Sunday, June 29, 2014
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Saturday, June 28, 2014
Eureka! A Whisper-Quiet Wind Turbine Based On Archimedes' Screw [feedly]
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Eureka! A Whisper-Quiet Wind Turbine Based On Archimedes' Screw
// Gizmodo
When they're standing out in a field, miles away from crowded urban centers, the sounds made by a wind turbine's blades aren't a big issue. But when they're perched atop a downtown building, they create noise pollution that's hard to ignore. A Rotterdam-based company might have found a solution, though, with a unique turbine design partially based on Archimedes' famous screw pump.
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Retired man sculpts hedge into a 100-foot-long dragon [feedly]
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Retired man sculpts hedge into a 100-foot-long dragon
// Gizmodo
John Brooker is a retired English gardener who one day got tired of looking at a straight hedge. After ten years of meticulous work he has transformed that straight hedge into an awesome 100-foot-long, 10-foot-tall dragon.
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How to Fight Fires With Decommissioned Jet Engines Strapped to a Tank [feedly]
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How to Fight Fires With Decommissioned Jet Engines Strapped to a Tank
// Gizmodo
As the post-conflict cleanup from the first Iraq War demonstrated, oil well fires are nearly impossible to put out without taking extraordinary measures. Luckily, this extreme measure is both super effective and totally badass.
Read more...
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Sunday, June 22, 2014
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Friday, June 20, 2014
Verizon Eyes Voice Over LTE Rollout This Year [feedly]
Unless Verizon greatly increases their LTE data network capacity, this will be a big flop. In the Ann Arbor Michigan area I'm seeing LTE data speed only at high end 3G or GSM pre-LTE 4G of around 2Mbps. In less populated areas, I see LTE speeds bounce between 8 to 15Mbps.
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Verizon Eyes Voice Over LTE Rollout This Year
// PCMag.com Breaking News
Verizon remains mum on specifics, offering no VoLTE launch date or list of locations or devices.
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How Historians Recovered the Only Surviving Nazi "Flying Pencil" [feedly]
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How Historians Recovered the Only Surviving Nazi "Flying Pencil"
// Gizmodo
Many good sea tales begin with a fisherman snagging his net on an underwater object, and this tale is no different.
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How Spammers Spoof Your Email Address (and How to Protect Yourself) [feedly]
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How Spammers Spoof Your Email Address (and How to Protect Yourself)
// Gizmodo
Most of us know spam when we see it, but seeing a strange email from a friend—or worse, from ourselves—in our inbox is pretty disconcerting. If you've seen an email that looks like it's from a friend, it doesn't mean they've been hacked. Spammers spoof those addresses all the time, and it's not hard to do. Here's how they do it, and how you can protect yourself.
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Amazon Prime Folks Can Watch HBO Shows Starting Today [feedly]
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Amazon Prime Folks Can Watch HBO Shows Starting Today
// Gizmodo
Last month Amazon and HBO announced a deal that would give Amazon Prime members access to HBO content without an HBO membership. Today the first batch of shows are available on Amazon.
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'Dinosaur skull' photographed on Mars [feedly]
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'Dinosaur skull' photographed on Mars
// Unexplained Mysteries
The latest in a long line of impossible objects sighted on Mars is a rock in the shape of a T. rex skull. Eagle-eyed observers claim to have found a l...
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Thursday, June 12, 2014
Chevy Assembly Line Workers Ride Around on Wall-E-Style Floating Chairs [feedly]
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Chevy Assembly Line Workers Ride Around on Wall-E-Style Floating Chairs
// Gizmodo
Remember those floating chairs that our uber-lazy future offspring rode around on in the movie Wall-E ? Chevrolet just installed the real-life version in two of its assembly lines. Meet the fully-automated, gesture-controlled Ergo-Chair.
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Toothy Fish With Jutting Jaw Confounds Science [feedly]
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Toothy Fish With Jutting Jaw Confounds Science
// Popular Science - New Technology, Science News, The Future Now
Smile!
Kryptoglanis shajii has quite a strange jaw skeleton, and a winning grin.
Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel Unversity
A newfound catfish from India doesn't look so remarkable from the outside, besides its prominent whiskers. Its size--slightly smaller than an average human pinkie finger--is unexceptional. And it is rarely seen, known to live in water deep underground, although it occasionally turns up in rice paddies and drinking wells.
