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Jan 082017
 

When I was ten I thought this movie was awesome. Well…. kids is teh dum, I suppose. In short, a Space Shuttle launches a satellite, which promptly smacks into a flying saucer, which promptly crashes in the Arizona desert and is scooped up by the Air Force and transported to… Hangar 18. Standard government conspiracy/1970’s-style Ancient Aliens hijinks ensue. It’s… it’s just terrible. Enjoy!

 

 Posted by at 8:46 am
Jan 082017
 

I was recently poking around in an antiques store when I came across a binder full of notes on space science. Hand written stuff, seemingly a bit above basic college level… a proposal for a communications satellite, what looks like a long essay or perhaps the beginnings of a manuscript on extraterrestrial intelligence, some math on interstellar travel. I found a *single* date on the handwritten pages, sometime in 1962. There were also a few early 1980’s issues of “the Planetary Report” stuck in the back. The store only wanted 2 bucks for it, so, what the heck. I bought t with the possibility that the writings might prove interesting even if only academically, sort of a look back to 55 years ago.

The magazines still had their original mailing labels, to a feller in Ogden, Utah. Gave first name, last name, middle initial. Obviously impossible to say if the writings from 20 years earlier belonged to the feller the magazines were mailed to, but it seemed a reasonable supposition. So, off to Google I went, looking the name up with “Ogden, Utah.” And it actually turned up a guy, born in 1925, which would have put him in his late 30’s when he (apparently) wrote the space stuff. Since the age is appropriate and the name is an exact match, chances are *real* good that I found the guy, and he’s still alive.

Small problem. I didn’t find him online as “noted space scientist X receives lifetime achievement award.” Nope. I found him on a database. Guess what kind of database. Go on, guess.

Gah.

 Posted by at 1:19 am
Jan 062017
 

Some people think that electronic devices that sit around just waiting for you to talk to them are a neato-keen idea. Some people think these devices are tools of Satan or the NSA or the IRS or the Illuminati or the Mickey Mouse Fan Club, listening in on you and recording everything you say, mutter or grunt. Well… whatever the full truth is, the basic fact seems to be that these things just aren’t quite ready yet. A little more tweaking would seem to be needed. Behold:

News anchor sets off Alexa devices around San Diego ordering unwanted dollhouses

Short form: a little girl got her family’s “Alexa” device to order her a doll house, because Alexa is really good at understanding human speech but not so good at knowing who it should actually listen to. So, this made the news. And then…

… today during CW6 in the morning when Jim Patton and Lynda Martin were talking about a child who accidentally bought a dollhouse and four pounds of cookies

“I love the little girl, saying ‘Alexa ordered me a dollhouse,’” said Patton.

As soon as Patton said that, viewers all over San Diego started complaining their echo devices had tried to order doll houses. 

Whoopsie.

Maybe having a system set up in your house that will automatically spend money based on sh*t it hears on TV is not the wisest of all possible things.

 

 Posted by at 5:38 pm
Jan 052017
 

Ok, so I’m not exactly going to be breaking news to people on the story out of Chicago about the kidnapping and torture of a (presumed) Trump supporter by four anti-Trumpers. This is halfway all over the place… it’s all over the right-wing side of the media, anyway, perhaps less so on the left-wing side. The reason for that should be obvious… that a guy was kidnapped, held for 48 hours, burned, beaten, berated and cut because he was white and because the assailants were anti-white and anti-Trump just doesn’t play well into the current narrative that Trump voters are the nexus of racist evil in America today.

But even though I’m not Breaking News, I think there are aspects of this story that deserve comment. And particularly, there are three separate cultures that should be pointed out:

  1. The culture of violence and depravity that made these four spectacular persons believe not only that kidnapping and torturing someone was a fun thing to do, but to live stream it on Facebook was a *smart* thing to do.
  2. The media culture that has spent the last year bleating at full volume that Trump supporters – specifically white Trump supporters – are racist violent scumbags. As we saw with the Jared Laughner shooting in Arizona in 2011, the press was quick to jump on the fact that Sarah Palin had used a graphic that showed “gun sights” for Congressional “targets.” So will we see similar examination of the anti-Trump/anti-Conservative/anti-Republican/anti-white messages in the media as a cause of this and similar violent incidents against perceived Trump supporters?
  3. The PC culture that *leaps* to the accusation of “hate crime” for any incident – real, imagined or outright invented – of bias against Muslims or ethnic minorities, but yet brushes off this actual, recorded incident of verifiable physical torture, that even tries to excuse this sort of thing if the victim is of one particular race and/or political persuasion. For example:

Democratic Strategist Not Sure Chicago Torture Video Constitutes a Hate Crime

Former Bernie Sanders campaigner Symone Sanders opined:

“… we cannot callously go about classifying things as a hate crime.”

“If we start going around and anytime someone says or does something egregious or bad and sickening in sense  in connection with the president-elect Donald Trump or even President Obama for that matter because of their political leanings, that’s slippery territory. That is not a hate crime.”

And CNN’s Don Lemon leans back on that hoary old trope, It’s Society’s Fault:

“I don’t think it’s evil. I think these are young people and I think they have bad home training. I say, who is raising these young people? I have no idea who’s raising these young people. Because no one I know on Earth who is 17 years old or 70 years old would ever think of treating another person like that. It is inhumane. And you wonder, at 18 years old, where is your parent? Where’s your guardian?”

But worst of all was the Chicago Police. Early on, after watching someone being tortured *explicitly* because of his race and perceived politics, Chicago PD Commander Kevin Duffin said:

“Although they are adults, they’re 18. Kids make stupid decisions — I shouldn’t call them kids; they’re legally adults, but they’re young adults, and they make stupid decisions…
“That certainly will be part of whether or not … we seek a hate crime, to determine whether or not this is sincere or just stupid ranting and raving.”

