Author: fledgling otaku

  • RSS-istance is futile

    I’ve managed to avoid using feed readers for years, but reading wordpress-maven Matt’s post today about switching to Google Reader from Bloglines suddenly made me realize just how much time I waste in the mechanics of web surfing. I just spent the better part of two hours populating Reader with my links and I am already blown away at how much more efficient this is going to be. I literally will be able to do twice as much surfing in half the time. Most of the time saving productivity increase comes from the unified interface; everything is in one place and I can rapidly scan headlines to see what i really want to read. Most blogs helpfully put the whole post into the feed, as well – as do comics like XKCD. And the interface is the same as Gmail, including the ability to “tag” a link with multiple categories and the dynamic interface which means no lag. This is like a revolution. A revelation. Both.

    I’m not pleased about investing further into Google. I don’t like all my eggs in one basket, but at least it’s trivial to export my OPML file if I decide to jump ship. In the interim, though, this is incredible.

    And whats even cooler is that I am going to setup RSS feeds for searches on PubMed – so I’ll be able to stay up to date on my work as well as my play. Maybe this is the kick in the pants that I needed to get Reference Scan going again…

  • Wii do DVD

    It’s true that DVD playback on the Wii is not exactly a killer app; by now anyone who has a Wii probably has plenty of other options for DVD playback. Still, just for convergence’s sake, would be nice to have. I fact Wii consoles already can play DVDs, if you’ve modded the console. And a software-based player is almost surely coming down the line; Nintendo has hinted that the next hardware revision in late 2007 will have DVD playback.

    If Nintendo released a software-based firmware upgrade or software app to allow me to play DVDs right now, I’d pay as much as $10-$15 for it. They could easily distribute it via the Virtual Console. The capability has to be there, since the Wii game discs are DVD media.

  • yeeeargh!

    For the latest in Hurricane Dean coverage, Eric Berger’s SciGuy blog at the Houston Chronicle is basically, ahem, the eye of the storm. The latest update puts landfall down in the Yucatan peninsula, meaning that there’s not much threat to Texas. Steven observed that I should be rather glad to have moved from Texas to Wisconsin two months ago; certainly true, my timing couldn’t have been better (and we just closed on our old house, so I wish the new owner best of luck. There’s precut plywood in the garage.) Somewhat ironically, it was a beautiful (though hot) day in Galveston county yesterday, as far as my contacts there reported. Meanwhile here in Marshfield it’s been cold drizzle since Saturday morning. My daughter has been going slightly stir crazy indoors, now that she’s used to roaming free outside. On the balance, I’d happily trade a little rain for a hot, muggy summer (and occasional hurricane threat). Of course, check back with me in November. Might be singing a different tune. I’d better get to Menard’s one of these days and scope out the snowblower aisle… buy some 2x4s to raise the boxes in the garage off the floor, too.

    Of course, weather issues aside, there’s always a piece of me gonna stay down Texas way. As the bumper sticker says,

    texaz.jpg

  • Mushi-shi

    AICN has a fascinating review of an anime series that got my attention:

    The science fairy tales make real dangers of concerns from the boundary between juvenile “why” questions and profound philosophical queries such as seeing in the dark, the inherent significance of shapes or the cause of dreams. It then addresses these troubles a as procedurals inspired by folk stories.

    (more…)

  • speed trap

    German scientists claimed to have broken the speed of light:

    Günter Nimtz and Alfons Stahlhofen of the University of Koblenz, Germany, have been researching a phenomenon known as quantum tunnelling. Two prisms are placed together. When a light is shown through the prisms, a detector picks up the light and records information about the photon. However, when the two prisms are separated, Nimtz and Stahlhofen discovered that photons would occasionally “tunnel” between the prisms — arriving at the detector sooner than should theoretically be possible.

    The two scientists say they have now tunneled photons “instantaneously” across a distance of up to one meter. Their conclusion, stated in a recent paper, is that the speed limit of special relativity has been violated. Dr. Nimtz claims quantum tunneling is a little understood process that is “the most important” aspect of quantum physics, one that may be responsible for the computational efficiency of the human brain.

    Now, color me skeptical of anything that cuts across the scientific establishment consensus, that gets published in popular press and arXiv rather than genuine peer review. My first reaction to this news was, could these professional scientists have made the first-year undergraduate error of confusing group velocity for velocity? As it turns out, yes.

    how are these authors measuring an excessive speed of light? In practical terms, most experiments measure light in terms of what is called the group velocity, which is how fast a pulse propagates along an underlying carrier frequency. This can, in some circumstances, lead to the pulses traveling faster than the speed of light in the medium they’re in, but not faster than light in vacuum. Although the setup in the new paper is not entirely clear, they were measuring the arrival time of pulses, which means we’re talking about group velocity rather than the actual speed of light.

    Another problem that occurs in these experiments comes from determining when the pulse actually arrived. If you analyze a pulse of light, you find that it is made up of a huge number of frequencies that, as you move away from the fundamental frequency, get lower and lower in amplitude. Once you look at the experimental set up in detail, you find that it is triggering on the pre-pulse noise generated by these high frequency components.

    Sorry, but the days of solitary German geniuses laboring in their spare time to overturn all of known physics with their rogue insights is long over. In the meantime, let this be a warning to all others who dare to make the attempt at unseating Einstein:

    universe speed limit sign 670616629 mph

  • before there was Spaaarta!!!

    there was Khaaaan!

    I’ve zero interest in watching 300, by all accounts a piece of fiction that has as tenous a connection to the actual events at Thermopylae as Jack and the Spartans.

    Anyway, Conan wipes the floor with puny Spartans any day:

  • Pitch Black

    I missed out on the whole Chronicles of Riddick thing, so I decided to start from the beginning and netflixed Pitch Black, the first movie in the Riddick trilogy. This was a really underrated film with a simple, yet solid plot, and with some great iconic visuals:

    vlcsnap-1700241.png

    A few minorly spoilerish observations below the fold. (more…)

  • joining the browncoats

    “Take my love, take my land\
    Take me where I cannot stand\
    I don’t care, I’m still free\
    You can’t take the sky from me”
    – Ballad of Serenity

    I mentioned a while back that I downloaded the complete Firefly, a science-fiction/western hybrid with a strongly libertarian bent by Buffy-creator Joss Whedon. I started viewing it a few weeks ago and got hooked, and am now going to go through the series again to savor it. I’ll likely post some screencaps again like I did with Shingu. In a nutshell, though – this series was even better than Galactica, and for those who know me, that’s no small endorsement on my part. The show lasted only one season before being cancelled, but its fan base is as energetic as Star Trek’s, in a way no other fanbase has ever attained (no, not even Buffy or Galactica). There was enough fan support to actually justify a full-length feature film (“Serenity“), which I will also review here. Let me make my position plain: if there’s a single science fiction show I recommend, out of all of the ones I have ever seen, it’s Firefly. I hope to show you readers why.

    “I am to misbehave.” – Malcolm Reynolds

  • the Deathly Hallows

    A friend of mine sent me her copy, I received yesterday afternoon and finished it this morning. I can finally surf the internet again without fear!

    some mega-spoileresque commentary below the fold.

    (more…)

  • Shingu fin

    I finished Shingu a few days ago. I am entranced. I have to agree with Steven, this series is top-shelf. The length of it makes a rewatch somewhat unlikely though, but I am going to read Steven’s TMW and then make a final post on my own thoughts overall.

    I stitched this poster together out of separate screencaps, since the camera was panning over it:

    bastard.png

    vlcsnap-791388.png

    “Stop staring at those flowers! it’s creepy!”

    more spoilerish screencaps below the fold.

    (more…)