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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Engineers create prototype for air-writing cell phone
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Engineers create prototype for air-writing cell phone
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ath3na
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06/10/2009 18:32
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience...ingincellphones
Air Writing: Next Big Thing in Cell Phones?
LiveScience Staff livescience.com – Wed Jun 10, 1:03 pm ET
Forget fumbling with tiny cell phone keys. A prototype of a new application allows cell phone users to write short notes in the air and send them automatically to an e-mail address.
This represents just one possible step toward allowing people to naturally merge the real world with the information power of the Internet. Travelers and other mobile users could air-write notes to themselves rather than have to text on the run.
"By holding the phone like a pen, you can write short messages or draw simple diagrams in the air," said Sandip Agrawal, an electrical and computer engineering student at Duke University in North Carolina.
The air-writing app takes advantage of accelerometers already inside cell phones such as Apple's iPhone. Accelerometers normally keep track of phone movements and orientation, such as having the display screen rotate from portrait to landscape mode.
Speed writers may still want to stick with texting for now, because air-writers currently have to pause briefly between each letter and cannot use cursive. But researchers expect an improved app that will come with better algorithms and accelerometers.
Future versions of this PhonePoint Pen app may even allow users to take a photo with their phone and write a quick note on it.
Such interactivity has also emerged in the work of other research groups, such as MIT's Sixth Sense project, and may signal the new era of cyborg technologies. Applications that can piggyback on existing cell phone technology may also get an advantage.
"We're trying to get past the whole idea of typing on a keyboard or using a stylus to enter information into devices," said Romit Roy Choudhury, an electrical and computer engineer at Duke who acted as Agrawal's mentor.
Agrawal won an inaugural Hoffman + Krippner Award for Excellence in Student Engineering for his work on the application, at the 2009 Sensors Expo and Conference in Chicago on June 9.
Researchers expect the app to become available for download in the next several months. So if you like to jog and tweet on Twitter without running into trees, take note.
* Video - Implanted. Enhanced. Invaded? Human-Robot Mergers * Cell Phones Allow Everyone to Be a Scientist * Robot News and Information
* Original Story: Air Writing: Next Big Thing in Cell Phones?
LiveScience.com chronicles the daily advances and innovations made in science and technology. We take on the misconceptions that often pop up around scientific discoveries and deliver short, provocative explanations with a certain wit and style. Check out our science videos, Trivia & Quizzes and Top 10s. Join our community to debate hot-button issues like stem cells, climate change and evolution. You can also sign up for free newsletters, register for RSS feeds and get cool gadgets at the LiveScience Store.
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Community
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General Discussion
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Cinematic 11.3 Adaptation
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Re:Cinematic 11.3 Adaptation
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ath3na
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0
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06/07/2009 20:41
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Great work on this first draft, Kev. I think this tests out the concept very well and gives a chance for community feedback. You can always refine the different technical aspects - those are really not that difficult in the long run, creatively speaking. The most important things are that you are getting a good handle on your process, that you finished this draft in a timely fashion and in a form that you can re-edit, and that you put it out there on the line for constructive notes. I just wish we had more time to film, but the matrix won't last forever - we just don't possess that much time as a community with Bay's and Math's patch. This is a great going away present if you ask me.
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Community
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General Discussion
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Faction Archives: Faction History Requested
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Re:Faction Archives: Faction History Requested
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ath3na
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0
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06/04/2009 19:30
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Other members of our faction are invited to add their touch to this description. Name of your faction: Insurgence Original Leaders: Khanstruct When it was formed: Beta Why the faction name was chosen: Our faction stood for freedom of information and individual rights, tolerance of differing viewpoints and confidence in the marketplace of ideas, democracy regardless of class or reputation, and the right to self-organize into what was known as the human republic of Zion. Through the looking glass, however, the machines might have used our faction name to describe these virtues and as a label for the disruptive, foreign Redpill movement. Additionally, the name also had an electromagnetic quality about it (i.e. surge, inductance). Why the faction was in the organization (merv, machine, etc) it was: Started at a time when most factions were Zion, our group tried to distinguish itself by staying on the cutting edge of information and the cross-server coordination of factions and organizations. We attended and orchestrated countless meetings on all servers and you'll find screenshots of our members' live-event participation in almost every thread of the ‘Live Events' section of DN1. We organized the first multi-faction Zion voice-server in the first week of live which we announced at the first multi-faction meeting on our server. We were instrumental in the first cross-server EPN voice-server and organized the EPN group on Xfire; we saved the EPN Relay, running the Relay for the longest uninterrupted time compared to any other incarnation. Our group looked beyond the literal meaning of events, proper names, and historical or contemporary references, yet we were non-exclusive, accepting people on whatever level they were willing to view the matrix and confident that, given the resources, each member could decipher the different levels of meaning. Amount of crews in its prime: Almost 40 Anything else you think might be interesting for us to know: Our current members include Hydrazine, Sputnik, Paschendale, KevinXser, Gomerman, Keymaster, Tohryanse, Nehoe, Waromnimonki, Mars, and Athena. We had several syntax EPN members active in our faction, such as Gerik. Past key members include, Liph, Nihilist, Tstrike, Killian, Thrylla, JojoBiz, and Westup.
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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NASA's Kepler Telescope blasts into space to find other Earths
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NASA's Kepler Telescope blasts into space to find other Earths
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ath3na
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03/07/2009 23:04
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Telescope blasts into space to find other Earths By MARCIA DUNN, AP Aerospace Writer – Sat Mar 7, 10:01 am ET
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – NASA's planet-hunting telescope, Kepler, rocketed into space Friday night on a historic voyage to track down other Earths in a faraway patch of the Milky Way galaxy.
It's the first mission capable of answering the age-old question: Are other worlds like ours out there?
Kepler, named after the German 17th century astrophysicist, set off on its unprecedented mission at 10:49 p.m., thundering into a clear sky embellished by a waxing moon.
"It was just magnificent. It looked like a star was being formed in the sky," said Bill Borucki, Kepler's principal scientist. "Everybody was delighted, everybody was screaming, 'Go Kepler!'"
Kepler's mission will last at least 3 1/2 years and cost $600 million.
The goal is to find, if they exist, Earth-like planets circling stars in the so-called habitable zone — orbits where liquid water could be present on the surface of the planets. That would mean there are lots of places out there for life to evolve, Borucki said.
On the other hand, "if we don't find any, it really means Earths are very rare, we might be the only extant life and, in fact, that will be the end of 'Star Trek.' "
Once it's settled into an Earth-trailing orbit around the sun, Kepler will stare nonstop at 100,000 stars near the Cygnus and Lyra constellations, between 600 and 3,000 light years away. The telescope will watch for any dimming, or winks, in the stellar brightness that might be caused by orbiting planets.
Astronomers already have found more than 300 planets orbiting other stars, but they're largely inhospitable gas giants like Jupiter. Kepler will be looking for smaller rocky planets akin to Earth.
Kepler is designed to find hundreds of Earth-like planets if they're common and, perhaps, dozens of them in the habitable zone, Borucki said. The telescope is so powerful that from space, NASA maintains, it could detect someone in a small town turning off a porch light at night.
It won't be looking for signs of life, though. That's for future spacecraft.
NASA was counting on a successful launch to offset the loss last week of the space agency's Orbiting Carbon Observatory. That environmental satellite ended up crashing into the Antarctic because of rocket failure. It was a different type of rocket than the one used for Kepler.
Everything seemed to go well with Kepler's launch.
___
On the Net:
NASA: http://www.nasa.gov/kepler
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Optimists live longer than pessimists; eight-year study
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Optimists live longer than pessimists; eight-year study
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ath3na
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0
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03/06/2009 15:36
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video: http://www.yahoo.com/s/1039954 text: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUS...E5247NO20090305
Optimists live longer and healthier lives: study Thu Mar 5, 2009 4:56pm EST By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Optimists live longer, healthier lives than pessimists, U.S. researchers said on Thursday in a study that may give pessimists one more reason to grumble.
Researchers at University of Pittsburgh looked at rates of death and chronic health conditions among participants of the Women's Health Initiative study, which has followed more than 100,000 women ages 50 and over since 1994.
Women who were optimistic -- those who expect good rather than bad things to happen -- were 14 percent less likely to die from any cause than pessimists and 30 percent less likely to die from heart disease after eight years of follow up in the study.
Optimists also were also less likely to have high blood pressure, diabetes or smoke cigarettes.
The team, led Dr. Hilary Tindle, also looked at women who were highly mistrustful of other people -- a group they called "cynically hostile" -- and compared them with women who were more trusting.
