying the vastness of the universe means it is possible there could be other forms of life outside Earth, even intelligent ones.

"How can we rule out that life may have developed elsewhere?" Funes said. "Just as we consider earthly creatures as 'a brother,' and 'sister,' why should we not talk about an 'extraterrestrial brother'? It would still be part of creation."

In the interview by the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano, Funes said that such a notion "doesn't contradict our faith" because aliens would still be God's creatures. Ruling out the existence of aliens would be like "putting limits" on God's creative freedom, he said.

The interview, headlined "The extraterrestrial is my brother," covered a variety of topics including the relationship between the Roman Catholic Church and science, and the theological implications of the existence of alien life.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

JMS Adapting Lensman

For Ron Howard. [Link]

He began by discussing the film "Changeling", which is set to premiere at the prestigious Cannes Film Festival. Clint Eastwood directed JMS' script, and the film stars Angelina Jolie and John Malkovich. "I'm the first comics guy to have a film at the Cannes Film Festival," JMS said, smiling.

Other film projects in the works include "They Marched into the Sunlight"--to be helmed by Paul Greengrass, director of "United 93" and the last two Jason Bourne films--and "World War Z". JMS also did a rewrite (in only 60 hours!) on a new film being produced by the Wachowskis. He did not have any updates on the Silver Surfer movie being developed at Fox Studios.

"I'm announcing this for the first time..." JMS told the crowd. "I'm adapting Lensman for Ron Howard." The Lensman series of novels (which stared in 1934) by E. E. Smith have been hailed as groundbreaking, definitive science-fiction. JMS said that Howard will be fully embracing the "space opera" aspects of the story and that they're envisioning it as an epic saga with elements of "Star Wars" and "Blade Runner".

"We're seeing it as one of three films," he said. JMS of course is no stranger to science fiction, having proved his sc-fi mettle with his popular "Babylon 5" series that aired throughout the '90s. Straczynski called "Babylon 5" the "bright shining star of [his] career."

Babylon 5 has some parallels to the Lensman series, particularly the fight between ancient races who have meddled in our pasts.

The ACME Catalog

Cool. [Link] I've always liked the
ACME BAT-MAN'S OUTFIT

Mono Titlrotor

Interesting concept. [Link]
Baldwin Technologies has an ambitious plan to build an umanned mono tiltrotor aircraft that could be used to move large stockpiles of ammunition, the so-called "Iron Mountain." Graham Warwick of Aviation Week's ARES blog has the latest video and details on the proposed aircraft:


ManBabies.com = Bizarre + Creepy

A site dedicated to swapping dad and baby heads in photos. [Link]

Reaper avoids the scythe

Sarah will be happy about this. She likes the show. [Link]
The CW network has given a 13-episode midseason renewal to its comedic hourlong series Reaper, Variety reported. The story centers on a slacker guy (Bret Harrison) who's forced to work for the devil (Ray Wise), thanks to a Faustian bargain made years ago by his parents. The freshman series from ABC Studios has a cadre of loyal fans but has otherwise struggled in the ratings.

Fraggle Rock Movie

Cool. I like the Fraggles. [Link]
The Weinstein Co. will adapt the Jim Henson series Fraggle Rock into a live-action musical feature, Variety reported. Cory Edwards (Hoodwinked!) will direct the film and write the screenplay. The Jim Henson Co. will produce and The Weinstein Co. will distribute.

Just like the series, the film will be populated by a mix of human characters and Fraggle Rock muppets. It will take the core characters Gogo, Wembley, Mokey, Boober and Red outside of their home in Fraggle Rock, where they interact with humans who they think are aliens. The show premiered on HBO in 1983, ran five seasons and was broadcast in more than 80 countries. It posted strong sales recently when the first three seasons were released on DVD.

Boomtown

Dubai is a boomtown. Lots of amazing pictures. It's a cyberpunk setting just waiting to happen. [Link]

Friday, May 09, 2008

Racial Harassment Nightmare

Wow. This should have been cleared up in 10 minutes, but took months and pressure from outside groups and bad press. [Link]
IN November, I was found guilty of "racial harassment" for reading a public-li brary book on a university campus.

The book was Todd Tucker's "Notre Dame vs. the Klan: How the Fighting Irish Defeated the Ku Klux Klan I was reading it on break from my campus job as a janitor. The same book is in the university library.

Tucker recounts events of 1924, when the loathsome Klan was a dominant force in Indiana - until it went to South Bend to taunt the Irish Catholic students at the University of Notre Dame.

When the KKK tried to rally, the students confronted them. They stole Klan robes and destroyed their crosses, driving the KKK out of town in a downpour.

I read the historic encounter and imagined myself with these brave Irish Catholics, as they street-fought the Klan. (I'm part-Irish, and was raised Catholic.)

But that didn't stop the Affirmative Action Office of Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis from branding me as a detestable Klansman.

They didn't want to hear the truth. The office ruled that my "repeatedly reading the book . . . constitutes racial harassment in that you demonstrated disdain and insensitivity to your co-workers."

It should have been easy to clear this up. Emphasis added.

But the $106,000-a-year affirmative-action officer who declared me guilty of "racial harassment" never spoke to me or examined the book. My own union - the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees - sent an obtuse shop steward to stifle my freedom to read. He told me, "You could be fired," that reading the book was "like bringing pornography to work."

Shame on the affirmative-action people and my union for displaying their ignorance and incompetence. Their pusillanimous actions, in trying to ban Tucker's anti-Klan history book, played into the hands of the hateful KKK.

After months of stonewalling, the university withdrew the charge, thanks to pressure from the press, the American Civil Liberties Union and a group called the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, or FIRE.

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Volkswagen 235MPG car to be released in 2010

And it's not a hybrid or electric. Diesel. [Link]

The VW 1L is so named because, in theory, it only consumes one liter of fuel per 100 kilometers traveled. For those of us in the US, this translates into about 235 MPG. Definitely far and above anything on the market currently. The concept, developed in 2002, actually got better fuel economy, scoring a sweet .89L/100km in VW testing. It’s likely to use more fuel in real world use, but with that kind of mileage in testing it’s unlikely that anyone would complain about an “unsatisfactory 200 MPG.”

The thing is, that kinda of fuel economy comes at the price of riding in an extremely small two seater, with the two seats being one in front of the other, a la jet plane, rather than a standard side by side. The 1L also looks frighteningly close to the ground, which is part of how it pulls off a drag coefficient of .159, much better than any current production vehicle. While the final design isn’t done, VW will probably power the car with a 1 cyclinder diesel engine of displacement lower the .5 L, meaning the car’s speed will top out at 120 km/h.

Definite compromises, but still. And it looks pretty cool, too.