Day: April 18, 2006

  • A New Miracle Diet

    New Scientist => Invention: The TV-advert enforcer

    This might just be the greatest, healthiest invention ever made by mankind.

    Philips has filed for a patent that would allow utilization of a “commercial-flag” in television broadcasts that could be deciphered by your TV and VCR and prevent you from changing the channels or fast-forwarding.

    Personally, I think something like this would lead to millions of people turning off the damned TV and getting a life. (They could take up blogging, for example.) People would be more active, loose weight and just generally eat more granola.

    Presumably version 2 of this device will prevent the TV from being turned off and physically restrain you from leaving the room or taking your eyes off the screen.

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  • No Big Deal

    Here’s an article (Columbus Dispatch => Discovery of Evolutionary Link Was a Scientific Inevitiability) that not only dismisses the significance of the recent discovery of Tiktaalik Roseae but makes me feel good about it at the same time.

    Tiktaalik Roseae is one of those “missing links” we’re always hearing so much about. These are transitional animal forms not yet discovered in the fossil record. Critics (note that I didn’t say “serious” critics) of Paleontology sometimes argue that without these missing links, the Theory of Evolution is just speculation without evidence. This is nonsense designed to cloud the fact that we have collected thousands if not millions of data points in Paleontology, Geology, Physics, Biology, Molecular Biology and a host of other scientific fields supporting it.

    Many such “missing links” have been found over the years. Each time one is found, the gaps in the record get smaller and the “missing links” just move to the gaps. There will always be gaps because, without every single skeleton of every animal that ever lived there will always be a little shadow in the corner that someone can try to drag up and claim renders everything else discovered before anomalous.

    Pelontologists knew that Tiktaalik Roseae had to be out there somewhere. They knew roughly where it had to be (in time) and they went searching for it and found it. This certainly is not meant to diminish the work that went into the task, because I’m certain it was an impressive feat, but the initial implication is that they essentially “proved” something that was already well-known.

    Here’s to Tiktaalik Roseae for coming out of the shadows!

    (Note:, OK, OK, the article in the Columbus Dispatch doesn’t really dismiss the significance of the discovery.)

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