Women in the cynically hostile group tended to agree with questions such as: "I've often had to take orders from someone who didn't know as much as I did" or "It's safest to trust nobody," Tindle said in a telephone interview.
"These questions prove a general mistrust of people," said Tindle, who presented her study Thursday at the American Psychosomatic Society's annual meeting in Chicago.
That kind of thinking takes a toll.
"Cynically hostile women were 16 percent more likely to die (during the study period) compared to women who were the least cynically hostile," Tindle said.
They were also 23 percent more likely to die from cancer.
Tindle said the study does not prove negative attitudes cause negative health effects, but she said the findings do appear to be linked in some way.
"I think we really need more research to design therapies that will target people's attitudes to see if they can be modified and if that modification is beneficial to health," she said.
And she said while a pessimist might think, "'I'm doomed. There is nothing I can do,' I'm not sure that's true," Tindle said. "We just don't know."
(Editing by Maggie Fox)
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Fertility clinics plan to offer 'designer' baby services
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Re:Re:Fertility clinics plan to offer 'designer' baby services
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ath3na
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0
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03/04/2009 15:39
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GoDGiVeR wrote: This
Worth the watch; short film, masterful computer animation, engaging art.
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Fertility clinics plan to offer 'designer' baby services
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Fertility clinics plan to offer 'designer' baby services
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ath3na
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0
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03/04/2009 01:34
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Video: http://www.yahoo.com/s/1038592 Text: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/2949637...#storyContinued Fertility clinic to offer custom-designed babies updated 4:19 p.m. CT, Tues., March. 3, 2009 Associated Press
NEW YORK - Do you want blue eyes with your baby? That's one of the questions a fertility clinic will be asking when it begin offering custom-designed babies to would-be moms and dads.
Dr. Jeff Steinberg, who operates clinics in Manhattan and Los Angeles, says that within six months he plans to let customers choose their baby's eye, hair, and even skin color, according to the New York Daily News.
Steinberg, who helped produce the first test-tube baby, acknowledges the technology is not 100 percent perfect and says best results are couples with Scandinavian heritage, whose gene pools are least diluted.
Critics, though, have blasted the idea of designer babies, likening it to the pursuit of a master race. --- 
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Vector - Hostile
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Crew and Faction Recruiting - Vector
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Insurgence - EPN
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Re:Insurgence - EPN
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ath3na
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0
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02/26/2009 18:45
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Vector - Hostile
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Crew and Faction Recruiting - Vector
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Insurgence - EPN
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Re:Insurgence - EPN
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ath3na
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0
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02/26/2009 00:56
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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How to Live Internet Video?
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Re:How to Live Internet Video?
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ath3na
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0
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02/25/2009 13:38
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Just checked that a Google search will lend some options. Some keyword suggestions: monetize, free, video, share http://www.dvguru.com/2006/04/07/te...vices-compared/ One option that is quite popular in the mobile phone community: http://www.qik.com/
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Lost city on Google Ocean?
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Re:Lost city on Google Ocean?
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ath3na
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0
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02/20/2009 17:10
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Climate & geological change are quite capable of changing a city into a reef, or a fertile plain into a desert. Let's just hope that it doesn't happen to northern Canada anytime soon. The underwater remains of an ancient city off the coast of India were reported in the BBC 2002: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/1768109.stm Saturday, 19 January, 2002, 06:33 GMT Lost city 'could rewrite history' The shipping rights in the arctic circle are a current area of international debate. http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily...0127_954391.htm Who Owns Rights to Melting Arctic? As the ice melts, Russia, Canada, and the U.S. vie for shipping and natural resource rights around the North Pole --- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/1768109.stm 

 Saturday, 19 January, 2002, 06:33 GMT Lost city 'could rewrite history'
The city is believed to predate the Harappan civilisation By BBC News Online's Tom Housden
The remains of what has been described as a huge lost city may force historians and archaeologists to radically reconsider their view of ancient human history.
Marine scientists say archaeological remains discovered 36 metres (120 feet) underwater in the Gulf of Cambay off the western coast of India could be over 9,000 years old.
The vast city - which is five miles long and two miles wide - is believed to predate the oldest known remains in the subcontinent by more than 5,000 years.
The site was discovered by chance last year by oceanographers from India's National Institute of Ocean Technology conducting a survey of pollution.
Using sidescan sonar - which sends a beam of sound waves down to the bottom of the ocean they identified huge geometrical structures at a depth of 120ft.
Debris recovered from the site - including construction material, pottery, sections of walls, beads, sculpture and human bones and teeth has been carbon dated and found to be nearly 9,500 years old.
Lost civilisation
The city is believed to be even older than the ancient Harappan civilisation, which dates back around 4,000 years.
Marine archaeologists have used a technique known as sub-bottom profiling to show that the buildings remains stand on enormous foundations.
Author and film-maker Graham Hancock - who has written extensively on the uncovering of ancient civilisations - told BBC News Online that the evidence was compelling:
"The [oceanographers] found that they were dealing with two large blocks of apparently man made structures.
"Cities on this scale are not known in the archaeological record until roughly 4,500 years ago when the first big cities begin to appear in Mesopotamia.
"Nothing else on the scale of the underwater cities of Cambay is known. The first cities of the historical period are as far away from these cities as we are today from the pyramids of Egypt," he said.
Chronological problem
This, Mr Hancock told BBC News Online, could have massive repercussions for our view of the ancient world.
"There's a huge chronological problem in this discovery. It means that the whole model of the origins of civilisation with which archaeologists have been working will have to be remade from scratch," he said.
However, archaeologist Justin Morris from the British Museum said more work would need to be undertaken before the site could be categorically said to belong to a 9,000 year old civilisation.
"Culturally speaking, in that part of the world there were no civilisations prior to about 2,500 BC. What's happening before then mainly consisted of small, village settlements," he told BBC News Online.
Dr Morris added that artefacts from the site would need to be very carefully analysed, and pointed out that the C14 carbon dating process is not without its error margins.
It is believed that the area was submerged as ice caps melted at the end of the last ice age 9-10,000 years ago
Although the first signs of a significant find came eight months ago, exploring the area has been extremely difficult because the remains lie in highly treacherous waters, with strong currents and rip tides.
The Indian Minister for Human Resources and ocean development said a group had been formed to oversee further studies in the area.
"We have to find out what happened then ... where and how this civilisation vanished," he said.
--- http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily...4391_page_2.htm
 Who Owns Rights to Melting Arctic? As the ice melts, Russia, Canada, and the U.S. vie for shipping and natural resource rights around the North Pole
By Arik Hesseldahl
This map shows potential routes of the Northwest Passage and Russia's Northern Sea Route. Though the Northwest Passage is currently iced over, analysts think global warming might reduce the ice and make passage a viable shipping route in 30 or 40 years. Ray Vella
For the better part of four centuries, explorers prowled the seas of North America, hunting the long rumored Northwest Passage, a navigable waterway that would connect Europe and Asia by way of the icy waters of the Arctic.
It wasn't until 1905 that Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen made the first trip from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific by way of Arctic waterways, a feat that took him three years. Since then, fewer than 200 ships have repeated the journey because of the constant threats of ice.
Still, the hope for a Northwest Passage lingers and has become central to a key international debate heating up over the Arctic north. If climate change and global warming are real—and there's currently little doubt over that—then it stands to reason that the ice covering Arctic waterways will decrease in coming decades, presenting fewer navigational problems for shipping. If the ice recedes—and few experts expect it will do so year-round—cargo shipping times and distances could, the thinking goes, be cut: A 12,400-mile voyage from Japan to England by way of the Panama Canal could be shortened to less than 8,700 miles using the Northwest Passage, saving 14 days and costs. Canada's Claim
But then whose water is it? Practically all of the navigable Northwest Passage routes, and there are only a few, pass between Canadian islands. Thus, Canada has argued that these portions of the route are domestic waterways, and that ships traversing the area should do so with Canadian permission. That has touched off a bit of a row between the U.S. and Canada. Just days before leaving office, President George W. Bush released a sweeping security directive asserting that the Northwest Passage is an "international waterway," meaning that American ships, or in theory those of any other nation, should be able to sail through the area in the same way they do other international waterways. The directive has been seen as a sharp rebuttal to Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, who has advocated boosting Canada's military presence in the area.
