Jan 052016
 

Interesting timing. The Norks set off a nuke, and MTV premieres “The Shanarra Chronicles.” This latter is something I’ve never paid much attention to; apart from Tolkein, I just don’t get much into fantasy. Bring up elves and magic and my eyes tend to glaze over. But Shanarra is set not in some mythical alternate world or some magical past, but apparently this world, thousands of years after (apparently) nuclear/biological warfare has destroyed human civilization and caused several subspecies (elves, trolls, dwarves, gnomes, etc) to spring up*. And, of course, magic. So, there’s that.

So, now with the Norks getting frisky with nukes and biowar getting easier on a daily basis, the idea of humanity evolving a tad  makes this video more relevant. It is a handy, concise explanation of the process of evolution, using computer graphics on a scale rarely encountered, and with a level of accuracy far exceeding what you’re likely to find in a public school post-Department of Education.

 

*See also “Adventure Time.”

And because why not, here’s this again. If you think evolution is bunk, by all means go through this and figure out what statements are wrong:

 Posted by at 10:33 pm
Jan 052016
 

CNN TV says they have confirmation that this was a man made event.

Magnitude 5.1 seismic disturbance recorded in North Korea

Yay, nukes! Can we test our own now, please?

UPDATE:

North Korea says it successfully conducts hydrogen bomb test

Granted, North Korea in the past has proved to be as honest as a Chicago politician, so who knows. A 5.1 magnitude quake equates to *roughly* 0.67 kilotons, which would be one hell of a weak H-bomb, but it’d be in line with the kinda sad nukes the Norks have set off in the past.

 Posted by at 8:13 pm
Jan 052016
 

I recently decided that I wanted to at least look at the idea of producing a printed and bound book or two of aerospace artwork. For copyright reasons selling coffeetable tomes filled with other peoples art is probably not a good idea, so this would likely be something just for myself, if it can be made affordable. But step one was gathering the artwork I have into one location so’s I can figure out what to include. So I dug through the ol’ hard drives and gathered stuff into one folder. A few conditions: the images had to be large/high-rez enough to be printed at at least 8.5X11; they had to be in color, not B&W; they had to be paintings (not CGI, not photos of models, not line drawings); they had to be “official” images, not fan art of the like; they had to be interesting.

I’ve been thinking of perhaps a few different volumes… “Saturn/Apollo,” “Shuttle Program,” “Conceptual Designs,” etc.  I was looking for something on the order of 50 images per volume.

End result: the “Aero Art” folder has 982 files for a total of 7.73 gigabytes. I guess I have enough to take a stab at this…

What I’d *really* like to do is to have a larger format book… preferably 11X17 or so pages. But that’s probably a bit much.

 Posted by at 1:50 am
Jan 032016
 

propellant tank, structure, landing gear and a nuclear rocket engine, to be used for landing a payload on Mars and for flying or hopping around. The propellant would be liquid carbon dioxide, easily compressed from the Martian atmosphere; the performance would be, by conventional liquid hydrogen nuclear rocket standards, reasonably awful, but it would be adequate to lurch back into Mars orbit or to do long range hops.

Two main designs seem to have been studied: a conical “ballistic” vehicle that would be a dedicated “hopper,” landing on its tail, and a winded vehicle that would land vertically in a horizontal attitude. This latter design was sent to me in the form of diagrams and five computer renders. The renders – early 1990’s vintage – came as viewgraph transparencies, clearly photographs of a computer monitor. The winged vehicle had simple shock absorbers for landing gear, terminating in dishes rather than wheels meaning that a rolling start or stop was impossible. The available information sadly doesn’t explain how the thing was supposed to land vertically.

martin-marietta_nimf0009

The full-rez scans of the viewgraphs have been made available to APR Patrons in the 2016-01 APR Extras Dropbox folder. If you’d like to help out and gain access to this and many other pieces of aerospace history, please check out the APR Patreon.

patreon-200

 Posted by at 1:25 am
Jan 022016
 

An interesting if somewhat confounding article:

Google takes quantum leap into artificial intelligence

The claim is here made that Googles “D-Wave” quantum computer is “100 million times as fast as any of today’s machines.” Which would be both great and impressive, but the article also says “each 10-foot-high D-Wave computer also needs to be super-chilled to a temperature that’s 150 times as cold as that of deep space.” What the hell temperature is *that,* given that deep space has no temperature, being deep space and all? And even if you compared the temperature to something measurable like, say, the freezing point of water, what does it mean to be “150 times colder?” Is something that’s 150 times colder than 0 degrees Celsius the same temperature as something that’s 150 times colder than 32 degree Fahrenheit? Hmmm.

A truly functional quantum computer that has all the kinks worked out, bugs swept out and Heisencats  shooed off would be a dandy device. This would seem to be a computer within shooting distance of the approximate power of the human brain. So it *might* turn out that the first true AIs aren’t digital computers, but quantum. And Loki only knows what sort of wacky insanity *that* might produce.

 Posted by at 9:36 pm
Jan 022016
 

Protest in Tehran after Saudis execute Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr, 46 others

The headline kinda misses the important point: Iranians stormed the Saudi embassy in Tehran and set it on fire. Storming embassies seems to be the Iranian national pastime. Of course, there are occasionally some minor repercussions to invading an embassy; it took a little while, but after the Iranians invaded the US embassy, the Iraqis invaded Iran, leading to hundreds of thousands of dead Iranians. I believe the CIA had some small role in seeing to it that that war came to pass. It’ll be interesting to see if some unpleasantness occurs between Iran and Saudi. If so, that’ll play hell with the petroleum market; get used to expensive fuel. I suspect that won’t bother the likes of Vlad Putin; might finally help yoink the Russian economy out of the toilet, at least for a little bit.

It would make for some entertaining CNN…

 Posted by at 9:04 pm