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Friday, 11 June 2010

On the Death of Birds

Posted on 10:03 by hony
Andrew's commenters point out that although the avian death toll in the Gulf is sure to be staggering...its not the worst thing we've done to birds:
The American Bird Conservancy estimated in 2003 that between 10,000 and 40,000 birds were killed each year at wind farms across the country, about 80 percent of which were songbirds and 10 percent birds of prey. "With the increased capacity over the last seven years, we now estimate that 100,000 – 300,000 birds are killed by wind turbines each year," said Conservancy spokesman Robert Johns. By our math, that comes to 274 to 822 birds a day killed by wind farms across the country.
And then this nugget from another reader:
40,000 or 300,000 birds is a lot - but a tiny number compared to some other causes of death. The US Fish and Wildlife Service estimates (PDF) that somewhere between 97-196 million birds are killed annually by collisions with building windows.

So you're saying we need to sue the glass manufacturers? The glass manufacturers would probably just say we should blame the window sales companies. The window companies would say we need to blame the contractors who installed the windows. The Republicans would say that the window installer's union is the root cause. And eventually the glass manufacturers would argue that only a single bird has actual been killed by collisions with building windows.


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Friday Poetry Burst

Posted on 07:14 by hony
God's Wheel, by Shel Silverstein

GOD says to me with a kind of smile,
"Hey how would you like
to be God awhile
And steer the world?"

"Okay," says I, "I'll give it a try.

Where do I set?
How much do I get?
What time is lunch?
When can I quit?"

"Gimme back that wheel," says GOD.
"I don't think you're quite ready YET."


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Friday Pranks

Posted on 07:10 by hony
Once in a while, I choose a random friend and post the following on their Facebook wall: "Hey man! Heard you are expecting! Congrats!"

Then I sit back and let the magic happen.


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Thursday, 10 June 2010

How To Regulate Traffic

Posted on 09:55 by hony
TAE is constantly harping on concepts like automated cars and taking the driving out of the hands of the drivers, and how that would massively expedite traffic as well as massively reduce accidents and fatalities. Why not get wasted at the bar and fall into your car...when you car can take you safely home?

It occurred to me today that in the meantime, cities that wanted to reduce congestion at busy intersections should charge people to use those intersections. This would incentivize people taking alternate routes, or better yet, other forms of transportation.


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Tuesday, 8 June 2010

Terraforming Mars, Ctd

Posted on 13:04 by hony
All the key ingredients seem to be coming together to successfully launch my plan (and by "my plan" I mean the plan I believe would work; I am not the original source of the idea) to seed Mars with custom-made bacteria that would create an atmosphere.

1. Scientists have announced artificially made organisms. Obviously the plan hinges on the ability to produce anaerobic bacteria (or heavily modified algae) that can convert surface elements into other elements and release oxygen and ozone. It would potentially also work if the microbes converted the CO2 in the Martian atmosphere into oxygen and ozone. For years I have wondered just what the problem is (I really don't know the answer) that prevents scientists from making bacteria with new functions. For years we've had "Bt corn" which is corn that produces the bacillus thuringensis toxin, which is toxic to European corn borer. Specifically, genetic engineers have added a new trait to an existing organism. If a set of genes exists in a creature here on earth that allows it to live by mining its own oxygen from the rust in surrounding rocks, why can't we isolate those genes and add them to an algae?

2. Bacteria have been found in Canada that could possibly survive on Mars. As our exploration of our own planet continues, we are learning that bacteria can survive and thrive in harsher and harsher places. It is no surprise to me that scientists have found a bacteria that survives in a place here on Earth that has conditions potentially worse than conditions on Mars. Understanding the methods that bacteria uses to survive could be key to building a terraforming microbe to ship to Mars...