Canada has maintained since the 1970s that it views the waters not as "international," but rather "internal." On all but three occasions of the 180-odd times that international ships have traversed the passage, Canadian permission and aid was sought, usually in the form of an icebreaking vessel, says Rob Huebert, a professor of political science at the University of Calgary, who specializes in Arctic affairs. That fact also helps buttress Canada's argument, he says. "Canada is the one with the expertise and the familiarity with the conditions," Huebert says. For years, the U.S. and Canada have quietly agreed to disagree over the matter—until Jan. 9, when Bush issued his Arctic security directive.
It's partially a military question. Submarines are required under international law to surface before traversing internal waterways but can remain submerged in international waters. And U.S. and Russian submarines have long been active in the area. For Canada, there's also an enormous environmental motivation. "If there's ever an oil spill, it's a disaster," Huebert says. "There's no technology that can remove heavy [oil] from under the ice. Canada tends to be hypersensitive about that." But sovereignty over shipping lanes that may or may not open up in the coming decades is only part of the ever-widening strategic game taking place in the Great White North. Awaiting New Technology
A 2008 report by the U.S. Geological Survey, which took four years of study, estimated that as much as 20% of the world's undiscovered oil and natural gas may lie beneath the Arctic sea floor. The region may hold as much as 90 billion barrels of oil—believed to be about 13% of the world's undiscovered oil—and some 1.7 trillion cubic feet of natural gas reserves, roughly equivalent to the gas reserves in Russia, the world's leading supplier.
These findings made the question over sovereignty far more strategic—and contentious. Canada, Denmark, Russia, and the U.S. all assert territorial claims in the Arctic. And if oil prices ever rebound to the levels seen during the summer of 2008, topping $147 per barrel, less ice could help make fossil fuel recovery more cost-effective, if not exactly easy. "To get to the exploitation phase, you have to wait for the technology to advance," says Peter Zeihan, an analyst with Stratfor, a strategic consulting firm in Austin, Tex. But with the ice cap disappearing at a rate of more than 20,000 square miles per year, the technical challenges are expected to dwindle over time.
And that's where drawing the map of borders in the Arctic Ocean becomes paramount—and complicated. In August 2007, a Russian submersible descended through a hole in the ice to plant a Russian flag on the sea floor at the North Pole. It was a provocative stunt that caused some hand-wringing around the globe, especially in light of Russia's increasingly aggressive military stance. Countries are allowed to consider waters out to 12 miles from their coasts as their own territory. For countries that have signed the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, which the U.S. has not but may do so soon, waters that go out 200 miles over a country's continental shelf are considered "exclusive economic zones." But if signatory countries can prove that their continental shelf extends beyond that 200-mile line, they have rights to oil, gas, and minerals beneath the seabed. Thus the scramble over competing claims of sovereignty.
Russia claims its shelf runs some 1,200 miles from Siberia—almost to Ellesmere Island, Canada's northernmost point, although Russia claims only the portion of the shelf on its side of the North Pole. Even so, if there is as much natural gas there as the U.S. Geological Survey thinks, and much of it is concentrated in areas Russia claims for itself, then it could conceivably solidify Russia's already dominant hold on the world's natural gas market—and thus raise the stakes in a strategic scramble now heating up at the top of the world.
Hesseldahl is a reporter for BusinessWeek.com.
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Lost city on Google Ocean?
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Lost city on Google Ocean?
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ath3na
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0
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02/20/2009 13:58
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Debunked: Unlike real archeological techniques that found a lost city off the coast of India reported in the BBC 2002, artifacts in Google Ocean’s mapping technology seemed to have served for tabloid gossip more than actual science.
Thanks to Phi for tipping us off. --- http://www.techradar.com/news/inter...s-google-535617 Atlantis still a lost city, says Google Despite what The Sun says about Bernie Bamford's discovery
Friday at 14:54 GMT
Google has denied that the fabled lost city of Atlantis has been 'discovered' via the recently released Ocean in Google Earth.
A number of UK tabloids got slightly ahead of themselves earlier today, claiming that a rectangular grid around the size of Wales 620 miles off the west coast Africa on Madeira Abyssal Plane was indeed the lost city of Atlantis.
The grid was spotted by Bernie Bamford from Chester while taking a virtual dip in Google Earth.
And while The Sun was quick to jump on the fact that Bamford claimed he had found a "man-made aerial map" of an underwater city and a number of other media outlets quoted curator of historical archaeology at New York State University saying that "the site is one of the most prominent places for the proposed location of Atlantis," Google has quickly denied the possibility.
Google does the PR switch
Quick to capitalise on this unexpected publicity, Google's Laura Scott told TechRadar:
"It's true that many amazing discoveries have been made in Google Earth - a pristine forest in Mozambique that is home to previously unknown species, a fringing coral reef off the coast of Australia, and the remains of an Ancient Roman villa, to name just a few.
"In this case, however, what users are seeing is an artefact of the data collection process. Bathymetric (or seafloor terrain) data is often collected from boats using sonar to take measurements of the seafloor. The lines reflect the path of the boat as it gathers the data. The fact that there are blank spots between each of these lines is a sign of how little we really know about the world's oceans."
So. To quickly recap. A man with a funny name in Chester didn't find Atlantis on the internet. But Ocean in Google Earth still rocks. By Adam Hartley --- http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepag...icle2255989.ece
And you know if its in that celebrity gossip rag - excuse me - bastion of wisdom known as the Sun it just has to be true. The surrounding media attention has been perhaps the most talk about a Sun article that has probably ever appeared on any semi-legitimate new source.
Of course, its much more salacious to label it the lost city of Atlantis, but there does exist another immediate, more readily-digestible archeologically-based hypothesis.
Considering human migration and examining the surrounding areas, one logical connection may have to do with the Basque people. The Basque people are relatively genetically, linguistically, and culturally isolated from the surrounding peoples - an argument that has been used in their independence movement in Spain.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basque_people
“Since the Basques speak a non-Indo-European language and have the highest proportion of the Rh negative blood type of all the peoples of the world, they were widely considered to be a genetically isolated population, preserving the genes of European Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers, until recent genetic studies found that modern Basques have a common ancestry with other Western Europeans.”
The Basque language is one language that doesn’t fit into the traditional evolutionary tracing of languages recently seen in another thread: http://www.bartleby.com/61/images/indoeuro.jpg --- Climate & geological change are quite capable of changing a city into a reef, or a fertile plain into a desert. Let's just hope that it doesn't happen to northern Canada anytime soon. The underwater remains of an ancient city off the coast of India were reported in the BBC 2002: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/1768109.stm Saturday, 19 January, 2002, 06:33 GMT Lost city 'could rewrite history' The shipping rights in the arctic circle are a current area of international debate. http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily...0127_954391.htm Who Owns Rights to Melting Arctic? As the ice melts, Russia, Canada, and the U.S. vie for shipping and natural resource rights around the North Pole
--- 


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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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'Pain gene' & 'Fear gene'
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'Pain gene' & 'Fear gene'
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ath3na
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0
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02/19/2009 15:47
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In the last decade, there have existed public announcements of the discovery of the 'Pain gene' & the 'Fear gene,' genetic strands that influence our decision making process and that have a role in defining what it means to be 'human.'
As with much of genetics, ethical questions surrounding the application of such scientific knowledge abound.
---
Thursday, 10 January, 2002, 18:19 GMT 'Pain gene' found http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/1753737.stm Last Updated: Sunday, 20 November 2005, 00:07 GMT Gene controlling fear discovered http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4449226.stm
---
Thursday, 10 January, 2002, 18:19 GMT 'Pain gene' found http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/1753737.stm
Scientists have found a gene whose absence can help reduce pain.
Tests on genetically engineered mice which lacked a particular gene showed a "dramatic" loss of sensitivity, appearing to feel up to 50% less pain compared to mice who had the gene.
The discovery by Canadian researchers could one day open the door for the development of drugs to help patients with terminal cancer, chronic backaches and other problems.
The gene concerned is DREAM (downstream regulatory element antagonistic modulator).
The DREAM gene blocks production of dynorphin, a chemical with pain-relieving effects produced in response to pain or stress.
In the mice which did not have the DREAM gene, more dynorphin was produced in the part of the spinal cord involved in transmitting and controlling pain messages.
The mice were discovered to have reduced sensitivity to all types of pain.
Researchers from the University of Toronto, The Hospital for Sick Children and the Amgen Institute said the success in reducing neuropathic pain, sharp - chronic pain resulting from nerve injury - was particularly significant because there are currently no widely effective treatments for this kind of pain.
Different approach
Professor Michael Salter, director of the University of Toronto Centre for the Study of Pain and co-author of the study, said: "Pain is a huge, silent public health crisis that is only beginning to be addressed by researchers.
