Thursday, November 25, 2010

Dry ice blasting for electric motor repair.

Dry ice blasting for electric motor repair.

dry ice blasting for electric motor repair

Dry ice blasting (CO2) for electric motor repair shops is preferred due to strict California environmental regulations concerning industrial hazardous waste disposal. Below is a case study for using dry ice blasting (CO2) for an electric motor rebuilder, compared to conventional methods such as sand blasting.

No need to dispose of the used media, no grit caught in the works, no dust problems, and much lower media costs in the first place. Awesome to see people using their noggins.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

James Nachtwey's searing photos of war

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"[During the Vietnam war] the politicians were telling us one thing, the photographers another. I believed the photographers."
-- James Nachtwey, war photographer in his TED talk

Monday, November 22, 2010

What to do when you have the funk, the whole funk, and nothing but the funk

What to do when you have the funk, the whole funk, and nothing but the funk

by Pamela on November 19, 2010

Image source: Jon Oliver and Funk Inc.

The entrepreneur journey is not all gumdrops and rainbows. Some times you get tired, frustrated, impatient and downright sad while trying to convince the world your product is the greatest thing since John Travolta met Saturday Night Fever.

If you find yourself in a bit of a funk, here are some ways out:

  1. Be grateful.
    OK, so your business may not be taking off the way that you want it to just yet. But is that the only thing going on in your life? Maybe you have great kids. Maybe you chose the perfect paint color for your guest bathroom. Maybe people say you look just like James Dean, when the light hits you right and you are having a good hair day.
  2. Be bitter and inappropriate.
    All that gratitude stuff can be just a little too life-coachy, can’t it? Time to drink up a bit of snark, like Go Fug Yourself or The Bloggess.
  3. Watch shoot em up movies.
    I realize that fashion snark may be a bit weighted towards the ladies. Gentlemen, what do you prescribe, a really good slasher movie or a few rounds of Grand Theft Auto?
  4. Laugh.
    I can’t get enough of Rhett and Link‘s zaniness. You may like highbrow English humor, or YouTube videos of people falling down. If it makes you laugh, it is fair game.
  5. Watch television on Hulu.
    Glee’s episode on Funk got this whole blog post started for me.  Maybe for you it is House or Saturday Night Live.
  6. Read stories of successes who were once failures
    Do we ever tire of quoting that Edison took 10,000 tries to get the light bulb right? That makes our fifteen tries to sell one seat on a teleclass sound downright anemic.
  7. Call your best friend and moan and complain. Tell him the only things he is allowed to say are “Seriously? I can’t believe that! That is NOT fair!”
    Sure, he may have his phone on mute while you ramble on like Charlie Brown’s teacher, but you WILL feel better after having explained your entire theory of the Conspiracy by The Man to Keep You Down.
  8. Walk down old school road.
    There is a good reason why high school reunions make the most staid person bust a move on the dance floor . Who doesn’t perk up when hearing the tunes of your youth? I am a child of  the 70s, so no dour mood can resist the healing power of Donna Summer or The Commodores.
  9. Ice cream.
    Ben and Jerry should call their product “pint-sized therapy.”
  10. Call your mother and tell her to remind you once again why you are the cutest, smartest and most likely to succeed child in the history of planet earth. Then ask her to send some pie.

It must not be healthy to feel cheery all the time.

So if you get down deep in a funk, may I suggest you get all the way down to the funk, the whole funk, and nothing but the funk?

Enjoy your weekend. :)

Good advice for rough times. Sure helped me this morning.

Friday, November 19, 2010

Facebook

Gravity does not exist for this young man, nor does fear.
via Rod Bruckdorfer at facebook.com

What an incredible demonstration of going past what "everybody knows" is possible.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

4 in 10 Americans think marriage is becoming obsolete

Wedding vows may want to consider swapping out “as long as we both shall live” for “as long as I can put up with you leaving the toilet seat up” or “as long as nothing better comes along” because more Americans than ever believe marriage has lost its significance.

A study from the Pew Research Center finds that 39 percent of Americans think marriage is becoming obsolete, up from just 28 percent in 1978. The number may reflect shifting definitions about what constitutes a family.

