Sep 032014
 

Mysterious Phony Cell Towers Could Be Intercepting Your Calls

It seems that there are at least 17 cell phone towers in the CONUS that do not appear to be a part of any recognized network, yet they are functional. Someone built the things, and if you are close to them, your phone will connect through them. And at that point, whoever is operating the towers can not only listen in, they can also upload malware to your smart phone. One especially exciting bit of programming that can be uploaded to your phone can turn it into a spy device: even when you think it’s off, the mike and camera can listen, watch and transmit.

The obvious suspect would be the NSA. But they can tap into the existing network and get everything they want anyway, much more readily than via a few mystery towers. A more disturbing thought is that the towers were paid for and operated by the Chinese or some such foreign entity. Many of the towers are built on or near military bases, just perfect for capturing juicy tidbits.

Might be interesting if it turns out that all of these towers have perfectly mundane and valid back stories… but the publication of this article inspires China to build just such towers.

A map of these “interceptor” towers:

esdmap

I would have expected more in California, Silicon Valley and such. Still, the “southern border” clustering seems odd. Perhaps these are being installed by Mexican drug cartels for some reason?

 Posted by at 10:48 pm
Sep 032014
 

US Bomber Projects issues 09 and 10 are now done, and will be available for sale just as soon as I get all the requisite website blahblah worked out. Hopefully tonight. I have issues 11 and 12 planned out, though still quite a bit of drafting to do.

The USBP series has been modestly successful (not blisteringly so, but ok, I guess…). I’m pondering doing the same format but with something other than bombers. Other concepts include:

  • US Fighter Projects
  • US Transport Projects (jetliners, cargo, civvies, SSTs, HSTs, etc.)
  • US Recon & Experimental Projects
  • US Launch Vehicle Projects
  • US Spacecraft Projects (spaceplanes, moon landers, Mars ships, etc.)
  • US Helicopter Projects

So, a few questions for commentors:

1) What did I leave out?

2) What would you most like to see? Some of these have a much bigger database to work from than others, of course.

 Posted by at 7:49 pm
Sep 032014
 

For those of you who have read the story “Beyond the Wall of Sleep” by H. P. Lovecraft, this little news item might seem vaguely familiar:

The First Successful Demonstration Of Brain-To-Brain Communication In Humans

Two human subjects, one in India and one in France, successfully transmitted the words “hola” and “ciao” in a computer-assisted brain-to-brain transmission using internet-linked electroencephalogram (EEG) and robot-assisted image-guided transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) technologies.

Hmmm. It’s not much just yet, and apparently the setup was fairly impressive, but the fact that there are machines that examine your brain electromagnetically and can send that info to another brain which reverses the process into another brain is potentially important. Imagine being “locked in,” and now being able to communicate, even if only in slow, slow binary.

 Posted by at 5:12 pm
Sep 032014
 

I should surprise nobody that since I live in a house made of Yule logs and have filled it with paper and books, *fire* is something I’m kinda twitchy about. So while writing the preceding posting, imagine how thrilled I was when the smell of smoke became overpowering. Fortunately it wasn’t my house, but instead the wheat field across the road. It’s that time of year when the farmers are burning their fields; I guess it quickly returns minerals and such to the soil, but you’d kinda think that just plowing the stubble back in might work better. I dunno, the farmers seem happy with the process.

Anyway, the wind was just right so that he smoke was blowing straight into my front windows. Joy.

Dsc_7205

Obviously, I grabbed the camera and started taking pictures. Had I been smarter I would have turned the smartphone video camera on and caught the dust devil that blew through. As it was, I only took a few inadequate photos of the mini-tornado; it went through the fire making a very, very brief firenado, but of course I didn’t catch that. All I caught was the smokenado/ashnado:

Dsc_7211 Dsc_7218 Dsc_7217

And one last shot as I was ducking out of the way… the ashnado shot across the road and plowed right into the deck where I would’ve been standing had I decided “nope.”