3. Falcon 9 successfully launched. Honestly, if a private corporation announced today that they had developed the above terraforming microbe, and wanted to terraform Mars and claim it for their own real estate/mining/emerging markets efforts, what currently is there to stop them? The simplest answer is that their access to space would be halted by governments, who currently regulate all flights into Earth orbit. But with the speech from President Obama that commercialization of space is a priority, and with the first successful launch of a privately owned spacecraft, one has to wonder: how far are we from a legal battle for space rights? If SpaceX landed a colony ship on the Moon...there is no existing entity on Earth that could stop them from claiming the Moon their property...other than the courts...
I am retreading old wheels, I know, but the point I want to make is this: a corporation with foresight and long-term planning strategies (and a butt-load of capital) might find the idea of terraforming Mars very prodigious. What better way to secure the future of their business than to create an entire planet of future customers? Especially if this planet reaches some sort of population cap, or worse, an ecological disaster or war eliminates much of this planet's population. This century might be the century of globalization, but perhaps smart corporations, armed with terraforming tools, might make the next century the one of solar systemization.


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Quote for the Day

Posted on 10:01 by hony
"I wish I could convey to you what it's like for me now; what I've become... I can conceive almost infinite possibilities and can fully explore each of them in a nanosecond. I perceive the universe as a single equation, and it is so simple. I understand... everything."

Lieutenant Reginald Barclay, in the Nth Degree episode of Star Trek: TNG.


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Playing with photons 10 miles away

Posted on 07:19 by hony
This makes my head hurt it is so awesome.

Contrary to the article, however, I don't see this as a good application for satellites. I see it as the elimination of satellites. Why send a satellite to space to broadcast information when you could do it literally anywhere?


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Sunday, 6 June 2010

Falcon 9

Posted on 12:25 by hony
Worked perfectly. Oh no, that means we might have a non-NASA shuttle alternative soon! WHHHAAAAAA?!?!


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Friday, 4 June 2010

The Evolution of Empathy

Posted on 10:23 by hony
All throughout evolutionary history, there are trade-offs. In fact, the history of evolution might be titled "Trade-offs and Their Consequences." Animals, plants, and others have all found that a new trait can be obtained...but usually at the cost of another trait. A great example is that no large (>1 lb.) flying creatures exist that have both arms and wings...they only have arms or wings. The simplest reason for this is that the genetic cost of Cox genes for all that information is simply too high, not to mention the mental and physical resources required to pack functional wings and arms into a creature are much higher than simply rigging existing arms into wings.

Human evolution is peppered with such concepts. We wanted to talk upright, so we needed a different hip and spine structure. This cost us the ability to bend over and trot on all fours like gorillas often do. We wanted thicker legs for jogging, but in order to jog we had to give up massive shoulders and arms. We wanted big brains, but it cost us mandible strength. We wanted even bigger brains, but it meant we had to be born very early, rendering us helpless infants for longer than virtually all other creatures on the planet. And to feed that brain, herbivorism was just impossible, meaning protein-rich foods like meat had to be regularly obtained.

So while Douthat tries to reconcile the Millenials lack of empathy with their enhanced idealism, I see no conflict. The internet has allowed my generation to reach out in ways never before.
But is it so hard to believe that perhaps we humans have a finite amount of empathy in us? We seem less locally empathic than Gen X, but more empathic globally. Could it be that Gen X simply is spending the same amount of empathy we are, but just at a different level?

In layman's terms, I can only give a shit about so much. And while I give a shit about the plight of Palestinians, the victims of the oil spill, torture victims, my parents, my family, people struggling with unemployment, NASA, and various other entities...it just doesn't leave me a lot of empathy to give to my friends who are whining about God only knows what.
The genetics of this make sense...it only makes sense for the brain to have enough empathy built into it to support empathy for an individual's local tribe. Extra empathy just costs the individual resources. My generation hasn't changed how much empathy we have...we've simply changed the definition of our tribe.


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Oil on Our Hands

Posted on 10:15 by hony
This all could have been avoided if we'd bought electric cars. Keep that in mind when you fill up today.


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    • ▼  June (10)
      • On the Death of Birds
      • Friday Poetry Burst
      • Friday Pranks
      • How To Regulate Traffic
      • Terraforming Mars, Ctd
      • Quote for the Day
      • Playing with photons 10 miles away
      • Falcon 9
      • The Evolution of Empathy
      • Oil on Our Hands
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