Apr 072015
 

Syfy has lost the rights to “Smackdown,” which is going over to USA network.

There is a downside: apparently wrestling brought in a lot of money to Syfy, so it may well be that Syfy will become a lower-budget network. But… you know, there’s not a single reason why that means that they will *necessarily* suffer for it. As I and many others have suggested repeatedly, Syfy needs to just troll through YouTube. Find the people who are making excellent 15 minute short films for $10K, and given them $100K to make an hour-long film. And those that work out… give ’em $250K per episode to make a series out of ’em.

And stop taking great ideas (“Ascension,” before it aired) and then turning them into crap (“Ascension,” as it aired). Syfy has had literal gold mines in the past… Battlestar, the Stargate franchise, Farscape. Build on them. Hell, give me an income and *I* will write a good series or two.

 Posted by at 3:27 pm
Apr 072015
 

Germ-line gene therapy – genetic engineering (such as to correct genetic diseases) that can be inherited by descendents – is forbidden in places like the US and UK. The idea is that this could lead to either horrible unintended birth defects… or a race to develop superbabies and the like.

The Chinese don’t seem to feel that worried about it.

Why is the scientific world abuzz about an unpublished paper? Because it could permanently change human DNA

*Apparently,* some Chinese researchers have successfully tinkered with viable human embryos and produced inheritable genetic traits.

Such things as designer babies are *inevitable.* Governments can try to keep a lid on nuclear weapons because nukes rely on the availability of very rare and exceedingly difficult to produce materials such as plutonium. But all that’s needed for genetic work are well equipped labs, some educated people and information. Soon enough, the technology will exist to allow people to tinker with themselves at home (and won’t *that* result in some entertaining disasters). Governments clamping a Thous Shall Not lid on this sort of research only results in other governments getting a lead.

Currently, a lot of westerners are supposedly making their way to China to get organ transplants they can’t get at home. This disturbs a lot of folks because who knows where those organs came from; like as not that new kidney was yanked out of a political dissident, not a motorbike crash victim.

Currently, if you have a case of the Heritable Horribles and a bucket of cash, there are western medical institutions at the leading edge who might be able to help you out. But soon enough, the Chinese will be able to do it much cheaper. And soon after… the Chinese will be your only option for gene therapy if you want to make sure that your Heritable Horribles are not longer heritable. Western governments might be able to make that sort of thing illegal at home… but how will they stop someone from visiting China to get it done there? Will they be arrested upon their return?

And of course, this being China, the end results will probably be pretty hit-and-miss. Sure, that guy over there got his cancer gene fixed. But that lady over there got her MD gene replaced with cadmium. And who knows how many will return home carrying the Zombie Apocalypse gene… dormant in them, but it’ll be expressed openly in their offspring. This problem could be solved by making this sort of treatment available in the West for a competitive fee, with western medical practices and oversight.

 Posted by at 2:32 pm
Apr 072015
 

Here’s a photo of a C-130 in-flight refueling two CH-53 helicopters, each helicopter carrying two Hummers. Now, if each Hummer had two dirt bikes, and each dirt bike was equipped with two small hand-launched drone aircraft…

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More photos of this kind can be found HERE.

 Posted by at 11:58 am
Apr 062015
 

Sometime around 1990 I was attending a community college in Illinois. Between classes, I’d go to the library and go through every issue of every magazine that seemed relevant. I was short of funds and the photocopier kinda stunk, so I was selective in what I copied. This strategy, sadly, has led to a few minor disappointments… in particular I distinctly recall seeing a painting depicting the interior of a Dyson sphere. But rather than a  simple spherical ball, it was made from stacks of differently-sized ringworlds, forming sort of a sphere. I did not photocopy it at the time.

For reasons which seem good to me, a few weeks ago I decided that I *needed* to find that illustration. I felt certain that it was in “Futurist” magazine. So a few weeks ago I went to the USU library and looked through every issue of “Futurist” from the mid-1970’s to 1990. No luck. I went back again and looked through every issue of “Space World” magazine from the mid 70’s to the end of magazine in 1988. Again, no luck.

While I didn’t find what I was looking for, I did find some other stuff of interest. But what struck me the most was something I picked up in both magazines: the 1970’s were fundamentally very different from the 1980’s.

