Category Archives: Tech
Strobe! Camera! Inaction!
Strobe light and falling water droplets
Comparison Shopping
Wil Shipley at Call Me Fishmeal compares the car he’s ordered and the car already he has (life is soooo tough) Tesla v. Supercharged Lotus Elise
The Tesla people were uniformly cool and real and fun. During the open house there wasn’t a single question they dodged. They offered up problems they’d found, troubles they’d had getting into production, issues that loom on the horizon.
They test-drove the car themselves because they still all love it so much. One guy turned off traction control (we were not allowed to) and demonstrated how much power the car really has — it was, frankly, daunting, and he got waved down after two laps because the guy in charge thought he was going to power-slide into the defunct K-mart. (A very real possibility.)
All the Internet's a Stage
Here Comes Everybody Review at Bruce Schneier’s blog.
Economists have long understood the corollary concept of Coase’s ceiling, a point above which organizations collapse under their own weight — where hiring someone, however competent, means more work for everyone else than the new hire contributes. Software projects often bump their heads against Coase’s ceiling: recall Frederick P. Brooks Jr.’s seminal study, The Mythical Man-Month (Addison-Wesley, 1975), which showed how adding another person onto a project can slow progress and increase errors.
What’s new is something consultant and social technologist Clay Shirky calls “Coase’s Floor,” below which we find projects and activities that aren’t worth their organizational costs — things so esoteric, so frivolous, so nonsensical, or just so thoroughly unimportant that no organization, large or small, would ever bother with them. Things that you shake your head at when you see them and think, “That’s ridiculous.”
Sounds a lot like the Internet, doesn’t it?
The review goes on to highlight a few implications of the low organizational cost of the internet. Crackpots having a wide audience is one of them.
Piiiiics iiiiin Spaaaaaace!
No, not the Swinetrek. The International Space Station turns 10
This month marks the 10th anniversary of the first launched module of the International Space Station (ISS). The module Zarya was lifted into orbit on November 20th, 1998 by a Russian Proton rocket lifting off from Baikonur, Kazhakstan. In the decade since, 44 manned flights and 34 unmanned flights have carried further modules, solar arrays, support equipment, supplies and a total of 167 human beings from 15 countries to the ISS, and it still has a ways to go until it is done. Originally planned to be complete in 2003, the target date for completion is now 2011. Aside from time spent on construction, ISS crew members work on a good deal of research involving biology and physics in conditions of microgravity. If humans are ever to leave the Earth for extended periods, the ISS is designed to be the place where we will discover the best materials, procedures and safety measures to make it a reality. (32 photos total)
Rack 'em, Pack 'em and Stack 'em
A wmv file showing air-traffic patterns throughout the world, over the span of 24 hours.
via bits and pieces
Help with Baccarat Not Included
Where do you Keep Your LEGOs?
In your LEGO® safe?
You would think that breaking into a Lego safe would just mean taking a few bricks off but this one is quite a bit more complex. The safe weighs 14 pounds for starters. It has a motion detecting alarm so it can’t be moved without alerting people in earshot. The lock require five double digit codes to open it, which results in over 305 billion different combinations.
Gears, Glorious Gears!
Helical (angled-tooth) gears. Witchcraft, because they’re made of wood.
More at the maker’s site
TILT!
Kinetic sculpture overload. 15 videos of amazing rolling ball machines