Since 1960, the percentage of children under 18 that live with a parent or parents who are unwed or no longer married have jumped fivefold to 29 percent. That 29 percent breaks down to 15 percent with divorced or separated parents, 14 percent with never married parents, and 6 percent with parents who live together but chose to never get married.

“Marriage is still very important in this country, but it doesn’t dominate family life like it used to,” said Andrew Cherlin, a professor of sociology and public policy at Johns Hopkins University. “Now there are several ways to have a successful family life, and more people accept them.”

Full story at Yahoo News.

Tons of relationship resources.

Photo credit: Fotolia

Definitely count me among the 40%. Given the horrendous legal impact - at least for men - it's a real losing game.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Scientists suggest that cancer is man-made (The University of Manchester)

You are here:

Scientists suggest that cancer is man-made

14 Oct 2010

Cancer is a modern, man-made disease caused by environmental factors such as pollution and diet, a study review by University of Manchester scientists has strongly suggested.

Their study of remains and literature from ancient Egypt and Greece and earlier periods – carried out at Manchester’s KNH Centre for Biomedical Egyptology and published in Nature Reviews Cancer – includes the first histological diagnosis of cancer in an Egyptian mummy.

Finding only one case of the disease in the investigation of hundreds of Egyptian mummies, with few references to cancer in literary evidence, proves that cancer was extremely rare in antiquity. The disease rate has risen massively since the Industrial Revolution, in particular childhood cancer – proving that the rise is not simply due to people living longer.

Professor Rosalie David, at the Faculty of Life Sciences, said: “In industrialised societies, cancer is second only to cardiovascular disease as a cause of death. But in ancient times, it was extremely rare. There is nothing in the natural environment that can cause cancer. So it has to be a man-made disease, down to pollution and changes to our diet and lifestyle.”

She added: “The important thing about our study is that it gives a historical perspective to this disease. We can make very clear statements on the cancer rates in societies because we have a full overview. We have looked at millennia, not one hundred years, and have masses of data.”

The data includes the first ever histological diagnosis of cancer in an Egyptian mummy by Professor Michael Zimmerman, a visiting Professor at the KNH Centre, who is based at the Villanova University in the US. He diagnosed rectal cancer in an unnamed mummy, an ‘ordinary’ person who had lived in the Dakhleh Oasis during the Ptolemaic period (200-400 CE).

Professor Zimmerman said: “In an ancient society lacking surgical intervention, evidence of cancer should remain in all cases. The virtual absence of malignancies in mummies must be interpreted as indicating their rarity in antiquity, indicating that cancer causing factors are limited to societies affected by modern industrialization”.

The team studied both mummified remains and literary evidence for ancient Egypt but only literary evidence for ancient Greece as there are no remains for this period, as well as medical studies of human and animal remains from earlier periods, going back to the age of the dinosaurs.

Evidence of cancer in animal fossils, non-human primates and early humans is scarce – a few dozen, mostly disputed, examples in animal fossils, although a metastatic cancer of unknown primary origin has been reported in an Edmontosaurus fossil while another study lists a number of possible neoplasms in fossil remains. Various malignancies have been reported in non-human primates but do not include many of the cancers most commonly identified in modern adult humans.

It has been suggested that the short life span of individuals in antiquity precluded the development of cancer. Although this statistical construct is true, individuals in ancient Egypt and Greece did live long enough to develop such diseases as atherosclerosis, Paget's disease of bone, and osteoporosis, and, in modern populations, bone tumours primarily affect the young.

Another explanation for the lack of tumours in ancient remains is that tumours might not be well preserved. Dr. Zimmerman has performed experimental studies indicating that mummification preserves the features of malignancy and that tumours should actually be better preserved than normal tissues. In spite of this finding, hundreds of mummies from all areas of the world have been examined and there are still only two publications showing microscopic confirmation of cancer. Radiological surveys of mummies from the Cairo Museum and museums in Europe have also failed to reveal evidence of cancer.   

