Thursday, June 12, 2008

Australia Felix!

One of those rare moments these days where something on the Internet made me laugh out loud:
At least the English know not to do something like Guantanamo Bay. They tried that 220 years ago, and created Australia.
Gotcha! But:
No fair - the ones sent to Australia were already charged, tried, convicted, and sentenced; and at least they were still in the Commonwealth & subject to British/colonial law & legal process.

Only barbarians would ship their alleged criminals to some overseas outpost then claim they had no recourse to the laws of the country...
Oh. OK, the laws in 18th C England were brutal and unfair to our eyes, but at least there was some semblance of a trial.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Wabbit hath ah lethuth

LOLcats is not just about cats you know.

wabbit hath ah lethuth
more cat pictures

Friday, April 25, 2008

The Mirboo North Gilfedders


Interesting to see what my great-great aunt, Ellen 'Ellie' Gilfedder, was up to around 1900.

A gathering of men and women from Mirboo North, about 1900. Front, left to right, are Ellie Gilfedder, Miss Rennell, Rose Hayes, Alice Hayes, Miss Haushalt and Ada Hayes. In the back row are Mr Garvie, teller at the Bank of Australasia, Mr Gibbs, the second bank manager, Mr Hashault, school teacher and Wally Hayes.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

"These are the we inside of me" - When a Neuroanatomist Suffers a Stroke



Dr. Jill Bolte Taylor was 37 when a blood vessel exploded in her brain. Through the eyes of a curious Harvard-trained neuroanatomist, she watched her mind completely deteriorate whereby she could not walk, talk, read, write, or recall any of her life.

Having lost the categorizing, organizing, describing, judging and critically analyzing skills of her left brain, along with its language centers and thus ego center, Jill’s consciousness shifted away from normal reality. In the absence of her left brain’s neural circuitry, her consciousness shifted into present moment thinking whereby she experienced herself “at one with the universe”.
“I realized that the blessing I had received from this experience was the knowledge that deep internal peace is accessible to anyone at any time...My stroke of insight would be: Peace is only a thought away, and all we have to do to access it is silence the voice of our dominating left mind”.
The video of her lecture at the TED conference is challenging and thought-provoking, and well worth watching right through to gain wonderful insight to human existence as we experience it via our brain. From the New York Times article:
As a Harvard-trained neuroanatomist, Jill Bolte Taylor has always known more about brains than most people. But when a brain hemorrhage triggered her own stroke, she suddenly had a front-row seat on the deterioration of the brain.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Sub-prime woes

John Clarke used to make me laugh myself sick as Fred Dagg back in the days. Well, he's still giving them stick; in their wildly-successful interview format, Clarke and long-time comic partner Bryan Dawe tear into the political and economics commentary style being seen more and more in the media nowadays:

Clarke and Dawe: the comic duo you can bank on

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Engineering challenges for the 21st century

The Grand Challenges for Engineering was determined by a committee of the National Academy of Engineering. From an In Depth article in The Melbourne Age on Feb 24th 2008:
The panel consisted of 18 leading scientists, including geneticist Craig Venter and Google co-founder Larry Page, and was chaired by former US secretary of defence William Perry.
...
The list below was presented to the annual conference of the world's largest scientific organisation (and publisher of the journal Science), the American Association for the Advancement of Science, in Boston last week.
...
Sydney-based futurist Mark Pesce believes there are some usual suspects in the list. "It's a good list. It's funny; when I saw the fusion one I laughed. I was born in 1962 and people were saying then that fusion was 20 to 50 years away. I'm 45 now and they're still saying it's 20 to 50 years away."
But he says there are some puzzling inclusions. "Nuclear tension and safety in cyberspace are absolutely sociological problems and they don't easily admit to any engineering solution."
What do you think?
  • Make solar energy economical
    Solar energy provides less than 1% of the world's total energy, but it has the potential to provide much, much more.

  • Provide energy from fusion
    Human-engineered fusion has been demonstrated on a small scale. The challenge is to scale up the process to commercial proportions, in an efficient, economical, and environmentally benign way.

  • Develop carbon sequestration methods
    Engineers are working on ways to capture and store excess carbon dioxide to prevent global warming.