He added: "There's a great interest in this finding because it's so different from the traditional approaches researchers have been taking to pain management."
At the moment, patients experiencing severe pain are given drugs to control their condition.
A treatment based on the DREAM gene discovery could prove a breakthrough because the mice in the study did not become addicted to the pain control chemicals their bodies produced.
This, say researchers, may prove to be an advantage over the potentially addictive drugs such as morphine.
Professor Saltier said: "These findings point to a novel pharmacological approach to pain management where researchers will be looking for drugs that could block the ability of DREAM to bind to DNA or simply prevent the production of DREAM."
But such a treatment may be hard to develop because the DREAM gene works deep inside cells.
The research is published in the journal Cell.
---
Last Updated: Sunday, 20 November 2005, 00:07 GMT Gene controlling fear discovered http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4449226.stm
Scientists have discovered a gene that appears to control whether fear reactions to impending danger are appropriate or not.
Mice lacking the gene stathmin appeared fearless in conditions that should instinctively inspire fear.
The gene is expressed in particularly high levels in a part of the brain, called the amygdala, known to be important in human fear.
The US team told Cell their findings could shed light on anxiety disorders.
Daredevil mice
The same researchers from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute identified a similar gene a few years ago, called GPR that appeared to be important in the process of "learned fear".
This is where animals, including humans, learn over time that something is a threat or danger, as opposed to the instinctive fear which animals are born with.
GPR appeared to block the action of "circuitry" in the amygdala of the brain which learns fear.
Conversely, the newer gene discovered, stathmin, appears to help this circuitry.
Mice bred to lack stathmin showed abnormally low levels of anxiety in situations that would normally make a mouse very afraid, such as being in large open spaces - innate fear.
They also reacted less to learned fear.
In the study, this was a neutral tone that was played while the animals were delivered a mild electric shock.
The mice showed a decreased memory for the fearful situations and had difficulty recognising dangerous environments.
Their memory for things other than fear was not impaired, however.
Co-researcher Dr Gleb Shumyatsky, from Rutgers University Piscataway, New Jersey, said these mice could be used to study human phobias and anxiety-related disorders such as post-traumatic stress disorder.
Survival mechanism
"These animal models could be used to develop new anti-anxiety agents," he added.
He said that taken together, their work on genes and anxiety supported clinical data indicating that anxiety is a spectrum of disorders.
He said it was likely that each disorder would have a "unique molecular signature" and therefore require individually tailored drugs for treatment.
Professor Alexander Gardner, a clinical psychologist in Glasgow and member of the British Psychological Association, said: "There is already evidence that the amygdala is involved in fear.
"This is very interesting research indeed."
He said it was important for animals and humans to recognise and respond to fearful situations for survival.
However, he questioned whether fear could be truly innate.
For example, he argued that man was not naturally afraid of fire - man used it to be able to exist in colder climates - but we learn that it can be dangerous and therefore do fear it.
He suggested it might be that certain genes laid down a map in the brain for further acquisition of fear.
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Community
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General Discussion
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New Dev or Story Tools?
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Re:New Dev or Story Tools?
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ath3na
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0
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02/18/2009 17:09
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When SWG came out with the Storyteller tools, I was hoping that MxO would eventually get this. I saw SWG as what MxO could become, but with live events. I was hoping that update 66 would contain main storyline character captures (even if they were only one-time use). There's only so much awe that an exile hideout boss can inspire compared to the Merovingian himself.
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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German inventor designs jet pack propelled by water
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German inventor designs jet pack propelled by water
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ath3na
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0
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02/18/2009 12:39
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More in jet pack news: --- German inventor designs jet pack propelled by water Video: http://www.yahoo.com/s/1032181 Wired Text: http://blog.wired.com/cars/2009/02/...d-motion--.html Fluid Motion: JetLev-Flyer H2O-Propelled Jet Pack By Chuck Squatriglia February 02, 2009 | 5:02:03 PM Jet packs are a cool idea too often undone by their voracious thirst for fuel, which limits your barnstorming to no more than a minute or so. A German entrepreneur has sidestepped that problem by using water pressure to create a "jet pack" he claims will stay aloft for hours. Provided you're flying over a lake. Lars Ramke says the JetLev-Flyer he unveiled at the big Dusseldorf boat show can reach an altitude of about 50 feet and a top speed of about 46 mph. Even more spectacular is his claimed range of 300 kilometers - which is about 186 miles for the metrically challenged. So how's it work? Ramke doesn't offer any details at his website, but according to Der Westen, a floating pump powered by a four-stroke engine (115 to 130 horsepower) sends water through a 140-foot-long hose to a pair of nozzles mounted on the "jet pack." It looks a lot like the "personal propulsion device" Canadian inventor Raymond Li patented about two years ago. Li calls it JetLev, for jet levitation. Li has touted the safety of the contraption, noting that the pack floats, it has no moving parts and the water shoots out of the two nozzles at no more than 100 PSI. You're also no more than a few dozen yards above the water if something goes pear-shaped. That makes the risk a little more acceptable than, say, strapping on a hydrogen-peroxide pack and jetting across a gorge like Eric Scott or soaring over the alps or across the English Channel on homemade jet wings like Yves Rossy. Ramke says the JetLev-Flyer is a breeze to operate, and the €100,000 ($128,000 U.S.) price tag includes "detailed instructions by a qualified personal trainer." At that price, its no surprise that Ramke told Spiegel most of the people buying them are Russian oligarchs. See Also: * Fusionman's Jet Wing Soars Over the English Channel * Soaring Over the Alps on Homemade Jet Wings * Jet Pack Flies (Two Feet) High * Wired Video: Jet Pack Pilot Blasts Off * Water-Jet Pack Patented. The Jet-Ski of 2020?
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Vector - Hostile
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Crew and Faction Recruiting - Vector
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Insurgence - EPN
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Re:Insurgence - EPN
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ath3na
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0
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02/17/2009 22:10
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Pill to erase bad memories
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Pill to erase bad memories
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ath3na
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0
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02/17/2009 01:48
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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...n-identity.html
Pill to erase bad memories By David Derbyshire Last updated at 12:42 PM on 16th February 2009
A drug which appears to erase painful memories has been developed by scientists.
The astonishing treatment could help sufferers of post-traumatic stress disorder and those whose lives are plagued by hurtful recurrent memories.
But British experts said the breakthrough raises disturbing ethical questions about what makes us human.
They also warned it could have damaging psychological consequences, preventing those who take it from learning from their mistakes.
Dr Daniel Sokol, a lecturer in medical ethics at St George's, University of London, said: 'Removing bad memories is not like removing a wart or a mole. It will change our personal identity since who we are is linked to our memories.
'It may perhaps be beneficial in some cases, but before eradicating memories, we must reflect on the knock-on effects that this will have on individuals, society and our sense of humanity.'
Dutch researchers claim to have erased bad memories by using 'beta-blocker' drugs, which are usually prescribed to patients with heart disease.
Experiments on animals had already shown that the drugs - beta-adrenergic receptor blockers - can interfere with how the brain makes and remakes memories of frightening events.
In the latest study, Dr Merel Kindt of Amsterdam University tested the drugs on 60 men and women.
His team created fearful memories in volunteers by showing them pictures of spiders while giving them gentle electric shocks.
The volunteers were urged to 'actively remember' the images, creating a strong negative association between spiders and discomfort.
The following day the volunteers were split into two groups. One was given the beta blocker and the other a placebo pill before both were shown the same spider pictures.
The researchers recorded the level of fear in the volunteers by playing sudden noises and measuring how strongly they blinked.
A strong startle response showed they were in a fearful state, while a mild response showed they were calm.
The group given the beta blocker had a much weaker fear response than those given the dummy pill, the researchers report in the journal Nature Neuroscience.
A day later - once the drug was out of their systems - their fear response was tested again.
Once more, those given the beta blocker the previous day showed fewer signs of spider phobia, suggesting the memory was completely erased.
Beta blockers appear to work because each time someone recalls a powerful emotional memory the memory is 'remade' by the brain.
The drug interferes with this re-creation of the stressful memory - and prevents the brain renewing it.
In theory, it could eradicate memories of traumatic events that happened years ago. It might also help patients overcome phobias, obsessions, eating disorders and even sexual hang-ups.
Dr Kindt said: 'Traditionally, therapists seek to teach people with such disorders strategies to build new associations and block bad memories but the problem is the memories remain and people often relapse.'