As the team moved through the ages, it was not until the 17th century that they found descriptions of operations for breast and other cancers and the first reports in scientific literature of distinctive tumours have only occurred in the past 200 years, such as scrotal cancer in chimney sweeps in 1775, nasal cancer in snuff users in 1761 and Hodgkin’s disease in 1832.

Professor David – who was invited to present her paper to UK Cancer Czar Professor Mike Richards and other oncologists at this year’s UK Association of Cancer Registries and National Cancer Intelligence Network conference – said: “Where there are cases of cancer in ancient Egyptian remains, we are not sure what caused them. They did heat their homes with fires, which gave off smoke, and temples burned incense, but sometimes illnesses are just thrown up.”

She added: “The ancient Egyptian data offers both physical and literary evidence, giving a unique opportunity to look at the diseases they had and the treatments they tried. They were the fathers of pharmacology so some treatments did work

“They were very inventive and some treatments thought of as magical were genuine therapeutic remedies. For example, celery was used to treat rheumatism back then and is being investigated today. Their surgery and the binding of fractures were excellent because they knew their anatomy: there was no taboo on working with human bodies because of mummification. They were very hands on and it gave them a different mindset to working with bodies than the Greeks, who had to come to Alexandria to study medicine.”

She concluded: “Yet again extensive ancient Egyptian data, along with other data from across the millennia, has given modern society a clear message – cancer is man-made and something that we can and should address.”

Notes for editors

A copy of the paper ‘Cancer: an old disease, a new disease or something in between?’ is available at http://www.nature.com/nrc/journal/v10/n10/full/nrc2914.html

For more information or an interview with Professor Rosalie David, contact Media Relations Officer Mikaela Sitford on 0161 275 2111, 07768 980942 or Mikaela.Sitford@manchester.ac.uk.

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Wow. Gives me a bit of a hollow feeling, for all that I believe in man.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Nobody Expects the Agile Imposition (Part III): People

Stories of incompetent managers (and/or accountants) who take out their frustrations on their work-force are, of course, the stuff of legend.   (Which has little to do with the process of “performance appraisals.”)   If a company believes that it has hired 10% too many people to do the job, it is probably wiser to fire the one damned fool person who is saying that.   However, if that person appears to be attracting a sincere audience, it simply means that the company has cash-flow problems ... which are almost always endemic.   The bloodstream of a business is cash, and “congestive heart failure” is always fatal to it.

“Substantial layoffs” are, pure and simple, a sign that there are icebergs in these waters, and that the company has recently hit one of them.   (It is very easy to <!>-up a company, even when management didn’t mean to.)   The company doesn’t have enough cash to pay its bills, and probably has tapped-out its lines of credit or is well on its way to doing so.   It is deciding whether to cut off its arm or which one of its legs.   If a major company makes substantial hits to its data processing operation, in particular, then that is a company that is “going down,” no matter how long it actually takes to hit the ground.   (If cash is the bloodstream, then the digital computer is the heart and hands and feet.)

You might not have the privy data with which to make a decision, but you can always see the signs.   Don’t sit there in your comfy seat, waiting until you actually smell smoke.   If you are reasonably alert and attentive and educate yourself as to what to look for, you can usually spot the warning signs months or years ahead of time, while management is still (publicly, at least) in denial.  If the words on that wall aren’t graffiti, don’t let the door hit you in the butt.   Don’t spread secrets or spill (or buy stock or puts/calls based on) what you may know; just carry your own box of personal belongings out to your car.

All that you can do – all that you have to do (unless you are an officer of the place, you unlucky SOB...) – is to get out of the way.   There will always be very strong demand for people who can make a digital computer sing and dance:   if not “here,” then “there.”     This is the way that business actually works.   Don’t take it personally, and try not to get caught by it more often than you inevitably will.   You are a very well-paid employee; therefore, you are very costly.   It is merely a contract; no one owes any allegiance to anyone.   It’s par for this course.   Plan wisely.

Excellent, balanced perspective.

The Criticism Sandwich: A Stale Idea

Nov 04, 2010 -

Mark Twain said that “sacred cows make the best hamburger.” One sacred cow is “the criticism sandwich”—no pun intended. The criticism sandwich advises us to lay on some praise before delivering any criticism and then to complete the process by adding another layer of praise. Most of us know, from having been at the receiving end of what feels like faux praise, that this process almost never works. Now we have scientific proof of why we should stop making sandwiches.

