Stumbled across this video on google video

I've played with compressed air/water bottle rockets before, but it never occurred to me that I could use a rack of these to actually FLY!

This guy deserves some sort of medal, and possibly a new pair of board-shorts - preferrably brown coloured


 
Categories: Geek | science

June 13, 2007
@ 01:58 PM

Found ElectricSheep the other day. It's fantastic. It's a distrbuted computing app that uses your PC's ( or mac's) idle CPU cycles to render frames of stunning algorithmically generated animations, called for some odd reason, sheep. The upshot for you is that you get a stunning screensaver that keeps evolving and changing and that you have helped create.

Actually, the name is odd for a good reason, it's inspired by Philip K Dick's novella - Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep:

Electric Sheep is a free, open source screen saver run by thousands of people all over the world. It can be installed on any ordinary PC or Mac. When these computers "sleep", the screen saver comes on and the computers communicate with each other by the internet to share the work of creating morphing abstract animations known as "sheep". The result is a collective "android dream", an homage to Philip K. Dick's novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep.


 
Categories: Geek

Pro's

  • It works on Vista
  • It's free
  • It's actually pretty good
  • Familiar Interface
  • Small-ish footprint
  • Healthy plugin development community

Con's

  • It only runs on Windows*
  • It's no Photoshop
  • It's not open source
*runs on .NET framework. No mono support

Paint.Net is a photograph editing and drawing app that was originally developed "as an undergraduate college senior design project mentored by Microsoft, and is currently being maintained by some of the alumni that originally worked on it"

It's written in the .NET framework using C# and was intended as a replacement for MS Paint.

It far surpasses MS Paint, although to be honest, I've never been able to stick with MS Paint for more than 10 minutes. It falls somewhat short of Photoshop though and even given the large community of plug-in developers it will be a long time before this app comes close to PhotoShop standards.

A notable shortcoming, straight off the bat, is the lack of paths and I found the bezier line drawing tool very hard to use. There is no Select > feather tool in the default installation, there is a feather pixel blur plug-in that can be used in a very oblique way to recreate some of the functions of a feather pixel selection, but it just doesn't work in some cases.

Comparisons are inevitably made with Photoshop because Paint.Net not only tries to do effectively the same things as phoptoshop, but also the tools and much of the workflow is very similar too. Unfortunately on most fronts Paint.Net loses out to it's US$649 rival.

Of course, one important comparison is price and here Paint.Net wins hands-down over PotatoChop. Another being it's relatively light hard-drive footprint and economic use of system resources. It's a pretty good avdert for the .Net framework in this regard, especially as this is an amateur project. The only thing that stops this being a REALLY good advert for .Net is that it's not open source. This is slightly mitigated by the presence of the effects API, which is apparently documented somewhere but, at the time of writing, I couldn't find


 
Categories: Geek

June 2, 2007
@ 06:07 AM

Now, I am well aware that aspirin comes from willow bark and indeed nearly all of our pharmocopia is derived from plants. Friends who know me know that I have no trouble with self-medication with certain plant materials. But when I have flu I don't want to have to pay $25 for some pills that contain nothing stronger than 'garlic oil'.

I almost bought a pack of these quack-pills because they came in Day and Night forms, leaving me with the impression that the Day ones would give me some energy to get through the day and the Night ones would allow me to escape the nausea and aches and knock me out for 10 hours or so. Closer inspection revealed that these pills (which come in 'Cold and flu', 'acute flu', 'cold and congestion' and just plain 'flu' varieties) contain nothing but Zinc, echinacea, valerian, garlic oil(!) and pixie dust. The difference between Day and Night formulations? The Day ones didn't have valerian in them. As far as I know these ingredients have not been subjected to proper double blind trials and rigorous scientific study as to their beneficial effects, unlike say paracetemol. But the hand-waving yoghurt-weavers will bore you to tears about how echinacea is SOOO effective at 'boosting' the immune system and their granny took them for years and could bench press a cow well into her seventies. To which I would reply:"What exactly do you mean by 'boosting the immune system' - show me some evidence of increased antibody count or an increase in average neutrophil and eosinophil count in a controlled study. Oh and by the way, the plural of anecdote is NOT data"

I am sick, I do not want the ingredients to a rather bland curry, in the form of a pill to make me feel better. I do not want twigs and berries. I WANT DRUGS!!1!


 
Categories: moan

If a grown adult fervently believes in the tooth fairy or Santa Claus then he or she would rightly be perceived as mad, ignorant or both by most people. Yet the belief in an invisible man in the sky who will torture you for eternity if you don't 'believe' in him is somehow afforded protection from such ridicule. Indeed, I would argue that belief in the tooth fairy or Santa Claus is more rational than belief in any of the major world religions because, at least to the unsuspecting child, both the tooth fairy and Santa leave evidence that they have actually been to your house and left money or presents.

I have a friend who is a Muslim. He is by no means a tee-totaler and I've never seen him pray, but get him started on the subject of religious belief and atheism and there is literally no stopping him as he talks and even shouts over any arguments against religious belief. On one occasion I was talking to my Muslim friend(N_) and another friend of mine(P_) who, through more than one family tragedy, despises religion more than I ever could. Somehow, regrettably, the subject of conversation came round to religious belief and atheism. N_ and P_ got more and more heated as they laid into each other, P_ eventually backed down because more and more onlookers were looking on (this was at a wedding after all). N_ was very pleased with himself for having shouted the loudest and longest. What stung me most was his assertion that scientists were arrogant because they presumed to know everything about the Universe. As far as I am concerned, the unfounded belief that all the answers to the biggest questions in this life lie between the pages of one book (and try to get religionists to agree on which book) is the height of arrogance.

Science does not claim to have all the answers, it is merely our current best explanation for how we think the universe works using the tools of logic and reason. Our scientific understanding of the universe is ever-changing (dare I say, evolving) as we accumulate more and more empirical evidence. People put forth theories that explain our current evidence, predictions are then made from these theories and then evidence to support these predictions is sought. If no evidence is found, or if the evidence indicates that the theory is wrong, the theory is adapted to accommodate the new evidence, or it is thrown out to be replaced by an alternative theory. Science evolves by people challenging the current paradigm and finding evidence to change it.

Most religions say the opposite. They state that the answers are revealed to us by gods and angels and we are to believe, without question, the answers that we are given. This is Dogma, unquestioning belief in revealed 'facts'. God gave you a brain, but obviously he didn't intend for you to use it. The world-view of the three Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity and Islam) probably made sense to the bronze-age goat-herders who first made it all up, but in todays world, where we know the world is not flat, the stars are not holes in the sky where the rain comes in, that life is billions of years old and the Universe itself is billions of years older still - frankly it's embarrassing.

Back to the diagram. In a nutshell - Christian dogma during the Dark ages in Europe effectively stifled scientific inquiry for over a thousand years. Perhaps the greatest 'sin' carried out by the church was the ban on the dissection of cadavers that held back medicine and biology for a millenium. The power of the church even led to a regression in our scientific understanding of the world and in our use of technology. It was only with the coming of the enlightenment and the rediscovery of 'heretical' Greek and Roman texts that Europeans could claim they had surpassed the Roman's, who's civilisation had collapsed a thousand years previously.



 
Categories: science | religion