It could be several years before doctors prescribe the drugs for patients with post-traumatic stress disorder.
The scientists say more tests are needed to confirm the drug's memory- erasing properties. Dr Kindt said: 'The next steps are to look at how long the drug's effects on memory last, and testing the treatment in people who actually are suffering from some kind of disorder or phobia.'
But British experts warned the drug raises some difficult questions.
Professor John Harris, an expert in biological ethics at the University of Manchester, said: 'It is obviously up to the individual whether or not she wishes to risk the possible effects, including psychological discontinuity, of erasing unpleasant memories.
'An interesting complexity is the possibility that victims, say of violence, might wish to erase the painful memory and with it their ability to give evidence against assailants.
'Similarly criminals and witnesses to crime may, under the guise of erasing a painful memory, render themselves unable to give evidence.'
Paul Farmer, chief executive of the mental-health charity Mind, said he was concerned about the 'fundamentally pharmacological' approach to problems such as phobias and anxiety.
He told Channel 4 News that the unintended consequences 'could include the eradication of positive memories'.
Professor Neil Burgess of the Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience told the programme that wide-scale use of the drug was a long way off.
'All they've shown so far is that the increased ability to startle someone if they are feeling a bit anxious is reduced,' he said.
The ability to remove memories has been the stuff of science fiction for decades.
In the film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, which starred Kate Winslet and Jim Carrey, a couple used a technique to erase memories of each other when their relationship turned sour.
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Crash of US, Russian satellites a threat in space
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Crash of US, Russian satellites a threat in space
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ath3na
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0
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02/12/2009 16:23
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You've probably heard of this by now. Its actually starting to pile-up up there. This is our history's first publicly reported accidental collision. Iridium has many low orbit satellites.
--- http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090212...mFzaG9mdXNydXM- *
Crash of US, Russian satellites a threat in space Seth Borenstein And Douglas Birch, Associated Press Writers - 1 hr 29 mins ago MOSCOW - U.S. and Russian officials traded shots Thursday over who was to blame for a huge satellite collision this week that spewed speeding clouds of debris into space, threatening other unmanned spacecraft in nearby orbits. The smashup 500 miles (800 kilometers) over Siberia on Tuesday involved a derelict Russian spacecraft designed for military communications and a working satellite owned by U.S.-based Iridium, which served commercial customers as well as the U.S. Department of Defense. A prominent Russian space expert suggested NASA fell down on the job by not warning of the collision. But U.S. space experts said the Russian has the wrong agency. The U.S. military tracks the 18,000 objects in orbit, monitoring only certain threats because it lacks the resources to do everything, said Maj. Regina Winchester, spokeswoman for U.S. Strategic Command, which oversees the military's Space Surveillance Network. Iridium spokeswoman Elizabeth Mailander said the company can move any of its 65 satellites out of the way if it gets a precise warning ahead of a crash. Such a warning was not made Tuesday, Mailander said. But the company has never redirected a satellite before because the warnings they get aren't precise enough and there are just too many satellites to be constantly rejiggering their orbit, she said. "Ours was where it was supposed to be and it was functioning," Mailander said. She said Iridium hasn't talked with Russian space officials. No one has any idea yet how many pieces of space junk were generated by the collision or how big they might be. But the crash scattered space junk in orbits 300 to 800 miles (500 to 1,300 kilometers) above Earth, according to Maj.-Gen. Alexander Yakushin, chief of staff for the Russian military's Space Forces. Experts in space debris will meet next week in Vienna at a U.N. seminar to come up with better ways to prevent future crashes, said NASA orbital debris program manager Nicholas Johnson. Igor Lisov, a prominent Russian space expert, said Thursday he did not understand why NASA's debris experts and Iridium had failed to prevent the collision, since the Iridium satellite was active and its orbit could be adjusted. "It could have been a computer failure or a human error," he said. "It also could be that they only were paying attention to smaller debris and ignoring the defunct satellites." But that job belongs to the U.S. Department of Defense's Space Surveillance Network, which was created with NASA's help. The network's top priority is protecting astronauts - warning if there is a threat to the international space station or manned spacecraft. And it gives NASA precise warnings for about a dozen satellites that could be maneuvered out of the way, something that happens once in a while, Johnson said. There are 800 to 1,000 active satellites in orbit and about 17,000 pieces of debris and dead satellites, like the Russian one, that can't be controlled, he said. The U.S. space tracking network doesn't have the resources to warn all satellite operators of every possible close call, Johnson and Winchester said. "It's unfortunate that we cannot predict all of the collisions all of the time," said Winchester. A private Web site, named Socrates, does give daily risk of crash warnings for satellites and Iridium, with 65 satellites, frequently is in the top 10 daily risks, Johnson said. However, the Iridium satellite wasn't on Tuesday's warning list, he said. Lisov said the debris may threaten a large number of earth-tracking and weather satellites in similar orbits. "There is a quite a lot of satellites in nearby orbits," he told The Associated Press. "The other 65 Iridium satellites in similar orbits will face the most serious risk, and there numerous earth-tracking and weather satellites in nearby orbits. Fragments may trigger a chain of collisions." Both the U.S. surveillance network and Russian Space Forces are tracking the debris, believed to be traveling at speeds of around 200 meters - or about 660 feet - per second. NASA said it would take weeks to know the full magnitude of the crash, but both NASA and Russia's Roscosmos agencies said there was little risk to the international space station and its three crew members. Russian Mission Control spokesman Valery Lyndin noted the station's orbit has been adjusted in the past to dodge space debris. The space junk also is unlikely to pose a threat to the space shuttle set to launch Feb. 22 with seven astronauts, U.S. officials said, although that issue will be reviewed. The Iridium orbiter weighed 1,235 pounds (560 kilograms), and the decommissioned Kosmos-2251 military communications craft weighed nearly a ton. The Kosmos was launched in 1993 and went out of service two years later in 1995, Yakushin said. Some Soviet-built, nuclear-powered satellites long out of action in higher orbits may also be vulnerable to collisions, Lisov said. If one of them collides with the debris, the radioactive fallout would pose no threat to Earth, he said, but its speeding wreckage could multiply the hazard to other satellites. Iridium said the loss of the satellite was causing brief, occasional outages in its service and it expected to fix the problem by Friday. The Bethesda, Maryland-based company said it expected to replace the lost satellite with one of its eight in-orbit spares within 30 days. The replacement cost for an Iridium satellite is between $50 million and $100 million, including the launch, said John Higginbotham, chief executive of Integral Systems Inc., which runs ground support systems for satellites. ___ AP Writer Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow and AP Technology Writer Peter Svensson in New York contributed to this report. AP Science Writer Seth Borenstein contributed from Washington. ___ On the Net: NASA: http://www.nasa.gov --- *This image provided by the European Space Agency shows and artist impression of catalogued objects in low-Earth orbit viewed over the Equator. Scientists are keeping a close eye on orbital debris created when two communications satellites - one American, the other Russian - smashed into each other hundreds of miles above Siberia Tuesday Feb. 10, 2009. The collision was the first high-speed impact between two intact spacecraft, NASA officials said. The debris field shown in this image is an artist's impression based on actual data but not shown in their actual size or density. (AP Photo/ESA)
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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MIT Students: Wearable Computer
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Re:Re:Re:Re:MIT Students: Wearable Computer
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ath3na
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0
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02/11/2009 18:59
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MarsNova wrote: I remember in the late 90s they had T-Shirts that would play music or talk if you pushed buttons on it and you could wash those things just had to take teh battery pack out of it.
I almost forgot about those - especially at Christmas time. That kinda reminds me of something else too: Kanye's retro man-from-the-future style. 
I came across alot of this kind of a thing yesterday: 

On the other side of the spectrum, these wearable computers we are familiar with look deadly serious, of course: 

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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Contact lens TV in 10 years?
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Contact lens TV in 10 years?
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ath3na
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0
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02/11/2009 14:43
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Another technological alternative to the computer screen:
Perhaps Cryptos had a pair of these. 