 

[...]  

I've always referred to these as "crap sandwiches" - hated them when someone tried to serve me one (and despised the person for being so manipulative and for thinking that I was that stupid), and always resisted, fiercely, any attempt to make me serve them to others. Not that I need the validation, but it's nice to know that others are finally recognizing the truth of it.

Overall, I see "being managed" as a filthy, toxic thing to do to human beings. It reeks of slavery and compulsion - and despite the apologists who natter on about "well, but *good* managers...", I have not the slightest shred of respect for anyone who practices this. In my 48 years on this Earth, I have seen _no_ evidence to the contrary (although I've met lots of managers), and plenty to support my experience and viewpoint.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

A Cellphone's Missing Dot Kills Two People, Puts Three More in Jail

A Cellphone's Missing Dot Kills Two People, Puts Three More in Jail

The life of 20-year-old Emine, and her 24-year-old husband Ramazan Çalçoban was pretty much the normal life of any couple in a separation process. After deciding to split up, the two kept having bitter arguments over the cellphone, sending text messages to each other until one day Ramazan wrote "you change the topic every time you run out of arguments." That day, the lack of a single dot over a letter—product of a faulty localization of the cellphone's typing system—caused a chain of events that ended in a violent blood bath (Warning: offensive language ahead.)

5420730.jpgThe surreal mistake happened because Ramazan's sent a message and Emine's cellphone didn't have an specific character from the Turkish alphabet: the letter "ı" or closed i. While "i" is available in all phones in Turkey—where this happened—the closed i apparently doesn't exist in most of the terminals in that country.

The use of "i" resulted in an SMS with a completely twisted meaning: instead of writing the word "sıkısınca" it looked like he wrote "sikisince." Ramazan wanted to write "You change the topic every time you run out of arguments" (sounds familiar enough) but what Emine read was, "You change the topic every time they are fucking you" (sounds familiar too.)

5420731.jpgEmine then showed the message to her father, who—enraged—called Ramazan, accusing him of treating his daughter as a prostitute. Ramazan went to the family's home to apologize, only to be greeted by the father, Emine, two sisters and a lot of very sharp knives.

Injured and bleeding, with a knife on his chest, Ramazan tried to escape. Emine was still trying to finish him on the door, but he managed to take the knife out of his chest and attacked back, wounding her. Ramazan finally escaped, and was caught by the police, but Emine bleed to dead as the family waited for an ambulance to cross Ankara's hellish traffic to reach their home.

Confused by all the events, he later killed himself in jail.

Apparently it's not the first incident of this kind caused by the damned dot on top of the letter i. The local press has pointed out that the faulty localization of cellphones in Turkey is causing "serious problems" when it comes to certain "delicate words" in Turkish, and they are calling to enhance localization of technology to avoid these mistakes.

Alternatively, the press could ask for banning knives from the homes of demonstrably stupid people. [Hurriyet—in Turkish—thanks to our Turkish-speaking readers for the corrections]

pTerry strikes again, in an eerily-perfect example of predictive ability. Somebody, knight that man.

Vimes shook his head. 'That always chews me up,' he said.
'People killing one another just because their gods have squabbled-'
'Oh, they've got the same god, sir. Apparently it's over a word in
their holy book, sir. The Elharibians say it translates as "god" and
the Smalies say it's ''man".'
'How can you mix them up?'
'Well, there's only one tiny dot difference in the script, you see. And
some people reckon it's only a bit of fly dirt m any case.'
'Centuries of war because a fly crapped in the wrong place?'
-- Terry Pratchett, "Jingo"