But when researchers took a CAT scan of Kryptoglanis shajii specimens, they were shocked by its odd bones. Perhaps most unusual is its teeth and jaw skeleton. It boasts four rows of sharp conical teeth, and a lower jaw that juts out--sort of like a bulldog. It also lacks certain bones, which are replaced by cartilage. The skeleton is "completely unique among catfishes and all fishes as far as I know," said study co-author John Lundberg, emeritus curator of Ichthyology at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, in a statement.
Why is the jaw so oddly shaped? Lundberg said it may be modified to eat certain animals like invertebrates, but they aren't sure. "In dogs that [jutting-out jaw] was the result of selective breeding," he noted. "In Kryptoglanis, we don't know yet what in their natural evolution would have led to this modified shape."
So many questions. For example: Why does Kryptoglanis smile so much? Is it eager to eat insect larvae, or does it derive sinister fascination from how much its taxonomy puzzles scientists? (This is not a question the scientists are asking.)
Whiskered one
Is it just me, or does it look like the little brute is smiling?
Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel Unversity
Researchers from Drexel and elsewhere are now trying to find out how it is related to other known catfishes, but so far that are stumped.
The study, charmingly titled "A tomographic osteology of the taxonomically puzzling catfish Kryptoglanis shajii," was published recently in the journal Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia.
Little fish
Kryptoglanis shajii is slightly smaller than a human pinkie finger.
Kyle Luckenbill, Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University
The creature was uncovered in the Western Ghats, a biodiversity hotspot in western India that recently turned up a new species of "dancing" frogs.
Here's a video that show the skeleton more clearly.
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The Army's New Helmet Design Comes with Built-In A/C [feedly]
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The Army's New Helmet Design Comes with Built-In A/C
// Gizmodo
It's starting to look like the soldiers of the future could almost fight in space. The Army's latest helmet concept, specifically designed for chemical-biological protection, includes a respirator that keeps the air clean and cool, like a mini air conditioner built right into the mask. It also looks very badass.
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Monday, June 9, 2014
8000-mile railway will connect US and China [feedly]
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8000-mile railway will connect US and China
// Unexplained Mysteries
Chinese officials are considering the construction of what would be the world's longest railroad. The record-breaking line would begin in Beijing and ...
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Tech's So Advanced, Why Don't We Change the Way Smartphones Work? [feedly]
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Tech's So Advanced, Why Don't We Change the Way Smartphones Work?
// Gizmodo
Technology has advanced so much that maybe it's time to rethink the smartphone. In fact, Randall Munroe has an idea: why not have apps just download on the fly as you need them?
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The First Commercially Available Car Navigation System Was From 1981 [feedly]
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The First Commercially Available Car Navigation System Was From 1981
// Gizmodo
The Global Positioning System constellation of satellites has been helping lost travelers find their way for a while now, but they only really started showing up in cars in the mid- to late- 1990s, and in big numbers even later than that. But the first automotive navigation system was offered over thirty years ago.
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What is Genius? [feedly]
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What is Genius?
// Mysterious Universe
The idea of genius is socially constructed and not, in any meaningful sense, scientific. People speak about a "genius-level IQ," but the IQ test measures disability and "giftedness"—not genius status—and it does so in a very imperfect and general way. What's more, we never speak of geniuses in terms of their IQ scores—you might assume Leonardo da Vinci had a high IQ because of his work, but you wouldn't assume that any random person with an equal or higher IQ could produce work of comparable quality.
In today's Daily Beast, Edward Platt reviews the literature surrounding the unusual habits of people we think of as geniuses, centering on Daniel Fink's theory that both genius and neurosis often center on an inability to suppress the action of the precuneus, a part of the brain that is associated with self-consciousness, memory, and introspection. But we don't actually know very much about what the precuneus does, and the sample size in Fink's study is small enough that it may not accurately reflect the neurophysiology of genius. It's a step in the right direction—and much more promising than IQ, at any rate—but at this point, it doesn't give us much to work with.
There are other theories of how genius works as a capacity, but they are neither as old and well-established as the IQ theory nor as interesting (to me) as the precuneus-activity theory.
And what these theories have in common is that they look at genius as something that can be defined in passive terms, whether it's expressed or not, which means that they tend to be theories that we apply after the fact to people that we already think of as geniuses. This tends to calcify our assumptions rather than challenging them.