The magazines from the 80’s could pass for present-day magazines. Sure, the technologies presented are seriously out of date… but they are recognizable as early versions of what we have now. The fashions were different, but not *too* different. The graphic design of the magazines, as well as the paper and the color photos and other graphics, are more or less up to current standards.

But the 70’s issues…. ah, no. Just… no. Everything was different. Everything seemed alien. Even the tone was just plain *off.* The 70’s gave the world some ideas that are just plain ballsy, such as space colonies and solar power satellites; but the activism behind them was enthusiastic to a degree that smacks of desperation. And from what I can remember of the 70’s, “desperation” pretty much fits the bill. Everything was awful… the Arabs and oil, the Soviets and nukes, Nam, Nixon, terrorists blowing up planes and sporting events, Carter, polyester, perms, white people with fros, etc. People were, I think, resorting to excessive partying in order to avoid the reality. And thus… disco. Studio 54. Cocaine. KC and the Sunshine Band. Songs that, as a six-year-old, I thought were great tunes about the awesomeness of rockets… but really weren’t.

Whatever the cause, the 70’s were just *wrong.* The 80’s, in contrast, were the beginning of the current era. As evidence, I present this magazine ad I saw posted online earlier today. Take a guess what decade it’s from. Go on… guess.

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It’s not just that the fashion shown is stuck in one very specific period, never to return again (with any luck). It’s the text. Holy carp, it’s just *bizarre.* This weird appeal to fake masculinity is something that faded out in the 80’s and has not returned, and now seems totally inconceivable.

If you want to see more mind-melting 70’s jumpsuits, here ya go.

Just… aaaaargh.

What turned the 70’s into the 80’s? Probably a vast number of things. But I do not discount Reagan. After the Sweater President, master of malaise, Reagan brought with him confident optimism. And that, coupled with the veto power, is damn near the *only* power the President Constitutionally really has that can fundamentally change a national economy. An economy is composed of a vast number of people; if they are on the whole depressed, the economy will suffer, and the people will be even more depressed. If the people can be cheered up, then the economy will improve. Even if the hard objective facts on the ground are *exactly* the same, you can get a fundamentally different economy and culture based on whether the President talks the economy up, as Reagan did with constant optimism, or talks it down, as Carter seemed to do.

And so when the tone out of Washington suddenly shifted, the culture suddenly shifted. And thus… no more jumpsuits.

But I’m still looking for that Dyson Sphere illustration. Sound familiar to anyone? Now I think it might’ve been in something like Science Digest or Omni… but who knows.

 Posted by at 10:08 pm
Apr 062015
 

Fukushima radiation has reached North American shores

Ahhhh! We’re doomed!

Scientists at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution detected small amounts of cesium-134 and cesium-137 in a sample of seawater taken in February from a dock on Vancouver Island, British Columbia.

DOOOOMED!

“Even if the levels were twice as high, you could still swim in the ocean for six hours every day for a year and receive a dose more than a thousand times less than a single dental X-ray,”

DOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMED!

 Posted by at 6:44 pm
Apr 062015
 

Ultra-fast charging aluminum battery offers safe alternative to conventional batteries

Short form: these seem to be similar to lithium ion batteries, but with aluminum ions. Performance, on a joules-per-gram basis, isn’t an improvement… but there are a few points in its favor (theoretically):

1) A lot cheaper

2) Faster charging

3) Won’t burst into flames

4) More charging cycles

Even if an aluminum battery isn’t quite as good as a lithium one, the lack of risk of bursting into flames is a definite plus… especially if you are an airline and you don’t want onboard fires at 35,000 feet. The charging time for a smart-phone-class battery was tested and found to be about one minute. Lithium ion batteries turn to garbage in 1,000 charging  cycles or less; these were tested to 7,500 cycles without loss of capacity.

Sadly, these aluminum ion batteries only produce about half the voltage of lithium ion batteries, so they’d stink for electric car use. But for laptops and the like? If they are much cheaper than lithium, and charge as quickly as the tests suggest, you could easily swap out dirt-cheap quickly-charged spares. Heck, if they are as rugged as suggested, you could have a built-in backup battery that keeps your laptop running while you swap dead main batteries on an airplane, without access to a charger.

And while they’re no good for cars, they might be just fine for houses. With recent improvements on PV arrays, batteries like these might plug into the system to finally start making off-the-grid electrical systems affordable.

 Posted by at 2:11 pm
Apr 062015
 

Now available… two new additions to the US Aerospace Projects series.