Thursday, November 4, 2010

In the Mast furling

Re: In the Mast furling

80% of all sail repairs are from battens. That is why sailmakers usually tell
you you have to have battens. It's in their economic self interest.
I sailed from BC to New Zealand with a 12 year old mainsail, with battens. Going
down from Raro, a batten pocket tore out completely. I sewed it back in. Then 15
feet of seam tore , starting at a batten pocket. I sewed it back up. In New
Zealand I had a sailmaker eliminate the roach and battens, and sew a full length
tape up the leach. I put another three thousand miles on that mainsail, much of
it to windward in 25 knot gusty trade winds, without popping a stitch.
Now, when I buy a used mainsail, before using it, I eliminate the roach, and
put a full length of sail cloth up the leech.
When people complain about weather helm on the 36, I tell them it is designed
for a roachless main. When they eliminate the roach , she balances perfectly.
I've never had any problem reefing or dousing my roachless and battenless main
in a following wind. There are many times it would have been dangerous to try
round up into the wind.
John Leacher calculates that a roach increases your speed by between zero and
three percent , max. The cruising time wasted, dealing with a torn main is fare
more than that.
-- Brent Swain

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Driver Reading a Book, Kindle, and Phone at the Same Time Is a Distracted Super-Moron

The setup is almost deserves technical plaudit, if it weren't so shockingly risky—a giant book wedged behind the steering wheel, a Kindle in one hand, and what looks like a smartphone of some kind in the other hand. There are no hands on the steering wheel, at any point. Was he speeding to an exam he was late for, trying to get some last minute studying in? Just really engrossed in Jane Eyre? Possessing a death wish? This could only be more dangerous to other cars on the road if instead of a Kindle, he was holding a grenade launcher. [via Fark]

Amazing. Simply... amazing.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

If you've never run a tap through 1/4" stainless steel...

...then you're missing out on a large part of what it means to be human.

Sounds like a weird, twisted kind of thing to say, but it's true, for
several different reasons. For one thing, there's a deeply sensuous -
and by that, I mean involving all your senses - experience in tapping
through thick metal; the hyper-sensitivity that you need, and that is
focused like a laser while you're doing it, that's necessary to keep
that tap from breaking. Call it "mechanic's feel" or what you will, but
there's an amazing aspect to slowly applying torque to that tap,
watching this hard but frangible, desperately-thin metal rod *twisting*
under the load, right up to the breaking point... and believing, based
on nothing more than that feel, that it's going to turn - *please*, you
damn thing, *turn!* - before it breaks, shattering into spiky little
pieces and ruining your whole project (you can't re-tap that hole unless
you can manage to get out that broken tap... and that's very, very hard
metal.) And that's just the beginning - because you have to extend that
"feel" even further, so you can sense when it's _not_ going to turn, so
you can back it out a turn or two, enough to clear the metal chips from
the flutes, or maybe even back it out all the way and relube it - and
then, restart again. Or maybe feel it enough to realize that the metal
you're tapping is being a little too grabby (due to temperature,
perhaps, or some alloy that's particularly adhesive), or that the tap
isn't quite as sharp as when it was new, and you have to drill the hole
a couple of thousandths of an inch larger.

And *all* of this information comes to you through your fingertips, as
you twist, hard - in that indefinable moment before it either turns or
breaks. It's beautiful, it's powerful, and it's humbling. And it's one
of the pinnacles that we humans have achieved - because the old
Archimedean principle of the inclined plane, translated into a screw, is
what holds the majority of the civilized world together. This, and
welding, are deep, gritty, powerful, magical experiences for that reason
- and for the inextricably-coupled amazing experience of being able to
interact with metal, the thing that is held up as the acme of solidity,
as a malleable thing, something that you can shape, control, change - or
make run like water.

Some people go to church to experience that kind of uplift. Me, I pick
up a tap or a welding rod. Or heave up my anchor and hoist my sails...
but that's a post for another day.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Three Common Options For Childcare

For a parent who works, especially full-time, it can be hard to find the right kind of care for your child or children. Doubtless, you want to have your child in the best kind of situation with the best people available - but it can be difficult to know what the best kind of childcare is for your child's specific needs. Below, we'll take a look at a the most common types of childcare.