I agree with Stephen Jay Gould: "I am somehow less interested," he told New Scientist, "in the weight and convolutions of Einstein's brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops." Since we don't know where genius comes from, we should probably assume that it can come from anywhere—and do what we can to make sure everybody can make the most of their potential.
Art professor and entrepreneur Raphael DiLuzio talks about his recovery from a severe brain injury, and what he has subsequently learned about the creative process, here:
What I find interesting about DiLuzio's speech is that the man is obviously and conspicuously intelligent, but he is also struggling with a few higher-level cognitive functions that most of us take for granted. He is gifted and disabled—and not because he is in any sense a savant. Could it be that the rest of us are in the same boat—that we call people geniuses when their intellectual strengths, properly nourished and cultivated, happen to correlate with what we want or need at the time? Is that really all genius is, or does it mean more than that?
That's not a rhetorical question. I'm very interested in your thoughts on the matter; you can share them in the comments below.
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Why do we see faces where none exist ? [feedly]
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Why do we see faces where none exist ?
// Unexplained Mysteries
Pareidolia is a phenomenon that can make us see faces and other meaningful shapes in abstract patterns. The human brain possesses a remarkable ability...
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NASA planning to grow plants on Mars by 2021 [feedly]
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NASA planning to grow plants on Mars by 2021
// Unexplained Mysteries
The space agency's next rover could be conducting its very own planet-growth experiment on Mars. The plants will be contained within a special sealed ...
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These new skyscraper tilting windows are designed to freak you out [feedly]
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These new skyscraper tilting windows are designed to freak you out
// Gizmodo
Holy crap. The John Hancock Tower in Chicago rolled out a snazzy scary new attraction for people who visit the top of the skyscraper: windows that tilt down to give you a better view of the ground beneath you. It's like a roller coaster ride for those afraid of heights (that would be me). Just stand next to the window and it'll tilt itself down like you're falling.
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Vampire Grave Found in Poland – What’s at Stake? [feedly]
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Vampire Grave Found in Poland – What's at Stake?
// Mysterious Universe
Transylvania may have the history and Sunnydale had Buffy, but it appears Kamien Pomorski in northwestern Poland is fast becoming Vampire Central after the recent discovery of yet another vampire grave, this one in a marketplace in the West Pomeranian Province.
The body was found buried in what was once a cemetery next to a Kamien Pomorski church by a team led by Slawomir Gorka. The cemetery was used between the 13th and 17th centuries. It appears that the teeth had been removed and a rock or brick was placed in the mouth in the belief that it would prevent the suspected vampire from biting anyone. There was also a puncture wound in the leg which is a common sign that the body had been staked to the ground to keep it from leaving the grave.
These bones appear to date back to the 16th century and this is not the first suspected vampire grave found in the area. In July 2013, seven bodies were uncovered at a construction site near the town of Gliwice in what appeared to be a vampire burial because the heads had been removed and placed on the legs.
Vampire legends are common in the Slavic cultures like the Poles and Romanians. Many of the beliefs can be traced to the time of the Black Death when graves were reopened for additional burials and corpses were found with blood seeping out of the mouth, teeth exposed and holes in the shroud due to decomposition. Without medical and scientific knowledge about illness and death, vampirism became the reason, causing unreasonable fears and the sometimes horrific treatment of the sick and mentally ill.
It's a good thing we know better today … don't we?
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Sunday, June 1, 2014
Rock Lines in Peru Were GPS for Ancient Fairgoers [feedly]
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Rock Lines in Peru Were GPS for Ancient Fairgoers
// Mysterious Universe
Peru is famous for its Nazca Lines – the hundreds of geoglyphs in the shapes of geometric forms, animals and humans found in the Nazca Desert and believed to have been created by the Nazca culture beginning around 300 AD. Recently, new lines were discovered that are older than the Nazca Lines and may have directed ancient Peruvians to fairs.
Image of dog in Nazca Lines
According to Charles Stanish, the director of the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA, the newly discovered lines were made by the Paracas, a Peruvian culture dating back to 800 BCE. Working in the Chinca Valley 125 miles south of Lima, Stanish and his team found straight rock lines, circles, rectangles and a point where lines converged in a circle of rays. They also found mounds and some lines that outlined pyramid structures.
Reporting his findings in journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Standish speculates that the lines were tied to ancient festivals held in the area because it was unsuitable for farming. Some of the lines line up with the position of the sun during the June (winter) solstice and may have marked the festival times, while others run parallel to roads still used today and may have led people to the fairs, with the mounds and pyramids possibly acting as forms of ancient road signs.