Virrago and mods: If less topics are preferred, this thread can be merged with the "MIT Students: Wearable Computer" thread. http://forums.station.sony.com/mxo/..._id=36300027697 --- 
http://tech.yahoo.com/blogs/null/121134 Contact lens TV in 10 years? Wed Feb 11, 2009 11:31AM EST Oh, the bother of having to be near an actual television when you want to watch a program! Researchers say those dark days may soon be behind us: Contact lenses that can beam video programming right into your eyeball may be just 10 years away from reality. Ian Pearson, a futurist (not an engineer, mind you), says that body heat would provide all the energy needed to power the high-tech lenses. And that's not all: "Digital tattoos" could also be developed to allow wearers to literally feel the emotions that the director wants you to feel. Per the piece: "This would allow James Bond fans to feel the thrill of outdoing the enemy or sports fans to experience the elation of jubilant players." Color me skeptical: Ten years seems like an awfully short time horizon for these developments. The technology for injecting an emotional state (er... legally and safely) via a skin patch is awfully out there, and contact lens TV suffers from the problem that the eye simply can't focus on objects that close to it. Some sort of projection system or complicated light-focusing arrangement could be a solution, but both of those technologies in a device the size of a contact lens are, again, currently far-fetched. People may also feel a bit squeamish about dropping a television into their eye socket... not to mention placing their emotional well-being in the hands of Hollywood. The closest we can get to eyeball TV today? Head-mounted displays like the Vuzix line of "video eyewear." Throw in a super-sized Mountain Dew to simulate "the elation of jubilant players" and you're halfway to the future.
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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MIT Students: Wearable Computer
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Re:Re:MIT Students: Wearable Computer
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ath3na
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0
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02/11/2009 12:09
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MarsNova wrote: haha he gots bunny ears Isn't it a blast from the past in regards to what technology a college could buy in 1980 compared to today? The borg guy from 1980 must not be digital-TV compliant. I hope he realizes that resistance to the DTV switch is futile. mantra777 wrote: Keyboard Pants Concept 
That's really awesome, I haven't seen that. The designer, Erik De Nijs, had a really great idea. I wouldn't suspect it to be machine washable, but I guess if you spilled coffee on yourself getting the stain out would be a secondary concern compared to possible electrocution.
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Vector - Hostile
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Crew and Faction Recruiting - Vector
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Insurgence - EPN
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Re:Insurgence - EPN
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ath3na
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0
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02/11/2009 01:44
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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MIT Students: Wearable Computer
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MIT Students: Wearable Computer
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ath3na
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0
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02/11/2009 01:06
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Video of one current Wearable Computer design http://www.wired.com/video/latest-v...ter/10288173001 MIT Students: Wearable Computer Added: Feburary 5, 2009 Students at the MIT Media Lab have developed a wearable computing system that turns any surface into an interactive display screen. --- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wearable_computer MIT students have been playing around with this concept for a while, and we've seen the essential ideas in movies, commercials, video games, the news, military tech, etc - each incarnation widening the possible applications & flexibility of computing. Outside of the traditional screen, mouse, & keyboard (or cell-phone touch screen) computer interface, this version of the wearable computer consists of projector & camera. Hand gestures involving the index and thumb on each hand operate the user interface, as in the 2002 movie, Minority Report*. Consider a touch screen, but instead using free space in which to perform the motions. Use a wall as a screen: draw on the projected image with your finger. Take a picture by making a box w/ your hand and a camera mounted on your head. Dial your cell phone on the palm of your hand. Definitely check out this current version of the wearable computer in the video at the wired link: http://www.wired.com/video/latest-v...ter/10288173001 
--- * Minority Report still: 
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Ship movements signal possible North Korea missile test
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Ship movements signal possible North Korea missile test
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ath3na
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0
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02/10/2009 22:11
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090211.../us_korea_north 
Ship movements signal possible North Korea missile test By Jon Herskovitz – Tue Feb 10, 10:06 pm ET
SEOUL (Reuters) – Chinese fishing vessels have moved out of waters near a disputed sea border between the two Koreas, a South Korean military official said on Wednesday, which could signal a North Korean missile test is imminent.
North Korea usually orders its vessels to stay out of Yellow Sea waters off its west coast when it conducts short-range missile tests. China is the closest thing the North can claim as a major ally and is the impoverished state's biggest benefactor.
"The (Chinese) fishing boats have disappeared, but no other unusual moves have yet been detected," said an official with South Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff who asked not to be named. The official would not comment on a possible missile test.
During its last test launch of short-range missiles in that area in October 2008, the North issued a no-sail order to its ships a few days before firing off missiles, South Korean government officials have said.
Impoverished North Korea, angry at the hard-line policies of the South's government, in recent weeks has stepped up tension by threatening to reduce its wealthy neighbor to ashes and making moves to test fire its longest-range missile.
Analysts said the steps were aimed at putting pressure on the South and at attracting the notice of new U.S. President Barack Obama, who is sending Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to the region next week to discuss regional security concerns.
"We are hopeful that some of the behavior that we have seen coming from North Korea in the last few weeks is not a precursor of any action that would up the ante or threaten the stability and peace and security of the neighbors in the region," Clinton said at a new conference in Washington on Tuesday.
It takes weeks for North Korea to prepare a launch of its Taepodong-2 missile, which has never successfully flown but is eventually supposed to be able to hit U.S. territory. It was last fired in 2006, fizzling less than a minute after launch.
The U.S. military stepped up its monitoring of North Korea this week amid concerns of possible missile launches, a U.S. military official said.
The North can easily test-fire short-range missiles, with South Korean government officials telling a leading local daily they suspect such a test may take place soon near the disputed naval border called the Northern Limit Line (NLL).
The NLL was set unilaterally by U.N.-led forces at the end of the 1950-53 Korean War and the North has said it is illegal. The area was the site of deadly naval clashes between the two Koreas in 1999 and 2002.
The foreign ministers of South Korea and Japan issued a statement after meeting in Seoul calling on North Korea to stop its provocations.
"The two shared the perception that it is undesirable for North Korea to create tension with hard-line comments and urged the North to act in a manner that would contribute to regional stability," their joint statement said.
(Additional reporting by Kim Junghyun and Jack Kim in Seoul and Arshad Mohammed and David Morgan in Washington)
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Study: Gut instinct may actually be 'unconscious memory'
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Study: Gut instinct may actually be 'unconscious memory'
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ath3na
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0
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02/09/2009 11:12
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http://www.livescience.com/health/0...-instincts.html http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience...utinstinctswork Study Suggests Why Gut Instincts Work By LiveScience Staff posted: 08 February 2009 08:08 pm ET Sometimes when you think you're guessing, your brain may actually know better. After conducting some unique memory and recognition tests, while also recording subjects' brain waves, scientists conclude that some gut feelings are not just guesswork after all. Rather, we access memories we aren't even aware we have. "We may actually know more than we think we know in everyday situations, too," said Ken Paller, professor of psychology at Northwestern University and co-researcher on the study. "Unconscious memory may come into play, for example, in recognizing the face of a perpetrator of a crime or the correct answer on a test. Or the choice from a horde of consumer products may be driven by memories that are quite alive on an unconscious level." The findings were published online Sunday in the journal Nature Neuroscience. The research, done with only a couple dozen participants, adds to a growing body of conflicting evidence about decision-making. In one study done in 2007, researchers found that quick decisions were better than those given lots of thought. But a study last year suggested neither snap judgments nor "sleeping on it" trump good old-fashioned conscious thought. The new study During the first part of the memory test in the new study, participants were shown a series of colorful kaleidoscope images that flashed on a computer screen. Half of the images were viewed with full attention as participants tried to memorize them. While viewing the other half, the participants were distracted: They heard a spoken number that they had to keep in mind until the next trial, when they indicated whether it was odd or even. In other words, they could focus on memorizing half of the images but were greatly distracted from memorizing the others. A bit later, they viewed pairs of similar kaleidoscope images in a recognition test. "Remarkably, people were more accurate in selecting the old image when they had been distracted than when they had paid full attention," Paller said. "They also were more accurate when they claimed to be guessing than when they registered some familiarity for the image." Splitting attention during a memory test usually makes memory worse. "But our research showed that even when people weren't paying as much attention, their visual system was storing information quite well," Paller said. The brain's role During the tests, electrical signals in the brain were recorded from a set of electrodes placed on each person's head. The brain waves during implicit recognition were distinct from those associated with conscious memory experiences. A unique signal of implicit recognition was seen a quarter of a second after study participants saw each old image. Other related research has shown that amnesia victims with severe memory problems often have strong implicit memories, Paller and his colleague, Joel L. Voss of the Beckman Institute, said in a statement. "Intuition may have an important role in finding answers to all sorts of problems in everyday life," Paller said.