As an example, where I live in Brooklyn childcare options mostly come down to a childcare center or day care center. This is one of the most common and economical forms of childcare available to most people. Childcare centers, or nursery schools, are facilities dedicated to the care of children. There are actually many benefits to a childcare center: for one thing, your child will be a part of a structured learning program in a licensed facility (and you should ensure that it is licensed before enrolling your children!) Kids will also have a chance to participate in and spend time with a diverse group of children, which can help develop their social skills.Another benefit is that most childcare centers offer flexibility in their schedules so that it's easy to find the right fit for your needs.

Another childcare option is a family childcare home. This means that the childcare is provided in someone's home. This may offer more individual care for your child, but it might be difficult to find a family childcare facility that is licensed, reliable, and safe.

The last childcare option is in-home care - hiring a nanny or au pair to take care of your child in your own home. This results in one-on-one care for your child, but is the most expensive childcare option.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Weight Loss

Maybe it's a silly way to feel, but having lost 50+ lbs so far (and no sign of slowing down), I've been getting progressively more annoyed with people asking me "how'd you do it?" - as if there was some secret formula or magic wand. They *know* how I did it; it's the same way anybody who loses weight does it. There's no magic wand - although there are better ways of thinking.
The hard part to losing weight is not the eating less, or the exercise (I actually haven't been exercising at all, in part as an experiment.) The hard part is making the commitment - and then, making the second commitment to Keep Your Eye On The Ball. You'll slip; you'll make mistakes (if you didn't have the habit of making them, you wouldn't be fat in the first place); you'll forget and do the wrong thing. As long as you Keep Your Eye On The Ball, none of that will matter.
Learn to have pride in yourself; attach it to the commitment that you've made if you have nothing else to be proud of. Eat only the things/amounts that wouldn't shame you if the whole world knew about them. Build your sense of self while you're at it, and design that self out of the best, cleanest, sanest parts of who you are. Then, grow (or shrink) into it.
See? Dirt simple.
OIOpublisher

Quote of the Day

"The counsels of impatience and hatred can always be supported by the crudest and cheapest symbols; for the counsels of moderation, the  reasons are often intricate, rather than emotional, and difficult to  explain. And so the chauvinists of all times and places go their appointed way: plucking the easy fruits, reaping the little triumphs of the day at the expense of someone else tomorrow, deluging in noise and filth anyone who gets in their way, dancing their reckless dance on the prospects for human progress, drawing the shadow of a great doubt over the validity of democratic institutions. And until peoples learn to spot the fanning of mass emotions and the sowing of bitterness, suspicion,and intolerance as crimes in themselves - as perhaps the greatest disservice that can be done to the cause of popular government - this sort of thing will continue to occur." -- George Kennan

Just ran across this; it's what I've been saying, in very much the same words, for most of my life on this topic. I feel retroactively plagiarized. :)

Friday, October 29, 2010

Erase fear at the molecular level

"This may sound like science fiction, the ability to selectively erase memories," Richard Huganir says. "But this may one day be applicable for the treatment of debilitating fearful memories in people, such as post-traumatic stress syndrome associated with war, rape, or other traumatic events." (Credit: iStockphoto)

JOHNS HOPKINS (US) — Researchers working with mice discovered that they can permanently erase traumatic memories by removing a protein from the region of the brain responsible for recalling fear.

Their report on a molecular means of erasing fear memories in rodents appears this week in Science Express.

“When a traumatic event occurs, it creates a fearful memory that can last a lifetime and have a debilitating effect on a person’s life,” says Richard Huganir, professor and director of neuroscience at the Johns Hopkins University. “Our finding describing these molecular and cellular mechanisms involved in that process raises the possibility of manipulating those mechanisms with drugs to enhance behavioral therapy for such conditions as post-traumatic stress disorder.”

Behavioral therapy built around “extinction training” in animal models has proven helpful in easing the depth of the emotional response to traumatic memories, but not in completely removing the memory itself, making relapse common.

Huganir and postdoctoral fellow Roger Clem focused on the nerve circuits in the amygdala, the part of the brain known to underlie so-called fear conditioning in people and animals. Using sound to cue fear in mice, they observed that certain cells in the amygdala conducted more current after the mouse was exposed to a loud, sudden tone.

