MonthJune 2008

China manned space flight set for October

The launch of China’s third manned space flight, the Shenzhou VII, with a crew of three “taikonauts” has been set for October, state media reported on Thursday.

A short-list of six “taikonauts” or astronauts had already been selected for the flight and would be whittled down to a crew of three before the October launch, Xinhua news agency said, citing a spokesman for the mission.

“One member of the flight crew will undergo a space walk and undertake relevant scientific experiments,” the spokesman said.

Full Story: Breitbart

(via dynomia.us)

Excellent William Gibson interview

I like it because I grew up in a really extreme monoculture in southwestern Virgina. I was surrounded by Southern white folks – this was in badass Appalachia, up in the hollers where my mother’s family had been forever. Having that experience in a small town made me happiest in big cities. Especially in radically multicultural big cities – as far as you can get from monoculture. I’m happiest where people are generally not even of recognizable ethic derivations. I’m into hybrid vigor.

Canada is set up to run on steady immigration. It feels like a twenty first century country to me because it’s not interested in power. It negotiates and does business. It gets along with other countries. The power part is very nineteenth century. 99 percent of ideology we have today is very nineteenth century. The twentieth century was about technology, and the nineteenth was ideology.

[…]

None of us ever live in dystopia. That’s an imaginary extreme. They just live in shitty cultures. And these societies [in my books] seem dystopian to middle class white people in North America. They don’t seem dystopian if you live in Rio or anywhere in Africa. Most people in Africa would happily immigrate to the Sprawl.

io9: William Gibson Talks to io9 About Canada, Draft Dodging, and Godzilla

An Omnidirectional Treadmill Means One Giant Leap for Virtual Reality

st_cyberwalk_f

One of the problems with virtual reality has always been that you had to either confine yourself to a joystick or strap into some crazy Lawnmower Man-style harness. Hardly natural. This April, however, a team based at the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics in T?bingen, Germany, unveiled the CyberWalk, an omnidirectional treadmill designed to serve as a VR-capable movement platform.

Full Story: Wired

Towards an understanding of the origins of life

the first cell

Two fascinating projects:

Scientists Close to Reconstructing First Living Cell:

cells were very different when life began 3.5 billion to four billion years ago. Rather than small metropolises, they were more like a purse that carried instructions-consisting of just a membrane with genetic information inside. They lacked the structures and proteins that now make them tick. The question is: How then were they able to take in the nutrients necessary to survive and reproduce?

Harvard Medical School researchers report in Nature that they have built a model of what they believe the very first living cell may have looked like, which contains a strip of genetic material surrounded by a fatty membrane. The membranes of modern cells consist of a double layer of fatty acids known as phospholipids. But in designing a membrane for their cell, scientists worked with much simpler fatty acids that they believe existed on a primeval Earth, when the first cell likely formed. The key, says study co-author Jack Szostak, a Harvard geneticist, was to develop one porous enough to let in needed nutrients (such as nucleotides, the units that make up genetic material, or DNA) but strong enough to protect the genetic material inside and keep it from slipping out after replicating.

(via Kurzeil)

A New Step In Evolution:

Lenski and his colleagues have witnessed a significant change. And their new paper makes clear that just because the odds of such a significant change are incredibly rare doesn’t mean that it can’t happen. Natural selection, in fact, ensures that sometimes it does. And, finally, it demonstrates that after twenty years, Lenski’s invisible dynasty still has some surprises in store.

(via OVO)

“Green Blade” Slices LA Skyline

la green blade

green blade

Full Story: Inhabitat

(via Grinding)

What will happen to your pets who are left behind?

By now I’m sure you know about You’ve been left behind, which made big waves on the blogosphere recently. They are in competition with Post-Rapture Post, who have been around a while. Both sites offer to send e-mails to you loved ones after the rapture.

But who will take care of your pets?

Post Rapture Pets is a resource for post-rapture planning, with all sorts of useful tips like:

# You should have multiple back up sitters available in case your primary
sitter is taken up in the Rapture.
# You’ll also need some kind of system to alert them that you’ve been taken
up. You’ll probably need to have some kind of prepayment plan, since you
won’t be around to write checks.

(thanks Bill)

Life goes on in Tehran

cafe tehran

A former LA resident photo documents his new life in Iran.

When I was leaving Los Angeles, many of my friends were worried for me. They thought I was jumping into a war zone. Soon after moving to Iran I shared a few photos with them and assured them that all is safe and normal. But I soon realized how little they knew about Iran. Their fears and lack of knowledge about Iran is justified and a result of negative portrayal of this country in the Western media — as well as sound bites from a certain controversial President. So I decided to start a site to remind them (and the rest of the world) that life goes on in Tehran and elsewhere in Iran.

Life goes on in Tehran

(via Dark Roasted Blend)

The anatomy of gummi bears and balloon animals

balloon anatomy

anatomy gummi

More pics: io9
http://io9.com/5015385/the-anatomy-of-a-gummi-bear
(via Grinding)

Witch killings and killings by witches

Cabinet of Wonders has a round-up of recent killings of people accused of being witches or magicians, as well as instances of witches or magicians killing other people (including the NYTimes’s coverage of killings of albinos in Tanzania):

Full Story: Cabinet of Wonders

Albinos, Long Shunned, Face Threat in Tanzania

Albinos, Long Shunned, Face Threat in Tanzania

Discrimination against albinos is a serious problem throughout sub-Saharan Africa, but recently in Tanzania it has taken a wicked twist: at least 19 albinos, including children, have been killed and mutilated in the past year, victims of what Tanzanian officials say is a growing criminal trade in albino body parts.

Many people in Tanzania – and across Africa, for that matter – believe albinos have magical powers. They stand out, often the lone white face in a black crowd, a result of a genetic condition that impairs normal skin pigmentation and strikes about 1 in 3,000 people here. Tanzanian officials say witch doctors are now marketing albino skin, bones and hair as ingredients in potions that are promised to make people rich.

To their credit, the Tanzanian government is doing what it can to protect albinos:

Police officers are drawing up lists of albinos in every corner of the country to better look after them. Officers are escorting albino children to school. Tanzania’s president even sponsored an albino woman for a seat in Parliament to show that ‘we are with them in this,’ said Salvator Rweyemamu, a Tanzanian government spokesman.

… but the situation still looks pretty grim.

Full Story: New York Times

(via Ectoplasmosis)

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