Month: May 2006

  • Lonely House

    lonelocust.com => So What About The Family?

    Back three weeks ago I mentioned that everybody except James and myself had gotten sick. Not so anymore.

    Sunday, James was coughing a bit, but by Sunday, he was throwing up and wouldn’t drink anything, so Irene finally had to take him to emergency. They admitted him immediately because he was having difficulty breathing, and that’s where he stays. He’s got a touch of pneumonia and has to stay there until he’s breathing normally through the night.

    Irene is staying with him. After the first night when I got home (someone has to look after Michelle) about 1:00AM I was hit by the same thing Irene had. A nasty stomach flu, with muscle cramps, fever, etc.

    All day yesterday, I could barely do more than move from one spot on the floor to another. Michelle was particularly good. She didn’t cause problems and she helped out. She’d get me things when I needed them and didn’t complain.

    Still, with only her and myself in the house, it was really lonely last night.

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  • No Framing, No Pasting

    Scientific American => The Flipping Point
    How the evidence for anthropogenic global warming has converged to cause this environmental skeptic to make a cognitive flip

    In order to link to this article, I believe I agreed to a copyright condition that I would make no comments on this, so I won’t.

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  • Grass Jelly Drink Tops 100!

    DSC00163.JPG

    Yeah! My grass Jelly Drink photo inched its way to 100 views on Flickr.

    Well, looking at the picture is infinitely better than drinking the darned stuff!


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  • Delivery Travesty

    Delivery Travesty

    I’m really not too happy about this.

    I ordered my Macbook last week and paid for 2-3 day expedited shipping (rather than 5-7, which usually equates to 7-8 days), and, remembering that it is TOMORROW in China, so it was really shipped on the 24th, this is ridiculous!

    It’s here in Phoenix, since last night, and they don’t plan to deliver until Wednesday?! Yes, today is a holiday, but that’s no excuse for it taking 7 days!!!


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  • Doctor Who – The Idiot’s Lantern – Review

    The Idiot’s Lantern
    by Mark Gatiss

    Mark Gatiss, who turned in one of the best episodes last season has delivered again.

    It’s 1953 London, on the eve of Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation, and an alien lifeform existing inside television plans to feed on the 20 million people anticipated to watch the coronation.

    The term “Idiot’s Lantern” is early television-era british slang, much as Boob Tube was in the US. While, as far as I could tell, the term was never used in the episode, it’s certainly appropriate. The coronation was the first great push for the invasion of televisions into British homes.

    Gatiss has really turned in a solid story, with pacing that perfectly fits the 42 minute episode. Pointless characterization is kept to a minimum and the scenes move the plot along rather than drive the often misguided attempts at moving the good Doctor from melodrama to drama.

    Rose is not so annoying in this episode and actually does a good turn as a detective, before being eaten by the TV monster.

    The conclusion takes place atop a transmitter tower and doesn’t half conjure up recollections of Logopolis. In fact, according to the Doctor Who Confidential on the making of this episode, one of the lines of dialogue that got cut involved the Doctor’s hesitation about climbing another transmitter tower. It’s a great shame the line was cut, because the second I saw that the Doctor had to climb the tower, my first words were, “Remember Logopolis, Doctor!” Some mention of it really belonged in the final version.

    No, I don’t talk to characters on TV too often, but it says a lot of Mark Gatiss’ skill in that he’s written an episode that draws you in completely.

    My only reservation about the episode is that, while I suppose I can buy the premise that an electrical creature feeds on the neural activity of the human brain and can, essentially, wipe it clean, I can’t quite accept that it also wipes their face free of features (like noses, mouths, eyes and such.) I’m certain that was just a concession to “shock” when the first victim is revealed on screen.

    Despite the fact that I like Gatiss’ work, I really wasn’t expecting too much from this episode, but instead, it’s my favorite so far this season.

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  • Blue Clouds at Night, NASA’s Delight?

    New Scientist Space =>Mysterious glowing clouds targeted by NASA

    Glowing, silvery blue clouds that have been spreading around the world and brightening mysteriously in recent years will soon be studied in unprecedented detail by a NASA spacecraft.

    The Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere (AIM) mission will be the first satellite dedicated to studying this enigmatic phenomenon. Due to launch in late 2006, it should reveal whether the clouds are caused by global warming, as many scientists believe.

    A similar phenomena can make weather balloons look like convincing UFOs just before sunrise or after sunset.

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  • Footprints in Time

    DenverPost.com => Stegosaur tracks a colossal find

    New Stegosaur footprints found near Denver, Co.

    The state’s first footprints of a stegosaur – Colorado’s official fossil – have been discovered near this foothills town 15 miles west of Denver.