In hopes of understanding the molecular underpinnings of fear memory formation, the team further examined the proteins in the nerve cells of the amygdala before and after exposure to the loud tone. They found temporary increases in the amount of particular proteins—the calcium-permeable AMPARs—within a few hours of fear conditioning that peaked at 24 hours and disappeared 48 hours later.

Because these particular proteins are uniquely unstable and can be removed from nerve cells, the scientists proposed that they might permanently remove fear by combining behavior therapy and protein removal and provide a window of opportunity for treatment.

“The idea was to remove these proteins and weaken the connections in the brain created by the trauma, thereby erasing the memory itself,” Huganir says.

In further experiments, they found that removal of these proteins depends on the chemical modification of the GluA1 protein. Mice lacking this chemical modification of GluA1 recovered fear memories induced by loud tones, whereas littermates that still had normal GluA1 protein did not recover the same fear memories. Huganir suggests that drugs designed to control and enhance the removal of calcium-permeable AMPARs may be used to improve memory erasure.

“This may sound like science fiction, the ability to selectively erase memories,” Huganir says. “But this may one day be applicable for the treatment of debilitating fearful memories in people, such as post-traumatic stress syndrome associated with war, rape, or other traumatic events.”

This study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

More news from Johns Hopkins: releases.jhu.edu

http://www.futurity.org/science-technology/erase-fear-at-the-molecular-level/

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Ocean Champions (OceanChampions) on Twitter

Converting all the major roads in the US to solar would provide enough energy to power almost the entire world; Solar Roadways has already built a prototype.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Peak Oil in Alaska

The 896 million barrels that are now predicted (as opposed to the 10.6
billion from the 2002 estimate) would last the US about 43 days.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/10/27/alaska.oil.reserves/index.html

45 Amazing Photos from Odd Pespectives

Beautiful, odd, and sometimes breath-taking.

http://gizmodo.com/5672971/45-photos-from-clever-sometimes-unbelievable-persp...

And people ask why/how I got into photography.

Well, aside from having a professional photog father - this was back in
Russia, when "color photo" meant "tinted with aniline dyes and color
pencils" - I always had an appreciation of... let's not call it
"beauty", which would take us into an area where I don't feel like going
today, but "definition". A perception of a scene, or a view, that could
be cut off here and there, extracted from the world,
framed as a separate object that would still tell its story (or
sometimes, a story that I wanted told but that was unrelated to the
actual situation. This happens a lot, actually; a camera can lie, or
mislead, or lead you on a merry chase as much, or perhaps even more,
than a pen. But I digress.)

I got into it because I wanted to tell visual stories. Much later, I
expanded to the other kind - but the love of crafting a visual novel, or
even a short, pithy quote, remained: whether a tiger lily growing brave
and wild in the midst of a spring forest (where from? How? All alone in
a meadow of tall grass, with the morning dew still trembling on the
petals? I got soaked to the bone because I just had to lie down and get
that low perspective) or an old car on a freezing Seattle night,
distorted into a harsh, ghostly-gray, stretching-to-infinity, grainy
perspective with glaring lights by a wide-angle lens and black-and-white 32ASA PXP film pushed
to 1600ASA (the magic of doing your own film processing and enlargement)
- all these, uniquely my stories. My conversations with the world; both
the one that exists only in my head, and the one in which pedestrians
hurry by but sometimes pause, arrested by my images for a moment...
affected in some way.

Is Genius Genetic?

The Dead Design Trends Quiz

If you're still kicking back in your fave papa-san chair while your TV
dinner sizzles in your avocado-colored toaster oven, you might want to
skip this - or prepare to be shocked. Yes, Elvis *is* dead.

http://tlc.howstuffworks.com/home/dead-design-trends-quiz.htm

Sunday, October 24, 2010

This One is for All My Chums

So, blogging. Or blagging, as xkcd would have it. What's it for?

In my case, I suppose it's much the same as it ever was: sharing what I know (and the fun stuff that I find while cruising the Net) with my friends, family, and - the Internet being what it is - any random stranger who may happen across my blag.

Welcome to these shark-infested waters. Be careful... there are really dangerous critters here. Let me finish my shark steak, and I'll tell you all about it...