The new lines date to around 300 B.C., predating the oldest Nazca Lines by 300 years. Standish points out that what makes these geoglyphs interesting is that they appear to have served more than one function.
The lines are effectively a social technology. They're using it for certain purposes. Some people have said the lines point out sacred mountains. Sure, why not? The lines [might] point out sacred pyramids. Why not? The lines could [also] be used to point out processions.
Whatever their purpose, Standish is right about this:
Native Americans in this part of the world were extremely ingenious.
Paracas geoglyphs lined with sunset on winter solstice.
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If you use Dropbox or Box, make sure you're restricting access to shared links. [feedly]
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If you use Dropbox or Box, make sure you're restricting access to shared links.
// Gizmodo
If you use Dropbox or Box, make sure you're restricting access to shared links. Otherwise, third party advertisers could be raking in some seriously sensitive URLs. Dropbox your tax return, anyone?
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UFOs: Manipulating & Destabilizing [feedly]
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UFOs: Manipulating & Destabilizing
// Mysterious Universe
On February 6, 1966, a Mr. Jose Pena was said to have observed the flight of a large, white-colored flying saucer over Madrid, Spain. The UFO reportedly displayed a strange, prominent symbol on its underside. A similar craft, displaying the very same symbol, was supposedly seen in May 1967, in a suburb of Madrid, and quickly photographed.
Such is the controversial nature of so many UFO-themed photos, it scarcely needs mentioning that the imagery remains highly inflammatory (despite having been shown to be a hoax) and is both championed and denounced.
Particularly intriguing is the fact that the controversy did not fade away. Actually, quite the opposite: it flourished for years. And thus was born the cult of UMMO – named after the planet from which the UFOs and their alien occupants supposedly originated.
One of those that dug deep into the matter of the UMMO controversy was the late Jim Keith, the author of such books as Saucers of the Illuminati, Black Helicopters Over America, and – with Kenn Thomas – The Octopus.
In his Casebook on the Men in Black book, Keith stated: "The UMMO case was created through a large number of contacts – UFO sightings, personal contacts, messages through the mail and telephone – alleged to be from space brothers from the planet UMMO," which, Keith added, was said to be "…located 14.6 light years from our solar system."
Keith continued that much of the UMMO material was comprised of "…six-to-ten page letters containing diagrams and equations, delineating UMMO science and philosophy. Differing from most channeled and beamed by space beings, they were scientifically savvy, although according to Jacques Vallee, smacked more of Euro sci-fi than superior extraterrestrial knowledge."
But was the UMMO saga really evidence that extraterrestrials were amongst us? According to Jim Keith, the answer was: No. Keith cited the words of a Spanish journalist named Manuel Carballal. It was Carballal, Keith said, who wrote that researchers Cales Berche, Jose J. Montejo and Javier Sierra had identified a well-known Spanish parapsychologist – who turned out to be none other than the aforementioned Jose Pena – as being the originator of the UMMO material.
Jim Keith expanded on this and stated that Pena "…is later reported to have admitted his creation of the complex hoax, stating that it had been a 'scientific experiment' aimed at testing the gullibility factor amongst Spanish UFO researchers."
Notably, there were those who postulated that the story got even weirder and wilder, to the extent that the original UMMO hoax was, later, ingeniously hijacked and expanded upon by certain official intelligence services (chiefly, the KGB)!
The scenario involved Intel-based personnel exploiting the original hoax as a cover for the dissemination of psychological warfare within the public UFO research community, as well as a means to secretly infiltrate and manipulate that same community to gather information.
Jacques Vallee noted of UMMO that "…some of the data that was supposedly channeled from the UMMO organization in the sky was very advanced cosmology." Vallee added that portions of the material "…came straight out of the notes" of none other than Andrei Sakharov, including certain, "…unpublished notes." Vallee commented further that there was a degree of thought suggesting "…somebody had to have access to those notes, to inspire those messages, perhaps the KGB."
Andrei Sakharov – who died in 1989 – was a scientist who played an instrumental role in the development of the Soviet Union's hydrogen bomb program. However, he ultimately became, in the words of the Nobel Peace Committee, a spokesperson for the conscience of mankind. Indeed, in 1975 Sakharov was awarded the prestigious Nobel Peace Prize.
