
Friday, July 22, 2005
Fun in Wisconsin

E&A and their cousins have had so much fun this week. Gamecube, swimming, walking the dog, getting ice cream - who wouldn't enjoy that kind of vacation? Tomorrow we head home, but we'll have lots of good memories in tow.
Wednesday, July 20, 2005
Friday, July 15, 2005
Gymnastics Camp

This week was Gymnastic Camp. Emily was "Wet 'n' Wild" and Alex was a Pirate. They both loved it. Amanda and I didn't get to go.
Thursday, June 30, 2005
Did you know that Einstein was smart? It's true! So much so that that "Annus Mirabilis" is being celebrated this year. So, you owe it to yourself and all of posterity to read each of the papers published by Einstein in 1905.
Just kidding...
But if you want to know more...
Friday, June 10, 2005
Friday, June 03, 2005
Wednesday, June 01, 2005
You've seen it in movies and on TV - but then, it was just science fiction. Introducing the little flying robots that are just born to spy on you! Can you imagine what will be possible with these things when they hit production capability? They can be used for surveillance, or security monitoring, or physical delivery of extremely small packages (think "21st century carrier pidgeon").
Thursday, May 26, 2005
"Barring hardware failure, Voyager I and II boast enough power and communications capability to keep radioing back to Earth until 2020, NASA says."
It's astounding what we were able to accomplish in the 1970's. We think of that time as "before personal computers", where handheld calculators had all of four or five functions, and "Pong" was the great hit of entertainment. Yet, at that time, we were launching probes into space that are continuing to work to this day.
The only other NASA achievements that have worked this well are the Martian rovers and the Martian mapping satellite. And it took a lotta tries before we got that right...
Tuesday, May 24, 2005
Monday, May 23, 2005
This is the kind of thing we all hope for - finding a gem in a load of garbage. Multispectral imaging, as enhanced by computers, allows us to bring out the details of obscured writings to a point that we are able to translate them. This will be big - very big. As this article describes, they've only translated 1% of this find before now, but the new technology will speed up the process.
My favorite part:
Meanwhile, the Oxford team is looking at another promising application of the technology. Scholars have long known that the elaborately painted cartonnage used to encase mummies was a kind of papier-mache made from papyrus. A lot of the papyrus has writing on it, but there didn't seem to be a way of reading it without destroying the decorative cartonnage.
In one recent trial, the imaging process was able to read writing beneath the painted surface of a cartonnage fragment. Scholars were thrilled, even though it turned out to be just another government report.
Monday, May 09, 2005
A hoot! Be sure to read the archives for the full effect of the Dark Lord.
I should have thought of this. I need a quick way to retire - why not sue the government for the damage it's doing to other planets? How about I sue them for littering on Mars? I believe it's a $500 fine per instance!
Tuesday, April 12, 2005
(See the fourth picture from the left).
I bought a Prius - Silver, Package #6, Leather interior.
And boy is it fun!
GM still seems to miss the point that hybrids aren't just a flash in the pan, but are a good stopgap measure while we travel toward hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.





