False Positives , Ian Irving's Adventures in Tech, Toronto (and HK), Sci and SciFi

Saturday, January 31, 2004

Save Hubble

Via wired news : Scientists Clamor to Save Hubble

I was very distressed hearing about plans to de-orbit the Hubble space telescope. I understand the difficulty in the servicing mission and the concerns about a uncontrolled reentry.

But on hearing about the decision I got a very strong felling of deja vu and remember what happened in '79 when Skylab fell out of sky. " In my gut I got a strong feeling that it was the end. Yes we needed to be able to get there and back, but as a working asset, a place to go, Skylab was incredibly valuable, even if it had to be mothball for a few years. "No problem, they said. Soon we'll have the space shuttle, and space launch will be so cheap we'll have a dozen space stations and then we'll start building O'Neill's... " Well it didn't happen, if fact it wasn't happening well before the Challenger accident of '86. '79 is when my dreams of being part of manned space program died. 86 only confirmed that there wasn't going to be much of a manned space program for me to watch. So, for want of a mission to boost Skylab, it has taken 25 year to get Skylab-lite (the ISS). Joy.

Now we have a decision to ditch a working space telescope which has provided data and images beyond compare, and hold our breath for a couple of years until, if we are lucky, the next generation of large space telescope is launched. What they should be doing, instead, 1) see if the orbit be shaped to make it easy to service 2) do the service mission to upgrade the instruments and replace the wonky gyro's 3) Make sure the capacity exists to maintain its orbit indefinitely, beyond the launch of the Webb ST (see 1). Astronomers are lucky that they have ground based and small space based instruments, otherwise it would be the end of improving our understanding the universe. I'm very glad they are putting up a stink about this. How about the rest of us. Is it important? No, it will not feed any staving children. But the US spends twice as much as on Pet food as on the current space program. Pet Food! Feed the kids that!. See this to better address that issue. I'll tell you why it 2 small reasons why it's important:

1) Dark Energy & Dark Matter. By current estimates the matter and energy we understand make up 4 % of the universe. 4 F**king percent. It?s figured that Dark Matter makes up around 26% and stops the galaxies from falling about. And 70% of the ?verse is Dark Energy which keeps the universe expanding, or at minimum from having collapsed long ago. You, Me and everything we See and think we understand are just the cream on a very large glass of milk. If you think the revolution in physic over the last 100 to 150 years (I'll include Electromagnetism as well as Relativity and Quantum Mechanics), which has made all our toys and tools possible, you haven?t see nothing yet!
2) Searching for Life bearing planets. In only the last 5 years we have been able to determine if and how common planet circling other planets are. Not very. Currently we are only able to indirectly measure very larger (super- Jovan) gas planet. The next generation will allow us to detect smaller, rocky, planet like earth and maybe even see some of the light from some, which would tell us about the chemical composition of the atmosphere and might tell us if there is life there (oxygen is a likely sign). Think what kind of impact it would have to know that there a no neighbors for a 100 light years ( we really are special, better take care of ourselves and our home) or that 30 light year away there is somewhere to visit (colonize), someone to talk to.

But before we can re-write the rules, or scout the galactic neighbor until we have better instruments. And don?t throwaway tools until you have better ones in your hands, and maybe not even then.

Skylab was a canary in the mine, so is the Hubble.


SaveTheHubble.org

Friday, January 30, 2004

Music Guide Done Right

Found deep within Om Malik on Broadband a Link to Ishkur's Guide to Electronic Music. A Flashed based guide to various types and genres of Electronic Music. It's like getting a new Encyclopedia set for Xmas! About 99% of the styles and music I've never heard of (A factor of age and utter un-coolness). But I loved the commentaries and discovered a few thing I didn't hate. (I tick to stuff in the last ten years: DownTempo/Ambient Breaks - Moby; Happy Core - which sounds like it should be the soundtrack of anime; TranceStep - Jonh B's American Girls is a hoot) The other interesting thing is the layout (showing how major genres mutated over time ) , the exploring of genres and well looped samples, and the explanations. It makes music that even Ishkur hates worthing listening to, if only to confirm that yeah that sucks! As a side effect If I want to tourture someone, I now know A couple of TerroCore "tunes" to play. You've been warned!

