:: This Goes Without Saying...Boston, MA ::


My collective impressions of the new controls.







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:: Cynical Nation
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:: Back of the Hill
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:: Slashdot
:: How to Make it in Life
:: Hawspipe
:: Insanity Now, Serenity Later
:: The Jaded New Englander
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:: People Who Deserve a Beatdown

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[::.. cast of characters ..::]


AL(al) n.
Narrator of highest note.

LORI(lohr-ee) n.
The girlfriend. Slightly bratty. Arachnophobe.

CHARLIE(chahr-lee) n.
A dieffenbachia plant spawn from the great Mother Charlie in Woods Hole, MA.



[::.. archive ..::]




:: Monday, May 23, 2005 ::



Anyone know what this thing is?

I see it 3 or 4 times a week on my way to work. It's lair appears to be at the end of my street.



:: posted by Al on 5/23/2005 09:58:00 AM ::


:: Saturday, May 14, 2005 ::


This gonna be great because as you know, I can't live without my radio.



Personal Nuclear Power: New Battery Lasts 12 Years

ROCHESTER, NEW YORK(Reuters) - New devices could put out power for a decade or more.

A new type of battery based on the radioactive decay of nuclear material is 10 times more powerful than similar prototypes and should last a decade or more without a charge, scientists announced this week.

The longevity would make the battery ideal for use in pacemakers or other surgically implanted devices, developers say, or it might power spacecraft or deep-sea probes.

You might also find these nuclear batteries running sensors and other small devices in your home in a few years. Such devices "don't consume much power," said University of Rochester electrical engineer Philippe Fauchet, "and yet having to replace the battery every so often is a real pain in the neck."



:: posted by Al on 5/14/2005 10:32:00 AM ::


:: Thursday, May 12, 2005 ::


Isn't this how 'The Matrix', 'I, Robot', and 'Terminator 3' all started??


U.S. Scientists Create Self-Replicating Robot

LONDON (Reuters) - Self-replicating robots are no longer the stuff of science fiction.

Scientists at the Cornell University in Ithaca, New York have created small robots that can build copies of themselves.

Each robot consists of several 10-cm (4 inch) cubes which have identical machinery, electromagnets to attach and detach to each other and a computer program for replication. The robots can bend and pick up and stack the cubes.

"Although the machines we have created are still simple compared with biological self-reproduction, they demonstrate that mechanical self-reproduction is possible and not unique to biology," Hod Lipson said in a report in the science journal Nature on Wednesday.

He and his team believe the design principle could be used to make long term, self-repairing robots that could mend themselves and be used in hazardous situations and on space flights.

The experimental robots, which don't do anything else except make copies of themselves, are powered through contacts on the surface of the table and transfer data through their faces. They self-replicate by using additional modules placed in special "feeding locations."

The machines duplicate themselves by bending over and putting their top cube on the table. Then they bend again, pick up another cube, put it on top of the first and repeat the entire process. As the new robot begins to take shape it helps to build itself.

"The four-module robot was able to construct a replica in 2.5 minutes by lifting and assembling cubes from the feeding locations," said Lipson.


:: posted by Al on 5/12/2005 08:29:00 AM ::

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