Now, here’s the thing. I think “hate crimes” is one of the stupidest, most panderingly corrupt ideas ever to spring from the decaying minds of lawmakers in recent decades. I don’t care if Joe tortured Bob because Joe didn’t like Bobs race or religion, or if he was just after money, or he was doing it for the sick thrills. Bob was tortured the same regardless; Joe was equivalently evil regardless, and the end result in the legal system should be the same regardless. But so long as we *have* “hate crimes” laws, then they should be applied equally across the board. Fortunately, the Chicago prosecutors did eventually decide to pursue “hate crimes” charges… but why would there have been any doubt?

The “hate crimes” charges should allow the legal system to throw these scumbags away for a good long while. But you have to ask… why shouldn’t that have been the case regardless? I’m seeing estimates of thirty years in prison, which sounds like a lot… but as they are 18 years old, that means they could be out by the age of 48. They could, in principle, still reproduce at that age. They should at the very least be locked up so long that there is no possibility for their gene codes to be propagated.

And for clarity: I don’t use the word “evil” terribly lightly. I don’t believe, as many religious people do, that “evil” is an actual force afoot in the universe, some malicious intelligence out to cause a ruckus. But then, I also don’t believe that “tall” is something that can be considered a personifiable force, either. Like “tall,” “evil” is something that someone can be that someone else can recognize. And kidnapping and torturing someone? That’s evil. After a proper, fair trial and if found guilty, feeding them feet-first into a  woodchipper would *not* be evil comparatively. What *might* be *argued* as evil would be to switch the chipper off and on during the process. But I’m uncertain of that. May require testing.

 Posted by at 6:45 pm
Jan 042017
 

And so 2017 gets off to an interest start in the effort to wipe out celebrities…

“Future Weapons” Star and SEAL “Mack” Machowicz Dies at 51

“Future Weapons” was a good and missed show. Only ran for three seasons (2006-2008) which now puts in squarely in the past. It would be nice to see an updated version of the series, though of course it now cannot have Mack as the host.

 Posted by at 10:26 pm
Jan 042017
 

A number of years ago I blathered on about an Idea-with-a-capitol-I that I had: drain the Great Salt Lake, scrape the muck out of the bottom, use blasts and bulldozers to dig it a hundred feet deeper, then run vast pipelines from the ocean to re-fill it with ocean water. Stock it with ocean life, in particular species that are being fished to extinction, set in place some *vast* recirculation and filtration systems, and shazam, now Utah becomes a paradise for both ecologists and fishermen. It was of course a ridiculous notion. but there ain’t no harm in dreaming big.

In the years since… there has been no progress on this idea. Oh well.

But something there *has* been progress on is land-locked aquaculture, raising food-fish in giant farms. Such as here:

Can farmers in Iowa help save the worlds seafood supply?

Where we read about a former hog farm that has been transformed into a fish farm. The waste water is not truly wasted… it goes to irrigate the same farmers corn fields, and the fish poop in the water becomes fertilizer. It seems to be a pretty good system, except that the fry (baby fish) are all flown in from Australia, not made on-site. As vast as the place is, it’s still pretty small compared to a conventional ecosystem.

Converting the Great Salt Lake into a living inland sea would be a chore, but the end result *should* be large enough to successfully host the complete life cycles of many species of ocean fish (and crustaceans, cetaceans, etc.). One advantage that making this a salt-water environment would have over fresh water aquaculture is that in the event of rains and floods, if the salt water critters get into surrounding rivers, they are unlikely to become an invasive species and damage the native system.

Still, good to see Flyover Country  expanding its economic base to aquaculture. With the rise of wind power, solar power, small-scale manufacturing/rapid prototyping, the need for high-density peoplefarms will hopefully decrease.

 

 Posted by at 10:14 pm
Jan 032017
 

So there I was watching the 1978 “Superman: The Movie” when something caught my eye. Early  after the introduction of Clark Kent to the staff of the Daily Planet, Kent demonstrates his bumbling, harmless, meek nature by stumbling into Lois Lane. But for just a few frames – caught below with the simple expedient of photographing the TV screen – Kent’s clumsy nature shows itself to be a little more than it might appear at first glance. Clearly he and The Donald share certain ideas about Where To Grab ‘Em By. Hmmm. Have we ever seen Donald Trump and Superman in the same room at the same time? Something to ponder…

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 Posted by at 10:49 am
Jan 032017
 

This YouTube channel is not a producer of content, but an aggregator of vintage documentaries. Additionally, the videos have improved audio and stabilized video – i.e., they’re better to watch and listen to than the originals. The videos are *all* over the place… you’re as likely to see one on nuclear bomb testing as you are on household cleansers. But there are a *lot* of videos that should be of considerable interest to readers of this blog. Lots of military and NASA vids.

Jeff Quitney

Here the page is broken down into convenient playlists.

Some recent videos of interest:

 

 

 

 

 

 Posted by at 9:44 am
Jan 032017
 

Which is the human talent/feature/bug for seeing faces (or other recognizable concepts) in things where faces objectively aren’t… clouds and tortillas and such. It’s a function of the need to see patterns, handy as a survival skill in a world full of bears and wolves and snakes and enemies all trying to kill you. These days it’s mostly just entertainment. Witness the Twitter page for:

Faces In Things

Examples:

And some where you have to look at it just right, but when you see it, you can’t unsee it:

 

 

 

 Posted by at 9:29 am