Thursday, January 29, 2004

Security the Microsoft way

Boing Boing: "MSFT: don't click on links, type them in by hand
Microsoft's crapware browser, Explorer, has more security vulnerabilities than my block has dope-dealers, but this is ridiculous. MSFT now advises its users to not click links, but rather to type them in by hand:

    The most effective step that you can take to help protect yourself from malicious hyperlinks is not to click them. Rather, type the URL of your intended destination in the address bar yourself. By manually typing the URL in the address bar, you can verify the information that Internet Explorer uses to access the destination Web site. To do so, type the URL in the Address bar, and then press ENTER.

Or, you could, you know, just Download Moz.

Oh My God. If I hadn't seen the document myself I wouldn't believe it. Coming Soon : Bill Gates delivers his solution to span and Email Viruses (Just Post a Letter!). And expect to see MS make bids for a pencil manufacture, and the leading buggy whip provider.

Database Modelling Plugin for Eclipse

Via Jared Odulio's Weblog : My Favorite Eclipse Plugins I found Clay Database Modelling Plugin for Eclipse

Not quite the full suite of ERB modeling tools, but It's a good start. I pointed at my working MySQL database via a JDBC definition, and wam-bam I've got a DB model in Eclipse. I can modify it , generate creation script and such (good old DDL) for a table or the whole model; add a key to the table; just being able to cruise my model and confirm table and rows within Eclispe is useful. Lets see what can be done if I read the help!

Wednesday, January 28, 2004

JYMSIML or at least read.....

Java Pro - Using Data Sources the Right Way: Data sources let app servers manage pools of database connections.

Java Pro - Uncoupling Struts: " Use the marker interface design pattern and polymorphism to uncouple your persistence tier from Struts"

Did Linux steal code from SCO?

Did Linux steal code from SCO? Take a look.

via vowe dot net

Everything except the squeal : Sausage Aged for Three Generations

NYTimes : Sausage Aged for Three Generations

Now I'm hungry.....


Tuesday, January 27, 2004

Don’t design on spec

Jeffrey Zeldman Presents: The Daily Report : Don't design on spec

  • It don't pay
  • Design is problem solving
  • unsafe for you and the client

When Big Brother meets Gordon Moore

The Panopticon Singularity

If I was a Japanese Cartoon

Via The Adventures of Accordion Guy in the 21st Century
Flash What would I look like if I was a Anime character?

I like the blue hair! Is there a photoshop plugin to Anime images?

Monday, January 26, 2004

Hiring in Startups and the danger of 'hiring down'

Due Diligence:"Hiring in Startups:

managers who consciously or unconsciously hire those who are not potentially threatening (intellectually or politically). Big companies in fat times can survive some amount of this behavior, a new venture cannot. If you look at a startup where the CEO feels much stronger than all of his reports, you're seeing a failure in the making.

and A VC: Why CEOs Fail

Don't try this at home!

Via vowe dot net http://www.pallas.demon.nl/concours.mpeg

not for wives, nephew's, brothers, or friends...Please god no.....I beg you....

Who Cares About Sound Quality

Via Techdirt: "Who Cares About Sound Quality?

It seems that the focus on in-home entertainment devices has moved from the stereo system to the home theater system. However, this change of focus from the audio to the visual means that many buyers are skipping out on the fancier speaker systems - much to the dismay of those who sell such speakers. Even though home theater systems require a complex setup of speakers to produce optimal sound, some are worried that many buyers are too focused on the picture they get from the screen, and thus only buy the cheapest speakers to handle the sound. Of course, they're working to change this perception. Though, there are some odd ideas - including 'tactile audio' where the speakers end up embedded in the furniture of the room itself. This way, the viewer can actually 'feel' the sound relate to whatever they're watching in the home theater."