  • Manage the nitrogen cycle
    Engineers can help restore balance to the nitrogen cycle with better fertilization technologies and by capturing and recycling waste.

  • Provide access to clean water
    The world's water supplies are facing new threats; affordable, advanced technologies could make a difference for millions of people around the world.

  • Restore and improve urban infrastructure
    Good design and advanced materials can improve transportation and energy, water, and waste systems, and also create more sustainable urban environments.

  • Advance health informatics
    Stronger health information systems not only improve everyday medical visits, but they are essential to counter pandemics and biological or chemical attacks.

  • Engineer better medicines
    Engineers are developing new systems to use genetic information, sense small changes in the body, assess new drugs, and deliver vaccines.

  • Reverse-engineer the brain
    The intersection of engineering and neuroscience promises great advances in health care, manufacturing, and communication.

  • Prevent nuclear terror
    The need for technologies to prevent and respond to a nuclear attack is growing.

  • Secure cyberspace
    It's more than preventing identity theft. Critical systems in banking, national security, and physical infrastructure may be at risk.

  • Enhance virtual reality
    True virtual reality creates the illusion of actually being in a difference space. It can be used for training, treatment, and communication.

  • Advance personalized learning
    Instruction can be individualized based on learning styles, speeds, and interests to make learning more reliable.

  • Engineer the tools of scientific discovery
    In the century ahead, engineers will continue to be partners with scientists in the great quest for understanding many unanswered questions of nature.

Firepower, bogus fuel additive maker, threatens to sue over (true) claims that their fuel additive is bogus

Have you heard of the Streisand effect?

After Atomic magazine columnist, blogger, and all round good bloke, Dan Rutter blogged many times about bogus fuel additive maker Firepower in 2007 & 2008, he was sent a PDF of "summary of our results" by Stephen Moss, CEO of the above-mentioned bogus fuel additive maker, accompanied by this charming text:

Dear Dan,

You are an idiot.

I suggest before you make claims regarding a product, you complete all your research correctly. Maybe you should try a product before you talk about it.

I have attached a summary of our results.

You can remove your defamatory statements regarding our product within the next 48 hours and post an apology and reference our results or we will commence legal action immediately.

–Kind Regards,

Stephen Moss
Chief Executive Officer
Firepower International

On 12 Feb 2008, he kindly complied, but added his usual, thorough assessment of their claims, which wasn't at all flattering to poor old bogus fuel additive maker Firepower. It said things like "not backed up by science", and "not tested by reputable, contactable organisations", and "their claims don't even make sense".

Needless to say, the bogus fuel additive maker Firepower were unhappy with this, not least because it's all true - their product hasn't been tested in an actual lab, or by an actual scientist, or... um... at all (in an english speaking country) as far can be told.

So, they did what any self respecting bottom-feeder would do. On 19 Feb 2008 , they anonymously ordered Blogsome, who host Dan's blog, to force him to cease linking to this PDF file, FP_Pill_07.zip of their bogus "evidence".

As a direct result, and in keeping with the fine tradition of anti-censorship, bogus fuel additive maker Firepower's brochure can now be found all over the internets, including on this site - FP_Pill_07.zip.

Funny that.

The above text is based on this one from AdamHelp, thanks Adam!


From dansdata - mirrors so far:
This one at Tantryl Technology, this one at Purdue University, this one at David Lumley Design, this one at Manitu Group, this one at Tinfoil Music, this one at WinForums, this one at nepis.net, this one at egginton.net, this one at Practical Devices, this one at GamersNation, this one and this one where the PDF link currently constitutes pretty much the entire content of the site it's on not to mention this one, this one, this one, this one, this one, this one, this one, this one, this one, this one, this one, this one, this one, this one, and this one and this one on OptusNet accounts, this one and this one at TPG, this one at WestNet and this one on a Versatel account in Belgium. Also mirrored and blogged about on Colombo Critic, and bjoreman.com, and ILikeJam, and ipsidixit.net, and The Thrill House, and Wyse Guys, and ItGlo.ws, and TechDomain, and TechNFun, and AdamHelp, and The Dord of Darien.

And the torrent's been downloaded a few hundred times.


How's that censorship workin' out for you, anonymous Firepower guy?