That the KGB might have decided to use the UMMO affair to its own, secret advantage, and to try and infiltrate and manipulate Ufology, is not so strange at all.
In 1953, the Robertson Panel – a select group of consultants brought together by the CIA to look at the national security implications of the UFO issue – recommended that a number of public UFO investigative groups that existed at the time, such as Civilian Flying Saucer Investigators (CFSI) and the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization (APRO), should be watched carefully due to "…the apparent irresponsibility and the possible use of such groups for subversive purposes."
A very similar thing may have occurred in the UK, too, back in the 1970s.
One of the most controversial of all UFO-themed sagas in the UK is that concerning an alleged UFO crash on the Berwyn Mountains, North Wales, in January 1974. Andy Roberts – the author of the book, UFO Down? – notes: "The claim was that a UFO piloted by extraterrestrials crashed, or was shot down, on the mountain known as Cader Berwyn and that the alien crew, some still alive, were whisked off to a secret military installation in the south of England for study."
Andy continued: "Within months of the event, UFO investigators in the north of England began to receive official-looking documents from a group called the Aerial Phenomena Enquiry Network (APEN). These documents claimed that an extraterrestrial craft had come down on the Berwyns and was retrieved for study by an APEN crash retrieval team [that] had been on the scene within hours of the event."
And as Andy also noted: "Some researchers have speculated that APEN may have been part of a government cover up, using UFO mythology to spread disinformation."
Such a scenario is not impossible: there's little doubt that APEN's clandestine correspondence and contact with the UK UFO research community of the mid-1970s was specifically designed to manipulate and destabilize the field.
Someone who dug very deeply into the APEN saga – and the attendant rumors that the group was some form of shadowy, quasi-official body – was Jenny Randles. I interviewed Jenny extensively – back in 1997 – about her memories on the APEN affair and she told me:
"At about the same time as [the Berwyns incident] occurred, I was involved in setting up an organization known as the Northern UFO Network, or NUFON. The original concept of NUFON was to be kind of a liaison scheme to bring local groups up and down the North and the Midlands together."
There were those, apparently, that didn't want such a liaison scheme to go ahead. And who were they? None other than APEN, as Jenny told me:
"You do have to wonder if some of the sinister things that [APEN] did would really have been perpetrated just for the sake of it. I think that the most serious aspect was that it did attempt to destabilize NUFON. I've no doubt whatsoever that that was the case."
Jenny also noted to me: "At the time, when BUFORA were attempting a similar initiative – trying to bring in local groups, a group liaison system that they operated – they also started to get similar APEN letters, basically telling them not to contact BUFORA. And also in the late seventies, when BUFORA, through their then-chairman, Roger Stanway, attempted a direct liaison with Flying Saucer Review, exactly the same thing happened vis-Ã -vis Flying Saucer Review."
While the true nature of APEN – whether government manipulators, eccentric UFO researchers with far too much time on their hands, or possibly even right-wing extremists (an interesting theory that does have some merit) – remains a matter of debate, the angle of them screwing with British Ufology is not open to debate. It's a fact: they were malicious, manipulative and at times even dangerous.
Yes, there is without doubt a real UFO phenomenon of unknown origins. But, it's a phenomenon that, for decades, has been used (and probably still is used) by certain shadowy characters and groups that wish to exert control and influence over the community that investigates the phenomenon. That's us, of course.
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Stonehenge Breaks a Record [feedly]
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Stonehenge Breaks a Record
// Mysterious Universe
While Stonehenge has been speculated to be many things, the oldest village in Britain hasn't been one of them … until now. Carbon dating on findings from a nearby archeological dig confirm that the parish of Amesbury, the town where Stonehenge resides, has been continuously occupied since 8820 BCE, resulting in the Guinness Book of Records giving it the official title as Britain's oldest settlement.
The dig took place last year at Vespasian's Camp, Blick Mead, a mile and a half from Stonehenge, and was led by David Jacques from the University of Buckingham. Researchers there found bones of aurochs – extinct wild cattle twice the size of current bovines, wild boar and red deer that were carbon dated back 10,000 years. They also found tools and other evidence that the land had been cleared, which indicates it had been farmed by people who settled there rather than merely visited by nomadic tribes as was previously thought.
Bone and tool found at Amesbury site
Jacques says this answers the question of why Stonehenge is where it is.