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News and Announcements
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Broadcast Depth
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Image Retrieval February 04, 2009
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Re:Image Retrieval February 04, 2009
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ath3na
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0
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02/05/2009 17:27
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hopeful news
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News and Announcements
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Broadcast Depth
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Thank you
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Re:Thank you
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ath3na
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0
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02/05/2009 16:22
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Farewell, Rarebit. Long ago, perhaps even the greatest supporters of The Matrix Online may have resigned themselves to the possibility that MxO might never receive its rightfully deserved critical, pop-cultural, or artistic appreciation. Most of us were just pleased to be part of a diversion that possessed a dynamic storyline, fostered a close-knit player-staff community, and extended a thought-provoking universe. Maybe more than any other massively multiplayer online role playing game, MxO had substantial dramatic-arts, philosophical, scientific, & esoteric components and contained contemporary socio-cultural & political commentary. If you were to read a review of MxO even in any of the best-known gaming publications, you might never find out these other levels existed. Perhaps the Matrix Online wasn't destined to sell the millions of copies like the most successful MMO currently, World of Warcraft. Perhaps it wouldn't be the Matrix if it tried to be like WoW. In 1999, at the turn of a new century, the Wachowski brothers prompted us to ask the question, "What is the Matrix?" With that question driving viewers, the movie placed emphasis on the importance of independent thought. Instead of assuming that their audience would favor only one broad interpretation, the Wackowski's allowed each fan to arrive at his own conclusions. The Matrix was multi-layered (omni-layered) in parallel to the real world; the curiosity inducing symbols were borrowed directly from humanity's history. Even the most perceptive fans and staff were often likely to miss hidden layers of meaning here or there. In the vein of one lofty interpretation, the task of completely understanding every layer of the Matrix would be almost akin to deciphering the known great mysteries of the universe in totality. Through the guise of a video game, the Matrix Online was a gallery of electronic art, rich with weighted ancient symbolism brought into the context of the height of contemporary civilization. Everyone involved became a part of a grand experiment; opposing viewpoints straight from the great philosophers of history dueled in this digital playground. But you didn't need to be an armchair philosopher to be intrigued by the game; it was enough that the ‘Extreme Falling Kick' looked incredible. Like the movies, the philosophy was there if you wanted to see it, but the deep questions could simply function as icing on a cake of visually stunning effects. When the user took part in a live event, he wrote a continuing script with every other participant. Events in the Matrix Online so greatly immersed the player that we saw the players' personalities come through their characters; it was enjoyable to decipher why someone picked the organization they did. You had the open society of E Pluribus Neo contrasted to the guarded secrecy of the Cypherite point of view, the aristocracy of the Merovingian compared to the highly structured meritocracy of the Machines. So, Ben, you picked a great game to work on and eventually lead. The Matrix Online has a unique place in the overall world of video games that points to future trends that are still yet to hit the mainstream. Maybe it was a little too hip for its time for everyone to jump on board; just know that the people that did take this journey with you have been positively affected by your contributions. In the last half-decade, we've opened our eyes a little bit more to the world around us, and I hope that you have learned something positive from us in turn.
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Caution Nazi Zombies Ahead
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Re:Caution Nazi Zombies Ahead
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ath3na
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0
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02/04/2009 16:04
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Community
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General Discussion
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We need an official storyteller!
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Re:We need an official storyteller!
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ath3na
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0
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02/04/2009 15:39
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Let the art, not a gilded label of "official," speak for itself. Something that is poorly conceived and poorly executed can be rubberstamped as official.
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Ancient Whales Gave Birth on Land
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Ancient Whales Gave Birth on Land
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ath3na
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02/03/2009 22:46
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Ancient Whales Gave Birth on Land http://www.livescience.com/animals/...ale-fossil.html http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience...gavebirthonland Jeanna Bryner Senior Writer LiveScience.com – Tue Feb 3, 8:10 pm ET
More than 47 million years ago, a whale was about to give birth to her young ... on land. That's according to skeletal remains of a pregnant cetacean whose fetus was positioned head-down as is the case for land mammals but not aquatic whales.
The teeth of the fetus were so well-developed that researchers who analyzed the fossils think the baby would have been born within days, had its mom not died.
The fossil discovery marks the first extinct whale and fetus combination known to date, shedding light on the lifestyle of ancient whales as they made the transition from land to sea during the Eocene Epoch (between 54.8 million and 33.7 million years ago).
Philip Gingerich, a paleontologist at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and his team discovered the pregnant whale remains in Pakistan in 2000, and then in 2004, Gingerich's co-authors and others found the nearly complete skeleton of an adult male from the same species in those fossil beds. The adult whales are each about 8.5 feet (2.6 meters) long and weighed between 615 and 860 pounds (280 and 390 kg), though the male was slightly longer and heavier than the female.
(Gingerich is also director of the University of Michigan's Museum of Paleontology.)
Confusing find
On the dig that ultimately yielded the pregnant whale, Gingerich and his team first spotted what looked like a line of chalk on the ground surface, which later turned out to be the teeth of the whale fetus.
"Very quickly I got into the baby's teeth," Gingerich told LiveScience. "Then I kept going around it, and the ribs seemed too big for the size of the animal and they were all going the wrong way. So I have to say I spent the whole day excavating this thing confused about what in the world was going on here."
Soon after, Gingeric discovered another, larger, skull, and he realized the fetus was still inside its mother.
The new species, now called Maiacetus inuus, is a member of the Archaeoceti, a group of cetaceans (an animal group that includes whales, dolphins and porpoises) that predate modern toothed and baleen whales. Archaeocetes had mouths full of several types of teeth, as well as nostrils near the nose tip. Both features are seen in land mammals but not in today's whales.
Like other archaeocetes, the newly discovered whale was equipped with four legs modified for foot-powered swimming (sort of like climbing, or scrambling, up a steep hill but instead in water). While the whales likely could support their weight on their flipper-like limbs, they probably couldn't go far on land.
"They clearly were tied to the shore," Gingerich said. "They were living at the land-sea interface and going back and forth."
Land delivery
The team suggests that Maiacetus fed at sea and came ashore to rest, mate and give birth.
The head-first position of the fetus matches what is found in many land animals, particularly the artiodactyls (pigs, deer and cows), which are thought to have given rise to ancient whales. Human babies also emerge head first, ideally.
Scientists speculate that a head-first orientation allows land mammals to breathe even if they get stuck in the birth canal.
That's not the case underwater. "If you're born in the water you don't want the head out away from the mother until it's going to pop free, because you don't want it to drown," Gingerich said.
In addition, tail-first delivery in modern whales and dolphins would ensure the baby is facing in the same direction as its mother who is likely swimming. To keep mom and baby from getting separated, tail-first delivery would be optimal, Gingerich said.
The research, published in the Feb. 4 issue of the online journal PloS ONE, was funded by the Geological Survey of Pakistan, National Geographic Society, National Science Foundation and Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.
* Whale News, Information and Images * Early Whales Had Legs * Why Whales Sing
* Original Story: Ancient Whales Gave Birth on Land
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Community
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General Discussion
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We need an official storyteller!
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Re:We need an official storyteller!
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ath3na
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02/03/2009 15:48
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Don’t give away your freedom and equality 'fore the first taste. http://forums.station.sony.com/mxo/...772#36300526648
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Soil & How Ancient Greeks Chose Temple Locations
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Soil & How Ancient Greeks Chose Temple Locations
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ath3na
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02/02/2009 22:21
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http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience...templelocations
How Ancient Greeks Chose Temple Locations Graciela Flores Natural History Magazine LiveScience.com – Sat Jan 31, 1:10 pm ET
To honor their gods and goddesses, ancient Greeks often poured blood or wine on the ground as offerings. Now a new study suggests that the soil itself might have had a prominent role in Greek worship, strongly influencing which deities were venerated where.
In a survey of eighty-four Greek temples of the Classical period (480 to 338 B.C.), Gregory J. Retallack of the University of Oregon in Eugene studied the local geology, topography, soil, and vegetation - as well as historical accounts by the likes of Herodotus, Homer, and Plato - in an attempt to answer a seemingly simple question: why are the temples where they are?
No clear pattern emerged until he turned to the gods and goddesses. It was then that he discovered a robust link between the soil on which a temple stood and the deity worshiped there.
For example, Demeter, the goddess of grain and fertility, and Dionysos, the god of wine, both were venerated on fertile, well-structured soils called Xerolls, which are ideal for grain cultivation.
Artemis, the virgin huntress, and her brother Apollo, the god of light and the Sun, were worshiped in rocky Orthent and Xerept soils suitable only for nomadic herding.
And maritime deities, such as Aphrodite, the goddess of love, and Poseidon, the sea god, were revered on Calcid soils on coastal terraces too dry for agriculture.