Dsc_7221

I took a bunch of telephoto shots as the trail of fire – created by dragging a propane flame throwing behind a four-wheeler ATV through the field – moved off into the distance. Most were better in theory than execution, but with a little cropping and fade correction, they’re kinda interesting:

DSC_7238 Dsc_7249

 Posted by at 4:24 pm
Sep 032014
 

Mental health issues, not books, led to teacher’s suspension

The claim is made that what caused Patrick McLaw to fall afoul of the authorities was not the sci-fi books he wrote, but a four page letter he wrote and sent to some Dorchester county officials. This could completely alter the entire story.Note that there is no information presented on what the letter said. However, history is replete with cases of people who have written whackadoodle letters threatening violence… letters that went ignored, then the letter writer goes on to rob a bank or knock over a synagogue or open fire on a crowd. *IF* the letter written was of this kind, then the story might suddenly flip from OMGWTF the cops are going nuts to Oh, good, the cops caught the crazy in time this time.

Again, no data on the contents of the letter. But it may be instructive to point out that McLaw is a male in his early twenties… right about the time that a whole lot of schizophrenics begin to really bloom. So… maybe.

Gotta go for now. My world out here seems to be on fire.

OK, I’m back (see the next blog post for pointless details)

Assuming that this is truly a case of a teacher who went bugnuts and either threatened others, threatened himself, or just plain wrote crazy stuff and the authorities were in the right to lock him in the nut hatch, there are still some disturbing features. First: the public goes bonkers and the authorities say approximately diddly. This seems to have been a result of HIPPA rules, which pretty much legally bar the authorities from saying anything about the medical status of someone who doesn’t want ’em to say anything. But you still think they could a said *something* before this point to keep a lid on the public outrage.

Second, and more importantly: just how *easy* it is to believe that the government would lock someone up for writing fiction, even bad fiction. This should be a warning sign to all three people employed by the government inside the US who actually want the public to have an informed yet trusting view of the government.

 Posted by at 3:27 pm
Sep 032014
 

While I haven’t been doing a whole lot of fiction writing of late, I’ve nevertheless been noodling around some ideas and plans. And something occurred to me last night: three separate stories each incorporated something of a MacGuffin that, in retrospect, can be the same thing. In other words, three separate stories (starring the “Mass Disappearance” crew) turn out to not be separate, but directly linked.

Huh.

And the MacGuffin transforms from a content-free plot device into something actually important on its own. Neato. Perhaps a way to turn short stories into a short novel…

Fortunately, the first of the three stories is actually the one I’ve actually written the most of… looks like 27 pages. I let that one lapse quite a while back when Real World Requirements started stomping on trivialities such as this, but I might get back to it soonish. Still working on “Mockingbird,” currently at 14 pages. I suspect it’ll be  on the order of 30 pages when done…. and then I’ll try to attack it with a chainsaw to reduce it as much as possible. It’s a story that might be , in its complete form, of great interest to aerospace engineers… but deadly dull to normal humans. So a page and a half of someone going through static test data might be a tad excessive.

 Posted by at 12:00 pm
Sep 032014
 

Dashcam Theater Presents:

[youtube Wnsdc7cTPuU]

I think I’m starting to put together a Unified Weirdness Field Theory. Everyone knows that Japan is full of WTF. Some have speculated that it is because Japan experienced a whole lot of BLAMMO a few decades back. Rattled their brains, knocked ’em goofy. The video here? Apparently it was shot in Chelyabinsk. You remember Chelyabinsk… BLAMMO.

Apparently there is an effort underway to get a Disneyland built in/near Chelyabinsk. Huh. This *might* be a viral video meant to spur locals into voting on Sept. 14, but damned if I can figure out just how it’s supposed to get people to vote which way…

 

 Posted by at 1:04 am
Sep 022014
 

MISSING LIBYAN JETLINERS RAISE FEARS OF SUICIDE AIRLINER ATTACKS ON 9/11

It seems that jihadis in Libya strolled off with eleven commercial jetliners in late August. Now, what would those folks want with aircraft such as that, I wonder? I bet it’s to deliver candy and stuffed toys and antibiotics to poor underprivileged kids. Yup. That’s gotta be it.

Seems to probably be a mix of Airbuses.

 Posted by at 4:59 pm
Sep 022014
 

Derek Grant jailed for killing son’s mugger in Greenock

OK. If I’m understanding this story correctly, there are four people of interest here: Father, Son, Mugger, Judge

And it went like this:

A) Mugger steals Son’s phone

B) Father confronts Mugger

C) Mugger stabs Father in the eye

D) Father stabs Mugger to death

E) Judge thanks Father for improving society sentences Father to six years in jail

Britain… y’all gots issues.

 Posted by at 11:20 am