The site blows the lid off the Neolithic Revolution in a number of ways. It provides evidence for people staying put, clearing land, building, and presumably worshipping, monuments. The area was clearly a hub point for people to come to from many miles away, and in many ways was a forerunner for what later went on at Stonehenge itself. The first monuments at Stonehenge were built by these people.
While residents of Amesbury and fans of Stonehenge are the clear winners in this discovery, there are a couple of losers as well. Thatcham in Berkshire, which has been occupied since 7700 BCE, drops to second place. And the dig site is the same one where it was discovered that Mesolithic Britons were eating frogs legs about eight millennia before the French.
There's nothing like killing two birds with one Stonehenge.
We're Number 1! We're Number 1!
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This Insect Farm Grows Fly Larvae For Your Dinner [feedly]
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This Insect Farm Grows Fly Larvae For Your Dinner
// Gizmodo
They're safer than fish, healthier than beef, and cheaper than chicken—bugs: they're what's for dinner. To help get a few more of these insects into our diets, a forward-looking designer has built the Fly Factory, a system for breeding fly larvae for human consumption.
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How to Get the Best Amazon Deals and Discounts [feedly]
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How to Get the Best Amazon Deals and Discounts
// PCMag.com Breaking News
Use these 12 tips to find the best products and prices on Amazon.
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B.C. Hiker Films Possible Sasquatch in Mountains Near Squamish [feedly]
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B.C. Hiker Films Possible Sasquatch in Mountains Near Squamish
// Cryptomundo
Bear, Sasquatch or somehow staged? What do you think?
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Bacteria could colonize Mars before we do [feedly]
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Bacteria could colonize Mars before we do
// Unexplained Mysteries
Extremely resistant forms of bacteria could find their way to Mars by hitching a ride on a spacecraft. NASA engineers go to great lengths to ensure th...
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Are Flying Cars on the Way? [feedly]
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Are Flying Cars on the Way?
// Mysterious Universe
Are we all going to be riding around in self-piloting, vertical-liftoff flying cars 15 years from now? Probably not—they'll be much too expensive for most of us—but assuming Terrafugia can get past the scientific and regulatory hurdles blocking development of its TF-X prototype (a big assumption, to be sure), a few people will. And who knows? By the mid-2030s, some of the rest of us might be able to get on board, too.
Watch a computer-modeled TF-X in action here:
I've noticed reactions to this video tend to fall into one of two categories: "this is freaking cool," or "this is freaking terrifying." You can put me more in the second category—I don't even love ordinary cars, and the idea of rocketing around in the sky at 200mph in a self-piloting prototype leaves me cold—but what's the future for if it isn't for flying cars?
Terrafugia has already created a street-legal airplane, the Terrafugia Transition, which you can see in action here:
If the TF-X flies as well as the Transition drives, we'll be OK—but that's a big if. The biggest technological hurdle the TF-X faces is vertical liftoff, which is a pretty new idea even for military aircraft and hasn't really caught on for widespread civilian use in any context. Without vertical liftoff you'd need runways, and the whole point of flying cars as they've been traditionally conceptualized is that they don't need runways. The TF-X is theoretically capable of vertical liftoff, but you can't ride to work in a theory. We'll have a better sense of things in ten years or so, after the first prototype is ready to make its debut.
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Will Artificial Intelligence Be Humanity’s Worst Mistake? [feedly]
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Will Artificial Intelligence Be Humanity's Worst Mistake?
// Mysterious Universe
Unlike certain other celebrity scientist elder statesmen, Stephen Hawking isn't prone to saying unbelievably weird stuff just to troll us—so when he wrote last week that developing artificial intelligence would be "the biggest event in human history" but "might also be the last, unless we learn to avoid the risks," the international press listened.
Stuart Armstrong (of Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute) briefly goes over existential risk in general, and existential risk posed by AI in particular, here:
In the short term, the biggest danger posed by AI is autonomous drones, and the best time to prevent the development of autonomous drones is to ban their use before it becomes commonplace (this has already been proposed in Canada, and would appear to be an obvious future topic for a U.N. covenant). Most of the longer-range fears concerning AI may appear far-fetched now, which means that this may be an ideal time to have these conversations, before powerful military and financial interests find themselves in the unenviable and dangerous position of planning the use of technology that the general public has not yet discussed. The last time this happened with respect to a new technology that had the potential to pose an existential risk, the result was an international nuclear arms race.
You can find out more about the risks of AI by visiting Oxford's FHI and Cambridge's Centre for the Study of Existential Risk (CSER).
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