The pattern suggests that the deities' cults were based on livelihood as much as on religion. And, says Retallack, temple builders may have chosen sites to make the deities feel at home.
The findings were detailed in the journal Antiquity.
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Vector - Hostile
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Crew and Faction Recruiting - Vector
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Insurgence - EPN
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Re:Insurgence - EPN
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ath3na
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02/01/2009 13:07
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Luxury igloos chill out the Davos crowd
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Luxury igloos chill out the Davos crowd
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ath3na
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01/31/2009 23:28
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Not quite 007 Die Another Day set quality*, but still pretty cool. --- 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/2009013..._20090131201854 Luxury igloos chill out the Davos crowd by Andre Lehmann Andre Lehmann – Sat Jan 31, 3:17 pm ET
DAVOS, Switzerland (AFP) – Perched high above the five-star hotels and heated debate amongst global leaders in the Swiss resort of Davos, an igloo hotel offers the chance to chill out and enjoy life as an Eskimo might.
Set in the midst of the groomed, snow-clad ski slopes 2,600 metres up (8,500 feet), where temperatures sometimes hang around minus 20 degrees Celsius (minus four Fahrenheit) during the daytime, the cluster of igloos nonetheless takes a few liberties with the genuine polar experience.
Iglu-Dorf is built out of packed snow, but the network of 15 igloos linked by tunnels looks more like a cross between neolithic caves and an eco-housing complex perched in the Alps.
They also offer some creature comforts that are not so common on the wild expanse of polar icecap, such as a sauna and whirlpool bath. And they were not hewn out of ice.
"We built the complex in five weeks using giant inflatable balloons which were then covered with snow," explained Alexander Lau, one of the staff at the Davos igloos.
"Building in a traditional manner would have taken us all winter," the tanned snowboarder grinned.
The balloons were covered by the snowploughs used to prepare the ski runs every night, and the cold did the rest.
Once the purpose-built plastic moulds were deflated, the ideal home appeared: rooms, bathrooms, bar, restaurant, an even a conference room.
Inside, four Swiss couples were enjoying a rather more manageable minus five degrees (23 Fahrenheit) as they embarked on their overnight stay.
"I was expecting anything but this," said Marc, whose wife offered him the frozen night out as a present.
"I'm surprised by the beauty of the decoration and the size of the rooms, I never imagined you could build such enormous igloos," he added, sitting on a chamois leather-clad bench carved with a chainsaw.
The igloo hotel was born out of a bet. Adrian Guenter, a Swiss snowboarding fanatic, swore he would be the first on the slopes in the morning so he built an igloo nearby. Over the years, it turned into a lucrative business.
Thirteen years on, Guenter presides over Iglu-Dorf, a thriving company that now has four village-hotels in Switzerland, one in Germany and, for the first time this season, a hotel in the tiny principality of Andorra in the Pyrenees.
Last year, 9,000 people spent a night in accommodation ranging from a more summary standard igloo (119 euros on weekends) to the "romantik-iglu plus" (339 euros) complete with candles, carved features, animal skins, a private whirlpool and even the luxury of a toilet.
While the wind howled relentlessly outside, the last guests left the bar or sauna for their private igloos, to slip into sleeping bags fit for a polar expedition - "minus 50 certified" according to Lau.
The next morning, the first clients emerged from an icy night. "I didn't manage to sleep," muttered a bleary-eyed Conny, while her husband, Fredi, claimed he had spent "a very good night."
The prospect of the bitter cold seems to do little to deter the more adventurous winter holidaymakers.
"The demand for our igloo stays is growing," said Joern Grundmann, the manager of the Davos igloo hotel.
As a result, the Swiss luxury igloos are on their way to the mountains behind the Russian city of Sochi, the Black Sea resort that will host the 2014 Winter Olympic Games. --- * Die Another Day movie set; Davos is rustic in comparison to this make-believe James Bond set: 

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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Snuggie, a Blanket w/ Sleeves
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Snuggie, a Blanket w/ Sleeves
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ath3na
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01/29/2009 16:06
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I've seen this blanket with sleeves product advertised on TV, and it makes the wearer look like an ancient druid or some inhabitant of a futuristic totalitarian society. 
Now, the "newspaper" (and that term applies loosely), [the] "The USA Today," is advertising & hyping the Snuggie up by claiming there is a Snuggie-mania sweeping the land. Personally, I have not seen evidence of such Snuggie-maniacal behavior.
"Snuggie gets a warm embrace from pop culture" http://www.usatoday.com/life/lifest...m?se=yahoorefer YouTube: The Cult of Snuggie http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y4Ox...feature=related Snuggie Sightings http://snuggiesightings.com/snuggie/ Compare the Snuggie to the Stonecutters costume from the Simpsons episode, Homer the Great. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homer_the_Great 

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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Immersive listening experiances..
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Re:Immersive listening experiances..
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ath3na
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01/26/2009 22:02
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Good times, I recommend.
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Legoland replicates inauguration
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Legoland replicates inauguration
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ath3na
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01/26/2009 21:48
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http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/Legol...r3821463303.jpg "More than a thousand mini-figures are shown on display as Legoland unveils a replica of the 56th presidential inauguration in Carlsbad, California January 16, 2009." 




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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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2009 Oscars.
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Re:2009 Oscars.
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ath3na
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01/22/2009 17:16
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The only ones I know right off the bat would be Ledger for Supporting Actor and Slumdog for Best Pic. I'm gonna go for the 'easy' ones first, and I will put on my thinking cap for the harder ones. I'm thinking Rourke for best actor, going by the Golden Globes. to be continued
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The Lounge
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Off-Topic Discussion
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Cloaking device may make cell phone static vanish (Reuters)
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Cloaking device may make cell phone static vanish (Reuters)
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ath3na
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01/22/2009 00:37
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First reported for public knowledge around 2006, the possibility of a material science cloaking technology exists and has been a hot topic in the mainstream media in recent years. off-topic thread from 2006 regarding original announcement: http://forums.station.sony.com/mxo/..._id=36300004896 Announced here is another application regarding related communication signal transmission. --- Cloaking device may make cell phone static vanish (Reuters) Posted on Thu Jan 15, 2009 2:08PM EST
http://tech.yahoo.com/news/nm/20090...cloaking_device
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A new light-bending material has brought scientists one step closer to creating a cloaking device that could hide objects from sight.
Beyond possible military applications, it also might have a very practical use by making mobile communications clearer, they said on Thursday.
"Cloaking technology could be used to make obstacles that impede communications signals 'disappear,'" said David Smith of Duke University in North Carolina, who worked on the study published in the journal Science.
Smith was part of the same research team that in 2006 proved such a device was possible.
He said the new material is easier to make and has a far greater bandwidth. It is made from a so-called metamaterial -- an engineered, exotic substance with properties not seen in nature.
Metamaterials can be used to form a variety of "cloaking" structures that can bend electromagnetic waves such as light around an object, making it appear invisible.
In this case, the material is made from more than 10,000 individual pieces of fiberglass material arranged in parallel rows on a circuit board.
The team, which included Ruopeng Liu of Duke University and T.J. Cui of Southeast University in Nanjing, China, in lab experiments aimed microwaves through the new cloaking material at a bump on a flat mirror surface. That prevented the microwave beams from being scattered and made the surface appear flat.
Smith said the goal was not to make something visible disappear. Cloaking, he said, can occur anywhere on the electromagnetic spectrum.
"Humans 'see' using visible light, which has wavelengths just under a micron (a millionth of a meter). But cell phones and other wireless devices 'see' using light that has a wavelength on the order of many centimeters," Smith said in an e-mail.
He said objects can block the "view" of these devices, making mobile phone communications more difficult.
"You might have two or more antennas trying to 'see' or receive signals, one being blocked by the other," he said. "You could imagine adding cloaks that would make one antenna invisible to the next, so that they no longer interfered."
Smith said the notion of a device that makes objects invisible to people is still a distant concept, but not impossible.
"This latest structure does show clearly there is a potential for cloaking -- in the science fiction sense -- to become science fact at some point," he said.
While the study's funders included Raytheon Missile Systems and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, Smith said the technology is not intended to replace "stealth" technology.
"Just about all technologies that have any application, naturally have potential in military applications," he said.
"If this has an impact on communications applications, even commercial, those same applications presumably exist in defense contexts."
(Editing by Maggie Fox and Vicki Allen)
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Vector - Hostile
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Crew and Faction Recruiting - Vector
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Insurgence - EPN
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Re:Insurgence - EPN
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ath3na
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0
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01/20/2009 11:06
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