    Two new dinosaur track sites found by staff and volunteers of the Morrison Natural History Museum also include footprints made by two or three not-yet-identified and potentially new dinosaurs.

    States have official dinosaurs? I want an official dinosaur.

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  • Window on a Time Long Gone

    worldwaronecolorphotos.com => Photos from World War I

    World War I…. who would have thought there were original color photos of WWI? This site contains hundreds of photos taken by the French in the last two years of World War One.

    This is a site containing hundreds of actual color photos of World War I. It’s an eerie feeling looking at these photos. It’s quite odd how color really makes the pictures seem more real… I’ve not seen any other color pictures going this far back in time. It really is a window on a world long gone.

    It’s disturbing to think of all the thousands of years that went before photography that have passed and are gone from any memory or first hand representation that they ever existed.

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  • Cool B25 Bomber Pictures

    abandonedbutnotforgotten.com => B25 Airplane Pulled Out From Lake Murray, South Carolina

    I’m not even going to try to include one of these pictures, they’re too big, but really worth a look. A wrecked B25 in remarkably good condition was recovered from a lake in South Carolina. These a pictures of the plane.

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  • Doubts on Dowsing

    BBC NEWS => Divining rods ‘help beat drought’
    This article popped up on the BBC the other day concerning thee drought in England and it got me thinking about it again.

    Southern Water said divining is used by some of its crews, although modern electrical equipment was mostly used.

    Divining is one of the techniques used by some of our crews, although by far the majority of teams use modern electrical equipment to measure flows and listen for noises of potential leaks and burst water mains.

    Dowsing is really a grey area for me. I think I can safely say that, in general, I don’t believe in any phenomena that cannot be demostrated under controlled, scientific circumstances. While I’m actually fascinated by things paranormal, I’m a non-believer. My interest in them is more of a “well that is a fascinating story/theory and wouldn’t it be interesting if it could be demonstrated to be true?”

    Dowsing, of course, falls in that category. There isn’t a scrap of credible evidence that it works. Supposed dowsers simply have never been able to recreate their ability under any form of controllable scrutiny. While I suppose you could make some wacky argument (that would play well in Sedona) that, like quantum physics, the act of observing dowsing changes the outcome, that doesn’t hold much water. (Pun intended.)

    So, why do I mention it? Because my great uncle was a dowser – and by all accounts, a really good one.

    My great-grandfather ran a farm, and that’s where my grandfather and his brothers and sisters were raised. The story goes, told to me by more than one of the people involved, that during a drought, my great-grandfather cut a divining rod and hauled all the kids out and tested each one of them to see if they could work the divining rod. My great-uncle, TW, successfully located water and they drilled a successful well.

    None of the other kids demonstrated any ability to perform the same task.

    Throughout his life, he travelled all over the place using his skills to locate things (he could, apparently, locate other materials) and never collected any remuneration beyond travel expenses for his services. He believed if he profited from it, he’d loose the ability. He also believed that one child in each generation had the ability, and he dutifully tested every one of his kids, grandkids, great grandkids, his brothers and sisters’ kids, etc.

    Not one of them had the ability.

    Of course, this is hardly surprising if you, like me, are quite skeptical of these old wives’ tales and superstitions.

    However, there came the day when he tested me.

    I can still see the whole scene vividly in my head. He cut a fresh forked branch from the oleanders next to his house. He showed me how to hold it and he demonstrated. He walked out across his yard and, from all appearances, the rod visibly twisted in his hand towards the ground. He then told me that was where the water main for his house ran out to the supply.

    It didn’t look like a hoax, and, although I was only 11 at the time, I was a pretty skeptical and sharp-eyed kid.

    He then handed it to me and let me try. I walked slowly towards the water supply and… nothing happened.

    He was really disappointed, he told me that I was pretty much the last of the family to be tested and that, as soon as he handed me the rod, he was convinced it was going to work. He said I was the first one to really take the rod and use it the right way, but there was absolutely no reaction.

    I was still standing right over the water main, and he told me to hold the rod out over it again. There was still nothing. He reached over from behind me, touched my shoulder and that thing pulled straight towards the ground like someone had jerked a string attached to it.

    Now I know that scientifically dowsing just doesn’t work, and that eyewitnesses are unreliable, but what happened there was absolutely undeniable. It’s also probably the defining moment in my life that fueled my interest in the paranormal.

    I went home to tell my dad and when I told him he’d tested me, my dad told me the tale of when he’s been tested. He told me that, more or less, he had the exact same experience. The second TW put his hand on his shoulder, the rod reacted.

    I still don’t know what to make of the whole thing, but I wonder if someday I might not go out and test my kids.

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