US Bomber Projects #14: System 464L Special

USBP#14 brings together the competitors to Weapon System 464L, the first major effort in the Dyna Soar program. These designs were previously shown individually in prior issues of USBP; here they are brought together, with some updates, as well as a few extra diagrams and a section of diagrams formatted for 11X17 printing. This issue includes info and diagrams of the Lockheed, Republic, General Dynamics, McDonnell, Boeing, Douglas, Northrop, North American and Martin-Bell entries as well as their various booster systems. Also included are detailed diagrams of the ultimate Dyna Soar design, the 2050E.

USBP#14 can be purchased for downloading for the low, low price of $6.

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Also available:US Transport Projects #03.

Included in this issue:

  • Lockheed “Environmentally Responsible Aviation” box-wing jetliner
  • Martin Commercial Twin-Hull concept from 1942
  • North American Aviation NAC-60 SST competitor
  • McDonnell-Douglas Cargo Spanloader
  • Boeing Model 763-058 “New Large Airplane”
  • BoMi Passenger Transport Rocket
  • Lockheed L-152-1 early jet transport with unusual inlets
  • Aerial Relay System: for when crazy is preferred

USTP #03 can be purchased for download for only $4:

 

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Please note: APR Patreon patrons can get 10% to 20% off all APR/USXP/air&space drawings & documents. See HERE for details.

 Posted by at 9:19 am
Apr 042015
 

Every now and then you stumble across something that provides tantalizing yet nonchalant hints to something amazing. Recently this occurred while perusing a Boeing report on closed life support systems for spacecraft. One concept mentioned and minimally described was a previous 1981 study of a spacecraft meant to transport crew to the asteroid belt for the purpose of mining asteroids for their resources. Just the basic concept was fairly amazing on its own, especially all the way back in 1981. Second: the propulsion system was vaguely described as a nuclear fusion system. Third: well, here’s the disappointingly small diagram that was included for illustration purposes. See if you can see what makes the design especially interesting…

boeing 81 asteroid transport

What can be seen: three arms that rotate for artificial gravity; three vast radiator fins and a relatively tiny fusion engine in the tail. But what makes the design amazing: just in front of the spacecraft is a Space Shuttle Orbiter, giving a sense of scale to the vehicle. It’s *vast.* And it would have to be… the cargo transported to the asteroid was 150 metric tons. Plus the passengers, all 1,250 of them. All ONE THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY of them.

The vehicle massed 10,000 tons; the powerplant (two 6 GW fusion reactors, spitting out 4.8 GW of thrust power, 2.8 GW of heat needing radiating and 4.4 GW of high energy neutron) massed 2000 tons; 4000 tons of hydrogen fuel; and 4000 tons of spacecraft/payload/passengers. The vehicle would boost for 11 days, coast for 226 days and brake for 13 days to rendezvous.

That, sadly, is all that’s available in the report I have. A FOIA request has been made for the reference that *seems* like might describe this further.

I hope to be able to define this vehicle further. As it is I can only guesstimate sizes; the habitation modules at the ends of the arms appear to be repurposed Shuttle External Tanks. But even nine of them would seem to be kinda cramped for 1250 people for two-thirds of a year… nearly 140 passengers per tank.

 Posted by at 10:12 am
Apr 032015
 

Here’s your weird story of the day. After years of people posting photos of themselves on Facebook trying to look “gangsta” by posing with guns, someone seems to have finally been arrested for it. This case seems to fall squarely into the “what, don’t the cops have something better to do with their time” camp.

Chesterfield woman arrested for ‘Facebook thugging’

Apparently in the course of a stereotypical online argument, someone mistook her for someone else and must have said something about coming to get her. So she wrote “I’ll post a few actual pics of me so you know the difference when you come find me.”

And then posted this photo:
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For some reason, this photo just seems awesome. I’m thinking… replace the toothbrush with a cigar and the pistol with a blaster, the hooodie with a silver spacesuit… and we have us an iconic 1950’s space heroine.

The Sharpie-brand eyebrows? In real-life they look cheesy as hell. But on Zagmar, Pirate Queen of Space, they fit right in.

 Posted by at 11:34 pm
Apr 032015
 

Coming this summer to Syfy, a “space bounty hunter” series called “Killjoys.” It *looks* like adequate space opera. But then… “Ascension” looked promising too, so caveat emptor.

 Posted by at 5:37 pm